Word: expounder
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Before he could expound the wherefores of his resolution, senatorial fulminating began. Two Virginians thrust home as follows...
...these qualities, President Morgan has established a six-year course at Antioch, in which the student studies half of the time, and works the other half in Dayton or in a neighboring town. Although the title of President Morgan's speech is "New movements in education," he will doubtless expound the Antioch system, which is as famous as it is little understood. And it should be better understood, for it appears to have a future before...
Although he has made a detailed study of Leonardo's life and works Mr. Lieb has made it clear that he intends to expound the practical rather than the artistic side of the life of the famous Italian scholar, in his lecture tonight. He believes that every student knows more or less about Leonardo as an artist but few realize that he was one of the greatest military engineers of all time...
...most authoritive, the richest and the fullest. Only one man is equipped with the experience and information to write such a classic, and that is President Emeritus Eliot. Almost three-quarters of a century of continuous contact with Harvard have fitted him preeminently to collect the traditions and expound the doctrines which have guided Harvard men for a dozen generations...
...which the professor tries gamely to drag and audience perfectly trained in passive resistance through a game which has no charm except its simplicity or its restfulness. Of course the professor is partly responsible for creating interest in his subject among the students who come to hear him. To expound its ins and outs to the class should be a privilege rather than a duty. But when a large part of that class comes with a fixed intent of communing solely with Morpheus, only a Disraeli or a Burke or perhaps a Fisher could unfix that intend. And the probability...