Word: fellows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Coggeshall '16 as Assistants in Government; R. Preston Wentworth '15 as Assistant in Military Topography; Harry Saul Bernstein '04 as Assistant in Pathology; Maclver Woody '07 as Assistant in Pathology and Physician to students; Francis Lowell Burnett '02 as Assistant in Pathology; Norman Ethan Allen Kinds as Austin Teaching Fellow in Geology and Geography; Belford Myrtetus Cruse as Austin Teaching Fellow in Chemistry; Reginald George Trotter, A. M. '15, Sidney Raymond Packard, Colin Brummitt Goodykoontz as Austin Teaching Fellows in History; Fred Campbell Meier '16 and James Plummer Poole as Austin Teaching Fellows in Botany; James Washington Bell as Austin...
...title of Alfred Clarence Redfield '13 was changed from Austin Teaching Fellow to Instructor in Physiology...
...Divinity Hall; William Edward Cox, Zenas Clark Dickinson, and Robert Louis Masson, as Assistants in Economics; David Arnold Keys as Assistant in Physics; Richard Stockton Meriam '14 as Assistant in Social Ethics; Raymond Lesley Webster '13 as Assistant in Prosthetic Dentistry; Joseph Vincent Fuller '14 as Austin Teaching Fellow in History; Leslie George Wright as Austin Teaching Fellow in Chemistry; Leslie Hinckley Spooner '03 as Assistant in Medicine (Graduate School); William Fletcher Knowles, M. D., '85, as Clerical Assistant in Larynology; Oscar Baxter Ryder, A. M., '16, as Instructor in Economics; James Wallace Hopkins and Bancroft Huntington Brown as Instructors...
Professor Moore started his talk with the story of a young fellow in the Ambulance Service who was killed at Salonica, but whom the war changed from a dawdler to a man. "War is good," stated Professor Moore, "in that it makes men. This war has called many from past and present classes of the University, and in so far as they hold themselves true, the war will make them. But if they do not, it will just as surely unmake them as the Civil War ruined so many young men of that day, making them good-for-nothing after...
...Freshmen last night in the first of the regular Monday evening meetings held in the Smith Hall Common Room by Professor Bliss Perry. "I am sorry," he said, "for those who go through this college and never discover what Harvard University is, but not sorry for that fellow who comes here from far off, and feels out of place and awkward, but who does the real thinking, dreams the dreams which have changed the face of the whole world." He said he was sorry for the "spoon fed" fellow who has been "tucked into bed by his intellectual friends...