Word: fellows
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...title. Who are the average Americans? Are they the men of the A. E. F., always ready to work twenty-five hours a day; to give their lives up to prove their Americanism; with a sense of team play, a sense of help the other fellow and get there, never surpassed; with a resourcefulness that overcame the impossible and a confidence that was streaked with fanaticism? Is it these men, the men of the A. E. F., or is it their returned shades, clamoring for less and ever less work, for more, and ever more pay, disgruntled, unpoised, conning...
Medical School - For one year from September 1, 1919: William Edgar Deeks, M.D., C.M., M.A., Lecturer on Tropical Medicine; Paul Frederick Orr, M.D., Charles Follen Folsom, Teaching Fellow in Hygiene; Henry Malcolm Thomas, Jr., S.B., M.D., Fellow in Medicine...
...only this University, but the entire system of education in this country, is benefited by the bequests of the late Henry Clay Frick. Here was a clear-minded, shrewd business man, a farsighted patriot, who saw how he best might serve his fellow-citizens. He realized the dire needs of America's colleges and went straight to the heart of the matter...
...Davison, and which was justified in expecting the same generous endorsement from the undergraduate body as would any athletic team at one of their contests. Of course, we cannot legislate people into goodness, nor can we make the undergraduate body go to hear good music rendered by their fellow-students if they won't; but it seems as if the old adage might be considered that, "although you can lead a horse to water, you cannot make him drink." It is worthy of notice that this remark is made of a quadruped, but not a biped; in fact...
Classification is the remedy that Dr. Nathan Isaacs, Thayer Teaching Fellow in the Law School, would apply to the so-called radical and Bolshevik element not only in the country as a whole but in the colleges and universities as well. Formerly assistant dean of the Cincinnati Law School, Dr. Isaacs resigned his position in 1918 to join the army; since the armistice he has been connected with a department of the government interested in the study of foreign groups and their movements...