Word: gauss
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...interview printed in yesterday's issue of the News Dean Gauss of Princeton says that it is a mistake for one who is not bright to attempt to work his way through college, since he is subjected to both physical and mental handicap. The bare statement sounds with a harsh note...
...fiction, will seek scholarly but not too technical articles, occasional verse. Its point of view may become as various as that of its board of ten editors, who include Dean Ada Louise Comstock of Radcliffe, President William Allan Neilson of Smith, smart Author John Erskine. popular Dean Christian Gauss of Princeton, Editor Will David Howe of Scribners', Dr. John Huston Finley of the New York Times. Editor-in-chief is William Allison Shimer, 37. onetime philosophy teacher at Ohio State. He is secretary of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa and of the Phi Beta Kappa Foundation. Cost...
...management of their own affairs so that they may function "as people should." And it is his testimony, as well as that of President Aydelotte, that the student response under proper guidance is characterized by "self-control, reliability, persistence and tolerance." Like views have recently been expressed by Dean Gauss at Princeton. There are signs that our colleges and universities are moving to a higher plane of intellectual life. Those who have been critical are seeing fruits of their persistent preaching. It cannot be doubted that the present period of necessary economy will have good effects in the quality...
...youth, with their strength and comparative freedom, the situation is a challenge to their understanding, their sacrifice and their elate effort to equip themselves for a higher intellectual level of existence, whatever the economic conditions. Dean Gauss in The Princeton Alumni Weekly, speaking of the great majority of college students, says that they are "cheerful and happy," and that, "unlike their elders, they do not everlastingly talk about the depression." They hope that "things will go back"; but whatever happens, they are not going back to the senseless way in which many of them lived in prosperous days. It cannot...
...Kent proper sometimes takes pupils free. Last week, on "The Old Man's" 57th birthday, a testimonial dinner was given for him at the Hotel Commodore in Manhattan. Joined to honor him were the Church (Presiding Bishop James DeWolf Perry of the Protestant Episcopal Church), the Universities (Dean Christian Gauss, representing President John Grier Hibben of Princeton), Kent alumni, Kent parents & friends (including Vice President Charles W. Appleton of General Electric Co., President Frederick Paul Keppel of Carnegie Corp.). Many a guest was too old to have known, as a school boy, Father Sill's influence. But all joined...