Word: guerard
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...successful writers. A writing course will on occasion produce good writing. In recent years MacLeish's English S has turned out C. B. Flood's Love is a Bridge (a bestseller), Ilona Carmel's Stephannia, Edward Hoagland's Cat Man, and William Alfred's Agamemnon. Professors Morrison and Guerard have also had considerable success in eliciting work which meets professional standards...
...securing the services of four distinguished persons as visiting lecturers: Miss Rosemond Tuve of Connecticut College, Mr. Northrup Frye of Toronto, Mr. F. W. Dupee of Columbia, and Mr. Armour Craig of Amherst. They will help repair the deficiencies occasioned by the sabbatical leaves of Professors Brower and Guerard; and as for Professors Levin and Bate and myself, we shall all teach here for half the year. In short, the "poor English major," whose plight you deplore, will not find himself rattling around Warren House entirely without companionship. Herschel Baker, Chairman, Department of English
...best piece is, naturally, at the beginning, and is hopefully entitled Renascence. E.C. Davidson shows he is a student of A.J. Guerard, but not too much so. His on-shore variation on The Old Man and the Sea creates, more than any of the other stories, a mood and a character which blend into suspense verging on horror, and is thus the only piece which can claim to draw its reader onward. Yet it achieves this only in the narrative. The technical ease of "how to catch a shark" seems to suit the author and the protagonist, which the stream...
Pity the poor English major. His troubles began with a retirement, were compounded by a departure, aggravated by a leave of absence to Stanford, and culminated by five Guggenheim Fellowships. The exodus leaves the department without Baker, Bate, Brower, Levin, Shannon, Guerard, and Rollins. So pity the poor English major as he tries to find a professor. Sorrow for him as he searches for courses with which to pass generals. Grieve for him as he looks for Modern Novels, Romantic Poets, Elizabethan Literature, Early Tudor Literature, Eighteenth Century Literature, Criticism, and Modern Poetry. Unloved, unwanted, and now uneducated--pity...
Rupert Emerson '22, professor of Government, the development of non-white nationalistic movements; Myron P. Gilmore, professor of History, legal humanism in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; Albert J. Guerard, professor of English, the modern novel, particularly the works of Joseph Conrad; Richard E. Pipes, research associate in the Russian Research Center, the ideas and social basis of Russian conservatism from its emergence at the end of the eighteenth century...