Word: idealizes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...significant part of the new arrangement is that giving greater responsibility to the instructors. Since their opinions can have a decided influence on the failure, pass, or distinction a student may receive, it is all the more important that they be well qualified for their positions. Theoretically, an almost ideal method of grading can be attained, showing if a student has truly mastered his work; practically, much of the result depends on the interest and impartiality of the instructor...
...Business Administration. Seldom has the development of a Graduate School been more swift and sure. It was first among Business Schools requiring a college degree for entrance. It was first to develop fully, the "problem method" of instruction. Its purpose was to establish business as a profession, its ideal to replace the chance balances of social evolution by the intelligent control of man, the unthinking buccaneer by the socially responsible executive. These beginnings have been kept alive. In a business era of change in both ethics and practice, an era linked more than ever before to economics international in scope...
...Congress of Indian Nationalists wants freedom unadulterated for those dumb and semi-starved millions. The Congress has chosen as a means of attaining this truth and nonviolence. I am aware that not all Congressmen have lived up to that ideal and the Congress will deserve the curses of the world if it acts contrary...
...This canon proposes a complete departure from the Christian, scriptural and prayer book ideal of marriage...
...changed the little paper's policy by writing this editorial: "We salute the 18th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States as an experiment undertaken as a glorious adventure: we say farewell to our journalistic support of it as we would say farewell to a shattered ideal. But a shattered ideal is not of much practical use." Last week the Jerseyman floundered into receivership, but not, Publisher Little insisted, because it changed its mind after 105 years...