Word: instructor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...plan instituted last year for promoting discussion and thought among the students on present day political, economic, and social questions was renewed this year with equal success and interest. Weekly Discussion Groups, led by a professor or instructor, have been held since the beginning of the year under the direction of the Christian Association of Brooks House with entirely satisfactory results. A series of discussion meetings, called "A Forum for Harvard Men," were begun on February 11, when Professor Wiener talked to 160 students on "Bolshevism" and subsequent meetings were addressed by Professor Munro, Professor Carver, President Eliot and others...
Professor Haskins is a graduate of Johns Hopkins, class of '87. He studied at the University of Paris, at the University of Berlin, and in 1889 became instructor of History at Johns Hopkins. He was made Gurney Professor of History at the University in 1902 and in 1912 he was appointed Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences...
...History, Government, and Economics; Philip Putnam Chase, tutor in the Division of History, Government, and Economics; Lawrence D. Steefel, tutor in the Division of History, Government, and Economics; Sidney Raymond Packard, tutor in the Division of History, Government and Economics; Donald Buttz Clark, assistant in Philosophy; Joseph Leonard Walsh, instructor in Mathematics; Thurman Los Hood, Secretary of the Committee on the Use of English by Students; Lester R. Ford, Instructor in Life Insurance (Bus. School) and Instructor in Mathematics; I. A. Barnett, Benjamin Peirce Instructor in Mathematics; William Gilson Farlow, Curator of the Cryptogamic Herbarium; Roland Thaxter, Honorary Associate Curator...
...enlisting in the 101st engineers. He was later sent to the first Plattsburg Camp, where he was commissioned a second lieutenant. He was then sent to France, and served with the 9th infantry, 2d division, A. E. F. Captain Leonard was wounded at Soissons and sent home as an instructor in September...
...quite without the province of one who follows intercollegiate sport in a capacity more or less critical, gratuitously to offer opinions outside his own medium of publicity concerning the conduct of athletic affairs at one institution or another, yet the question of resident coaches as opposed to the instructor engaged merely for the season has assumed a wide-spread importance which may be regarded as justifying the CRIMSON--or whatever university daily, for that matter,--in opening wide doors and windows for the admission of whatever light may come from any source or quarter...