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Word: instructors (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...graduated with honors and became an instructor and a proctor in his house on Wall street. During the first few years of his proctorship he wrote, "I find my work interesting and enjoyable." But soon the morals of his students wore him down...

Author: By N. J. C., | Title: Pamphleteer George Gundelfinger Is Soiled Galahad of Yale Morals | 11/25/1950 | See Source »

...Griswold had taken a Ph.D., become an instructor in history and a specialist in international relations. In 1938 he became an assistant professor and four years later an associate professor. During the war he directed Yale's Foreign Areas Studies and in 1947 he won a full professorship. His appointment to the presidency, he claims, "came as a complete surprise...

Author: By Rudolph Kass, | Title: PROFILED | 11/25/1950 | See Source »

...with a little time out for graduate work in music, the beaming, popular leader has been simultaneously conductor of the Wellesley, Radcliffe, and Harvard Orchestras, and director of the Wellesley Concert series. He has taught classes in music appreciation, acted as graduate advisor of Pierian, and has been an instructor (now dean) of the New England Conservatory of Music. He has been active in the Berkshire Festival and plays the violin in the Tanglewood String Quartet with three members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra...

Author: By Andreas Lowenfeld, | Title: PROFILE | 11/21/1950 | See Source »

Acting as Dean, Instructor in conducting, and director of the orchestra of the New England Conservatory, as author, and as frequent chamber music participant, Holmes has had to cut down his activity at Harvard. He is no longer active leader of the University Orchestra. But wherever good ensemble music is heard between Symphony Hall and Wellesley, Malcolm Holmes is likely to have a leading part...

Author: By Andreas Lowenfeld, | Title: PROFILE | 11/21/1950 | See Source »

...crash, could have lived for two days on the mountain. In the valleys below Mont Blanc, however, there is an unwritten law that when a man is lost on the mountain, somebody must go after him. In Chamonix, sharp, energetic little Rene Payot, first Alpinist of France and chief instructor at the army's mountaineering school, put on his climbing clothes, greased his face well against the winds to come, rounded up 25 colleagues and announced simply, "On y ua [Let's go]." In St. Gervais, Louis Viallet, farmer and part-time guide, got on the telephone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: On y Va | 11/20/1950 | See Source »

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