Word: masterships
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...mentioned as possibilities for the mastership, Richard M. Gummere '07, Director of Admissions, leads the list. Also discussed have been Dean Hanford, Mason Hammond '25, assistant professor of History and Greek and Latin, James B. Munn '12, Chairman of the English Department, Samuel H. Cross '12, professor of Slavic, Elliot Perkins '23, instructor in History and Literature, and Jerome D. Greene '96, Secretary to the Corporation. The order of the names has no bearing on the possibilities of appointment...
...with my many servants, who have never come out frankly on the side they supported so well in fact and action. In some cases, they themselves knew not of my mastership. But millions followed them, thinking, to bring peace through war, temperance through legislation, employment through high wages, morality through censorship, and Americanism through oaths, for teachers. In spite of all the kow-towing, buttering, and boot-licking to abhorrent ends, the balance weighed overwhelmingly with Evil, and that, though not all to a perfectionist, mattered most...
With the meeting of the Board of Overseers this afternoon it is believed probable that the appointment of Clarence H. Haring '07, professor of Latin American History and Economics to the Mastership of Dunster House will be confirmed by the Board...
...Greenough is not giving up any of his courses and at present has no intentions of resigning from the Faculty of the University, but merely feels that the work of the House Mastership is an additional strain at this time. His resignation marks the first break in the original list of seven men who were chosen at the beginning of the House Plan. Assuming the position in 1930 he was, with Julian L. Coolidge '95, professor of Mathematics, the first to hold the position of House Master in the University...
...subway express trains at 14th Street like any other nickel-paying subway rider. As the train hurtled downtown, Mr. Hedley smelled smoke. About the train curled acrid yellow fumes. President Hedley did not need to be told something was seriously wrong. He at once took mastership of the situation. Shouldering his way through the pack of nervous passengers to the front car, he told the motorman to stop beside a local at the Bleecker Street station. At his command the guards slid open the side doors. Using seats to bridge the gap between the tracks, the subway's president...