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...money, Barnard took steps to live within its present income. Resident students (about a third of the total) got a polite ultimatum: do your own housekeeping chores or pay more rent. The girls voted to do the chores. At the same time they were told that Dean Millicent Carey Mclntosh was taking an informal leave of absence, would put in her time scouting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Quakeress with a Quota | 2/21/1949 | See Source »

Raising money for any liberal arts school in a scientific age is hard enough; raising it for a women's college, as Dean Mclntosh knows, is the limit. As a male educator once put it: "When a man wants to leave money to his college, he leaves it. When a woman wants to leave money to her college, she finds that her late husband has tied up her money in a trust fund so that she can't make a fool of herself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Quakeress with a Quota | 2/21/1949 | See Source »

Millicent Carey Mclntosh believes in speaking her mind. She has been doing it for 26 years as a teacher of girls (at Bryn Mawr and Brearley), and for the past year as dean of Barnard, Columbia University's little sister. Last week, at the New York Herald Tribune's annual forum, Dean Mclntosh made one of her most outspoken speeches, which had considerably more muscle than the inaugural address of Columbia's President Eisenhower (TIME, Oct. 25). Said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Plain Words from the Dean | 11/1/1948 | See Source »

...Delegate General A. G. L. McNaughton, Gromyko confided that he hadn't been able to get a decent apple since he arrived in the U.S. Agricultural Expert Wallace asked General McNaughton to suggest a couple of first rate Canadian varieties for the Russian. "Well," McNaughton drawled, "we have Mclntosh Reds-also the Northern...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: Of Customs & Apples | 7/26/1948 | See Source »

After a day's work as headmistress of Manhattan's fashionable girls' Brearley School, Mrs. Mclntosh rushes home to play with her four sons and one daughter (aged 7 to 13) until their 9:30 bedtime. To keep them "individuals," she packs off each of the children (including the twins) to a different school. Weekends, on a Massachusetts farm, the younger Mclntoshes get better acquainted with each other and with mother and father-Dr. Rustin Mclntosh, who is a professor of pediatrics at Columbia and director of Babies Hospital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Something to Hold On To | 12/9/1946 | See Source »

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