Word: proctor
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Positions as monitor and proctor for the University also were popular, 158 men serving as monitors and 85 as proctors. The Employment Office placed 74 students as tutors or tutor-companions, 64 as clerks, and 36 as chore men, while 34 secured typewriting work through the efforts of the office. There were also 22 student guides, 21 ushers, 17 chauffeurs, 15 musicians, and 13 waiters. Other students were employed as camp counselors during the summer, as salesmen and boys' club leaders, as stenographers and farmers, as coaches and translators, as janitors and librarians, and in a large variety of other...
Princeton, it would seem from the following "Warning From the Proctor" published in the Daily Princetonian, was published for the Harvard invasion in more ways than...
...lives there if he can help it; the proctor who was last year assigned to the dormitory has left. Whether his charges can or will remain is yet to be seen. Anyone who has ever been in the building will agree that it is not fit to be used as a dormitory; after an extensive investigation we were unable to find a single person who spoke a good word for Holyoke House...
...Donham '98 and two assistants. Mr. R. L. Dana, Law School '04, of the law firm of Pillsbury, Dana and Young, Boston, will give the course in Commercial Contracts. Law relating to Business Associations will be given by Mr. F. T. Field, Law School '03, of Goodwin, Proctor, Field and Hoar of Boston...
...paper. But the circumstances are not so alarming as they might seem; the Admiral is not threatened with the fate of "Pussyfoot" Johnson. If he is manhandled at all, it will be because the over-enthusiastic Englishmen of Cambridge have once again forgotten their sense of propriety. The Senior Proctor, who, it would seem, is the University's chief guardian of manners, has written to an undergraduate weekly, reminding the students that two years ago they "did in fact cause inconvenience and embarrassment to certain distinguished soldiers and sailors by pressing on their procession, clambering on their carriages, and manhandling...