Word: professionals
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Passing to educational problems from a discussion of the disused human brain in a New York Times interview yesterday, Dr. Stewart Paton of Princeton put no undecided finger on a type of modern educator that is heartily regretted everywhere, while at the same time there seem to be no immediate...
The phenomenon is familiar. The University's newest changes in educational lines have been aimed at minimizing the deadening influence of such men. And the cause of the phenomenon is not much farther to seek. Colleges--that is to say, the machinery of education--are being called on to handle...
The Division of Chemistry is hardly flattered by this morning's very badly written account of it, which pretends to be a guide to concentrators. Aside from the awkward and inelegant English of the author, his impressions of Chemistry as a science or a profession leave much to be desired...
Next day, a highly commendable young man, a polished, a politically-minded young man ferried across to the Island, took charge. His name is Benjamin M. Day, by profession a downtown lawyer, by inclination a onetime president of the Young Men's Republican Club. Said Major Curran: "Ben Day is...
In Boston, Dr. Richard Clarke Cabot pontificates unofficially over the medical profession, doubtless naturally for he has been teaching as well as practicing and writing for many a year.