Word: psychologist
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...relations between man and woman. Browning was masculine to the core and it was this quality which enabled him to write so well on the subject. He put everything he had into his writing and this included human insight and psychology. But he was not primarily a preacher or psychologist but an artist and it was in this line that he excelled...
James Rowland Angell, eminent psychologist and President-Elect of Yale University, will be the guest of honor at the first Annual Dinner to be given by the Union in the Trophy Room next Tuesday evening, May 24. President Elect Angell took his A.M. at the University of Michigan in 1891 and was awarded the same degree by that university a year later. After instruction in psychology at the University of Minnesota, he became connected with the University of Chicago in 1894 and held various positions there; finally, beginning in 1911, that of Dean of the University. He is the holder...
...this action, a precedent is set in that Dr. Angell is not a Yale graduate. But he brings with him an extensive knowledge of western and eastern methods of education; a wide experience secured in business and in public service; the practice gained as a leading psychologist in the War Department and as the present chairman of the National Research Council; finally, the highest ideals as to the promotion and expansion of education. We congratulate Yale on her choice and extend to Dr. Angell our best wishes for success in this new field of his endeavors...
William MacDougall, the Oxford psychologist, whose "Body and Mind" and "The Group Mind" are well known wherever men study his subject, and who did unusual work among nervous cases during the war, has arrived at Harvard, and on Monday will take up his duties as Professor of Psychology. Until recently Professor MacDougall was a Fellow of Corpus Christi College at Oxford...
...Oliver Lodge printed in the CRIMSON of Feb. 13th, he will see that the CRIMSON did not state what it believed to be the "scientific status of investigations of the supernormal as expounded by Sir Oliver Lodge." The CRIMSON only stated that "It was refreshing to see an eminent psychologist take a stand against Lodge." And this most certainly Professor Hall did in his article printed in the Boston Herald...