Word: stevenses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Latecomers often trickle out into the hallways. Changing the lectures to Sever 211 has not altered the situation greatly. But sore backs and cramped legs are small penance for hearing the melodious, mild Irish brogue of Dr. Donoghue discourse on Yeats, Eliot, Shaw, and Stevens. For the rest of this...
Towards the end of the 1930's Harvard's told Psychology Department found itself divided four to three on every question. The four were E.G. Boring, S.S. Stevens, John G. Beebe-Center, and Karl S. Lashley -- all experimentalists interested in the animal or physiological psychology. By winning every vote they...
Not everyone in the University, however, shared the pioneering spirit of these men. President Conant (who loathed psychoanalysis) showed little interest in the proposals for a new department, and it was only when Paul Buck became Provost during the War that the Administration gave the idea serious consideration. With the...
Boring was chairman of the Department for the first two years of its existence, and found himself again in that position in 1945 when the Department of Social Relations came into existence. Boring suggested that the Psychological Laboratory leave Emerson Hall for the Social Relations people and move into the...
When he projects his own image, Harold Macmillan sounds more like Trollope than Tide. In an interview with Publisher Jocelyn Stevens in last week's issue of Queen magazine, the Prime Minister indulged in some mellow ruminations that could never have been cued by an adman: