Word: successively
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...success of the "baby dean" system, inaugurated by Dean Greenough several years ago rests largely on the degree of personal contact established between the dean and the members of his class. True, the juvenile administrative officer must be dignified if possible and even scholarly after a fashion, but above all he must possess the qualifications which will enable him to look at scholastic pitfalls through the eyes of the undergraduate whom he serves. Under ordinary-circumstances this ideal can only be served by constant renewal and change in the personnel of University 4. Thus, it is with mixed feelings...
...office of assistant dean are not mathematically definable. The extraordinary has been clearly discernible in the work of Mr. Mayo, dean of the Sophomore class, and of Mr. Bacon, dean of the Junior and Senior classes. But as a working principle it is as reasonably sure of success as a long-term system. Assistant deans may not become estranged from the view point of the undergraduate in three or five years. Many of them grow, perhaps, in understanding of the student, but the appointment of younger graduates obviates any possibility of the Faculty dominating undergraduates in the connecting link between...
Next year will see only one familiar face-Dean Bacon's,-in the office of the Dean. To him the CRIMSON wishes a continuance of the success which has attended his work and that of his outgoing colleagues. To the succeeding assistant deans,-terms of office, not necessarily long but as happy as those of their predecessors...
...case to say that the reading periods as instituted next year-will have a very definite reaction on the work done in summer vacations. At present the average man feels that reading done independently and without coercion is very fine but it has little to do with his scholastic success in college. He must eventually learn, however, that reading with or without an incentive is seldom quite barren of results. Even in August an afternoon spent looking at a book must leave some impression on the mind, the exact permancy being determined by the book which gives and the mind...
...taste, for he has more than hinted that his inspiration while making the picture was of as divine an origin as was Moses' when he received the Ten Commandments. Evidently the completed film was the work of Cecil B. de Mille in co-operation with Michel the Archangel. Whatever success the picture has, piously murmurs the gentlman, is due not so much to himself as to his celestial...