Word: supplemental
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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They took a seemly oath: "... I pledge myself . . . to consider ever primary to my own, the welfare of patients dependent upon my professional knowledge and skill; ever to respect the interests and reputations of my colleagues; as occasion requires, to supplement my own judgment with the wisdom and counsel of competent medical specialists; to render my assistance willingly to my colleagues; to extend freely my professional aid to the unfortunate, the poor and the needy; to advance steadily in knowledge by the reading of authoritative medical literature, by attendance at important gatherings of medical men, by postgraduate instruction from...
...loan exhibition of drawings by the "little Dutch masters" of the Seventeenth century will be held at the Germanic Museum from Wednesday, March 25 to Saturday, April 25. The purpose of the show is to supplement the exhibition of Rembrandt etchings held at the Fogg Museum, and to illustrate the artistic activities of Rembrandt's contemporaries. The works of these artists have been sadly neglected by American collectors and as a result, in spite of their great charm, they are exceedingly rare. The Germanic Museum has gathered together a notable group of over fifty drawings from public and private collections...
...scandal investigations in 1929 (and like him, an old gossiper in "The Statesman's Window"), was about to give further testimony concerning those scandals before a grand jury. Observers wondered if Potter, in order to obtain funds for attorneys' fees in his forthcoming trial, had offered to supplement what was known in the land-grant case. It was said that many an official crook would have wished his death in that event. The Cleveland Plain Dealer went so far in its news columns as to remark: "Is it possible that whoever killed Bill Potter considered . . . that...
...publications, the "Harvard Teachers Record" makes its initial appearance this week. This production of the Graduate School of Education, to be published quarterly, is not an entirely new venture in educational journalism for it was formerly issued as a season of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin and later as a supplement to it. The chief purpose will be that of keeping the alumni and friends of the school in touch with its ideas and activities, while one issue will be devoted mainly to the annual meeting of the Harvard Teachers Association...
...broadening and cultural effects arising from study abroad as a supplement to work done in American schools and colleges cannot readily be overstated. Whereas the large European Universities as Geneva and the Sorbonne in Paris have a large percentage of foreigners in their student enrollment, the Universities of America are prone to be localized and essentially nationalistic in outlook. Furthermore few have the opportunity of associating with European students here, as they are so thinly scattered throughout the country...