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Word: teacher (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

GRADUATE SCHOOLS' CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION. "Religion and the Teacher." Professor George G. Wilson. Phillips Brooks House, 7 P. M. All members of the Graduate Schools are invited to be present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar | 10/28/1911 | See Source »

That Professor Taussig has performed for this generation a service comparable to that performed by J. S. Mill for an earlier one, is an achievement of which all Harvard men may well be proud. As a teacher Professor Taussig has aroused enthusiastic interest in economics among undergraduates, and as a scholar by his pioneer work has commanded the admiration of those who, like himself, have devoted their lives to the study of economic problems. The qualifications that make a god teacher and the talents that make a good scholar are quite distinct. It is the possession of both in such...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TAUSSIG'S "PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS". | 10/18/1911 | See Source »

...apparatus of screen advocated by Mr. Craig might be. At the left stood a study chair and a desk of some period difficult to conjecture; in the chair sat the "Wise Man" philosophizing aloud, and near him, on a pedestal, an hour glass. The "Wise Man" was a teacher and he philosophized in language that betokened him an atheist. A "Fool" enters. He admits he is a fool but he tells not his beliefs about some things lest they be stolen from him. The "Fool" leaves and the philosopher continues his speculations. He is about to call his students when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Plays in Boston | 10/10/1911 | See Source »

Another prominent member of the class to which Justice Holmes belongs was the late Henry Pickering Bowditch: "soldier and scholar-teacher and friend." The brief biographical sketch by Dr. Harold C. Ernst '76 is timely and just. Dr. Bowditch by birth, by breeding, and by serviceableness represented the quintessence of Massachusetts culture and citizenship, whose consistent but unostentatious motto was ich dien...

Author: By Edward EYRE Hunt ., | Title: Mr. Hunt on Graduates' Magazine | 10/3/1911 | See Source »

...disturbances which have characterized the lectures in one of the large Sophomore courses during the last few weeks recall to some of us our school days, when any childish amusement was preferable to paying attention to the teacher. Apparently there are still many "college men" who are strongly addicted to the puerile habit of stamping. As a means of expressing approval or disapproval of what a lecturer says, the use of a pair of large and hardy feet (organs indispensable in many emergencies) is absurd. Men of impulsive natures with frequent and acute temptations to stamp in lectures, should practice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INFANTILE DEMONSTRATIONS. | 3/25/1911 | See Source »

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