Word: tutors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This year's resident in Dunster and Lowell Houses have been chosen by House Master and tutors with a view to each House having a typical slice from the human layer-cake of the College. Certain tutors will live in the Houses, others will have conference rooms in them and live elsewhere, but every student-in a given House will have at least on resident tutor. These methods are admittedly experimental. It is hoped that each House will in time develop an individuality and attract students by their major interests...
What, for the present, are the main differences to be expected under the House Plan? Undergraduates of the three upper classes will be grouped by Houses. Living and eating in the same building, they will see more of their tutors and of one another, and there can be more intermingling of under and upper-classmen. Athletics will become more inter-house and less inter-class, although the University athletic contests will go on as usual. Resident tutors will not be proctors. In fact, there will be no proctors in the Houses. To make resident tutors disciplinary officers would scarcely promote...
Activities in Dunster House were officially considered by the Student Committee in the House for the first time this year at a meeting held yesterday afternoon. At that time the committee meeting with Professor C. N. Greenough '98, Master, and R. G. Noyes, Head Tutor, considered several matters involving the efficient organization of House activities...
...commendations were formed for admission to the Master and Head Tutor Chief among these was the decision to appoint a House Library committee, consisting of five undergraduates and three tutors, which will assist in the management of the House Library. The Library, which is already open for use by members of the House during the day, will consist of about 5000 volumes at first, with provision for growth to an ultimate size of over 20,000 volumes. Besides the main room, which has shelves for about 5000 books, there is a stack room large enough to hold 4000 more. Each...
...that time the first year men will hear several speakers, who will discuss various phases of Freshman affairs. Delmar Leighton '19, Secretary of the Committee on the Choice of Electives, and Tutor in the Division of History, Government, and Economics, will discuss the choice of studies for the Freshman Year. He will be followed by Walter B. Briggs, Assistant Librarian of the Harvard College Library, who will speak on the Library Facilities of the University. The third speaker will be E. A. Whitney '17, Assistant Professor of History and Literature, speaking on the Lecture Course...