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Word: burnett (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...University-Dean Alexander Meiklejohn and Professor W. C. Bronson; Dartmouth College-Professor Louis H. Dow '90 and Professor John K. Lord; University of Vermont-President Matthew H. Buckman and Professor Frederic Tupper, Jr.; Williams College-President Henry Hopkins and Dean F. C. Ferry '95; Bowdoin College-Professor Charles T. Burnett and Professor Henry Johnson; Middlebury College-President Ezra Brainerd and Professor Charles B. Wright; Amherst College-Professor John M. Tyler; Trinity College-President Flavel S. Luther and Professor F. C. Babbitt '90; Wesleyan University-Professor William N. Rice and Professor A. C. Armstrong; Tufts College-President Frederick W. Hamilton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES | 12/5/1907 | See Source »

...Burnett, G. H., undecided...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Occupations | 6/22/1906 | See Source »

...Beck Hall Spread, Beck Hall, immediately after the Stadium exercises--R. Amory, Jr., W. H. Appleton, J. D. C. Bradley, S. F. T. Brock, G. H. Burnett, I. T. Burr, Jr., S. Cabot, Jr., C. Cobb, L. Delano, W. F. Emerson, O. D. Filley, R. Fitz, F. A. Goodhue, R. Grant, Jr., C. P. Greenough, 2nd, W. F. Harrison, V. Hollingsworth, J. R. Cooper, Jr., LeR. King, O. Matsukata, W. G. Means, L. G. Morris, D. A. Newhall, J. D. Nichols, J. Parkinson, Jr., A. J. D. Paul, J. D. Peabody, R. M. Poor, S. D. Preston, H. H. Whitman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Class Day Spreads | 6/22/1906 | See Source »

Under the auspices of the Philosophical Club, Dr. C. T. Burnett '00, instructor in philosophy at Bowdoin College, delivered a lecture in Sever 11 last night on "The Art of Misleading" or "The Psychology of Advertising...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Burnett on the Art of Misleading | 4/28/1906 | See Source »

There is a tendency on the part of most men, Dr. Burnett said, to assume things on utterly unsatisfactory grounds. This tendency is manifested when we substitute our feelings of absurdity, religious sentiment, mere physical pleasure, or extreme delight in the beautiful, for reasoning thought. It shows itself also when our moral feelings destroy our true perspective of the beautiful, or when our feelings for the beautiful usurp our moral ideas...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Burnett on the Art of Misleading | 4/28/1906 | See Source »

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