Word: normally
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...complete table of registration for the summers of 1912 and 1913 follows: 1913 1912 Teachers in colleges and universities, 34 28 Teachers in normal schools, 5 8 Teachers in high schools, 73 87 Teachers in endowed schools, 36 37 Teachers in grade schools etc, 118 102 Superintendents, 5 8 Principals and supervisors, 42 47 Total teachers, 313 317 Harvard students, 92 98 Students of other colleges, 69 55 No occupation given, 39 76 Social workers, etc., 16 9 Clergymen, 6 9 Lawyers, 2 10 Physicians, 4 4 Librarians, 3 3 Secretaries, 5 5 Engineers, 3 - Newspaper work, 3 2 Clerks...
...where the College Chapel was, that he did not know. Pathetic, yes, and humorous, but a kind of pathos and humor that can make hypocrites of a good many of us. For several years after compulsory Chapel was abolished, such episodes might have been expected, for a reaction is normal after any ailment. Undoubtedly the next Count at Harvard will convulse us with tales of the present morning Chapel, or rather lack of it. But we think that the time is here of Harvard men to come to a realization of the fact that a happy medium is desirable. Therefore...
Ernest C. Moore, now profesor of education at Yale, is appointed professor of education. Professor Moore received the degree of A.B. from Ohio Normal University in 1892, the degree of A.M. from Columbia University four years later, and that of Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1898. Besides teaching in the University of California, where for two years he was Dean of the Summer Session, and at Yale, where for the past three years he has been professor of education, he served for four years as superintendent of schools at Los Angeles. He was associated with Professor Hanus...
...Anderson, Jr., now instructor in economics in Columbia University, has been appointed assistant professor of economics. Dr. Anderson graduated from the University of Missouri in 1906, receiving the degree of A.M. from that institution in 1910, and that of Ph.D. from Columbia in 1911. Besides teaching at the State Normal School, Cape Girardeau, Mo., in the high school in Columbia, Mo., and tat Missouri Valley College, he served four years as head of the department of history and political economy at the State Normal School, Springfield...
...school and as several men from the class of 1913 are planning to enter next fall, it is the plan of this reception which is becoming an annual affair, to give the undergraduate members of the St. Paul's Society a much needed opportunity for seeing the normal life in a theological school and for meeting with other Harvard men who are preparing for a life work in the ministry. Dean Hodges, of the school, will speak, and after the formal reception there will be a chance for undergraduates to meet, in a more informal...