Word: researching
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...wall-sockets and often with fire-places, which may have been used for studies. The windows were loosely fitted into narrow slits in the walls, and the doors, even when the building was still in use, must have been in a dilapidated condition. Dr. Bonaparte made a special research into the sanitary conditions, but it was with difficulty that he discovered even the ordinary conveniences. These were of an extremely primitive nature and entirely inadequate for the buildings. In fact these dormitories were the most antiquated structures that we have unearthed, and were evidently built much earlier than most...
President Neilson touched only lightly on the use of a university in extending research work and in giving men an opportunity of professional training, while he dwelt at lengah on the opportunity which both universities and colleges should give their members of acquiring the greatest number of living contacts with the world. He further expressed his opinion that college education in this country is becoming more and more differentiated; that there is an ever-growing tendency to separate the able from the mediocre students and to give them the advantages of an intensive course of study under immediate individual supervision...
...higher degrees in his field will find in the meetings of the Conference a valuable opportunity. The advantages to be gained from any workshop or technical laboratory of this sort have been proved too often to be open for dispute. The constant exemplification of methods used in study and research is fully as desirable in the field of literature as it is in that of history, the classics, or the drama...
...Theodore E. Damm, Research Director of Joseph Richards Co., advertising agents of New York, will address the marketing group of the Business School Club in the Union at 7.30 this evening. His subject will be "What Service a Business Executive should expect from an Advertising Agency...
Professor Bouton was preeminently a teacher. Whether he were engaged in steering a Freshman section through the rocks and shoals that beset the approach to analytic geometry, or in guiding a graduate student in his research, he had an unerring instinct for picking out what was essential and vital, to the exclusion of the trivial and unimportant. His mathematical judgment was unerring, his advice on scientific questions was absolutely sound. No pains were too great to be expended on any student, his pupils had always the first claim to his time, and no one who applied...