Harvard Alumni Bulletin, Količina 19Harvard Bulletin, Incorporated, 1916 |
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Ambulance Field Service American Ambulance Field annual appointed assistant Associated Harvard Clubs athletics ball Brookline Brown Cambridge candidates Captain chairman Charles Chicago Club of Boston coaches committee Coolidge coöperation course Dean dent Department dinner director Editor elected Ellery Sedgwick Faculty football forward pass France Frederick freshman Fund George give graduates Hall Harvard Alumni Association HARVARD ALUMNI BULLETIN Harvard Bulletin Harvard College Harvard Medical School Harvard Union Harvard University Henry Horween Hospital Howard Elliott instructor John John Harvard Law School lectures lege LL.B M. A. DeWolfe March married Mass Massachusetts Medical School meeting memorial ment military Miss National October officers Ph.D play present President Lowell Princeton Profes Professor Robert Roger Pierce Saturday scholarship secretary Soldiers Field spoke tion Training Corps Treasurer Tuition fee undergraduates vard versity vice-president week William Yale York City
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 592 - To such a task we can dedicate our lives and our fortunes, everything that we are and everything that we have, with the pride of those who know that the day has come when America is privileged to spend her blood and her might for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace which she has treasured. God helping her, she can do no other.
Stran 589 - ... which ministers to their sustenance. We are speaking of no selfish material rights but of rights which our hearts support and whose foundation is that righteous passion for justice upon which all law, all structures alike of family, of state, and of mankind must rest, as upon the ultimate base of our existence and our liberty. I cannot imagine any man with American principles at his heart hesitating to defend these things.
Stran 592 - Right in the van, On the red rampart's slippery swell, With heart that beat a charge, he fell Foeward, as fits a man: But the high soul burns on to light men's feet Where death for noble ends makes dying sweet...
Stran 589 - In the measures to be taken to secure the future peace of the world the people and Government of the United States are as vitally and as directly interested as the Governments now at war. Their interest, moreover, in the means to be adopted to relieve the smaller and weaker peoples of the world of the peril of wrong and violence is as quick and ardent as that of any other people or Government. They stand ready, and even eager, to cooperate in the accomplishment of these ends, when the war is over,...
Stran 320 - An Act for making further and more effectual provision for the national defense, and for other purposes...
Stran 294 - The fact of a neutral Power resisting, even by force, attempts to violate its neutrality cannot be regarded as a hostile act.
Stran 293 - A neutral Power is not called upon to prevent the export or transport, on behalf of one or other of the belligerents, of arms, munitions of war, or, in general, of anything which can be of use to...
Stran 589 - We are provincials no longer. The tragical events of the thirty months of vital turmoil through which we have just passed have made us citizens of the world. There can be no turning back. Our own fortunes as a nation are involved, whether we would have it so or 25 not.
Stran 301 - Fewer courses, more thoroughly given, which would free instructors for a larger amount of personal supervision of the students, would be better for the pupils; and would make it possible for the university to allow those members of the staff who are capable of original work of a high order more time for productive scholarship. Many a professor at the present day, under the pressure of preparing a new course, cannot find time to work up the discoveries he has made, or to publish a work throwing a...
Stran 456 - Applications," on May 17. THE library of the late Professor Hugo Münsterberg has been given to Harvard University by a group of his friends. The library consists of about 10,000 books, reprints, pamphlets, manuscripts, charts and other papers. Among the 3,000 books in the collection are the latest and most valuable ones on experimental and applied psychology, especially those bearing on phases of the subject to which Professor Münsterberg had devoted his time.