Word: abroad
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Oliver was born in Salem, Mass., in 1829. He graduated from the University in 1852 and from the Medical School in 1856. After leaving Cambridge he went abroad for a few years to complete his study of medicine, and then returned to take a position in the Massachusetts General Hospital. He left the hospital to take up private practice a few years later. In 1881 he gave up an extensive private practice on account of some trouble with his eyes, which later rendered him totally blind...
Profesor Foerster is one of the many students of the labor situation who believe that the present unrest is not caused primarily by the anarchy of the radical elements, either here or in Europe. "Strikes are now more prevalent in America and abroad than at any other period of modern history. They are not, however, due to the utterances of some long-haired European radical, but are caused by two entirely different factors. The first is the increasing pressure of the cost of living, which results in an unrest among the workingmen. The second is the growing feeling among...
...tonight under the auspices of the Harvard Mission, at which Alden H. Clark will speak on "The Spirit of Modern Missions and Reconstruction Work." The meeting will be held in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, at 7.15 o'clock. Mr. Clark will show the extent of the reconstruction work abroad and the great scope of the tasks of the missions overseas, as well as explain the great changes which have taken place during the last quarter-century...
...Kenneth C. MacArthur '04, pastor of the Old Cambridge Baptist Church, will speak at Phillips Brooks House tomorrow morning at 9.30. Dr. MacArthur has spent 11 months abroad with the 76th Infantry, and has had many interesting experiences "over there." His talk will be entitled "A Big Enough Ideal." All members of the University are invited to attend...
America is the accepted spokesman of world democracy, but a chain is no stronger than its weakest link. A doctrine which breaks down at home can hardly be propagated abroad. We have passed the day of the pious slave holder who became so deeply impressed with the plea for foreign missions that he sold one of his slaves to contribute liberally to the cause. If democracy cannot control lawlessness, then democracy is a failure...