Word: abroad
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...debate. The one thing clearly definite about the proportion is that it must tend to the elimination of national lines, the deadening of the spirit of nationality and the subordination of our own home interests to misty visions of international bliss. The spirit of internationalism bliss and bolshevism is abroad. It has overrun Russia, is overrunning Germany and other European countries and there are far too many indications of it right here at home. Let us preserve American ideals and stand fast to the principles of ordered liberty by observing which our country has grown great and by ignoring which...
...most unfortunate that conditions at the University are such that students coming from foreign lands remain almost completely aloof from their fellows of American blood. Mr. Hood pointed out in his communication of last Monday the great barriers intervening between us and our guests from abroad which not only prevent them from obtaining little more than a superficial knowledge of American customs and culture but also shut us out from the profit we might enjoy from associating more closely with them. He suggested certain remedies for the situation,--to wit, the mingling of foreign students with American in dormitories...
...There is no nation in Europe that suspects the motives of the United States." This fact was to President Wilson the most important and the most wonderful of his impressions gathered abroad...
...Walter C. Bailey '94, M.D. '98, has been appointed head of the Red Cross Commission to Poland. During the war, he was engaged in Red Cross Work abroad, as a member of the Rockefeller Tuberculosis Commission. He established tuberculosis dispensaries at Lyons, France, and was later appointed medical head of the Department of the Rhone, where his work was of great importance...
...working over Tommies and dough-boys alike--that was what made the Harvard Surgical Unit No. 22 a factor in knitting together a permanent Anglo-American friendship." This was the opinion expressed to a CRIMSON reporter yesterday by Captain Henry W. Woodward M.D. 15, who has been abroad with the University Unit since...