Word: constantly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Baron d'Estournelles de Constant gave an address in Emerson Hall yesterday afternoon on "American and European Co-operation for World Peace." He was introduced by President Lowell, who drew attention to the fact that no subject attracts more universal attention than world peace...
Baron d'Estournelles de Constant will give an address on "American and European Co-operation for World Peace" in Emerson D, this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Baron d'Estournelles has just finished a tour of the United States, speaking in many cities in favor of world peace and fraternity. He is one of the greatest living authorities on this subject, and one of its most untiring advocates. He was among the French delegates to the first and second Hague conferences, and is the founder and president of the International Conciliation Association, which has a strong position in this country...
Baron d'Estournelles de Constant, of Paris, will give an address in Emerson D next Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock on the subject of "American and European Co-operation for World Peace." Baron d'Estournelles, who has been making a tour of the United States, speaking in many of our large cities in behalf of international justice and fraternity, is a distinguished member of the French Senate and President of the French Arbitration Group of the Interparliamentary Union...
Throughout his active scientific life, he was a constant student of the recent Echini and examined and described a large part of the collections of the "Challenger," "Blake," and "Albatross" expeditions. He met the "Challenger" when it reached Halifax in May, 1873; and it was here that the scientists of that expedition prophesied that he would have a brilliant future. In the winter of that same year he passed through a terrible ordeal in the death of both his father and wife. Yet, though a changed man, he clung to his desire for new knowledge and, in accordance with...
...great faults to be found in books are that they are often compiled from other books and therefore give expression to theories and supposed facts which are really obsolete truths. They are deliberate thoughts and cannot be asked questions. Yet even in consulting men there is the constant danger that they, too, are not alive to the facts as they really stand. So the research student, if he expects to carry on his work successfully, must himself have formed imaginative ideas of what he is going to find drawn from the study of local conditions. He must have questions ready...