Word: human
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...their guests will take place at the Union immediately after the morning meeting. Dr. John F. Moors '83, a member of the Harvard Corporation, will be the toastmaster. The Reverend Samuel McChord Crothers h.'99, minister of the First Parish Church (Unitarian), Cambridge, will speak on "Education and Human Nature." He will be followed by Professor Andre Morize, who will speak on "Some After-War Educational Problems...
...annual dinner of the association in the Harvard Union at one o'clock, Mr. John F. Moors '83, a member of the Harvard Corporation, will be the toast-master. The Reverend Samuel McChord Crothers '99 will speak on "Education and Human Nature," followed by an address by Professor Andre Morize on "Some After-War Educational Problems...
...called,--instruction in speech with a worthy technical proficiency, an approach to a scientific study of the principles involved in masterful speaking, are receiving today, in many universities and colleges a consideration which looks towards the placing of this branch of study on a plane with others of the humanities. That a building dedicated to the memory of our soldiers, to be used as a place for public gatherings should be in part devoted to the training of men in the art of speaking properly seems perhaps very natural. The part that the human voice has played in this great...
...boldly against any league of nations that is encumbered by a Democratic President, you are turning to bolshevism. If you fail to go into a league you are projecting somebody else in the same unenviable direction. What did we do without a phrase so happily applicable to all human needs? Boston Post...
When Harvard gets enough money, we should almost double our teaching staff. Our instructors would then be delivered from the drudgery of blue-pencilling copy-books, and have leisure for that serious work by which alone an university is made. Give them a chance to be human, and the undergraduate may find professors worthy of his friendship. Then when we have more money, we might equip our poverty stricken chairs with laboratories, theatres, libraries and all the other what-nois. Then, they tell us, their present progress would seem like marking time. Ask our men which they would rather have...