Word: humanity
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...PATHOLOGICAL COLLOQUIUM. "Puncture Wound of the Medulla." Dr. S. Ordway. "The Conglutinin of Bovine Serum." Dr. F. P. Gay. "The Reaction of Fixation as Applied to Detection of Racial Differences in Human Blood." Dr. J.G. FitzGerald. Library of Pathological Department, Building D, Medical School, Longwood avenue, Boston, 4 P.M. Open to members of the University and to physicians...
...PATHOLOGICAL COLLOQUIUM. "Puncture Wound of the Medulla." Dr. S. Ordway. "The Conglutinin of Bovine Serum." Dr. F. P. Gay. "The Reaction of Fixation as Applied to Detection of Racial Differences in Human Blood." Dr. J. G. FitzGerald. Library of Pathological Department, Building D, Medical School, Longwood avenue, Boston, 4 P. M. Open to members of the University and to physicians...
...long time, and does credit to the writer and to those whose enterprise furnished the material for such a description. Undoubtedly the position formerly held by classical studies and literature is now coming to be held by the political and social sciences in all our American universities. The "new humanities," as these studies are coming to be called, concern themselves, as did the old humanities with the strivings of the human spirit, but with its strivings after justice rather than beauty. That Harvard students are awake to these interests, as well as to the problems of physical science...
...never killed anybody but white soldiers, and was never known to kill a woman or child under any conditions. I remember when I was a doctor at Pine Ridge, the soldiers disarming the whole reservation and shooting down the defenceless Indians and afterwards chasing and killing the women. Human nature is the same the world over. We have been barbaric, we have been cruel, but you take a poor negro, cover him with oil and burn him at the stake. We have not done this for a hundred years, and yet you are a civilized people...
There are many branches to the medical profession, in some one of which any temperament can find congenial occupation and in all of which there is great opportunity for doing good. The science of medicine touches human life more closely than any other branch of learning...