Word: kinds
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...best way to see and understand the state is to have an interest in its social problems. To cultivate a spirit of fraternity is the only way; not pity or the kind of fraternity that makes a man so sensitive that he can't bear to ride in a street car because there are women standing in it, but fraternity such as exists between farmers when they get together for a barn raising. Every contact with the average man is a way of teaching democracy...
...most convenient box on his way out of the hall. There will be no checking of voters as the ballots are deposited. The polls will be open from 9.30 to 4 o'clock and the electorate will consist of all who have ever received a degree of any kind from the University...
...place to know answers this query plainly in his letter to President Lowell. They are coming from just such groups of men as that which has been training here for many months. The finishing touches which a regular training will put on them is bound to produce the kind of officer our country is looking for. Harvard has the French Officers, an almost perfect organization and a large body of serious, willing workers--three elements essential to the task which those who fostered the University regiment sought to do. It will take something decidedly more powerful than mere rumor...
...over one hundred Yale undergraduates are already in France in various kinds of military service and as thousands of students and graduates are fitting themselves to go over later it has seemed wise to the university authorities to be forehanded in establishing this bureau, which it is elieved, is the first of its kind arranged for an American university...
...admirable, and true to that everlasting spirit of youth, which in nations as in men leads to the accomplishment of stirring deeds, and the overleaping of the slow ways of commonsense. But in this war, which is one without romance and without chivalry, we have no resources of any kind to expend in a show of gallantry. Those boys, almost young men, who are not called on nor needed by our armies, will find the best way of helping their country in continuing the course of education they have begun, fitting themselves to be strong and honorable...