Word: live
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Nuss' Military Band; Grand March, including a sleigh march featuring Miss Pauline Mason in her "Snow Dance," supported by members of the Pilgrim Publicity Association and ladies in National costume; waltz in couples, by Miss Cunningham and Mr. Jaycock, and Fraulein and Herr Mueller; exhibition of skating apparel on live models; continental skating, by Mr. Jaycock; Hungarian dance in costume, by Miss Winifred Kilrane and Mr. Shute; presentation of fashionable skating costumes, on live models; ensemble of all costumes shown in previous numbers; exhibition of fancy skating by Fraulein and Herr Mueller; burlesque by University students; final parade...
...duty of Americans is clear. The United States must be prepared to fight if war is forced upon her. The logical necessity is no that of quixotically righting the wrongs of other nations, but of defending our national existence and honor. America as a people must live; although perhaps with Voltaire, the pacifists do not see the necessity. And we should be dull indeed if we did not profit by the experience of certain unprepared nations of Europe...
...minister is par excellence the religious leader of the community and religion is one of the most serious, the most permanent and inclusive interests of human beings. The sex hunger, the desire for food and clothing the passion to understand ourselves and the universe in which we live--these are the chief motor impulses of our race, and the third is the most inclusive of them all. Religion is not the creation of a book or priests or governments of institutions. It springs out of the heart of our human kind; it issues from the deep centres of human fears...
Teeming with good literature on live subjects, the current Harvard Graduates' Magazine's accounts of the splendid work done by alumni in the organization of military training camps must bring the blush of shame to the cheeks of University undergraduates who have winked at opportunities to enlist in the service of their nation. Discourses by General Wood and "1898" are the leading features of the December issue...
...should be. It has long been so in England. The salvation of our country must be worked out by men with training and a broader view. On the other hand, in this age of democracy no man can become truly, educated who has not at least a live interest in political issues. Every man, and, a-fortiori, every college man, should be at least an amateur politician...