Word: moralizes
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...favor staying out." In view of the fact that the League of Nations is the vital issue of the campaign, a Cox-Roosevelt Club has been formed for the effective organization of pro-League sentiment among the students of the University. Believing that the League is the greatest moral issue with which the people of the United States has ever been confronted, the Cox-Roosevelt Club stands unequivocally for the ratification of the Treaty and Covenant with such clarifying or interpretative reservations as may be consistent with American tradition, and for the prompt participation of the United States in this...
Morning prayers will be conducted in Appleton Chapel at 8.45 by Professor George Herbert Palmer, A.M., L.L.D., Litt.D., L.H.D., Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity, emeritus. Services will close promptly at 9 o'clock to enable students to reach their classes at that hour...
Services, beginning Monday, will be conducted as follows: September 27, Professor Edward C. Moore, Ph.D., D.D.; September 28. President Lowell; September 29, Professor George H. Palmer, A.M., LL.D., Litt.D., L.H.D., Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity, emeritus; September 30, Professor William B. Munro, LL.B., Ph.D., L.D.; October 1, Professor Clifford H. Moore, Ph.D., Litt.D., October 2, Professor James H. Ropes...
Dr.A.P. Fitch will be the speaker. These meetings, which will come every Monday night throughout the fall term, are primarily religious in their nature, although their scope extends to problems of all sorts--economic, moral, educational, industrial and political. By these meetings Freshmen are given an opportunity to hear well-known men speak on subjects closely akin to the daily life of the college...
...over by the beginning of the Endowment Fund, but the University will still be left in an unfavorable position if the fund is not completed. The Law School, perhaps is the least needy of the various departments of the University, because its position of prestige gives it a certain "moral advantage" over its rivals, which attracts many promising instructors to Cambridge rather than elsewhere...