Word: mutualization
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Harvard has met Oxford on the athletic field, on the water, and now in the halls of debate. On each occasion the meeting has developed between the two, mutual appreciation and a better understanding. Today, as antagonists we salute the Oxonians, and we welcome them as good fellows...
Today, to a greater degree than ever before, Harvard belongs to the alumni and it is more than the hackneyed spirit of loyalty to Alma Mater that binds them together. They have a sense of proprietorship in a common enterprise, an interest in seeing it develop, and a mutual feeling of obligations to each other. The admission to the "fellowship of educated men" which goes with a bachelor's degree, was once lightly referred to as advantageous chiefly in entitling a man to membership in the New York Harvard Club. Certainly one of the greatest assets in graduation, which...
...bring the English and American student points-of-view together. Much more than the actual athletic results were accomplished by the Oxford-Cambridge track team's visit last summer. As a "getting-together" of English-speaking men for a common object, the track meet went far to provide a mutual understanding and respect...
...ignorant of the relations of life as a whole. We assume that for every subject there is a specialist, and that specialists can make up life. But social life consists, not only of specialization, but also of coordination. Only to the extent that all these functions work together with mutual understanding and with unity of purpose, can there be stability or effectiveness in human relations...
Apparently Europe must learn for herself that the only way out of the present situation lies in open dealing and mutual confidence. Until then economic stability and prosperity are practically impossible. Meanwhile, the lesson seems to be a hard one, and the temptation still great to make use of the familiar phrase. "After...