Word: needful
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...ideal, or apt to be largely attended. "Colonel Fiske," rapped Edwin W. Thorn, Parisian Legion official, "has made statements both absolutely and profoundly ridiculous, if he has been correctly quoted. . . The public water supply of Paris is one of the purest in the world. . . There is no more need for inoculation, and no more danger of ptomaine poison in Paris than at home...
...race is not always to the swift", in all truth; nor is it to the co-educationally stunted mentality. All praise to them who race their tedious way to glory on Brattle. There is no need for a medley relay...
...first six were designed to help men better to understand the part of organized religion in the world today, and the last five touched, more intimately on the religious problems and perplexities faced by the individual. The lectures were as follows: The first half: Prof. R. C. Cabot, "The Need of Religion"; Rev. A. F. Hickey, "Roman Catholocism"; Rabbi S. S. Wise, Judaism"; Dean W. L. Sperry, "Protestantism"; Dr. H. S. Fosdick, "The Future of the Church." The second half: Dr. Frederick Palmer, "Is Immortality Necessary?"; Prof. J. H. Woods, "Philosophy of Religion"; Prof J. B. Pratt, "Faith and Workship...
...time were available, the upperclassmen would undoubtedly devote much of it in knowing and learning to serve better his own particular patients. Medical students have their greatest opportunity for social service in their everyday contacts with suffering humanity in the hospitals of this vicinity. They have no need of seeking out social service; it is right here at their feet--if they have half a heart they can not turn away...
...glory of the Phillips Brooks House, the annual report of which is contained in this issue, lies in its practicality. One need be neither athletic, pessimistic, or radical to safely say that the spiritual contributions of such an organization to the life of the bulk of undergraduates are dubitable. Religion, both in and out of college, is coming to be recognized as a matter for the individual conscience and any effort to force it on the public is likely to result in the annihilation of its aim. Be it to the credit of the Phillips Brooks House that the delicacy...