Word: prided
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...parties. Many financiers, railroad magnates and money kings actually have strong political opinions and work earnestly for their respective parties. So the undergraduate need not feel that he is conspicuously different from others, if he makes an effort to be politically well informed. In fact the best educated citizens pride themselves on their knowledge of current politics. The feeling that a real gentleman should hold himself aloof from the vulgar activities of politics has disappeared long...
Once again Harvard can point with pride to a group of graduates who have bravely helped to alleviate the sufferings of Europe's wounded soldiers. The fourth contingent of the Harvard Medical Unit has just returned from a three-months' term of service "somewhere in France." The report of the body contains accounts not only of praiseworthy sacrifice and energy in caring for the sick and wounded, but also of brilliant observations and research work in the medicine of warfare. The men who have made the work of these units of such inestimable value deserve the highest praise, and individually...
...great European conflict. Nay, we are led to believe that "our error is far more often on the side of indifference than of intolerance." What must be the astonishment of the thoughtful reader when the next issue of the CRIMSON not only points out, in a tone of evident pride and satisfaction, that the institution on the Charles has, among the leading educational institutions of America, distinguished itself above all others for the participation of its members in the Great War, on the side of France; but also declares, in the most emphatic manner, that this highly unnatural conduct constitutes...
...Harvard element in the list of "Citations" for special manifestations of courage and devotion. The list contains 30 names, 14 of which belong to Harvard men. This is a record in which the whole body of the Alumni, however variegated their shades of belief, may take a wholesome pride...
...ever on the things which unite, less than ever on the things which divide. Not yet have the protagonists of unity reached their goal. But the churches are more joined in co-operation and mutual helpfulness than was ever possible in the days of rigid dogma and unyielding denominational pride. It will be difficult for the Harvard Divinity School to celebrate its own work without at the same time celebrating these advantages toward what Dr. A. C. McGiffert, in summing up the aims of the Christian faith, recently called "the control of all human relationships and institutions by the spirit...