Word: research
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...from enjoying this privilege. Now, however, almost anyone who has sufficient knowledge of Latin and some other language is eligible. Students who desire to carry their work beyond their undergraduate life will benefit most, for they can now secure much easier than formerly a degree from a foreign university. Research scholars and those seeking the honors that can be won in a world-famed institution will welcome the change...
...pamphlet is under preparation by the vice-chancellor indicating what can be done in the way of teaching for research students at Cambridge, and steps have been taken to tabulate for future Cambridge students the facilities for research work in the great American centres of study. Of the 4,000 undergraduates of Cambridge University there are only 200 remaining in Cambridge, and work done in this direction can hardly be operative until after...
...Medical School has appealed to the people of Massachusetts to aid in a campaign to raise $18,000 in order that the work of the commission may be continued this year. At present the commission's free hospital is lacking in the necessary funds to carry on research work. The medical profession has already declared that the suspension or curtailment of the activities of this board would be a public calamity...
Instructor L. R. Ford '13, who is to enter military service; Assistant Professor J. L. Coolidge '95, who has been commissioned as major in the Ordnance Department, Washington; Professor Albert Sauveur, who is to continue in his technical research for the French Government; Associate Professor W. R. Spalding '87, who is to assist in the organization of bands at the Government cantonments; Professor R. A. Daly '95, who is to do Y. M. C. A. work; Dr. S. W. Ellsworth '93, of the Medical School, who has been commissioned as captain in the Medical Reserve Corps...
...engineer but in these days of chlorine gas, thermite bombs and other such instruments of carnage he is quite as indispensable on the battlefront as the builder of roads and bridges. All applied science, moreover, depends on pure science. It is in this latter field that the pioneering of research must be done. If we neglect pure science we shall in time have no science to apply. Any impairment of this country's present facilities for research in science, whether pure or applied, is therefore to be avoided if possible. --Boston Herald