Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Everyone graduating from Harvard knows of the increasing demand throughout American towns and cities for broadminded and intelligent men to assume some share of responsibility in the political or social welfare of these communities. A representative university like Harvard is always ready to aid in securing positions in such a field of progressive activity; and there is no time a man appreciates more keenly what his college stands for than at the end of the Senior year. Association in any of the work to be outlined by the speakers means sacrificing only a few hours each month...
...Woods took "Vocation: Democracy in the Main Action of Life." Real vocation, he said, was to know the moral meaning of the task taken up, whatever that task might be. He showed that the prevalent idea of the meaning of work as a means of controlling the greatest share of material products was fast giving way to the consideration of work and especially of useful co-operation as a means of service to mankind. He took up the question of president-day industrial problems and showed that the interests of capital and labor were identical in many respects such...
...each side. The city in large measure creates the atmosphere in which the University lives: clean streets, pure water, public order, a community living on a high level of education and morality, make conditions to which parents willingly commit their sons. The University is only meeting its fair share of the mutual obligations in offering the services of its staff to help in the improvement of the conditions under which both it and the city must live. It is gratifying to know that these services are strengthening the bonds of good feeling...
...preparatory schools to learn just where the available athletic talent of those institutions would continue their scholastic work when they graduate next June, divulges the fact that Yale will profit materially in the matter of selection, as the New Haven university is scheduled to draw by far the larger share of the captains of the school teams...
...hold on New England, and get far too small a number of the strong and able boys who still pour out of the ancient fountain of manhood. If the clubs respond to this call of the Federation, Harvard will be enabled to enter again into a more fitting share of mutual service in the home country...