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...half-course, meeting Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 11 during the second half-year. The first part of the course deals with Europe since, 1815, the later part with the opening up of the East. It deals directly with missions as the spiritual aspect of the contact of the West with the East. The organization of missions at home, the progress of missions abroad will be discussed in detail...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Change Announced in History 24b | 2/9/1910 | See Source »

...university principles should be uppermost in his mind. Some of the very best teachers I have known, and some of the very best teachers that you have known, are not versed primarily in the science of education. Some of the very best scholars with whom you have come in contact here at Harvard, may have impressed you as men not peculiarly gifted as teachers. The art of teaching is a thing by itself. I, myself, find difficulty in understanding from what it springs. Surely, through it must be moving that sign of perception that leads the teacher to understand that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRES. GARFIELD'S ADDRESS | 12/10/1909 | See Source »

...speak with some knowledge of the life that would be yours, were you to go into teaching as a profession, and your road were to lie in a secondary school, for I had one year's experience. There you are, so to speak, seeing and coming into close contact with young life at the very source, before the time that the young life has drawn away from the early ideas formed in the home. I assure you that if you were to go into that sort of life, it would be a very delightful one, because of this close contact...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRES. GARFIELD'S ADDRESS | 12/10/1909 | See Source »

...popular belief that college ideals are higher than those of the great world outside, for they are less exposed to contact with its rougher aspects. So college journalism, which may be forgiven many mistakes in style and finish, should never be guilty of any least infringement on the laws of propriety. That any publication, issued at Harvard and circulated in the College, should go beyond the bounds which civilized society erects, is an offence not only to those now connected with the University, but also to all who have labored to build up its high standards...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JOURNALISTIC PROPRIETY. | 12/3/1909 | See Source »

...regretted that the Musical Clubs can not take as long a Western trip as had been planned, for Harvard graduates living beyond the Mississippi have little opportunity to come into contact with our College organizations. How to maintain their interest in the University, and how to attract more students from the western half of the country are problems, the solution of which has only been begun in the last few years by renewed activity on the part of University officials...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MUSICAL CLUB'S TRIP. | 12/2/1909 | See Source »

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