The problems that call for sober thoughtfulness and mere devotion are as pressing as those which call for practical efficiency. We are here not merely to release the faculties of men for their own use, but also to quicken their social understanding, instruct... Outlook and Independent - Side 4751902Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| Edwin Du Bois Shurter - 1903 - 278 sider
...superficial nor pedantic, which values life more than it values the mere acquisitions of the mind. There are other things besides mere material success...fit men for thorough scientific investigation and for the tasks of exact scholarship, for science and scholarship carry the truth forward from- generation... | |
| Woodrow Wilson - 1903 - 54 sider
...consciences, and give them the catholic vision of those who know their just relations to their fellow men. Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...fit men for thorough scientific investigation and for the tasks of exact scholarship, for science and scholarship carry the truth forward from generation... | |
| 1903 - 322 sider
...consciences, and give them the catholic vision of those who know their just relations to their fellow men. Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...square its standards by that law or lack its national title.J It is serving the nation to give men the enlightments of a general training ; it is serving... | |
| 1908 - 456 sider
...of others." Dr. Woodrow Wilson, when inducted into the presidency of Princeton University, said, " Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...standards by that law or lack its national title." The key-note of President James's inaugural address at the University of Illinois was that " the object... | |
| Martha Foote Crow - 1915 - 408 sider
...away in its lack of their dynamic and rejuvenating presence. CHAPTER XX THE COUNTRY GIRL'S TRAINING Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...standards by that law or lack its national title. — President Wilson. The object of all education is to fit men for service. — Edmund Janes James.... | |
| Woodrow Wilson - 1925 - 1090 sider
...consciences, and give them the catholic vision of those who know their just relations to their fellow men. Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...fit men for thorough scientific investigation and for the tasks of exact scholarship, for science and scholarship carry the truth forward from generation... | |
| P. C. Kemeny - 1998 - 368 sider
..."citizens" who would live under the "high law of duty." "Every American university," Wilson concluded, "must square its standards by that law or lack its national title." 1 Wilson's inauguration appeared to confirm the New York Sun's assessment of his election: "the secularization... | |
| Amy A. Kass - 2002 - 444 sider
...them the catholic vision of those who know their just relations to their fellow men. Here in America, for every man touched . . . with the spirit of our...standards by that law or lack its national title." The university is not a refuge to dream in, Wilson argues, but a place "for a thoughtful poring upon... | |
| 1915 - 528 sider
...article. — -Ed.) When President Wilson was inaugurated President of Princeton University, he said : "Here in America, for every man touched with nobility,...standards by that law or lack its national title." Dr. Edmund James, president of the University of Illinois, takes up the same motive when he says: "The... | |
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