| United States. Bureau of Education - Education - 1909 - 632 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning; that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs of accommodation, its vital processes of union. I am not suggesting that young men be dragooned... | |
| Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris - American literature - 1910 - 492 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs of accommodation, its vital processes of union. I am not suggesting that young men be dragooned... | |
| Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris, Charles W. Kent - American literature - 1910 - 494 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs of accommodation, its vital processes of union. I am not suggesting that young men be dragooned... | |
| Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris, Charles W. Kent - American literature - 1910 - 490 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...realities. It must become a community of scholars and pupils—a free community but a very real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs... | |
| Education - 1910 - 596 pages
...university in the hope and belief that no sensible fellow fit for a career can resist the infection. mode of association; that its courses are only its...side, its contacts and contagions its realities. It mifst become a community of scholars and pupils — a free community but a very real one, in which... | |
| Education, Higher - 1913 - 408 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...realities. It must become a community of scholars and pupils,—a free community but a very real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs... | |
| Norman Foerster - Education, Higher - 1913 - 414 pages
...this simple conception, that a college K f not only a body of studies but a mode of associaV tion ; that its courses are only its formal side, its contacts...real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs of accommodation, its vital processes of union. I am not suggesting that young men be dragooned... | |
| Norman Foerster - English language - 1915 - 134 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs of accommodation, its vital processes of union. I am not suggesting that young men be dragooned... | |
| Norman Foerster - English language - 1915 - 120 pages
...set ourselves to make a home for the spirit of learning: that we reorganize our colleges on the lines of this simple conception, that a college is not only...realities. It must become a community of scholars and pupils,—a free community but a very real one, in which democracy may work its reasonable triumphs... | |
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