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AMBULANCE SERVICE.

The part which Harvard men have been playing in the war is highly honorable. Some are helping to care for the wounded in France; others are fighting pestilence in Servia; and at present another "surgical unit" is being organized for work behind the lines. There is, however, room and need for much more service of this sort, not only on the part of men with medical training, but for others in general ambulance work.

There is no wish here to proselyte for aid to any particular party in the conflict. America has helped Germany, many think, in sending supplies to Belgium; and it happens that France and England are the countries at present most accessible to Americans for hospital work. Here is an opportunity to develop and mature in the presence of gigantic convulsions, and at the same time to serve the cause of humanity.

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