ENSURING PROGRESS
SCIENTIFIC AND MATERIAL ACHIEVEMENT. “There is a growing conviction that man’s scientific and material achievements have outstripped his spiritual development, and thus, if progress is to continue, it must be al a new level of consciousness which is the result of man's realisation to Hie full of his spiritualQmssibilities.," said Miss Beatrice Baker, an English headmistress, in a reccjnt 8.8. C. talk. “And so if our young people arc to be trained to lead a full and happy life and be prepared for whatever the future may bring them, they must pass beyond the enjoyment of the physical side of their nature to an appreciation of their intellectual powers and beyond this again to an appreciation of the creative spirit, of the universe waiting f n opportunity' to express itself v one of them as in all men. The lion of (he Divine Spirit is > cd to one race, one rel : : op but is universal —anc the one sure fop" 4 national oullool Members of t told, arc often ity functions. 1
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 2 November 1939, Page 6
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174ENSURING PROGRESS Wairarapa Times-Age, 2 November 1939, Page 6
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