Word: abstractedly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...form a disinterested opinion on the abstract question of co-education, it need hardly be said, is a very difficult matter. Indeed it can almost be said that such an opinion is impossible. Co-education is as much a question of distinct practical conditions and local influences as it is one of theoretical utility. Testimony that can be gathered from all quarters is so conflicting in character that it is next to impossible to secure any concensus of opinions which might decide...
...article in the Student and Statesman entitled "A Defence of College Athletics," an abstract of which is given on our first page, is a valuable contribution to the discussion in regard to the value of inter-collegiate sports. The writer takes up a phase of the question which has thus far in the discussion received far too little attention. As he says in the introduction to his article, writers on both sides of the question have up to this time made the false assumption that very few men receive benefit from inter-collegiate athletics. It is natural...
...protection. Political economy is indeed a popular subject here, as shown by the number of men who take courses in that study and in the recent movement for the enlargement of the department in instruction, but the tendency has been, as at most colleges, to instill into students certain abstract principles of free trade on which are based opinions that show little acquaintance with the practical workings of our national institutions and prove equally intolerant with those of the extreme protectionists. As one of the Cooper Institute speakers says, "they do this without reflecting that those theories are constructed from...
...following is an abstract of the lecture delivered by Mr. F. W. Taussig on "Protection to Young Industries in the United States" before the Finance Club Tuesday evening : "The lecturer considered the argument for protection to young industries, in its application to the United States. The essential part of this argument, he said, lay in the fact that the obstacles to the establishment of the young industries were supposed to be temporary and artificial, of such a character as would not prevent the final establishment of the industry, even without protection. Then he considered the course of industrial history...
...following is an abstract of the new regulations at Princeton concerning athletics. As will be seen, playing base-ball games with professionals is not directly prohibited; but, as only eight days of touring are allowed, and the time for games in Princeton even is limited, it will hardly be possible to keep up the old method of practice games with professionals: Lists of all foot-ball and base-ball teams allowed to play out of town shall be filed in the registrar's office; and each member must also file the written consent of his parent or guardian...