Word: cabote
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Another part of the work of the Phillips Brooks House Association is that of lectures on religious subjects. The Sunday Afternoon Lecture Course on Religion has been continued this year with an average attendance, during the first half year of about 300 men. Professor R. C. Cabot opened the course by speaking on "The Need of Religion." The Rev. A. F. Hickey spoke on "Roman Catholicism", Rabbi S. S. Wise on "Judaism," Dean W. L. Sperry on "Protestantism," Prof. Kirsopp Lake on "The Modern Trend of Religion," and Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick on "The Future of the Church." In addition...
ADVENTURES ON THE BORDERLAND OF ETHICS-Richard C. Cabot, M. D. -Harper ($2). Professor Cabot of Social Ethics at Harvard, as sincere a servant as ever stood before the Lord and his fellows, some years ago gave a thoughtful public something to chew on in What Men Live By (1914). He now proposes the study of Ethics (a word more inclusive and less suspect than Morals) by toilers in various vine-yards-Theology, Medicine, Business, Education, Social Work...
Business is no uncharted field for Dr. Cabot. It was he who encouraged Sidney Howard (now playwright) to work up and write The Labor Spy; he who helped institute the case system at Dean Donham's Harvard School of Business Administration. He recommends: enforcement of industrial codes by voluntary arbitration boards, the codes to embody the "maximum ethics" of Christianity...
...education Dr. Cabot has the experience of his wife, Ella Lyman Cabot, to draw upon as well as his own. He thinks Ethics can be taught as well as "taught about." He regards new instruction in morality at South Dakota schools as "a fine beginning." He describes Boston's efforts, which include Bible reading, singing of hymns and patriotic songs, scout groups, badges and slogans-and believes in them all. His prime recommendation, however, is short daily periods for discussing Ethics by the case system. He bravely admits that he cannot hold with "the pedagogic fashion of our time...
...death of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge in 1924, Senator Curtis took over the reins of Republican leadership. Previously he had been, the assistant leader, busy salving the wounds which Senator Lodge inflicted upon his fellow Republicans. As leader, Senator Curtis, for the first time in recent years, succeeded in closing the short session of the 68th Congress on March 4, 1925, without all-night sessions. He kept the calendar clear, the legislative machinery grinding. Nothing roils Senator Curtis more than blocs and filibusterers...