Word: chapter
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...prerogative in England. It goes on to discuss vetoes in United States history, under the heads of vetoes affecting the form of government, the distribution of its powers, and their exercise. Each class is elaborately treated. The occasion of each veto is discussed, its effect, and its constitutionality. Each chapter ends with a section devoted to the general political and constitutional effect of the vetoes. The relation of vetoes to the financial powers of the government, especially the banks, tariffs, and internal improvements forms the most important branch of the discussion. A chapter on procedure and the political development...
...considering the composition of the Old Testament-it is evident that it contains bits of Semitic law, as in the first chapter of Genesis. There are certain old traditions regarding older times, as the story of Samson in Judges. Then follow the annuals of Kings the Prophets-substantially as the living speakers spoke them-the Psalins and Writings. All these were not put together in one form till centuries after they were written. The Old Testament was not regarded as sacred at the time it was written, which is evident by the opposition that the apostles received...
...hour examination in Philosophy 1 next Friday will be from the tenth to the thirteenth chapter inclusive of 'Javons' Logic...
There was a very gratifying attendance at the first of the Vespers yesterday afternoon. Dr. Van Dyke read the psalm and offered the prayer. Dr. Abbott took for his text the sixth chapter of Isiaah. Isaiah, he said, was not prompted to deliver his message from any feeling of his own worthiness, but from a feeling that he had received from God, a blessed truth which it was his duty to tell to men. All of us should feel this duty to impart to men the truths which are given us by God. It is the students and that class...
...Young Men's Christian Association held a meeting last evening in Lawrence Scientific School. Hugh McK. Landon '92, spoke to the members upon the twelfth chapter of Romans. He said that the passage seems to contain two more important teachings, underlying and pervading the whole series of shorter ones contained in the chapter. The first of these is action and the second is self-denial. This selfdenial means self-sacrifice in its highest form. These two main themes are so interwoven with the separate parts of the chapter and the parts are individually so beautiful that the whole is justly...