Word: content
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...life. There, before us is the brew. Not a judge on the bench but has had a hand in its making....In the field of constitutional law, the method of free decision has become, I think, the dominant one today. The great generalities of the Constitution have a content and a significance that vary from age to age. The method of free decision sees through the transitory particulars and reaches what is permanent behind them....The eccentricities of judges balance one another....Out of the attrition of diverse minds there is beaten something which has a constancy and uniformity...
...especially surprised upon perusing yesterday morning's CRIMSON to note that there was no mention of one of the most important items of the past day. It seems from the way this year's content reads, that the CRIMSON's policy is not to print the news of the day but to fill four pages of paper with any copy easy to obtain. Whether the news printed is newsworthy or whether it is accurate space to be important...
...give students the proper attitude toward the scientific approach to knowledge. For the non-scientific mind which pretends to call itself an educated one, the proper understanding of the scientific view seems essential. Too many people in the University have little idea of such an attitude, yet they are content in their feeling that since they have taken an elementary course in science they are aware of the scientific method. These elementary courses cannot present to the undergraduate any understanding of such a method, nor should they. It does seem, however, that an understanding of scientific approach is of greater...
...revived it are merely providing a duplicate service with the Advocate and are unfair in ignoring the Advocate in their statement of policy. This is after all rather a weak line of argument. For clearly the Advocate is not even distantly related to the Critic in either content or policy. Anyone who will take the trouble to examine the Advocate for the last two years will see almost at a glance that no matter what its stated purpose was, in fact it was the organ of a certain specialized literary school, primarily interested in imitating and analyzing that small...
...means let TIME make its advertisements as interesting as its editorial content. I would much rather read an item such as Milshire Gin's facetious blurb for "Grandma's Old-Fashioned Gin Sponge-Cake" [TIME, July 16] than one of TIME's own recorded facts to the effect that one Dr. Morgan used "Drosophila melanogaster" [TIME, Oct. 1] in his laboratory experiments...