Word: existences
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Just why this condition of affairs was allowed to exist will cause no one undue loss of sleep at this late hour. The presidential campaign is in full sway and it is high time that all good Republicans in our midst were banded together in an effective organization to promote the interests of their party's candidate. The meeting called for Monday night is for that purpose...
Whereas no constitution was adopted by the members of the Harvard Republican Club formed last spring, and whereas two of the officers elected at that time have severed connection with that club, in our opinion that club has ceased to exist and an opportunity should be given to the republicans in the University to reorganize on an active basis to further the interests of their party in the national campaign...
...presence of so much solemn verse has put the editor in a pessimistic mood for he bewails the ignorance and stupidity which estrauges student and professor from helpful human relations. I have personally seen so little of this estrangement that I cannot write on it intelligently, if it does exist. One of the best things I have gained from my teaching has been the friendship of students; one living among eternal youth--for undergraduates represent eternal youth--must necessarily himself stay young. There are few professors whom I have known who do not enter deeply into the lives of some...
Something exists: however reckless and extravagant this statement seems, let us accept it provisionally and term that something ourselves. Man is a compound of a material part called the body, and an intangible part called the soul. The facts about the body are simple; the soul being invisible is only assumed to exist, first through its apparent effects, secondly through self-consciousness. There is but one form of self-consciousness to which we are not passive; we may feel pain or sensation, but we never say that we feel the will. It is always subjective and active...
...class, their club-mates and their surroundings in the private dormitories are refining influences, and although a poor man may work his way through College, he is thought none the less a man. The craze for being the social equals of wealthy men, in contrast to Europe, does not exist among the poorer men in the American University...