Word: freedly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...secret organization: it rewards scholarship in the entire College. And it is in the belief that it discharges that function in ways essentially satisfactory that this suggestion for crystallizing those methods is offered. Care should be taken that future members appreciate the fact that it is scholarship alone, freed from all personal considerations, upon which they are to base their elections...
...causes of disturbance in the Balkan countries and their neighbors today. This distortion of boundaries is due to historical causes. Since Austria drove the Turks from Hungary, she has continually attempted to check the southern Slav, grasping territory whenever possible. During the nineteenth century, Servia, Greece, Roumania, and Bulgaria freed themselves from the Turk, and by a concerted effort in 1912, almost drove him from Europe...
...Twomey, G. H. Sullivan (B), H. W. Porter, H. Goldberger (C), J. K. Moorehead (D), F. B. Sargent (E); Sect. 35, E. P. Coleman, W. B. Corbett (A), P. A. Cober, J. S. Mitchell (B), L. B. Arey, P. E. Fardy (C), J. A. Keeder (D), H. Freed (E); Sect. 36, B. J. Haggard, F. F. Munrie (A), W. A. Elliot, J. A. Daly (B), L. P. Jacobs, L. B. Brink (C), R. W. Brink (D), H. Bennison (E); Sect. 37, W. N. Davidson, W. B. Feiga (A), P. Eaton, D. Lewis (B), T. J. Read, A. H. Sanborn...
...abandoned the pulpit, having entered actively into literature and also into political affairs, especially in the anti-slavery conflict over Kansas. In 1862 he became a captain in the 51st Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, and afterwards Colonel of the 1st Regiment of South Carolina, composed of freed slaves. He was severely wounded in August, 1863, and left the service in the following year. From the close of the War to 1878 he resided at Newport, R. I., but since then has lived in Cambridge. In 1880 and 1881 he was a member of the Massachusetts legislature and from...
...also. In a review later on in the Monthly, Mr. Westcott says that we sometimes hear that "art for art's sake is decadent--whatever that means." It ought not to mean anything. As a matter of fact it does mean that the disciple of the doctrine thinks himself freed from the truth that morality has any relation to art. A pure-souled idealist like Shelley could depart from traditional codes of morals and make for himself a new code that was yet noble. But Shelley escaped, in his poetry, from the vulgar details of life into an ideal world...