Word: lived
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...overcome the evils of disease and crime which exist in the land, the collectivists have secured the passage of legislation granting them powers to force the people, even in opposition to their rights of freedom, to live clean, healthy lives in proper homes. Where there is contagious disease, there we find the collectivists' forces at work to prevent its spread and overcome its danger. Industries, too, are under regulations which have been brought about by collectivistic influences in society. Everywhere the individual rights of men have been interfered with when the good of the community has been in question...
President Eliot denied that we should ever hope for an ideal race blended from all the races of the world. It is best that the different races should live side by side in friendship but that they should retain their several diversities, which relieve the monotony of their relations...
...undergraduate newspapers, no class meetings, no college politics, no football rallies, no business managers, no claques for organized applause, no yell leaders, no dances, no social functions of the mass. Social intercourse during term between the sexes is strictly forbidden; and it is a matter of college loyalty to live up to the rule. Of non-academic activities there are but two--athletics and conversation. They are not a function but a recreation; nor are they limited to specialists whose reputation is professed. Young Oxonians, in general, lead a serene and undistracted, but rich and wholesome life. They cultivate athletics...
...been truly said than man does not live by bread alone. History is crowded with instances illustrating the fact that men have cast off this mortal coil as so much worthless dross when impelled by the demands of some spiritual truth. Other men have endured the greatest hardships and privations in their endeavors to create the beautiful in form, in sound, or in color. As it has been with the religious and artistic spirit in the past, so is it with the modern scientific spirit. The desire to find out the secrets of nature impels men to trudge over Arctic...
...must recognize that we are a part of the general system and that we cannot get away from it. The first need of the day is to shake men out of their complacency, and to show them the facts of the world in which they live. The one hopeful cry of our age is that for life. And it is hopeful because the Christian religion makes an appeal for a larger, fuller, and more abundant life...