Word: main
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...firm hold upon the members of the University. The average attendance at the meetings during the past year has been more than double that of the preceding year. There is a rapidly increasing interest in that department of intellectual training, of which the Union is the only representative. The main point of criticism which we should make in regard to the attitude of the college toward the Union is that more men do not avail themselves of the privileges of the society earlier in their college course. If the Union can bring a strong influence to bear on these...
COMMITTEE.PROSPECT UNION.- An entertainment will be given under the auspices of the Union by the Freshman Glee and Banjo Clubs and Mr. H. E. Monroe of Boston, in Trade Association Hall, 604 Main St., Tuesday, April 28, at 8 p. m. Admission for non-members, 25 cents...
Along with this main course there will be presented parallel lectures by President E. B. Andrews, Professor F. W. Taussig, Ph. D., Hon. Carroll D. Wright, Professor J. B. Clark, Ph. D., Albert Shaw, Ph. D., Professor E. J. James, Ph. D., each man giving three lectures on a subject in which he has made special research. In addition it is expected that M. H. D. Floyd, of Chicago, will give two lectures on the industrial history of the United States...
Tonight the curtain-raiser will be "Two Old Grads," a clever college sketch written by R. H. Post '91. It will be followed by the main piece of the evening, the "Obispah," the music of which has been composed by R. W. Atkinson '91, and L. S. Thompson '92, and the libretto written by B. A. Gould '91. Tomorrow evening Act II, Scene 2, from Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" will be put on as a curtain lifter in place of "Two Old Grads...
Professor James's paper on "The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life" was originally prepared for the meeting of the Philosophical Club of Yale University last February and appears in print now for the first time. The main purpose of the article is to show that there is no such thing possible as an ethical philosophy dogmatically made up in advance. After dividing the ethical question into three parts,-the pscychological, which asks after the historical origin of our moral ideas and judgments,-the metaphysical, which asks the meaning of the words good, ill, and obligation,-and the casnistic which...