Word: moral
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Morvis '83, editor of the Congregationalist, will be present at the meeting of the Ethical Society this evening at 7 o'clock in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, to take part informally in the discussion upon the question "Should Moral Institutions Accept 'Tainted' Money?" The chief feature of the discussion will be a consideration of the ethics of the acceptance of Mr. Rockefeller's gift to the Congregational Church...
Under the auspices of the Ethical Society, a series of seven lectures on "The Ethics of Professions" will be given in Phillips Brooks Honse on the following dates: Thursday, April 6, Mr. George Morris, of Boston, editor of the "Congregationalist," on the question, "Should Moral Institutions Accept Tainted Money?"; Thursday, April 13, Dr. R. C. Cabot, of Boston, instructor in clinical medicine in the Medical School, on "Ethics of the Medical profession"; Thursday, May 4, Mr. R. A. Woods, head of the South End House, Boston, and lecturer of the Cambridge Theological School, on "Social Work as a Profession"; Thursday...
...fulfillment of the plan agreed upon by. Harvard and the Prussian Ministry of Education, Professor E. G. Peabody '69, Dean of the Faculty of Divinity, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, and Chairman of the Board of Preachers to the University, has been designated as the Harvard lecturer at the University of Berlin in the first half of the next academic year. Professor Peabody was selected by the University of Berlin from a list of professors available for such service which was furnished to the Rector of the University of Berlin. Professor Peabody's lectures will be on the subject dealt...
...main objection to football, President Eliot says, lies against its moral quality: "The game is played under established and recognized rules; but the uniform enforcement of these rules is impossible, and violations of the rules are in many respects highly profitable toward victory. Thus coaching from the side-lines, off-side playing, holding, and disabling opponents by kneeing and kicking, and by heavy blows on the head and particularly about eyes, nose, and jaw, are unquestionably profitable toward victory; and no means have been found of preventing these violations of rules by both coaches and players. Some players...
...problems last evening in the Phillips Brooks House. After showing the difficulty of understanding the meaning of events of the present day, Mr. Woods outlined the motives and meaning of the university settlement. Behind all university settlement work, he said, are the motives of applied history, science, democracy, and moral adventure...