Word: referred
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...determined to serve, it is necessary to find out where educated men are most needed. We know that some of the professions are croweded with men who are seeking not to obtain leadership but a bare existence; but is there not one profession that has been neglected? I refer to the ministry...
...even to the general reader, as the whole stage action is involved. Until very lately, scholars following the scholiast have interpreted Greek drama from the standpoint of the existence of a stage, basing their opinions first on the authority of the scholia and certain phrase. which were taken to refer to the passages up or down of the actor as he went up the stairs to the stage from the orchestra or decended to the orchestra from the stage; secondly, on the inferences which it seemed could be drawn from from ruins of Greek theatres. In 1890 Dr. Wilhelm Dorpfeld...
This young man I refer to does not drink, at least in saloons, but does he do anything to close them? He does not jeer at religion, but does he do anything to make the world more religious? Is he doing or planning anything to make the lives of his parents brighter and happier, or is he making the most of opportunities to get an education such that later he may do his part towards keeping his state and country what they have been in the past...
...Advocate anticipates us in a request which we feel is worth the consideration of every man who is interested in doing something for Harvard. We refer to the editorial calling upon students to remember during the vacation the effort which their committee is making towards raising $150,000 for a new Library Reading Room. This is a matter which concerns every Harvard man, and, while the committee are doing all they can to obtain the requisite sum, that does not imply that they have no need of co-operation from the great body of students in general and from every...
...interpretations were open to improvement. When the revision was undertaken, many were against it, but those who undertook it thought that if there were errors in the translation, as there were, they should be corrected. Another consideration may be found in the marginal notes, many of which refer to other editions. Often scholars could not agree as to the meaning of a passage, and there are many annotations giving alternate renderings...