Word: sort
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...next Boston Sunday Globe a number of Harvard professors and other distinguished men throughout the country will express their views, over their signatures, on MODERN JOURNALISM, AS IT IS AND SHOULD BE. A collection of opinions of this sort has never before been printed, and it is found to call forth much comment. Among those who contribute articles on this subject to the Globe are Professor A. S. Hill, Professor Josiah Royce, Mr. Barrett Wendell, Mr. George R. Nutter, Professor Frank W. Taussig, Admiral Porter, Anthony Comstock, Honorable S. S. Cox and Russell Sage...
...next Boston Sunday Globe a number of Harvard professors and other distinguished men throughout the country will express their views, over their signatures, on MODERN JOURNALISM, AS IT IS AND SHOULD BE. A collection of opinions of this sort has never before been printed, and it is found to call forth much comment. Among those who contribute articles on this subject to the Globe are Professor A. S. Hill, Professor Josiah Royce, Mr. Barrett Wendell, Mr. George R. Nutter, Professor Frank W. Taussig, Admiral Porter, Anthony Comstock, Honorable S. S. Cox and Russell Sage...
...next Boston Sunday Globe, a number of Harvard professors and other distinguished men throughout the country will express their views, over their signatures, on MODERN JOURNALISM, AS IT IS AND SHOULD BE. A collection of opinions of this sort has never before been printed, and it is found to call forth much comment. Among those who contribute articles on this subject to the Globe are Professor A. S. Hill, Professor Josiah Royce, Mr. Barrett Wendell, Mr. George R. Nutter, Professor Frank W. Taussig, Admiral Porter, Anthony Comstock, Honorable S. S. Cox and Russell Sage...
...feeling that if any one should cheat, he would have the club at his mercy. The other members would then have to expel him unanimously; or, failing of unanimity, some would have to resign and so break up the club rather than remain associated with him; and this sort of aggressive righteousness was to much to expect from men bred in our atmosphere. A challenge to that kind of righteousness was, it seemed. one which we could hardly count on men's accepting...
...impression this episode gave me of the debilitated tone of social responsibility here was startling. By social responsibility I mean the willingness to act for the social ideal, no matter how much obstructive individuals have to suffer. In this sort of civic courage our race has led history; and why it should be so lacking here I do not know. Perhaps my vision of the facts is distorted. But it seems to me that, if it is not, this is the reform in "college opinion" which we most deeply need. If individuals cannot be sent to Coventry, no matter what...