Word: viewing
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...look to reason rather than to religion for explanation and for truth. Still the age was in a way a religious age, though the religion was of the intellect rather than of the heart. But while the character of the race was rising from an intellectual point of view it was deteriorating as fast in morals. Every virtue was counterbalanced by some vice. It was at the same time the best and the worst of ages...
...executive committee of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association has entered recently into negotiations with the League of American Wheelmen with the view of re-instating the college riders who were suspended last year from competing in any races held under the auspices of the L. A. W. Some slight changes have been made in the college racing rules which have met the approval of the executive committee of the L. A. W. and it is probable that in a short time all the suspensions will be removed. The intercollegiate rules, as they now stand, accord very nearly with...
...Corinthians "Now abideth faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love," and from Ecclesiastes, "Therefore I hated life because the work that is wrought under the sun is grievous unto me; for all is vanity and vexation of spirit." These two writers, he said, have views so opposed to one another that evidently one of them must have been very much in the wrong. And is it not so that viewed from certain standpoints there seems to be an element of truth in the words of the old preacher? Does it not sometimes look...
...deplorable that there is such misunderstanding and even latent antagonism, between men who uphold the claims of the body and those who uphold the claims of the mind. There is no call for it: both lay emphasis on a different means, but both really have the same end in view, and would find, if they threw away their hostile feelings, that the different means were not incompatible, but that all are needed. So long as men insist on their own views and present inclinations, the University will tend to go from one extreme to the other. There is a great...
...editorials it is pleasing to come upon one which champions that much abused course, English C. Unfavorable criticism of the course has had pretty free play lately, and has, it is to be feared, gone too far. The Monthly gives what would seem to be a better advised view of the situation than has been generally taken...