Word: without
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Gray '97, and F. R. Steward '96, on the affirmative; N. J. Breembaugh '96, and G. Thomas '96, on the negative. The affirmative based their arguments principally on the lack of harmony in the Liberal party and the consequent inability to transact any business. They were a party without any central issue or any recognised leader. The Home Rule Bill, too, the affirmative tried to show was unpopular and undesirable. The negative rested their claims on the principles of the Liberal party. They maintained that it was the party of social reform. They also supported Home Rule, Welsh Disestablishment, Reform...
...offence is an unpardonable one, and the penalty, in case the thief should be discovered, ought to be severe. Supposing, what is by no means certain, that the act was committed by a student, it will reflect seriously upon the University if many days are allowed to pass without either the return of the cross or the apprehension of the man who took it. For such acts as these are not done except in bravado and that implies that the knowledge of them will be shared by a number of men. If there is a single group...
...DEAR MR. WENDELL:- We of the Cambridge University Athletic Team feel that we cannot leave the shores of America without seeking to convey to you and through you to the graduates of Harvard University, our most sincere thanks for the great kindness and hospitality you have extended...
...trust that no member of the University who lives within the limits of Old Cambridge will let the day pass without subscribing his name in support of so worthy an object as that of the improvement of the post office. The needs of the office are so plain that no comment of ours should be required to convince any one of the necessity for immediate action on the part of the authorities at Washington. The question which will probably come to the minds of most men will probably be as to just why members of the University should concern themselves...
...questions of religion and morals can not be allowed, nor the doctrine of infallibility ever accepted. Even if the Catholic Church was right in the controversy concerning the meaning of the rock on which Christ founded his church, its claims to absolute authority and infallibility could not rest without being scouted. The impotency and falsity of the Catholic Church's policy are manifest. In so many ages it ought to have brought men to an earlier knowledge of learning and opened the way to the new discoveries in science. Instead the Roman Church retarded science in every possible...