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Word: abstracting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...William James, who graduated from Harvard in 1869, has said something which applies only too closely to cases of this kind. Writing to H. G. Wells in 1906, he said, 'Exactly that callousness to abstract justice is the sinister feature, and to me as to you the incomprehensible feature,--of our U. S. civilization. . . . When the ordinary American hears of these cases instead of the idealist within him beginning to see red with the higher indignation, instead of English history growing alive in his breast, he begins to pooh-pooh and minimize and tone down the thing, and breed excuses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: J. N. BEFFEL DISCUSSES SACCO-VANZETTI CASE | 3/17/1921 | See Source »

...general discussion of the problems co existent with college organizations. Participation, not isolation, is the course which will win respect from those college men, whose respect we certainly do not care to lose. Without participation we can hope for no leadership, and non-representation can not but abstract from the well-earned glory of athletic victories...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPLENDID ISOLATION? | 1/31/1921 | See Source »

...bringing with it the membership in the Varsity Club. The insignia awarded for minor sports is, after all valuable in a much lesser degree. There are few who go out for minor sports to win the insignia as an honor to be worn. The incentive is more in the abstract honor of being on the team and in getting the exercise. The privileges of a Minor Sport Club would never stir the ordinary student to heights of energy and athletic activity. At first the idea seems attractive but upon analysis it really appears quite unnecessary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 12/15/1920 | See Source »

...little too long for its purpose and contains too much exotic detail. The misspelled pomegranate might well be replaced by a homelier and more familiar apple. In general, the verse in this issue is too rhapsodic and aerial. I suppose that the feverish apostrophes to Beauty in the abstract are due to the limitations of Cambridge in the concrete...

Author: By Robert S. Hillyer ., | Title: ESSAYS, REVIEWS, AND POETRY GIVES ADVOCATE WIDE RANGE | 4/9/1920 | See Source »

...rich, receive what, in effect, is a gratuity. That is one of the many anomalies of democratic institutions. Mr. Barnes suggests that in making their canvass the "drive" teams confront every manifestly solvent graduate with a demand for unpaid arrears of tuition, and then proceed to the more abstract obligations of college loyalty, pupilliary gratitude, and enlightened self-interest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 10/4/1919 | See Source »

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