Word: marcuse
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...Against Brown, Garvan pitched a good game, allowing but five scattered hits. Yale made only five hits off Washburn but managed to bunch them at critical times when bases on balls and errors counted in the score. A few hits well bunched, costly errors by the Columbia fielders, and Marcus' wildness were the causes of Yale's easy victory over Columbia. Robertson pitched well except in one inning, when he was hit three times. McKelvey pitched the last two innings and was a trifle unsteady. In general the work of the team in the field has been satisfactory except...
...growth, a region which has received but little attention from botanists. Many speciamens from California, have been sent by Professor W. L. Jepson of the University of California and Mr. J. W. Congdon of Mariposa, California. An extremely interesting collection, including many critical specimens, has been contributed by Professor Marcus S. Jones of Salt Lake City. The entire collection now contains over 27,-000 specimens, the result of over sixty years of continuous growth...
...Yale Debating Union: C. W. Smally, Yale '53, of Philadelphia; Charles Hopkins Clark, Yale '71, of Hartford; David A. Wells, of Norwich; and Edward J. Phelps, of the Yale Law School, ex-minister to England. Besides these speakers, the committee of the Yale Union are corresponding with Marcus A. Hanna, Bourke Cochran, Charles A. Dana, and Captain O. J. Mokan, relative to lecturing...
...Copeland expressly disclaimed any attempt to expound either Emerson or Carlyle with authority. He acknowledged a debt to several books and to the illuminating conversation of Professor J. B. Thayer, who, upon Arnold's comparison of Marcus Aurelius and Emerson as moralists, made the important comment that, although Marcus Aurelius gives the world morality, Emerson gives it morality kindled...
Passing on to the Stoics, the professor spoke of the doctrines of Caesar, who held the view that there was no eternal life, and of Cato and Cicero, both of whom agreed with the views of Caesar. Marcus Aurelius was a more cautious stoic, never directly offering any view upon immortality. The influence which these men held upon Roman thought was very great. The conflicting tendencies of the religion of the second century were mentioned. The hopeless cynicism of Pliny was contrasted with the faith of Vergil, who had a deep consciousness of the ethical demand for retribution...