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Articles 2851 - 2880 of 3660
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Summary Report Of Replies To The Seminary Questionnaire, Frederick M. Jelly
Summary Report Of Replies To The Seminary Questionnaire, Frederick M. Jelly
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Title Page, Mariological Society Of America
Front Cover, Mariological Society Of America
Report On The North Palm Beach Convention, Juniper B. Carol
Report On The North Palm Beach Convention, Juniper B. Carol
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Table Of Contents, Mariological Society Of America
Table Of Contents, Mariological Society Of America
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Observations On Fr. Ford's Lecture, Alban A. Maguire
Observations On Fr. Ford's Lecture, Alban A. Maguire
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Financial Report For 1976, Mariological Society Of America
Financial Report For 1976, Mariological Society Of America
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
A Survey Of Recent Mariology, Eamon R. Carol
The Members Of The Mariological Society Of America, Mariological Society Of America
The Members Of The Mariological Society Of America, Mariological Society Of America
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
The Blessed Virgin And The "Debitum Peccati." A Bibliographical Conspectus, Juniper B. Carol
The Blessed Virgin And The "Debitum Peccati." A Bibliographical Conspectus, Juniper B. Carol
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Back Cover, Mariological Society Of America
Newman On "Sensus Fidelium" And Mariology, John Ford
Newman On "Sensus Fidelium" And Mariology, John Ford
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Criteria For Doctrinal Development In Marian Dogmas, William H. Marshner
Criteria For Doctrinal Development In Marian Dogmas, William H. Marshner
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Mary And The Renewel Of Catechetics In Our Time, Frederick M. Jelly
Mary And The Renewel Of Catechetics In Our Time, Frederick M. Jelly
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Impact Of Mariology On Christian Ethics, William J. Finan
Impact Of Mariology On Christian Ethics, William J. Finan
Marian Studies
No abstract provided.
Questionnaire On Seminaries, Frederick M. Jelly
Isaiah 63, Charles D. Roggemann S.M.
Isaiah 63, Charles D. Roggemann S.M.
Musical Compositions about the Marianist Charism
Christ
Horace Walpole And The Methodists, Samuel J. Rogal
Horace Walpole And The Methodists, Samuel J. Rogal
University of Dayton Review
In England between 1739 and 1775, opposition to the Methodist movement and its leadership-especially John Wesley (1703-1791), his brother Charles (1707-1788), George Whitefield (1714-1770). and Lady Selina Shirley, Countess of Huntingdon (1707-1791)-assumed three distinct forms: Anglican bishops prohibited Methodist preachers from conducting services in Established churches; mobs, instigated by Anglican vicars, rioted at Society meetings; beginning around 1739 and continuing even into the nineteenth century, a steady stream of anti-Methodist pamphleteers poured forth invective and twisted Biblical evidence in an effort to expose what they generally concluded to be political traitors, religious heretics, and empty-minded enthusiasts. These opponents, although achieving …
Fathers And Son: Conrad's The Shadow Line As An Initiation Rite Of Passage, Donald Gutierrez
Fathers And Son: Conrad's The Shadow Line As An Initiation Rite Of Passage, Donald Gutierrez
University of Dayton Review
Conrad's late short novel The Shadow Line, which has struck some critics as a poorly constructed romance, acquires coherence and depth when regarded as an initiation rite of passage. Indeed the ritual character of this story is so dominant in orienting the protagonist and his initiatory society significantly as to constitute the chief narrative mode in the story. Society in this fiction is divided in ways that highlight ritual features but also ironize the initiand, the initiators, and, by implication, the community, the basic triad in traditional initiation ceremony. Its ritualistic character, furthermore, is accentuated by a pattern of motifs …
The Ghost Of Cromwell — Republican Revolution Without Military Dictatorship: The American Constitutional Experience, 1775-1800, Stephen M. Millett
The Ghost Of Cromwell — Republican Revolution Without Military Dictatorship: The American Constitutional Experience, 1775-1800, Stephen M. Millett
University of Dayton Review
Lt. Gen. Oliver Cromwell met with the House of Commons in a stormy session on April 20, 1653. Enraged by their obstinacy, he harangued the Commons with violent language. "Perhaps you think that this is not Parliamentary language; I confess it is not; neither are you to expect any such from me," he concluded defiantly. "You are no Parliament, I say you are no Parliament. I will put an end to your sitting." At his command, his troops entered the hall and pulled the Speaker off his chair. Cromwell had forcibly terminated the Long Parliament, which had governed for the …
Napoleon I And Education In The Sciences: One Aspect Of The Two Cultures In Conflict, Raymond J. Maras
Napoleon I And Education In The Sciences: One Aspect Of The Two Cultures In Conflict, Raymond J. Maras
University of Dayton Review
Several years ago the position was taken that Napoleon's patronage of the sciences when weighed against the provisions for the teaching of science in the schools seems to be in the nature of propaganda. According to the research on the subject, science, under the Napoleonic aegis, was defined in a narrow, utilitarian manner and "any attempt to institutionalize a concept of science which went beyond this utilitarianism was immediately thwarted." Hence, Napoleon's contribution was merely to continue the close link between science and the military which the Revolution introduced. In fact, in Napoleon's regime "the pursuit of a scientific education …
Menelik Ii: Another Look, Erving E. Beauregard
Menelik Ii: Another Look, Erving E. Beauregard
University of Dayton Review
Mankind has a penchant for adulation. This trait glows in the great man theory of history. Thomas Carlyle gave the classic rendition of this: "We come now to the last form of Heroism; that which we call Kingship. The Commander over Men; he to whose will our wills are to be subordinated, and loyally surrender ourselves, and find their welfare in doing so, may be reckoned the most important of Great Men." Carlyle, being a racist, raised only Europeans to that supreme hall of the earthly Valhalla. Various writers, historians and other sundry, perhaps lesser, breeds, have entered the fray …
The Fox And The Hyenas, Leroy V. Eid
The Fox And The Hyenas, Leroy V. Eid
University of Dayton Review
In late October of 1884 a huge parade wended its muddy way in a heavy rain down the streets of New York City. A fascinated English visitor watched as a thousand lawyers chanted their ridiculous:
Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine
We don't care a bit for the rain,
O-O-O-O-HI-O
The visitor knew they were celebrating the state of Ohio voting in favor of James G. Blaine for the presidency. Modern historians are just as amazed as was James Bryce, the first Viscount Bryce, when he described this unreal scene in his classic work, The American Commonwealth. Who was Blaine and …
This Side Of Rapture: The Quiet Sisterhood Of The British Feminists, Alice Gilmore Vines
This Side Of Rapture: The Quiet Sisterhood Of The British Feminists, Alice Gilmore Vines
University of Dayton Review
"Women were struck with fists and knees, knocked down, dragged up, hurled from hand to hand, and sent reeling back, bruised and bleeding, into the arms of the crowd. They were no longer demonstrators; they were monsters, their presence unendurable. They were pummeled and they were pinched, their thumbs were forced back, their arms twisted, their breasts gripped, their faces rubbed against the pailings; and this went on for nearly six hours ... there were a certain number of tough characters who did not choose to let this opportunity slip, and some ... were dragged away and miserably ill-treated; indeed, …
A Historian Looks At Frank Lloyd Wright And The Nature Of Architecture, Frank F. Mathias
A Historian Looks At Frank Lloyd Wright And The Nature Of Architecture, Frank F. Mathias
University of Dayton Review
Is it possible for contemporary historians to evaluate accurately the work of Frank Lloyd Wright? It must be realized than an accurate evaluation of the work of any creative genius presupposes much more than a mere opinion on the part of the evaluator. An architect who blandly asserts that history is no more than a dusty trail of dates, may stack many bricks but will probably be unable to provide a home for the evolving spirit of mankind. Similarly, a historian who believes that architecture is limited to the physical qualities of stone and wood is often the one who …
The Abolition Of Slavery In The British West Indies; The Case Of Barbados, Bruce Taylor
The Abolition Of Slavery In The British West Indies; The Case Of Barbados, Bruce Taylor
University of Dayton Review
In June of 1833, the British Parliament passed an act to abolish slavery within the imperial system. While this was the beginning of a profound legal revolution in the British West Indies, it was a logical result of a series of reforms by Parliament in response to a relentless drive by abolitionist forces and a corresponding loss of political influence by the West Indian planters. The planters were able only to salvage a cash payment as compensation for their loss of property and a period of adjustment euphemistically called "apprenticeship."
Dayton And The Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, George Ruppell S.M.
Dayton And The Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, George Ruppell S.M.
University of Dayton Review
Even today some people wonder why Dayton, Ohio is called the home of aviation and the mention of McCook, Wright and Patterson fields seems like another mystery. Even the news media before 1910 missed the big story. In Dayton the two sons of Bishop Milton Wright, Wilbur and Orville, bicycle builders and repairmen, thought that they could fly with an engine, and at the same time there was Samuel P. Langley, the head of the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C., doing the same thing. The Dayton boys corresponded with everyone they thought would have some experience with flying. Octave Chanute …
Mussolini And The Vatican: 1922-1943, James E. Mcgoldrick
Mussolini And The Vatican: 1922-1943, James E. Mcgoldrick
University of Dayton Review
It has become common among students of totalitarianism to dismiss Benito Mussolini as an incompetent braggard whose every effort finally met with ridiculous failure. Indeed, if there were any comic aspect of World War II, it was provided by 11 Duce trying to be an imperialist. His abortive invasion of Greece, Hitler's rejection of his offer to contribute Italian troops for the invasion of Russia and his continual posing for photographers with arm raised and lower lip jutting out give one the impression that Mussolini was a theatrical ham the world would always have difficulty taking seriously.
Any realistic appraisal …
Vows, Prayers, And Dice: Comic Values In The Man Of Mode, Roberta F.S. Borkat
Vows, Prayers, And Dice: Comic Values In The Man Of Mode, Roberta F.S. Borkat
University of Dayton Review
“Because religion makes some run mad, must I live an atheist?” (I,i, Young Bellair)
br> “… because some who want temper have been undone by gaming, must others who have it wholly deny themselves the pleasure of play?” (III, iii, Harriet)
These statements, which refer to love, are spoken by two of the most successful characters in The Man of Mode. The similes comparing love to religion and love to a game echo each other because of their similar structure; furthermore, they vibrate throughout the playas central images which explain the system of comic values in The Man of Mode. …
Narrative Comedy In Wallace Stevens' "The Comedian As The Letter C", K. E. Marre
Narrative Comedy In Wallace Stevens' "The Comedian As The Letter C", K. E. Marre
University of Dayton Review
Readings of Wallace Stevens' "The Comedian as the Letter C" take several directions. The allegorical, literal, and philosophical aspects of the poem have received much attention and have illuminated ways in which the poem can be meaningful. The style of the poem, however, has been of constant interest to critics, and aspects of it have attracted attention, but those readings that deal with it do not concern the narrator's function in the comedy of the poem. It is my belief that the poem would perhaps be more accessible if the kind of comic technique in it were explained. Crispin's reduction …