... inclination to adopt masculine sentiments or habits in any unnecessary or unseemly degree ; they are disposed to imitate the methods of life and work of industrious undergraduates just as far as these appear to be means approved by experience to the... University education - Page 371edited by - 1884Full view - About this book
| American literature - 1887 - 890 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the University or afterward, has tended in the smallest degree to support the view that the adaptation of women to domestic... | |
| Louisa M. Hubbard - Volunteers - 520 pages
...to be means approved by experience, to the end which both sets of students have in common ; they are not, so far as I have observed, inclined to go a step...to support the view that the adaptation of women to the domestic life is so artificial and conventional a thing that a few years of free, unhampered study... | |
| 1887 - 620 pages
...students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, eil her at the University or afterward, has tended in the smallest degree to support the view...domestic life is so artificial and conventional a thin;; that a few years of free unhampered study and varied companionship ; t the University has a... | |
| Science - 1887 - 902 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the university or afterward, has tended in the smallest degree to support the view that the adaptation of women to domestic... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - American periodicals - 1887 - 926 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the University or afterward, has tended in the smallest degree to support the view that the adaptation of women to domestic... | |
| English periodicals - 1887 - 978 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the...companionship at the University has a tendency to impair it. So far as I am aware, only one other argument has been, or can be, adduced on the opposite side. This... | |
| English periodicals - 1887 - 958 pages
...the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either nt the University or afterwards, has tended in the smallest...companionship at the University has a tendency to impair it. So far as I am aware, only one other argument has been, or can be, adduced on the opposite side. This... | |
| Dale Spender - Educational equalization - 2001 - 384 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the...conventional a thing that a few years of free unhampered 26 study and varied companionship at the University has a tendency to impair it. So far as I am aware,... | |
| Nineteenth century - 1887 - 1254 pages
...these appear to be means approved by experience to the end which both sets of students have in common, and nothing that I have seen of them, either at the...companionship at the University has a tendency to impair it. So far as I am aware, only one other argument has been, or can be, adduced on the opposite side. This... | |
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