2013년 11월 26일 화요일

About 'university methodist'|Old Postcard Wednesday--Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas







About 'university methodist'|Old Postcard Wednesday--Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas








Charlotte               Brontë               was               born               April               21,               1816.

One               of               five               daughters               born               to               Reverend               Patrick               Brontë               and               Maria               Branwell               Brontë,               Charlotte               lived               a               sheltered               life,               spending               most               of               her               years               confined               to               Haworth               Parsonage.

With               Charlotte's               limited               knowledge               of               the               world,               it               should               come               as               no               surprise               that               the               plot               of               her               first               published               novel,               Jane               Eyre,               contains               many               parallels               to               her               own               life               -               some               very               likely               intentional,               while               others               may               be               subconscious               or               even               merely               coincidental.

Regardless               of               her               intentions               while               writing               Jane               Eyre,               it               is               clear               that               Charlotte               Brontë               drew               heavily               on               her               own               identity               and               experiences               in               creating               the               character               of               Jane.

Jane               Eyre's               childhood               seems               in               some               respects               to               have               been               modeled               after               Brontë's.

Like               Charlotte               herself,               Jane's               father               was               "a               poor               clergyman"               (Brontë               26).

Jane's               parents               both               died               when               she               was               a               baby;               whereas               Charlotte's               father               outlived               all               his               children,               their               mother               died               when               Charlotte               was               five               years               old               (Cody,               Everett).

After               Mrs.

Brontë's               death,               her               unmarried               sister,               Elizabeth               Branwell,               moved               in               with               the               family               to               care               for               the               six               Brontë               children.

Pauline               Nestor,               in               her               biography               Charlotte               Brontë,               describes               Elizabeth               Branwell               as               "a               severe               character,               ill-suited               to               the               role               thrust               upon               her",               and               makes               mention               of               the               role               "her               strict               Calvinism"               played               in               raising               the               children               (Nestor               3).

Likewise,               Maureen               Peters,               in               her               book               An               Enigma               of               Brontës,               describes               Aunt               Branwell's               sacrifice               in               raising               her               sister's               children:               "As               a               strict               Methodist,               Aunt               Branwell               knew               where               her               duty               lay,               but               she               appears               to               have               derived               neither               pleasure               nor               contentment               from               the               doing               of               it"               (17).

In               Jane               Eyre,               Jane               is               raised               by               her               Aunt               Reed,               who,               like               Charlotte               Brontë's               Aunt               Branwell,               does               so               reluctantly               and               out               of               a               sense               of               duty.

When               the               grown               Jane               returns               to               visit               her               aunt               on               her               deathbed,               Mrs.

Reed               rambles               deliriously               about               Jane               as               a               baby               and               her               animosity               toward               her:               "I               hated               it               the               first               time               I               set               my               eyes               on               it…and               but               an               hour               before               [Mr.

Reed]               died,               he               bound               me               by               vow               to               keep               the               creature"               (Brontë               232).

The               parallels               between               Aunt               Branwell               and               Mrs.

Reed               continue               into               adulthood;               Jane's               return               during               Mrs.

Reed's               illness               appears               based               off               of               Charlotte               and               Emily               Brontë's               summons               home               from               school               in               Brussels               their               aunt               fell               ill.

However,               Aunt               Branwell               died               before               the               Brontë               sisters               even               departed               (Gaskell).

Of               course,               the               similarities               between               Aunt               Branwell               and               Mrs.

Reed               are               balanced               by               the               differences;               even               though               Aunt               Branwell               likely               was               the               inspiration               for               Mrs.

Reed,               it               seems               more               probable               that               Mrs.

Reed               was               an               exaggeration               of               Aunt               Branwell,               rather               than               an               authentic               copy.
               Some               parts               of               Jane               Eyre's               childhood               were               taken               directly               from               Charlotte               Brontë's               memories;               no               matter               how               extreme               seem               the               conditions               of               Lowood,               the               school               is,               in               fact,               intentionally               modeled               after               Charlotte's               own               experiences               at               Cowan               Bridge.

In               her               biography               The               Life               of               Charlotte               Brontë,               Elizabeth               Gaskell,               a               friend               and               fellow               writer               of               Brontë,               said               of               the               relationship               between               the               two               schools:               "Miss               Brontë               more               than               once               said               to               me,               that               she               should               not               have               written               what               she               did               of               Lowood               in               Jane               Eyre,               if               she               had               thought               the               place               would               have               been               so               immediately               identified               with               Cowan               Bridge,               although               there               was               not               a               word               in               her               account               of               the               institution               but               what               was               true               at               the               time               when               she               knew               it"               (Gaskell).

As               Lowood               was               obviously               meant               to               be               Cowan               Bridge,               despite               Brontë's               reluctance               to               have               others               aware               of               it,               the               similarities               between               the               two               schools               merit               additional               analysis.
               Gaskell               describes               the               Cowan               Bridge               school               as               a               charity               school               for               daughters               of               poor               clergyman,               that               they               might               be               educated               as               befitting               their               station.

The               school               was               established               by               "a               wealthy               clergyman…the               Reverend               William               Carus               Wilson,"               who               "devised               a               scheme,               by               which               a               certain               sum               was               raised               annually               in               subscription,               to               complete               the               amount               required               to               furnish               a               solid               and               sufficient               English               education,               for               which               the               parent's               payment               of               £14               a               year               would               not               have               been               sufficient"               (Gaskell).

The               Lowood               school               depicted               in               Jane               Eyre               is               also               "partly               a               charity-school",               as               Helen               Burns               tells               Jane               (Brontë               50).

However,               instead               of               being               a               school               for               clergyman's               daughters,               as               was               Cowan               Bridge,               Lowood               is               "an               institution               for               educating               orphans"               (Brontë               50).

Like               Cowan               Bridge,               each               student               at               Lowood               must               pay               only               £15               a               year,               while               the               rest               is               paid               for               by               subscription               (Brontë               50).
               Nor               do               the               striking               similarities               stop               here               -               the               conditions               at               Lowood               are               also               strongly               supported               by               the               Charlotte's               memories               of               Cowan               Bridge.

The               food               -               or               lack               of               it               -               especially               seemed               to               be               a               point               of               contention               with               Charlotte.

Peters               describes               Cowan               Bridge:               "They               slept               in               long,               narrow,               unheated               dormitories               and               ate               food               so               badly               cooked               as               to               be               almost               inedible.

All               her               life               Charlotte               remembered,               with               loathing,               the               burnt               oatmeal,               the               stews               with               lumps               of               rancid               fat               and               the               sour               rice               pudding"               (19).

Indeed,               the               food               at               Cowan               Bridge               left               such               an               imprint               on               Charlotte's               memory,               that               she               describes,               through               Jane,               the               food               at               Lowood               quite               vividly:               "Burnt               porridge               is               almost               as               bad               as               rotten               potatoes;               famine               itself               soon               sickens               over               it…               Breakfast               was               over,               and               none               had               breakfasted"               (Brontë               46).

And               then               dinner:               "The               odour               which               now               filled               the               refectory               was               scarcely               more               appetizing               than               that               which               had               regaled               our               nostrils               at               breakfast:               the               dinner               was               served               in               two               huge               tin-plated               vessels,               whence               rose               a               strong               steam               redolent               of               rancid               fat"               (Brontë               51).

And               then,               finally               a               small               though               edible               meal:               "I               devoured               my               bread               and               drank               my               coffee               with               relish;               but               I               should               have               been               glad               of               as               much               more               -               I               was               still               hungry"               (Brontë               52).

As               horrifying               and               incredible               as               are               Jane's               accounts               of               the               noisome               food               and               prevailing               hunger               at               Lowood,               it               is               still               more               horrifying               to               realize               that               these               scenes               were               written               from               Charlotte               Brontë's               own               memory.
               Mr.

Brocklehurst,               the               headmaster               of               Lowood,               also               owes               his               character               to               a               real               personality.

The               Reverend               William               Carus               Wilson               ran               the               Cowan               Bridge               school,               and               is               described               by               Peters               as               having               deliberately               put               the               children               through               hardships               in               order               to               make               them               into               "responsible,               God-fearing               adults"               (Peters               19).

With               this               goal               in               mind               the               children's               treatment               was               justified               as               the               means               to               a               righteous               end.

Likewise,               Mr.

Brocklehurst,               when               he               finds               that               Miss               Temple               has               fed               the               children               with               bread               and               cheese               when               their               breakfast               has               been               inedible,               protests:
               You               are               aware               that               my               plan               in               bringing               up               these               girls               is,               not               to               accustom               them               to               habits               of               luxury               and               indulgence,               but               to               render               them               hardy,               patient,               self-denying.

Should               any               little               accidental               disappointment               of               the               appetite               occur,               such               as               the               spoiling               of               a               meal,               the               under               or               the               over               dressing               of               a               dish,               the               incident               ought               not               to               be               neutralized               by               replacing               with               something               more               delicate               the               comfort               lost,               thus               pampering               the               body               and               obviating               the               aim               of               this               institution;               it               ought               to               be               improved               to               the               spiritual               edification               of               the               pupils,               by               encouraging               them               to               evince               fortitude               under               the               temporary               privation               (Brontë               62-62).
               By               comparing               the               records               of               Reverend               Wilson's               treatment               of               the               children,               and               his               goals               for               raising               them,               with               Jane's               accounts               of               the               headmaster               at               Lowood,               it               is               clear               that               Charlotte               Brontë               replicated               Wilson's               character               in               Mr.

Brocklehurst.
               In               honor               of               the               elder               Brontë               sisters,               Maria               and               Elizabeth,               who               fell               ill               under               the               conditions               at               Cowan               Bridge               and               died               immediately               following               their               return               home,               Charlotte               created               the               character               of               Helen               Burns.

Gaskell               points               out,               "I               need               hardly               say,               that               Helen               Burns               is               as               exact               a               transcript               of               Maria               Brontë               as               Charlotte's               wonderful               power               of               reproducing               character               could               give."               Maria               is               described               as               being               "far               superior               in               mind               to               any               of               her               play-fellows               and               companions,               and               was               lonely               amongst               them               from               that               very               cause;               and               yet               she               had               faults               so               annoying               that               she               was               in               constant               disgrace               with               her               teachers,               and               an               object               of               merciless               dislike               to               one               of               them,               who               is               depicted               as               "Miss               Scatcherd"               in               Jane               Eyre"               (Gaskell).

The               real-life               Miss               Scatcherd,               a               woman               by               the               name               of               Miss               Andrews,               appears               to               have               been               the               instigator               of               the               harsh               punishment               Maria               suffered.

None               of               the               Brontë               girls               complained               about               their               treatment,               perhaps               because               Maria               persuaded               her               younger               sisters               to               endure               their               treatment               in               silence               (Peters               20).

Having               watched               Maria               suffer               harsh               discipline               and               her               worsening               illness               without               complaint,               Charlotte               no               doubt               remembered               her               older               sister               with               an               impression               of               saintliness,               with               which               she               imbued               the               character               of               Helen               Burns.

Like               Maria               Brontë,               Helen               is               depicted               as               being               intelligent               and               isolated;               Jane's               first               introduction               to               Helen               is               during               an               outdoor               recess,               where               Helen               is               shunning               the               company               of               other               children               in               order               to               read               (Brontë               49).

Later,               in               class,               Jane               observes               Miss               Scatcherd's               apparent               dislike               of               Helen,               commenting               that               "Miss               Scatcherd               continued               to               make               her               an               object               of               constant               notice"               (Brontë               53).

Despite               Miss               Scatcherd's               treatment               of               her,               Helen               refused               to               criticize               her,               saying               instead               that               she               deserved               to               be               punished               for               her               faults.

Helen               admonishes               Jane's               fiery               temper               and               desire               to               fight               back:               "It               is               far               better               to               endure               patiently               a               smart               which               nobody               feels               but               yourself,               than               to               commit               a               hasty               action               whose               evil               consequences               will               extend               to               all               connected               with               you               -               and,               besides,               the               Bible               bids               us               return               good               for               evil"               (Brontë               55).

Given               that               the               character               of               Helen               Burns               is               acknowledged               to               be               a               faithful               representation               of               Maria               Brontë,               it               can               only               be               assumed               that               this               was               indeed               Maria's               view               of               their               situation               at               Cowan               Bridge.
               The               fever               that               is               described               in               Jane               Eyre               is               also               based               off               of               events               at               Cowan               Bridge.

The               girls               at               Cowan               Bridge,               like               the               girls               of               Lowood,               were               vulnerable               to               the               spread               of               the               fever,               most               likely               typhoid;               in               the               confusion               created               by               the               spread               of               the               fever,               Maria's               symptoms               of               worsening               consumption               were               overlooked,               or               perhaps               intentionally               ignored               or               blamed               on               her               laziness.

By               the               time               the               seriousness               of               her               condition               was               understood,               the               constant               hunger               and               cold               had               taken               its               toll,               and               Maria               died               shortly               after               returning               home,               soon               to               be               followed               by               Elizabeth               (Cody,               Everett).

The               fever,               which               Brontë               describes               as               "typhus",               is               reproduced               in               the               pages               of               Jane               Eyre               (76).

Similar               to               the               discussion               of               Cowan               Bridge               by               Gaskell               and               other               biographers               of               Charlotte               Brontë,               Jane               blames               the               impact               of               typhoid               on               the               conditions               at               Lowood:               "Semi-starvation               and               neglected               colds               had               predisposed               most               of               the               pupils               to               receive               infection"               (Brontë               76).

In               this               environment,               Helen               Burns               worsens,               and               finally               dies,               like               Maria,               of               consumption.
               Although               the               strongest               parallels               between               Charlotte               Brontë's               life               and               Jane               Eyre               occur               in               childhood,               the               similarities               continue               throughout               the               rest               of               the               novel               as               well.

Charlotte               created               Jane               after               her               own               image               of               herself,               reputedly               telling               her               sisters,               "I               will               show               you               a               heroine               as               plain               and               as               small               as               myself,               who               shall               be               as               interesting               as               any               of               yours"               (Gaskell).

Elizabeth               Gaskell               describes               Charlotte               as               having               a               "grave               serious               composure",               and               her               features               as               being               "plain,               large,               and               ill               set"               (Gaskell).

Likewise,               Jane               is               described               by               Rochester               as               having               "the               air               of               a               little               nonnette;               quaint,               quiet,               grave,               and               simple,"               while               her               cousin               St.

John               calls               her               "not               at               all               handsome"               (Brontë               131,               339).

Jane               takes               on               not               only               Charlotte's               thoughts               and               memories,               but               her               appearance               as               well.
               Jane's               choices               of               work               also               reflect               Charlotte               Brontë's               own               experiences               with               what               work               the               Victorian               world               provided               for               women.

Nestor               describes               the               Brontë               girls'               upbringing               as               establishing               "the               expectation               that               they               would               need               to               earn               their               own               living"               (3).

Besides               marriage               or               remaining               a               dependent               of               the               family,               the               only               option               available               to               women               was               teaching.

As               a               result,               even               though               she               disliked               children,               Charlotte               worked               as               a               teacher,               at               Miss               Wooler's               school               at               Roe               Head               and               at               the               Pensionnat               Heger,               as               a               governess               twice,               each               time               for               a               period               of               only               months,               and               attempted               to               open               a               school               at               Haworth               Parsonage               with               her               sisters               (Cody,               Everett).

Being               familiar               with               these               trades,               it               is               no               surprise               that               Jane               finds               the               same               sorts               of               work:               first               as               a               teacher               at               Lowood               after               finishing               her               studies,               then               as               a               governess               for               Mr.

Rochester,               and               finally               as               the               teacher               of               a               little               school               for               farmers'               daughters               at               Whitcross.
               When,               as               in               Charlotte's               own               life,               Jane               is               summoned               to               attend               the               deathbed               of               her               aunt,               she               learns               of               the               disgraceful               life               that               her               cousin               John               Reed               has               led,               up               until               his               recent               suicide.

The               Gateshead               servant,               Robert,               who               has               come               to               fetch               her,               tells               Jane,               "His               life               has               been               very               wild:               these               last               three               years               he               gave               himself               up               to               strange               ways;               and               his               death               was               shocking               (Brontë               221).

The               last               three               years               of               his               life,               the               young               Mr.

Reed               spent               drinking,               gambling,               and               otherwise               squandering               the               family               estate.

Whether               it               is               coincidence               or               based               in               the               reality               that               Charlotte               knew,               her               brother               Branwell               spent               the               last               three               years               of               his               life               as               an               alcoholic               and               an               opium               addict,               dying               the               year               after               Jane               Eyre               was               published               (Gaskell).

Although               Charlotte               could               not               have               known               that               her               own               brother               would               die               after               three               years               of               misconduct,               surely               her               experiences               of               watching               Branwell's               disintegration               contributed               to               the               fate               of               her               character               John               Reed.

Indeed,               Lucasta               Miller               states               that               "Branwell's               fall"               began               shortly               before               Charlotte               commenced               writing               Jane               Eyre               (78).

The               timing               of               Branwell's               disgraceful               behavior               clearly               argues               for               the               influence               he               had               on               the               course               of               the               novel's               subplots.
               The               relationship               between               Jane               and               her               employer,               Mr.

Rochester,               may               have               also               been               suggested               by               events               in               Charlotte's               own               life.

During               her               stay               in               Brussels,               Charlotte               apparently               fell               in               love               with               M.

Heger,               who               was               first               her               teacher,               and               then               her               employer,               as               she               accepted               a               teaching               position               at               the               school               at               the               end               of               her               studies               there.

The               basis               for               her               feelings               for               M.

Heger               was               apparently               intellectual,               as               she               described               him               to               her               friend               Ellen               Nussey               as               "a               little,               black,               ugly               being"               (Peters               86).

Charlotte's               infatuation               for               M.

Heger               distanced               her               from               his               wife               and               eventually               made               her               unwelcome               in               their               home               or               at               their               school.

Of               her               departure               from               Brussels,               Charlotte               wrote,               "I               think,               however               long               I               live,               I               shall               not               forget               what               the               parting               with               M.

Heger               cost               me"               (Gaskell).

Charlotte               wrote               to               M.

Heger               for               some               time               after               her               return               home;               the               "unquestionably               passionate"               nature               of               her               letters               leaves               no               doubt               of               her               feelings               for               him.

Charlotte's               secret               unrequited               love               led               to               the               creation               of               her               first               novel,               The               Professor,               but               the               influence               it               also               had               on               Jane               Eyre               is               undeniable.

Jane               says               of               Mr.

Rochester,               "I               am               sure               most               people               would               have               thought               him               an               ugly               man,"               and               she               continually               describes               him               as               being               dark               or               black,               much               like               Charlotte's               description               of               M.

Heger's               physiognomy.

Despite               Rochester's               appearance,               however,               Jane               falls               in               love,               and               is               soon               engaged               to               be               married               to               him,               until               she               finds               out               that               he               is               already               married               to               the               crazy               woman               he               keeps               locked               up               in               the               attic.

Jane               decides               she               must               leave               Rochester,               lamenting               as               she               runs               away,               "With               agony               I               thought               of               what               I               left…               I               longed               to               be               his"               (Brontë               321).

Jane's               grief               at               leaving               reflects               the               distress               Charlotte               wrote               about               after               leaving               M.

Heger.

One               can               only               imagine               that               the               happy               ending               of               Jane               Eyre               is               also               a               reflection               of               Charlotte's               thoughts               -               perhaps               the               expression               of               her               fantasies               regarding               M.

Heger.
               Before               Jane               earns               her               happy               ending,               however,               she               must               first               show               that               she               is               desirable,               despite               her               plain               face               -               much               as               Charlotte               herself               showed               by               turning               down               proposals               from               three               different               men,               two               of               them               before               ever               meeting               M.

Heger.

The               first               man               to               propose               to               Charlotte               was               Reverend               Henry               Nussey,               the               brother               of               one               of               her               closest               friends,               Ellen               (Everett).

Henry               Nussey               dreamed               of               being               a               missionary               and               had               chosen               Charlotte               because               he               thought               her               appropriate               for               a               missionary's               wife               (Peters               41).

Charlotte               refused,               feeling               that               she               was               "ill-suited"               to               be               the               wife               Henry               wanted,               and               not               wishing               to               marry               without               love               (Nestor               10).

Charlotte               wrote:               "I               had               a               kindly               leaning               towards               him,               because               he               is               an               amiable               and               well-disposed               man.

Yet               I               had               not,               and               could               not               have,               that               intense               attachment               which               would               make               me               willing               to               die               for               him;               and               if               I               ever               marry,               it               must               be               that               light               of               adoration               that               I               will               regard               my               husband"               (Gaskell).

Also               expressing               her               sense               that               they               were               not               suited               for               one               another,               Charlotte               said,               "Why!

it               would               startle               him               to               see               me               in               my               natural               home               character…               I               could               not               sit               all               day               long               making               a               grave               face               before               my               husband"               (Gaskell).

Jane               must               also               overcome               such               a               proposal,               from               her               cousin,               St.

John,               a               clergyman               who               also               dreams               of               being               a               missionary.

St.

John               asks               Jane               to               accompany               him               to               India               as               his               wife,               saying,               "You               are               formed               for               labour,               not               for               love…               I               claim               you               -               not               for               my               pleasure,               but               for               my               Sovereign's               service"               (Brontë               402).

Jane               imagines               her               fate               as               St.

John's               wife:               "always               restrained,               and               always               checked               -               forced               to               keep               the               fire               of               my               nature               continually               low"               (Brontë               408).

Just               as               St.

John               proposes               to               Jane               with               a               purpose               that               mirrors               Henry               Nussey's,               Jane               refuses               him               for               much               of               the               same               reasons               that               Charlotte               refused               Henry.

Having               confirmed               her               inalienable               right               to               make               her               own               choice               of               a               husband,               Jane               returns               to               Rochester,               thereby               playing               out               a               fantasy               ending               for               Charlotte's               own               experiences.
               That               Charlotte               Brontë               drew               on               her               own               limited               life               experiences               in               the               creation               of               Jane               Eyre               is               demonstrated               by               the               many               parallels               between               Charlotte's               life               and               her               heroine's.

Jane               evinces               many               of               the               characteristics               of               her               creator,               to               the               point               that               Jane               Eyre               is               a               portrait               of               Charlotte               herself.

It               is               clear               that               Charlotte               Brontë               put               not               only               her               heart               and               soul               into               her               writing,               but               her               very               life.
               
               Works               Cited
               Brontë,               Charlotte.

Jane               Eyre.

Oxford:               Oxford               University               Press,               2000.
               Cody,               David.

Charlotte               Brontë:               A               Brief               Biography.

27               Nov               2004.

Hartwick               College.


               http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bronte/cbronte/brontbio.html.
               Evans,               Barbara               and               Gareth               Lloyd.

The               Scribner               Companion               to               the               Brontës.

New               York:               
               Charles               Scribner's               Sons,               1982.
               Gaskell,               Elizabeth.

The               Life               of               Charlotte               Brontë.

1857.

27               Nov.

2004.


               http://lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/EG-Charlotte.html
               Everett,               Glenn.

A               Charlotte               Brontë               Chronology.

27               Nov.

2004.

University               of               Tennessee               
               at               Martin.

1987.

http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bronte/cbronte/brontetl.html.
               Miller,               Lucasta.

The               Brontë               Myth.

New               York:               Alfred               A.

Knopf,               2001.
               Nestor,               Pauline.

Charlotte               Brontë.

Totowa,               New               Jersey:               Barnes               &               Noble               Books,               1987.
               Peters,               Maureen.

An               Enigma               of               Brontës.

New               York:               St.

Martin's               Press,               1974.
               







Image of university methodist






university methodist
university methodist


university methodist Image 1


university methodist
university methodist


university methodist Image 2


university methodist
university methodist


university methodist Image 3


university methodist
university methodist


university methodist Image 4


university methodist
university methodist


university methodist Image 5


  • Related blog with university methodist





    1. indiainteracts.wordpress.com/   07/16/2009
      Romila Thapar, Duke University, Methodist Church or Romila Thapar, Secularism... that, “The Duke University is related the Methodist Church”. For details see...
    2. girlmblog.wordpress.com/   03/14/2012
      ...film knowing that we (CHAS) were going to screen the film at Southern Methodist University on March 7th AND the best part was that Will Ferrell himself was...
    3. michuzijr.blogspot.com/   01/23/2012
      ...wa miaka Ishirini anaetikisa chuo kikuu huko Marekani --- Name: Geofrey C Bilabaye School: Central Methodist University in Fayette Missouri Sports: Soccer Major: Computer science and international business. GPA...
    4. texasparlor.blogspot.com/   05/09/2010
      ... news about the apparent closing of the venerated Southern Methodist University Press, est. 1937 and still quite active. He begins "The future of the award-...
    5. reasonablekansans.blogspot.com/   09/11/2007
      ...claim ID is pseudoscience. Southern Methodist University is offering a course...and to think this is a *Methodist* university. Let me share a few more little...
    6. m-pyre.blogspot.com/   01/18/2007
      ... last week: "Intimates of President Bush have singled out Southern Methodist University as the likely site of his presidential library, but faculty members, complaining...
    7. writerquake.blogspot.com/   10/01/2008
      ... exhibits; and an independent public policy institute." Southern Methodist University is undoubtedly a fine institution and offers much more than a future presidential...
    8. thewhitedsepulchre.blogspot.com/   02/17/2010
      ... me most, though. Check out the SMU Libertarian website . The Southern Methodist University Libertarians have divided up their organization into a variety of interest...
    9. bilgrimage.blogspot.com/   03/11/2009
      ...same occasion that the bishop of her Methodist church, who sits on the board of her Methodist university, had told her after learning we were a couple that he...
    10. leiterreports.typepad.com/   02/27/2008
      The betrayal of principles of academic freedom and research makes this an embarrassment for Southern Methodist University.
    11. University Methodist - Blog Homepage Results

      The Wesley Center is a campus ministry outpost of the United Methodist Church in Eugene, Oregon. Students from the UO, LCC, and friends participate...
      Thought I'd post a few more pictures for you all. We're getting closer and closer to finished. I got to walk through the Gallery yesterday where they are putting up...
      Yesterday, I was interviewed by Thomas Gilson from Central Methodist University’s Eagle Radio about my writing. Since Blogger, WordPress, and Facebook all lack the...



    Related Video with university methodist







    university methodist Video 1








    university methodist Video 2








    university methodist Video 3




    university methodist































    0 개의 댓글:

    댓글 쓰기