Word: movement
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...track. Mr. Reed closes his article by urging the formation of an Inter-collegiate Bicycle Association. This would be a capital plan, but we doubt if the interest taken in bicycling in the colleges is great enough. In a few years will be the time for such a movement to be made...
...mere watchword such as this. Word-jugglery is often effective on party contests, but we cannot but think it harmful here. That is to say, we believe that those who support the new crusade often fail to grasp the real evils which have called forth this reform movement, because of a certain mental obstinacy on their part in only considering one aspect of the evil. It is true that it does no particular harm to attach to the term "professionalism" the peculiar connotation which is given to it by the Advertiser writer. We do not believe, however, that under...
...workers in natural science, where every man of them all is free, yet every man works as if the whole army of co-workers were under the orders of a single leader. A similarly ideal condition of organization is reached from time to time in the history of great movements, political or religious. Then individual interests are forgotten, individual self-consciousness is lost, and all the workers are for the one ideal of the movement, so that they all become one body. Such a condition Paul pictures in his ideal of a church organism, I. Cor. XII. But such...
...student athletic associations of the several colleges to consider the regulation of athletic sports, seems to open the way for a solution of the present difficulty which may prove satisfactory to all concerned. We hope that delegates from all the colleges whose faculties are concerned in the new movement will be present. A plan presented by such a convention would be very likely to obtain student approval, and we can see no good reason why it might not be approved by the college faculties also, if reasonable in its suggestions...
...express train and palace car, in addition a good hotel to stop at on arrival, such a hardship, especially when compared with the journey to Princeton the Harvard team makes every year? The action of the Harvard delegates at last year's meeting, in heading a movement for Dartmouth's expulsion is liable to be interpreted by outsiders as the result of pique, because Harvard was defeated by such a small college in both base-ball games of the preceding year. It is to be hoped that at the coming meeting, the Harvard delegates will feel themselves justified in withdrawing...