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Word: movement (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...meeting will be held in the Union Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock for the purpose of forming an organization of Harvard farmers. The movement to establish closer relations between present and former members of the University interested in agriculture as a profession is instigated by certain leaders of the Undergraduate Economics Society. At the organization meeting the speakers will include the Hon. Carl Schurz Vrooman '94, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, and Secretary Davis, of the Sand Hill Board of Trade of Aberdeen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Farmers to Have Organization | 2/11/1915 | See Source »

...counting Hawaii and Porto Rico, there were fifty-two land grant colleges and universities having a required term of military service, and these enrolled in their military departments 23,864 students. The movement favored by President Schurman is thus already on its way, but to date, the Government has paid little attention to the work, and it is a definite course of action which is suggested...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STUDENTS SHOULD LEAD ARMY | 2/11/1915 | See Source »

...CRIMSON (or the Heliotrope-Mauve as it is shortly to be renamed) approves the reform movement that would surpress all banners--beginning, of course, with red ones...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BAN ON BANNERS. | 2/5/1915 | See Source »

...Princeton University strongly upholds the idea of college military training in an article in the Nassau Literary Magazine entitled "A Phase of Military Preparedness." He commends the idea of a strong military force for United States, and says that it in no way interferes with the universal peace movement which the present war has so rudely interrupted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON HEAD ON MILITARISM | 1/30/1915 | See Source »

...years there has exhibit among Harvard students a sentient against the serving of intoxicants functions given under the auspices of University. This sentiment has not be confined to undergraduates. It is class-meetings alone from which mean excluded through an unwillingness make themselves conspicuous by them stinence. The temperance movement now national and even international scope, and it is only natural that a student body so representative as the Harvard should at last begin to explore itself vigorously upon this vital question of the hour...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: On Behalf of Graduate Schools. | 1/23/1915 | See Source »

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