Word: movements
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...pass I also think is necessary to the game in some form, although it should be modified in some way. Mr. Dalv and myself advocated limitation in last year's conference, to eliminate the wild scramble for the ball on the high passes, but without success. This year the movement seems to have gained some ground, and from an article in the Yale News I should judge that Mr. Camp has come around to that opinion, which would seem to presage some change...
...method of the course will be constructive rather than historical. Although the general view-point will be technical, educational problems will be treated from a non-professional stand-point. Froebel's theories reflect closely the tendencies of the romantic movement, and lead to the consideration of the work of Carlyle, Ruskin, Emerson, Novalis, Schelling, Goethe, and Schiller...
...more attention. Four years ago we all united in doing honor to the memory of Emerson on the hundredth anniversary of his birthday. Those who praised Emerson as a philosopher emphasized that it was his mission to give beautiful form to the idealistic thoughts of the great philosophical movement which started with Kant and culminated in Fichte. Tonight's celebration at the German Verein is devoted to Fichte himself. Some Harvard men have wished to do what has been done in the last few weeks at a hundred places within and without Germany. They want to do honor...
...added that the chief value of a Fichte memorial does not lie in the reference to the past, but in the importance for present day thought. It is evident that after some decades of philosophical indifference, a new strong philosophical movement has set in all over the world and that its strength lies in a revival of Fichte's ethical idealism. It is most fortunate, therefore, that Professor Julius Goebel, who is equally interested in the historical and philosophical aspects of Fichte, will deliver the chief oration. HUGO MUNSTERBERG
...recent graduate of the University of Geneva and the founder of one of the numerous Esperanto journals, M. Privat is very well fitted to explain the status of the Esperanto movement and the relation of the University student toward it. He was secretary of the second Esperanto Congress held at Geneva in 1906, and is one of the most distinguished Esperantists in Europe...