Word: objections
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...object of the club is to educate its members and. in a broader sense. the whole University, in the discussion of the radical social thought of the day. Speakers of national note will probably be secured, who represent the most advanced sociological and economic thought. with especial attention to the various phases of socialism. The club is a political organization only in so far as its objects may be advanced by these meetings. The next meeting will be held some time next week when officers will be elected...
...held in New York on April 1. These delegates will be appointed this week by the president of the club. The League, formed a few years ago, consists of the civic and political clubs of about thirty of the leading, colleges and universities of the country, and its object is to form a bond between men in the various colleges who are interested in raising the standard of public and political life and further interest other men in the work. Delegates are expected from the Universities of Colorado, North Dakota, Louisiana, and the University of Chicago, beside all the large...
...main purpose of the trip is to arouse interest among the graduates of the nearby states in the musical activities at Harvard, in this, the centennial year of its existence. It has a threefold object in view, to stimulate interest in the Department of Music, and in the John Knowles Paine Memorial Building, which is being planned as musical headquarters for the University, and finally in the centennial celebration of the Pierian Sodality to be given by the centennial orchestra...
...Teachers' Association was founded in 1891, and is composed of officers of the University and of Radcliffe College and persons who have been officers or students of the University. It has as its object the promotion of technical training in education and the advancement of its members in their profession...
Several Law School men, among whom are graduates of the University and of Yale and Princeton, have made arrangements for the formation of a social club, which shall have as its object the promotion of social unity in the Law School. A considerable sum has been subscribed already in the form of bonds and 47 Brattle street has been taken as a club-house, a steward engaged, and necessary arrangements made. The club will afford a place where men interested in legal topics may meet and discuss matters of common interest. The most prominent men engaged in pushing this idea...