Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Cambridge Union of Social Workers will hold a meeting in the Parior of Phillips Brooks House this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Professor William Morse Cole '90, associate professor of accounting, will speak on "Proper Accounting for Charitable Institutions." Miss Mary L. Birtwell will deliver the second address, her subject being "The Bearing of Equipment on Finance." Mr. F. P. Foisie will give some statistics of contributors to Cambridge charities. All members of the University interested will be welcome...
...society is to set before its members the duty of their profession, aside from its technical workings. This is the first year that outside of the legal profession has spoken on the subject. At future meetings this winter talks will be given by an engineer, a business man, a social worker, and others from various other vocations. It is planned to have this type of talk in alternate years, and in the intervening times to have speeches delivered by lawyers...
...classic languages. On the other hand, it is plain that he looks with some favor, at least, on a closer approximation to the English university ideal, with the university in control of the teaching and the small college (within the university) doing much for youth on the cultural and social sides. Like Princeton, following the lead set by Woodrow Wilson, Harvard that of A. Lawrence Lowell, and Amherst that of Alexander Meiklejohn, Yale is beginning to react favorably on the popular demand that in some way culture, scholarship and intellectuality be restored to a dominant place in the American national...
...England, Germany, and the United States," by Professor Francis G. Peabody. George W. Nasmyth, of the Harvard International Polity Club, in his talk "Above all Humanity are the Nations," reverses the ideal of the Club, and then pleads that the Cosmopolitan watchword is the expression of the fundamental social truth, "Above all Nations is Humanity." Louis P. Lochner describes a "Week-End Excursion to Paris;" and the customary editorial and news notes complete the number. There are several excellent illustrations, including President Eliot's picture, the John Harvard Statue, the College Yard (looking north from Grays Hall), and a group...
...Park denied that this latter objection to the cause was a real one, but classified it as the fear of the conservative and timid that any change, social, legal, or industrial, in the status of woman would do a great harm to women and thence to the family. She closed with the plea that the whole woman suffrage question depends on people thinking in the light of reason and justice, instead of seeing the cause through the mist of their own prejudices or the conservatism which is bred of custom; in short, that people should consider the question...