Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Professor T. N. Carver, writing on "Social Service and the Student" for the Phillips Brooks--House Social Service pamphlet, outlines in the following words the opportunities for social service activities for the undergraduates, and the benefits which they may derive from...
...Social Service Committee of the Phillips Brooks House Association desires to bring to the attention of students of the University those opportunities for social service which lie nearest at hand. Believing that all useful work is social service, even though we make our living by it, and that every serious student is preparing himself for some kind of useful work, this committee has no desire to attract the students' attention away from that kind of social service. Nevertheless, there are present opportunities for active and positive service which may be carried on by a student while he is preparing...
...University who desire to do social service work should apply to the social service secretary in Phillips Brooks House this morning between 8 and 11 o'clock. There are about 100 positions vacant as leaders of boys' clubs in the settlements of Greater Boston. Men who can coach athletic teams, supervise club athletics, and instruct foreigners are especially desired. Last year 400 students of the University were engaged in various phases of this interesting work, and these positions are now being filled for the current year...
...separate in themselves, but are united in the Phillips Brooks House Association, which is in turn keeping together the students who would ordinarily be separated on account of differences in religion. He also spoke of the great number of Harvard men who were engaged several nights a week in social service work under the direction of Phillips--Brooks House. He concluded by telling of the great social problems the Association has solved and those that it is trying to solve at present...
...like to have the American visitors lecture, each of them giving at least one lecture, and that when these lectures had been given, the visitors should regard their responsibilities as discharged. Among the lecturers in Wellington were Professor Wheeler and Professor Hanus--Professor Wheeler lecturing on "Ants and Other Social Insects," and Professor Hanus on "The Search for Standards in Education." The courtesy and generous hospitality of the committee in charge were untiring...