Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Social Service report for the year 1911-12 is made very significant, not only by the fact that a greater number of men have carried on Social Service work with a higher degree of efficiency than in any other previous year, but also by the fact that Harvard is considerably in advance of other colleges in the efficiency and scope of its Social Service work. Cornell has only five men engaged in Boys' Club work, but this small number is sufficient to cope with the needs of a small town like Ithaca. One hundred men take part in settlement work...
There is printed below a list of the Harvard men who have done social service work regularly once a week during the past year, with the idea that, when presented in this form, the extent and significance of this work will be more adequately appreciated. It may be said that the men whose names appear have had, with few exceptions, weekly engagements throughout the year...
...McLean '14, E. G. Simons '12, W. H. Trumbull '15. 19 Russell Avenue, Watertown--J. C. Davis, Jr., uC., Sailors' Haven, Charlestown--G. L. Harrison 2L. St. Mary's Parish--R. A. Dodge '14. St. Mathew's Episcopal Church--S. Adams '14, R. S. Simmons '13. Social Service House--R. A. Files 1L., W. J. Hammersly 3L., C. E. Holmes '13, J. T. Lanman '15, T. C. P. Martin 3L., C. F. Merriam '14, P. Monteagle 2L. South End House--L. E. Barber '12, M. Brainard '15, S. P. Griffitts '15, F. B. Harvey '14, D. K. Packard...
...teams in their eating accommodations. The club is now some distance from Soldiers Field, but it is far more convenient than the Yale training quarters. The Varsity Club should mean a bright future for Harvard athletics. The athletes were formerly isolated and those who did not belong to social clubs had little chance for fellowship. This was a great evil and the direct benefits were apparent when the teams moved into their rooms on Holyoke street. There was then an opportunity for closer relations between the players and also between the players and coaches. In closing, Coach Haughton paid...
...closing Mr. Woods pointed out a number of broad foundations on which he believed that a new social order might be based. By these effort should be made that every child might have an opportunity for an upbringing, physically and morally sound, there should be a vast extension of the co-operative spirit in industry, as well as a supervision of the greater part of all business by public authority...