Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Administration, and the Budget System of Great Britain. These courses will be known as Government 25, 29, 26, and 28. Government 6a hf. will be transferred to the group open to undergraduates and graduates and will be given by Mr. Laski. Economics 17 will be made a full course. Social Ethics 20c will be withdrawn...
...country control public opinion absolutely. Those people are very sensitive, and this must be taken into consideration in dealing with them. It is almost impossible for us to conceive a people with no political education, but the Colombians have none. In their early years they get none of that social education which is the real foundation of all political education. All that is non-existent there...
These reports will include those of the president, C. A. Coolidge '17; P. M. Cabot '18, treasurer; J. D. Parson '17, librarian; W. W. Wobster '17, Christian Association; J. P. Thurber '17, St. Paul's Society; C. E. Coleman '17, Catholic Club; W. B. Beale '18, chairman of the Social Service Committee; F. C. Wilson '17, chairman of the Harvard Mission Student Committee; W. J. R. Taylor '17, chairman of the Chapel Committee; E. C. Kemble 4G, Graduate Schools Society secretary; A. E. Case 3L, Law School Society secretary, and R. M. Atwater 3M, secretary of the Medical School Committee...
...Lampoon has done well to mock a tendency which has become all too general in America. The America of the "parlor snake" is not true America, and Harvard men should be the first to prove this. True art and even true social standards as well as true hearts in the trenches must help us in the eyes of Europe...
...complaint. And without doubt it is based really on narrowness of judgment. In no place where men have learned to differentiate between man and man and the most primitive tribes have learned that sort of selection--are all beings equally regarded and equally admired by their fellows. In any social scheme where relations become more complex there is liable to be error of judgment. Men place stress on external appearances, they judge others by their possessions, or some fancied distinctiveness of birth. At Harvard, as at other places frequented by civilized man, those external appearances are apt to mislead...