Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...annual fall clothing collection made by the Phillips Brooks House will begin today. Collectors will go around the various dormitories to gather up discarded clothing, old text-books and magazines. The collection will last until Wednesday night and a wagon will call for the articles collected on Thursday. The Social Service Committee of Philips Brooks House makes three such collections each year with the object of giving students an opportunity to dispose of articles where they will be most appreciated and to make it possible to aid many deserving poor...
...Social Museum, daily, except Sundays and holidays, from 8.30 A. M. till 5 P. M.; Saturdays, from 8.30 A. M. till...
...Social Service Committee of Phillips Brooks House makes three such collections each year with the object of giving students and opportunity to dispose of articles, with which they are through, where they will be most appreciated, and to make it possible to aid many deserving poor. The clothing is carefully sorted, the best of it being reserved for needy students and the rest distributed among recognized charitable institutions...
...should be some spiritual region in which he can do as he likes, some land of little things where he may be delivered from the tyranny of the long arm." This reflection may invite more appreciation in England, where tradition and time-honored custom have established a political and social inertia reasonably impervious to radical pressure, than in America, whose institutions are not similarly encrusted. However, herein lies a possible indication of our own proneness to talk and act nonsensically. College men especially are wont to search out the humorous elements in a serious situation, and their enjoyment in raillery...
...never over-drawn either in her happiness or earlier "dumb- ness." Mr. Wilson's Barnaby has not the sureness of Mr. Cope's of last year. In many moments he strikes an almost burlesque note. Every one of the other characters--except perhaps the city people (from Reinhartz's social Eutopia, Reading)--is strikingly individualized by author and actor. Mrs. Fiske's sureness and beauty of voice and diction alone are a rare treat, set in the fresh surroundings of the old Dutch community and in a stage setting in every way satisfying. J.W.D SEYMOUR...