Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...broader thing than the Nationalist Party, the Nationalist Government, or the Nationalist Army; the Nationalist movement is a nation-wide, though not yet nation-deep awakening; it is a movement away from the old and toward something new, toward hope, toward light, in politics, in economics, in social and religious activities, in the realm of arts and letters, and in the field of physical sciences...
...Estate of Norton Perkins: "In Memoriam to my father, the late E. H. Perkins Jr." 50,250.00The Rockefeller Foundation: For the School of Public Health 137,250.00The Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial: Industrial Psychology 12,000.00Survey of Crime and Criminal Justice 25,000.00International research in the social sciences 7,490.77Study of individual industrial efficiency and research in the field of business 20,000.00The Charles Sprague Sargent Memorial Fund for the Endowment of the Arnold Arboretum 222.345.00Estate of Martha L. Sargent (Mrs. Howard Sargent.: To be known as the Louisa Lee legacy...
...Sever 18 Mineralogy 14 Mineral. Lab. Music 2 Old Fogg Lect. Rm. Philosophy 1a Abramson-Weber Emerson D Weeks-Zevitas Emerson J Philosophy 13a Emerson J Philosophy 33 Emerson J Semitic 9 Old Fogg Lect. Rr. 2 O'clock Anthropology 1 New Lect. Hall Chemistry 2 New Lect. Hall Social Ethics A Emerson D Social Ethics 26 Emerson...
...with a discussion of "the new social code of the student and its effects on academic life" that Mr. R. L. Duffus in the New York Times Magazine concluded his survey of the problems of American colleges. And because he chose merely to be an optimistic reporter of the surface facts, this conclusion was something of an anti-climax. The effect of club life and self support on undergraduate democracy he felt to be a dangerous subject better set forth without injudicious comment. At Harvard," he said, "it is taken for granted that a certain social status in the outside...
...Manning, Bishop of New York, like many a bishop inclined to deal pleasantly with the Roman hierarchy, uttered his dictum on the encyclical and upon church unity at the annual meeting of the Church Women's League for Patriotic Service in the Manhattan home of Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, social bigwig. Said Bishop Manning: "We are living in very interesting times. . . . Great movements are going on all about us. ... I want to say that I hope no one will feel in the least discouraged or doubtful as to the progress of the movement [for union] on account of any pronouncement...