Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Harvard 5 Mr. McCoy, 7 New Lect. Hall Mr. Nolte, 3, 17 Harvard 2 Mr. Palmer's Section 10 Sever 5 Section 18 Sever 6 German D Bradley-Morse Sever 17 Nichols-Yuge Sever 18 German 21 Sever 6 Indio Philology 2 Sever 18 Philosophy 2 Emerson A Social Ethics 27 Emerson A 2 o'clock (I) English 10a Emerson J French 13 hf. Emerson J Spanish 1 Emerson D TOMORROW Botany 2 Sever 5 Chemistry 4 New Lect. Hall Chemistry 18 Pierce 112 Economics 3 New Lect. Hall Economics 11 Harvard 6 English 8 Sever 17 English 10b Sever...
...phases to those who see in the situation certain conditions which might be said to parallel those at Yale. To sum up the broadest aspect of the plan, it is projected subdivision of the University into smaller residential units, and the chief purpose will be an improvement of the social side of education by the promotion of better understanding between diverse groups of students and the establishment of more thorough contacts between students and instructors or tutors...
...control what all fair minded persons acknowledge to be at the present time a great evil. Every civilized country is trying by one method or another or control the evil of drink. We are trying a somewhat more drastic experiment than any other. It is really the greatest social experiment of modern times and deserves the most careful and persistent study
...great social changes of the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries gave rise to profound political transformations. The industrial revolution radically upset the economic system and established industrial and commercial capital side by side with wealth in land. This in turn involved the decline of the old feudal aristocracy and the rise of a middle class. It was but natural that this natural class, as it became influential should desire some voice in the affairs of government. In time it evolved a political theory known as liberalism and based on the principles of individualism, liberty and free competition. In the countries...
...power of the absolute monarchy was broken and constitutional systems were instituted before 1914. Two of the most notable examples were Russia and Turkey. It is quite conceivable that under normal circumstances the new systems might have evolved satisfactorily in time, as the country in question developed economically and socially. But the world war proved too great a strain. Even the more advanced countries found the existing system unsatisfactory and introduced war governments, which smacked strongly of dictatorships. In the less advanced countries the war led to total collapse, as in Russia and in Turkey. In 1917 the liberal experiment...