Word: socialist
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Room of the Union next Tuesday evening at 9 o'clock. A discussion on the subject "Contemporary Political Issues and Candidates" will be led by officers of the various political organizations of the University. Members of the Taft, Democratic, La Follette, Progressive Republican, Woodrow Wilson, W. E. Russell, and Socialist Clubs are invited to attend...
...excellent presentation of what has seemed to some a more difficult situation than it is. Mr. Henderson says, "It is a high tribute to the open-mindedness of the Harvard Corporation, and to the potency of Harvard's liberal tradition, that this (the immediate and thorough repression of the Socialist Club, the La Follette Club, the Wilson Club, and, since this is Massachusetts, the League for Woman Suffrage) has not been done". Free discussion is the one thing which will prevent alike riotous radicalism and stolid conservatism, and I am sure most Harvard men will hope with Mr. Henderson that...
...presence of the strike at Lawrence. The CRIMSON has received numerous communications on the subject, many of which have been printed, and some of which for one reason or another have not been printed. Mr. Victory Berger has delivered an address on the subject, and finally the Socialist Club has issued the first of a series of tracts upon...
...communications to us regarding the meaning of Socialism and the strike at Lawrence. Neither does it wish to get mixed up in the controversy now. At the same time, whatever Socialism may mean, and who-ever may be right, we are at least interested in this tract of the Socialist Club, not because we want to see more socialists, nor because it is a remarkable or flawless bit of argument. We have always held that Harvard men should interest themselves in current problems, and Harvard men certainly know nothing about Socialism as a rule. Our most important reason for considering...
...Victor L. Berger, Socialist Representative from Wisconsin, and editor of the Milwaukee Leader, addressed the members of the University in New Lecture Hall yesterday afternoon, giving a general discussion of the meaning of Socialism and its relation to present day conditions, both political and economic...