Word: socials
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...absolute cessation of business. They have ignored the courts; have shown hostility to the government itself; they place their own interest above those of the whole country, and would make allegiance to the unions paramount to any other duty which men may owe to any organization--social, religious, political...
...been agitated and reagitated, and yet has failed to receive the support of eighty-five per cent of the American wage-earners, is strong proof of our contention,--namely, that trade-unionism for the past twenty years has pursued unwise methods, has violated rights fundamental to our whole social structure, has fostered a spirit of selfish tyranny, has sought to dominate the industrial world, and has placed its own interests before those of the whole country...
...Christian Association has secured the consent of Professor E. C. Moore, of the Divinity School, to lead this year a class to study the work of foreign mission boards in the non-Christian countries. This work will be considered in relation to the social, economic, moral and religious conditions of the countries. The course will meet for the first time in the Shepard Room, Phillips Brooks House, at 8 o'clock tomorrow morning and will be open to all members of the University...
...Foreign Work. Department aims to present the claims of foreign missions upon the intelligent interest and co-operation of College men. A class, which studies foreign mission conditions in their economic, social and religious bearing, meets on Saturday mornings at 8 o'clock, under the leadership of Professor E. C. Moore. Through this department the Association obtains the salary of E. C. Carter '00, who having been sent from Harvard to India in the fall of 1902 as one of the travelling secretaries of the Christian Association movement, has recently been put in general charge of this work...
Under the auspices of the Social Service Committee, six troupes were formed last year to give entertainments at the various charitable institutions in and about Cambridge. Fifty men took part in the work, giving about forty entertainments to a total audience of some 7,500 people. The work is being continued this year, and it is hoped that it will be on a larger scale. As the number of applications for entertainments always far exceeds the power of the Committee to fill them, and as the range of work admits of a great variety of talent, all men with...