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Word: spreading (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...another column of the Crimson appears an interview in which Mr. Fechner, lecturer at the Graduate School of Business Administration, calls attention to the wide-spread misunderstanding that exists as to the aims of labor unions. So much publicity is given their discreditable acts, that their usefulness is often overlooked. Among the aims mentioned by Mr. Fechner, is the campaign to carry on educational work among the workers. Not only do the unions advocate compulsory education for children, free text-books and the extension of night schools, but they would have opportunities for study so widely offered that all labor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: USEFUL UNIONS | 1/12/1921 | See Source »

...sheet. Harvard gained nothing by liberating. The University does not wish to conduct an advertising campaign in a commercial manner, but it should not refuse to extend its influence where it can. It is conservatism carried to a harmful degree to imagine that a good name and fame are spread without any effort from within. Harvard, like Yale and Princeton, should support whole-heatedly any plan leading to a greater scope of usefulness and action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: USEFUL VACATIONS | 1/3/1921 | See Source »

Three hundred years ago the Pilgrim colonists first grounded their shallop upon the shores of Cape Cod, and established a new race and traditions which were destined to spread across continents and throughout nations. Three hundred years is but a short span of the world's life, yet human memory is sometimes shorter. How fitting is it, then, that on this day we should turn for a time from out shuttles, and books, and plowshares, to remember and do homage to the courage of the Pilgrims and to the ideals which led them forward...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PILGRIMS | 12/22/1920 | See Source »

...marshals and other class officers confer with the nominating committee of the Student Council, and appoint four men who are reasonably business-like and efficient, and who also are not busy with any extensive outside activities during the spring. These men would be the Chairman, the Treasurer, the Spread Manager, and the Yard Man. Of course there are many other ways of appointing or electing these men, but they should be the type of man that I have mentioned above. If it is desired to honor men who are more popular or more prominent in athletics, this could easily...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Letter to the Student Council | 12/7/1920 | See Source »

...Keating believes that Czecho-Slovakia, by virtue of the education and character of its people, and its geographical position, is holding Bolshevism at bay, and preventing its spread through Europe. To to this aspect of the importance of the country he will devote the major part of his address. It is expected that he will also touch on the relations of Czecho-Slovakia to Poland and Jugo-Slavia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JAMES KEATING AT UNION | 12/7/1920 | See Source »

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