54 results

  • Mentions: Chicago Board of Education
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Addams and Howe urge the construction of a new junior-senior high school before the Chicago Board of Education.
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Addams discusses the motto of the Chicago Woman's Club and its history of social reform for its Golden Jubilee at the Congress Hotel.
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Addams describes the history of the Chicago Woman's Club and the future of social reform.
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McCune asks Rich for help negotiating between the Chicago Board of Education and the Hebrew Institute.
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Taylor updates Addams on news of the Wendell Phillips Settlement's activities.
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At a meeting of the education department of the Chicago Woman's Club, Addams encourages the use of school health care workers and censuses.
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Addams spoke to the Reading Chamber of Commerce on the role that the United States could play in reducing the humanitarian crisis in Europe.
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Addams and Bodine discuss changes needed in compulsory education rules to make them more effective.
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Karsten updates Addams on business in Chicago, including a resolution created to deter the Board of Education from implementing military drills in high schools and a peace exhibit to be held in March.
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Karsten welcomes Welty as a member of the Woman's Peace Party, and informs her that she would be interested in discussing the introduction of military drills into Chicago high schools.
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Karsten replies to Hounsell request for information about the introduction of military drill into high schools.
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Addams asks Blaine for her annual donation to Hull-House to help them clear a deficit which came from their Unemployment fund.
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Addams discusses Julia Lathrop's presentation at the National Conference of Social Work in Kansas City.
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Using her home Nineteenth Ward in Chicago as an example, Addams explains how political corruption is born in the corruption of youth and argues for the establishment of regulated public spaces to encourage cooperative and positive relationships instead. This is the eighth article of a monthly, year-long series on economic and social reform in America and a woman's role to affect change.
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Addams discusses the role of a lack of recreation for youth as a source of political corruption and argues for the establishment of regulated public spaces to encourage cooperative and positive relationships.
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Addams defends her involvement in partisan politics and argues that philanthropy and politics must often be partners in charting a better future for families and for communities. This is the first article of a monthly, year-long series on economic and social reform in America and a woman's roles in affecting change.
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Addams' testimony before an Illinois State Senate committee as the leader of a contingent to oppose legislation in Illinois that would exempt child actors from the state's 1903 Child Labor Law.
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Addams warns independent women against men who will try to take advantage of them in matters of money. This is a reprint of an article first published in 1907.
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Addams co-wrote the Hull-House entry in The New Encyclopedia of Social Reform, covering its history and accomplishments.
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Addams describes the poverty of the Hull-House neighborhood in the early days of her work there. She discusses the lack of security and loneliness of the elderly, as well as child labor.
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Addams argues for women to have the vote in order that they may continue to perform their duties to family and to home in the modern world, where responsibilities, like feeding their children and keeping them safe, are no long directly within their control.
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Addams argues for the creation of entertainments for urban dwellers for recreation and relaxation.
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Addams discusses the experiences of Chicago probation officers and the profession of civil service.
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Taylor laments the absence of several members at the recent meeting of the Chicago Commons' Board of Trustees and proposes an idea to have just two meetings each year.
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Addams addressed a meeting of teachers and laborers on the need for funds to support better education on February 11; the lecture was published on March 5, 1905.