Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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This is the first opportunity that the whole class of 1922 has had to hear Dr. Fitch. Although he spoke to a group of the Junior S. A. T. C. early this fall, he has not been able to make the trip from Amherst to address the entire class since the return of the College to its normal basis...
...first year. Before his duties at the Andover Theological Seminary became too heavy, Dr. Fitch used to give a series of talks to the first-year men, but recently he has been able to speak only once each year. Last year he was one of the men who addressed the Freshman class in the series of speeches held in the Smith Halls Common-Room under the auspices of the Phillips Brooks House Association. As it was impossible to arrange these speeches this fall because of the S. A. T. C., Dr. Fitch is making a special trip from Amherst...
...English Department, Mr. Maynedier is in charge of course 22, which has been limited to sixty students. English A is in charge of Mr. Hersey for the first half-year and of Professor Greenough for the second. A new course is number 10c, on Masterpieces of Public Address, to be given as a half-course in the second half-year by Associate Professor Winter. Professor Lowes is listed to give English 9, which has been changed to Examination Group IV. Another new course is 7a, given by Professor Hurlbut, on "Swirt and his Time." Professor Lowes is also scheduled...
Today, at nine o'clock, at the regular meeting of Government 1a, in the New Lecture Hall, President Lowell will address the Freshman Class in regard to the regulations relating to Concentration and Distribution. All Freshmen who take Government 1a and all other Freshmen who have no college engagement from nine to ten o'clock are required to attend. Upperclassmen in Government 1a are excused from attendance...
That the University Ensign School which graduated its last class of cadets yesterday, was the first Officers' Material School in the country to open during the war and the last to close, was the statement of Capt. P. W. Hourigan, commandant of the School, in his farewell address. It also, he said, had the reputation of turning out the best reserve officers of any one school, and had graduated 890 ensigns, second only to the Annapolis Reserve School which commissioned 1,000 men. President Lowell, and Rear Admiral Spencer S. Wood also spoke, Lieutenant A. R. Parker, Chaplain...