Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Stout '29, President of the CRIMSON, will address the aspirants, outlining their work and explaining CRIMSON standards and qualifications for editorship. The new men will then be shown the various departments in which they will work, and the details of their several tasks will be outlined by active members of the various boards...
This tenet of the Coolidge credo was reiterated by the President at last week's semi-annual business meeting of the government in Washington. It was the dominant note in an address devoted to the eight years of budget system history. Those years have seen the public debt reduced from $24,000,000,000 to $17,000,000,000. Big business, an invalid in 1921, has revived. Unemployment has been lessened, economic confidence restored...
...Clark '29, captain of the University crew, will address the assembled rowers and he will be followed by E. J. Brown '96, University coach, H. H. Haines, Freshman mentor, F. R. Sullivan '27, coxswain of the 1927 University eight, C. H. Pforzheimer '28, coxswain of last year's University crew, and G. G. Benedict '23, assistant dean...
Professor Harry Elmer Barnes has delivered another ultimatum to the world. Defying his critics to "scare him away," the expounder of historical sociology at Smith College serves notice that although of course he did not mean to begin a controversy in his recent address before the scientific congress he will now light to the finish. Then in a delicate touch the professor remarks that if his opponents had only kept quiet there would have been no public discussion of the question. But of course if they do take notice of him. Dr. Barnes will "raise the ante and stay...
...masterly three and a half hour address, M. Poincare reminded the Chamber that negotiations for revision of the Dawes Plan are about to begin among the Allies, the U. S. and Germany (TIME, Jan. 14). The representatives of France, he said, must have a free hand. They would cling tenaciously to the principle that Germany must pay enough to satisfy French reparations claims and cover the debt of France to Britain and the U. S. Within that rigid framework the Chamber ought to accord the Government every liberty in negotiation...