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Word: auditorium (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Introduction to Ol' Blue Eyes 101, a 70-year survey examining the theme "Growth: how to achieve and do it properly." No reading, but extensive listening to records required. Lecturer: Frank Sinatra, Sh.D. (doctor of showbizology). Last week some 400 students turned up at the Yale Law School auditorium to hear the Chairman of the Board deliver that class-by-himself course. Asked to speak on personal achievement, Sinatra responded characteristically to protesters critical of his appearance at South Africa's Sun City resort five years ago: "I'll go anywhere I want to go, anytime I want...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Apr. 28, 1986 | 4/28/1986 | See Source »

Because, if neglected by America, Lebanon would almost certainly drift toward antagonism to U.S. interests, the former adviser to a Lebanese president told a half-filled Boylston Hall auditorium...

Author: By Sara O. Vargas, | Title: Lebanese Diplomat Faults U.S. Middle East Policy | 4/24/1986 | See Source »

...student who was present at Boylston Auditorium on April 2, who witnessed the sad trampling of all the principles of free and open debate, I was both angered and confused by the reactions in the pages of The Crimson; notably, Robert Katz's piece, "Not So Simple" and Joseph Crystal's response in your "From Our Readers" section...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Missing the Point | 4/10/1986 | See Source »

...piece, "Not So Simple" is indicative of the confused nature of the argument, which can be summarized as "well, the protestors were wrong to try to keep these murderers from speaking, I guess." The matter, contrary to Mr. Katz's formulations, is really quite simple: the rowdies in Boylston Auditorium who threw glass and red paint at the speakers violated the central tenet of academic discourse, the free expression of all sides of an argument. On a matter as emotional and divisive as U.S. policy in Centra America there is simply no room for such attempts to squelch opposing viewpoints...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Missing the Point | 4/10/1986 | See Source »

...civil liberties, especially the organs of the Church, which have voiced dissent over government policies, are objectively wrong and deserve approbation. It is precisely because of the spiking of these stories by such groups as the Committee on Central America (COCA) that I, for one, ventured to Boylston Auditorium to hear what those who oppose the Sandinista regime had to say. Mr. Crystal ends his letter on a note of high pomposity by saying, "I hear the objections: Where might [the protestors] argument take us tomorrow? To this I answer: What is happening today?" By this formulation, Mr. Crystal, assuming...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Missing the Point | 4/10/1986 | See Source »

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