Word: discussing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...meeting tonight to discuss the question of compulsory membership in the Union, the Student Council cannot do better than to call for a vote of the undergraduates by classes...
...Twelfth Annual Conference of Eastern College Men on the Christian Ministry, which opened last evening, will convene this morning in Andover Chapel at 9 o'clock and again in the evening at 7.30. The Reverend W. H. Wilson, D.D., Ph.D., will discuss "The Country Movement in its Relation to the Rural Church," the Reverend N. Boynton, D.D., will speak on "The Perils and Possibilities of the City Church," and Professor Walter Rauschenbusch, D.D., on "The Minister as a Servant of the Community" at the morning session. In the evening the Reverend N. E. Richardson, Ph.D., will speak...
These varying figures have some interest in showing that none of the three universities has anything like an undisputed lead in this field, but they are not to be taken too seriously. The thing of importance is the thorough, sane, and intelligent manner in which these eighteen undergraduates discuss the important questions of the day,--in a style far different from the "oratorical" contests of the Middle West. There are persons who think debating is in some mysterious way a corrupter of the youth who take part in it. Such persons take it too seriously. It is certainly an intellectual...
Tomorrow morning the Conference will meet at Andover Chapel at 9 o'clock, and again in the evening at 7.30 o'clock. At the morning meeting the Reverend W. H. Wilson, D.D., Ph.D., will discuss the "Country Movement in its Relation to the Rural Church"; the Reverend N. Boynton, D.D., will speak on "The Perils and Possibilities of the City Council"; and the Reverend W. Reuschenbusch, D.D., on "The Minister as a Servant of the Community." The speakers at the evening meeting will be the Reverend M. W. Jacobs, D.D., LL.D., who will speak on "The Personal Cost...
...undergraduates, and the views supported are the product of minds inexperienced and without breadth. A student cannot have developed any real power of discernment in music; hence his opinion can have but little weight. Music is, according to the point of view, a fine art or a science. To discuss it from any angle, however, requires a knowledge gained from years of experience...