Word: haven
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...meeting of representatives of the debating interests of Harvard, Yale and Princeton was held at New Haven on Saturday to discuss changes in the debating systems at present in use in the three universities. Harvard was represented by F. B. Wagner 3L., Yale by C. F. Kerrigan, L. O. Bergh and T. F. Hall, and Princeton by N. M. Thomas '05, J. L. Semple '05 and W. S. Davison '06. The proposals stated in Saturday's issue of the CRIMSON were discussed, but no decision was reached except in regard to the suggestion made by Princeton that briefs be submitted...
...informal meeting of representatives of the debating interest of Harvard, Yale Princeton will be held at New Haven this morning to discuss changes in the debating systems at present in use in the three universities. F. B. Wagner 3L., the Harvard representative, will submit a plan now in use by the triangular league composed of Pennsylvania, Columbia and Cornell, by which all three universities debate upon the same subject on the same date. Each university enters two teams, one of which debates at home, the other away, one team supporting the affirmative of the question under discussion, the other...
January 21--Yale at New Haven...
...Haven, Conn., December 9, 1904.--Before a very large audience in Woolsey Hall, Yale defeated Princeton tonight in the annual debate. The Yale team, which supported the affirmative of the question, "Resolved, That it should be the policy of the United States not to hold territory permanently unless with the purpose that it ultimately enjoy statehood," surpassed its opponents in both oratory and argument and presented a much clearer and better connected case. Both teams were inclined, however, to be somewhat flippant. The judges, Professor John Bassett Moore, LL.D., of Columbia University, Hon. Lucas F. C. Graven, Governor of Rhode...
Yale and Princeton will hold their annual debate tonight in New Haven, on the subject, "Resolved, That it should be the policy of the United States not to hold territory permanently unless with the purpose that it ultimately enjoy statehood." Yale will support the affirmative and Princeton the negative side of the question. The Yale team is made up of A. P. McKinstry '05, W. D. Myers '05 and C. L. Beede '06 L. S. The Princeton team is as follows: N. M. Thomas '05, J. L. Semple '05 and W. S. Davison...