Word: hearings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Members of the societies comprising the Federation of Territorial Clubs will be the guests of the Pennsylvania Club to hear Dr. A. P. Fitch, president of the Andover Theological Seminary, in the Territorial Club Room of the Union Monday evening at 7.30 o'clock. Dr. Fitch's subject will be "Harvard's New Nationalism." This meeting will also be the last chance before the recess to obtain information beneficial to the purpose of the Federation...
...House next Tuesday at 7.30 o'clock at which certain graduates and undergraduates will outline in more detail the life at Northfield during past years and also the prospective plan for this year. Every man who is at all interested is invited to be present at this meeting to hear the plans or to ask questions, whether he is planning to attend the conference...
...each of whom I can vouch for as being a perfect gentleman and a clear-headed business man. One in particular is incidentally a young Harvard graduate with a cum laude on his sheepskin, who to my knowledge is not given to making "cringing advances" nor to talking to hear himself talk. Therefore, although in no way implicated myself, I feel called upon to object mildly to the polemic against insurance men as a class, which recently appeared in the CRIMSON. This ill-considered letter leads one to suspect that the difficulty is chiefly with the writer himself. Either...
...discouraging, but it is the fact, and the fact has been so impressed on the minds of those interested in chapel that at last they have taken active steps to see whether or not we cannot be sure that each day will call men to chapel to hear a man whom the undergraduates want to hear. I think that nothing proves more conclusively the wisdom of this attempt than the almost enormous attendance which greets Professor Palmer and President Lowell and the others who are chosen to lead the services during early weeks of the college year. This step toward...
...Hearing good music is usually attended with the rigors; physical and financial, of ticket-getting, more or less personal preparation, more or less personal preparation, more or less cross-town travelling. And when one is uncomfortably ready for the business of being edified, he takes a large, measured dose,--heroically. Perhaps that is why so many of us do not make the most of our opportunities to hear good music. Perhaps that is also why informal recitals such as those which are being given in the Union on Friday nights find in us especial appreciation...