Word: question
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...negative team will meet the Yale affirmative in Sanders Theatre on Friday, May 5, at 8 o'clock, while the 1919 affirmative team will debate against the Princeton negative at Princeton. The question is, "Resolved, That the United States should grant complete independence to the Philippine Islands within the next five years." Mayor Rockwood of Cambridge will preside and the judge will be Mayor Curley of Boston, Mayo Cliff of Somerville, and Mayor Cliff of Newton...
...subject, including the purpose and scope of city planning, governmental control over land privately used, etc. In the second lecture the speaker will discuss the plan of a city as a whole and its parts as related to the whole. The third lecture will take up the question of private development as controlled by building regulations. The last lecture will be on the subject of the administration in city planning. Lantern slides illustrating foreign and American loge methods and their results, will be used. The lectures will be open to the public...
...subject this year is "Resolved, That the policy of the French in Morocco during the present century has made due allowance for the rights of other European nations." Candidates should come to the first trials prepared to give a five-minute speech on either side of the question. All undergraduates are eligible. At the second trials ten-minute speeches will be allowed, while at the final trials men will be permitted to speak fifteen minutes...
...Chicago judge has solemnly ruled that Bacon wrote Shakspere, Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson's three performances of "Hamlet" in Sanders. Theatre have aroused an interest in the University such as no event in the drama has aroused for some years. In fact, it is comforting to have the mooted question forever disposed of, if only the higher court does not rule that the question does not come within its jurisdiction...
...question in which the Athletic Committee should not become involved is the irrelevant problem of professional and amateur athletics. Harvard is called upon to put forth teams and crews developed under given conditions, and Harvard, in fairness to her supporters, must leave no stone unturned in her effort to give her best. The question is simply this: Who is to have the right to select the oarsmen of the crew? Is that power to be vested in a young, inexperienced captain, or in a responsible, experienced coach, employed as a permanent authority? In fairness, alike to every captain...