Word: sided
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Raymond '10 was the first to reply for the negative side. He said the Separation Act was unjustifiable because it suddenly and arbitrarily violated a solemn agreement made between Napoleon I and the Pope, without any reference to the present head of the Roman Church. The violation was not based upon any great popular demand, or on any pressing necessity caused by the interference of the Church with the functions of the State. The Separation Act was the result of more political scheming and Anti-Christian agitation. A. Horvitz '10 continued the argument to the effect that the specific provisions...
...clergy before the Act had not been a burden on the State. Raymond, making the second rebuttal, stated that the Church was now entirely controlled by the so-called religious associations, and that its condition was one of complete helplessness. The force of Haar's final rebuttal for the side was marred by a tendency to invective. He pointed out quite clearly, however, that the attitude of political however, that the attitude of political hostility adopted by the Church towards the government was one of self-defence, and stated that its educational and political power had already been broken...
...Samuel A. Eliot, D.D., of Boston will preach in Appleton Chapel tomorrow evening at 7.30 o'clock. All seats on the floor will be reserved for members of the University until 7.25 o'clock. Students in the University will enter at the south side door and officers of the University and their families at the north side door. The gallery will be open to the public...
...annual intercollegiate chess tournament between Harvard, Columbia, Yale, and Princeton will be held this year in New York at the West Side Republican Club on December 21, 23, and 24. The order of matches will be as follows: December 21-Harvard vs. Princeton, Columbia vs. Yale; December 23-Harvard vs. Yale, Columbia vs. Princeton; December 24-Harvard vs. Columbia, Yale vs. Princeton...
...more intra-college competition. Mr. Derby's scheme would leave the Yale game or some important contest, which would still mean with our "American temperament" considerable specialization and exclusion of other interests, and the undesirable newspaper and arena notoriety of players, but it might turn some of the side-liners into players and possibly into University material. If undergraduates and graduates are not yet ready to withdraw from outside competition in a perfectly frank and manly way, as we withdrew from competition with Pennsylvania, and yet believe in more general participation in sport, why not adopt some such system...