Word: speak
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Irving O. Whiting, of Boston, will speak tomorrow evening in Holden, at 6.30, on "Mr. Moody's Meetings in the South...
...Harvard students, perhaps, will actually grace the boards, it is not by any means improbable that many students will write for the stage. There is a large field open in the direction of dramatic writing, and solid satisfactory remuneration awaits success in this field. In these days when public speaking becomes absolutely necessary to public men, and when every man of determined opinions is at some time compelled to speak out those opinions, no opportunity ought to be neglected by which a better method of speaking may be obtained. The work of the Shakspere Club is admirably calculated to improve...
...lecture last evening by Mr. Lodge was a fitting close to one of the most entertaining and instructive course of lectures to which the students have listened for some time. It was well that the use of leisure time should be considered from, so to speak, a professional standpoint. The lecturer recognized the tendency of our present mode of life toward a life of leisure combined with, and comprehended in sensible, remunerative work. It is the duty of every man who is blessed with an opportunity to rest from the sterner duties of life to so cultivate...
...Shakspere Club are to be congratulated upon the interest which they have manifested in arranging for a course of lectures. The activity of Mr. Jones has resulted in the arrangement of a course of addresses on topics of interest to all who will hereafter "speak in public." The initial lecture will be given in Sanders, on Friday evening of this week. The lecture will be given by Mr. Bronson Howard, of New York, on "The Autobiography of a Play." The address cannot fall to be of great interest, for Mr. Howard is himself a highly successful playwright...
...Studd, who is to speak in Appleton Chapel tomorrow evening, we would say that we believe that what he will have to present will be exceedingly interesting to college men, and at least will command their hearty respect. Mr. Studd has visited Yale and Cornell and other colleges, and the papers from those colleges speak even enthusiastically of him. He is an Englishman, and was educated at Eton and Cambridge (class of '83), so that his sympathies with college students are naturally very strong. As captain of the Cambridge University Cricket Eleven, he won great distinction in athletics. "A typical...