Word: speak
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...seem to certain Freshmen that insult has been added to injury. At a time when few occupants of the Charles River Palaces have recovered their equanimity, they are informed that Dean Brown of Yale will speak to them in Smith Halls Common Room. Some may feel that in a few weeks they might have so quashed their community feeling that they could have received this man graciously--even joyously. It has been asked in Gore Hall whether the Dean will discuss football in his address...
...University will have the privilege of hearing an address by Dr. John R. Mott, LL. D., in the New Lecture Hall this evening at 6.45 o'clock. Dr. Mott, who will speak on the subject, "War Conditions in Russia and Europe," is preeminently fitted to deliver such a war lecture because he probably possesses more first-hand knowledge of the whole complex European situation than any other man in the country...
...Mott tell of his experiences in Y. M. C. A. work abroad. Tomorrow, however, members alone will mean nothing. The University must be there. Dr. Mott can always address non-collegiate audiences; his talk here is the only one of its kind to be given,--he is to speak at this University and none other. The assembly then must be of a mass meeting nature and the tickets distributed should not be given out to family or friends; we want the University itself, not its followers. The lecture will be worth while, that is certain, and no one who comes...
...contest have been almost completed. It will be a formal affair, held in the Music Building, and presided over by Professor C. Cestre, University Exchange Professor from the Faculte des Letters at Bordeaux. At that time the six men selected last evening will each be given 12 minutes to speak on either side of the question. The judges, who will probably be taken from the French and Economics Departments of the University, will be announced later...
...regular weekly meeting in the New Lecture Hall tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock, Dr. R. H. Lord '06, will speak on the present conditions in Russia. This will be the third of the University War Lectures. Dr. Lord spent several weeks of last summer in the newly-formed republic and has made a very close study of the military as well as the political and economic aspects of the situation there. He has delivered several other lectures on this subject...