Word: speaking
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first time since the triangular system was established in 1909, the judges will cast their votes separately. The chairman will announce the decision. Each debater will speak for twelve minutes in constructive argument, and five in rebuttal. The affirmative speakers begin the argument and have the last rebuttal speech...
...talks to the Freshman class have played an important part in the program of the first year. Before his duties at the Andover Theological Seminary became too heavy, Dr. Fitch used to give a series of talks to the first-year men, but recently he has been able to speak only once each year. Last year he was one of the men who addressed the Freshman class in the series of speeches held in the Smith Halls Common-Room under the auspices of the Phillips Brooks House Association. As it was impossible to arrange these speeches this fall because...
...clock for the first smoker that it has held since the war. This gathering of 1919 is an important one, in as much as it is the last meeting before Class Day, at which subjects of class interest may be considered. Men prominent in the class will speak on Senior activities this spring, including plans for the coming picnic, picture and Class Day. The speakers tonight are: H. C. Flower, first marshal of the class; C. A. Clark, Jr., chairman of the Class Day Committees; L. K. Garrison, class treasurer; and Charles Jackson '98, general secretary of the Alumni Association...
...meeting has been arranged to be held in the Fogg Art Museum Lecture Hall on Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Dr. G. A. Sarton, of the Carnegie Institute is to deliver an address on "Leonardo, the Man of Science," and Professor G. H. Edgell '09 is to speak on "Leonardo, the Painter.' Between these two short addresses, the University Choir, under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison '06, is to render selections of Renaissance music...
...that suppression by the split at the Peace Conference. The Fiume question and the newly discovered secret pact between Japan and China are illustrations of how the press has been injured since the war began by the censorship and by government concealment of news. Never again will it speak with the authority it once had and this is the more regrettable because of the gravity of the new issues confronting all the nations of Europe and of the world. With the red flag flying on more than half the public buildings of Europe, there never was as much need...