Word: speaking
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Replied Secretary Mills, shrugging: "Oh, you know no one can speak for the President. I'm not here to give the Administration's attitude...
...five-day annual meeting at Wilmington, Del. While some 30 clerks counted proxies, the 700 stockholders who attended had to be moved to a nearby Warner theatre (operated but two days a week for lack of patronage) where they laughed loudly every time President Harry Warner tried to speak...
Reaching far underneath a bed for a stray sock tossed there by its owner, Mrs. E. Adelbert Jacobson, a maid in one of the Houses, ventured to speak a piece of her mind in an exclusive CRIMSON interview yesterday morning. "Now take this here sock," Mrs. Jacobson commented, "thrown way under here out of my reach, what do those boys think I am a lost and found department. Why, the work I have to do to keep these rooms in order! My lands, you'd think a cyclone had hit it every morning. Pajama tops here, and the bottoms...
Preparations for the first meet of the Freshman Debating Council were completed yesterday with the announcement of the men who will speak at the debate with the Winthrop High School team at Winthrop this evening. Elimination trials for the team resulted in the selection of A. G. Sullivan '36, as first speaker, L. C. Lewin '36, second man, J. S. Bach, Jr. '36, third, and C. B. Fiebleman '36 as alternate...
...week instead of Conductor Leopold Stokowski, Eugene Ormandy took the Philadelphia Orchestra to Manhattan, to Carnegie Hall stage where Conductor Mengelberg refused to let him play ten years ago. The audience loudly approved his firm, clear beat, his authority over the orchestra, his unmannered way of letting the music speak for itself. He suggested to some people the simple, hard-working conductor that Stokowski used to be before he let his pale hair grow...