Word: speech
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Tuesday evening, March 15, at 7 o'clock. Each man will speak ten minutes and six men will be retained. At the third trial, Friday evening, March 18, at 7.30 o'clock, there will be a regular debate, and each man will have twelve minutes for his main speech and five minutes for rebuttal. The team will be picked at this trial...
...pension to be mildly insane. There follow a series of uproariously funuy scenes between Klapproth and the "patients" Josephine Kruger, who is continually searching for material for a new novel: Fritz Bernhardy, an inveterate traveller: Eugen Rumpel, a young man with dramatic aspirations and a defect in his speech: Grober, an irascible old soldier: and Amalic Pfeiffer, who is constantly searching for a husband for her daughter...
...clock in Sever 11. Each competitor will then be allowed to speak five minutes, and six men will be retained. The second trial, on Friday evening. February 26, in Harvard 1, will be conducted in the form of a regular debate, each man making a main speech of twelve minutes and a rebuttal speech of five minutes...
...annual mass meeting for all men in the University interested in any kind of track athletics was held last evening in Upper Massachusetts. Captain E. T. Rust '04, in a short speech, urged all the men present to realize that the task for this year is to bring out a winning team in the dual meet on May 22, and said that this could be accomplished only through the united efforts of all men interested to induce a much larger squad to come out immediately for regular training. Mr. Graham made another call for more material and outlined the plans...
...students, in the classes for those years. Such an article bearing on the never settled question of academic distinctions in college as an earnest of future services, is always of interest. An article by Professor Kuno Francke on "Emperor William's Gift to Harvard," is a reprint of his speech delivered at the opening exercises of the Germanic Museum, November 10. "From a Graduate's Window: Contrasts Pleasant or Otherwise," presents strikingly the in-adequacy of the salaries of Harvard professors of today and fifty years...