Word: spoke
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Mission Study Class on Mexico will meet in the Parlor of Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7 o'clock. Dr. John Howland, of Guadalajara, Mexico, will spoke upon "The Awakening in Mexico During the Nineteenth Century." The members of the class will take part in the discussion which will follow, and Dr. Howland, will answer questions regarding conditions and missionary problems in Mexico. All members of the University are invited...
About fifteen of the leaders spoke of their own experiences and offered criticisms of the work now being done by Harvard men. The current feeling of the whole conference showed an added increase of interest in the social service work and that the men were applying theory to practical problems...
...36th anniversary dinner of The News was held Saturday night in the ballroom of the Hotel Taft. Nearly 250 guests were entertained. Prominent among the speakers were Norman Hapgood, who described Journalistic ideals; President Hadley, who praised. The News; and Secretary Anson Phelps Stokes, who spoke on Yale Culture. R. A. Douglas, chairman of the out-going board, R. H. Macdonald, Jr., present chairman, and Stoddard King, 1914 managing editor, who acted as toastmaster, were also speakers. The annual banquet of the Courant was held Monday evening in Memorial Hall...
There will be a meeting of candidates for the board of the Freshman Red Book in the Trophy Room of the Union tonight at 7 o'clock. Q. Reynolds '14, and C. F. Farrington '16, chairman of the 1916 Red Book Committee, will speak. These men also spoke at the 1917 smoker last night...
...Thursday evening Major-General Wood, U. S. A., spoke on the subject of the Military Instruction Camps. The camp at Burlington, Vermont, which is the one of the five that Harvard students would naturally join, will be held for only five weeks, allowing ample time for other possible summer undertakings; the expenses of the outing will be so slight that the experience is possible for practically everyone; the work will not be so strenuous that it is devoid of enjoyment; the wide variety of the training will render it worth while whether the country is ever...