Word: spoke
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...rowed with Cornell and Princeton over a two-mile course at Ithaca, May 23. Eighty men from the classes of 1917S. and 1916 reported at the first meeting of the Freshman crew candidates on Monday. Captain Denegre introduced Mr. Richard Armstrong, the new supervisor of rowing, who spoke on what was expected of the Freshmen. The average weight of the men who reported is 159 pounds, and the average height 5 feet, 10 1-2 inches...
...recent meeting of the Boston Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Walter, Camp of Yale spoke on "Football and its Relation to Business". A report of the address written for the "News" follows...
...hampering the individual and so the Illustrated takes an editorial fall out of you. But the Illustrated states a forceful case against your "paternalistic Group System and Faculty advisers" to which many Harvard men will demand an answer. The reviewer heard Mr. Burton Kline '06 when he spoke on Harvard and the press and knows from experience that his statement of Harvard's professorial ill-treatment of reporters is as true as it is interesting. R. L. West '14 has given us a good deal of inside information on the training of debating teams to what he calls the "Harvard...
George Lansbury, British Socialist and former member of Parliament, spoke at a joint meeting of the Harvard and Radcliffe Socialist Clubs at Brattle Hall yesterday. He told of the labor situation in England, as it has arisen from the recent industrial uprising in Dublin, of the immanence of public ownership of railways and coal mines in the United Kingdom, of the problem of unemployment, and of the Woman Suffrage movement...
...Withington, whose class was the first to adopt the plan of Senior dormitories, spoke from close personal experience of the contribution that the Seniors make to the real Harvard democracy, by rooming in the Yard together. The average Harvard man is one who pursues, more or less, the course of developing individually in his years here. That individually is not by any means lost in the Senior dormitories, and it is really the average man's individuality which makes for the true democracy here, which is the judging of a man by what he accomplishes in College...