Word: states
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...further check upon the election, we suggest that the manager submit to the Athletic Committee the names of three nominees, together with the result of a canvass of the men entitled to vote. These voters should in each case state the reason for their choice, whether it he based upon personal friendship or upon actual or second hand knowledge of the candidate's ability. With these data the Athletic Committee would be able to pass intelligently upon the recommendations of the manager. The adoption of this suggestion might not result in securing better managers, but we believe that it would...
BOARD OF OVERSEERS. Meeting at 50 State street, Boston...
...January 2 of the Harvard Club of Indiana, and will speak informally at a dinner of the Harvard men in the city. On January 5 he will address the public school teachers of Dayton Ohio, and on January 7 will give another address before the students of Ohio State University at Columbus, Ohio. He will probably be in Cambridge by January...
Horvitz made the first rebuttal for the negative, and laid great stress on the fact that the salaries of the clergy before the Act had not been a burden on the State. Raymond, making the second rebuttal, stated that the Church was now entirely controlled by the so-called religious associations, and that its condition was one of complete helplessness. The force of Haar's final rebuttal for the side was marred by a tendency to invective. He pointed out quite clearly, however, that the attitude of political however, that the attitude of political hostility adopted by the Church towards...
Lewis, for the affirmative, claimed that the financial burden to the State had been a real one, and that the law had been provoked by unendurable evils, of which the educational was the worst. Lurie's rebuttal which followed, was humorous, and was aimed at proving the cases chosen by his opponents to be sporadic. Butler, closing the debate for the affirmative, said the question was to be looked at from a broad point of view, without taking into consideration mere technicalities. Thus, the so-called Organic Articles of Concordat, though never signed by the Pope, had been in force...