Word: subject
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Last Saturday morning he spoke before the Chicago Club on "Psychotherapy"; in the afternoon he addressed the Germanistic Society on the subject of "Books and Readers in Germany and America." He was a guest of the Commercial Club in the evening, delivering an address on "Psychology in Commerce and Industry." Professor Munsterberg spent last Monday in Toronto, and spoke before the Canadian Club of that city on "Right and Wrong in the Prohibition Movement." He delivered two addresses Tuesday before the students of Cornell University. In the morning he spoke to the students of the department of philosophy...
...John Hopkins Dennison, minister of the Central Church, Boston, will speak at the weekly meeting of the Christian Association in the Parlor of Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7 o'clock. His subject will be "The Power of Right Thinking." All members of the University are cordially invited to be present...
President Eliot will speak before the Civic Forum on the subject of "Lawlessness" this evening in Carnegie Hall, New York. After the President's speech the question will be open for general discussion. The Civic Forum is an organization in New York whose objects are the discussion of public questions and the promotion of international good-will. Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D., h.'90, will preside at the meeting. Tomorrow morning President Eliot will deliver a short address before the students of the Horace Mann Schools and Teachers' College...
...preliminary trials for the Pasteur Medal will be held in Upper Dane Hall, Friday evening, beginning at 7.30 o'clock. At these trials six men will be retained to take part in the final contest, January 14. Each man will make a five-minute speech in English upon the subject of the contest, "The Policy of France and Morocco." The judges will be L. Allard, of the French Department, professor R. M. Johnston, M. C. Leckner '07, as the deputy of Professor G. P. Baker '87, the deputy of Professor I. L. Winter '86, and a representative appointed...
...does Harvard alone attest his greatness. His mental precision and unusual capacity for lucid and apt discrimination have enabled him to treat public questions with singular authority and with an unerring instinct for the aspirations and needs of society. He has touched no subject without illuminating it; he has stood firmly for collegiate and civic righteousness; and so sane have been his counsels, so masterly his power of statement, that he not only commands today the attention of America, but he is honored by scholars and thinkers throughout the world. He has set an example to all by the simplicity...