Word: viewing
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Duggan said that he had picked Borah's speech attacking the proposed court change because he thoroughly agreed with it. A contrast was made by Elwood M. Rabenold, Jr. '37, who spoke from the opposite point of view, reciting a speech by the Hon. James A. Bayard on "The Judiciary...
...compulsory fee become taxation without representation, two new groups need a vote in the all-high Committee for the Regulation of Athletic Sports. Though the Student Council thumps loudly for the nomination of two of its members to the Committee, the house sports should not be overlooked, particularly in view of their growth when watered by the new monies. It is significant that the Student Council was chosen to report on the college opinion towards sports, an indication of Quincy Street's knowledge that its finger is not on the student pulse, and that the present hierarchy of representation does...
...announced that five guides will conduct the tours this summer. A marquee similar to last year's placed in a convenient location will serve as headquarters for the guides; and there will also he available a form of "Harvard on View", which will give a map of the University and a schedule of tours...
Most effective part of the Irish Hospitals Sweepstakes scheme, from the point of view of Ireland, is that it not only sup ports Irish hospitals so luxuriously but does so almost entirely at the expense of the rest of the world. The drawing itself is naturally a Dublin shindig. Last week, as usual, the hall in the Lord Mayor's man sion was appropriately decorated, this time to represent "That Drawn-the-Favorite Feeling," with a stage set representing a Castle of Dreams. When the tickets had been drawn, by Ireland's prettiest young nurses, it was found...
Early radio engineers and psysicists were aware that radio signals could be transmitted over long distances, but from a theoretical point of view they could not understand why this is possible. They saw no reason why this energy omitted from a transmitting station should not disappear into free space and be lost to the cart. To explain this difficulty, Sir Oliver Heaviside in England and Arthur E. Kennelly simultaneously proposed the explanation that radio signals are reflected from an ionized layer in the upper atmosphere and the energy thereby returned to the earth...