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...three papers which are to be read on "Oratory and Debating" the second will be delivered by Professor G.P. Baker on "Intercollegiate Debating." In the discussion which is to follow, parts will be taken by Hammond Lamont '86, editor of the New York evening Post; Dr. R.M. Alden '96, of U. of P., and Professor E.E. Hale Jr., '83, of Union College. Mr. Lamont was instructor in the English department from 1892-1895 and was associated with Professor Baker in work in argumentation in '94-'95. Dr. Alden was associated with Professor Baker in the same kind of work during...
Senator Hoar '46 will make the address and the award of deturs will follow. Besides those whose names are in the pamphlet, the invited guests include the Governor, the Mayor of Cambridge, various University officers, including the President, Follows, Overseers and Faculty, the head masters of the preparatory schools sending the highest scholars, and all living winners of Bowdoin Prizes...
...spurts but the first Newell managed to hold the lead and won by three feat. The second Newell finished about four lengths behind the first Weld and a length ahead of the second Weld. The time was 10 minutes and 46 seconds. The orders of the winning crews follow...
...shown in the practice yesterday, but the general work of the team was still unreliable. All of the line men showed important faults, which made the defense weak at times and ruined the good work of the backs on the attack. The men were slow in charging, failed to follow the ball and played too high, consequently, very little headway was made through the centre of the line J. Lawrence alone was free from these faults, but his usual tendency to play offside appeared again and was more costly than the slowness of the other...
...principal contribution to the November Monthly is a poem, "Prometheus Pyrphoros," by J. T. Stickney '95. The poem is an attempt to imagine what was contained in a lost play by Aeschylus. The versification, however, which is almost entirely of blank form, does not follow the model of the ancients. Instead of ten syllables to a verse there are more often eleven, with now and then a passage in rhyme. The style as a whole is very subtle and obscure. The basis of the poem is the fable of Prometheus: He attempts to bring light and fire to the people...