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Tomorrow night at 7.30 o'clock at the Liberal Club, 66 Winthrop Street, members of the Harvard International Assembly, representing 21 different nations, will hold a meeting to consider the foreign policies of their respective states. The speeches will be restricted, as far as possible, to five minutes in order to leave time for a general discussion afterwards. The meeting, which is open to members of the University, will concern itself chiefly with the foreign policies of the lesser powers, since the Liberal Club has already discussed the larger nations, such as England, France, and Germany.
The speakers, who are taking graduate courses in the University, with the nations of which they will be the representatives, are as follows: Vincent Phen, China; Gerhart Jentsch, Austria; C. S. Pexas, Greece; G. N. Tanikawe, Japan; B. G. Ohlin, Sweden; Said Dabbus, Turkey; Zygmunt Rudolph, Poland; Sigrud Fjaer, Norway; Jules Roman, Belgium.
After the discussion, which will be presided over by G. H. Guttridge of England, the committee will turn its attention to the revision of the constitution of the International Assembly, and will also elect members to the Secretariat for the coming year.
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