Public Speaking TodayWhittlesey House, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Incorporated, 1940 - 355 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 16
Seite 264
... Reporter , what you have said thus far seems to indicate that people are afraid that they won't get jobs , or afraid that their incomes won't increase . MR . REPORTER : What they think is that if they can get jobs they are darn glad to ...
... Reporter , what you have said thus far seems to indicate that people are afraid that they won't get jobs , or afraid that their incomes won't increase . MR . REPORTER : What they think is that if they can get jobs they are darn glad to ...
Seite 271
... REPORTER : Do the anti - trust laws get enforced ? MR . CHEVALIER : I think you have only to read the news- papers to realize that they do . MR . REPORTER : You sound like a New Dealer . MR . CHEVALIER : I hope not ! MR . DOUGLAS : Well ...
... REPORTER : Do the anti - trust laws get enforced ? MR . CHEVALIER : I think you have only to read the news- papers to realize that they do . MR . REPORTER : You sound like a New Dealer . MR . CHEVALIER : I hope not ! MR . DOUGLAS : Well ...
Seite 272
... REPORTER : Who has been talking about these doors of opportunity being closed ? MR . CHEVALIER : I thought it was the folks you were talking to out on the street , Mr. Reporter . MR . REPORTER : Yes , but they get their picture from the ...
... REPORTER : Who has been talking about these doors of opportunity being closed ? MR . CHEVALIER : I thought it was the folks you were talking to out on the street , Mr. Reporter . MR . REPORTER : Yes , but they get their picture from the ...
Inhalt
THE QUICK AND THE DEAD | 15 |
WHAT IS GOOD SPEAKING? | 48 |
Chapter IV | 56 |
Urheberrecht | |
15 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Advertising American argument audience Benjamin Franklin better breath Bruce Barton Carlyle chairman CHEVALIER comfortable committee Communism Communist consider conversation course debate Demosthenes diaphragm discussion DOUGLAS economic Edmund Burke effect eloquent exercise extemporaneous eyes fact feel force Foreign Trade Zones Franklin give hear heard humor idea ideology imagination inflection interest Iolanthe Jacob Marley John Caird liberty listeners live look Mark Twain matter mean meeting ment mind motion nation never occasion oratory pause persons phrase pitch platform political practice present problem public speaking question radio reason relaxed REPORTER Republican RICHFIELD social sound speaker speech spirit story student talk teachers tell things thought tion Tommy Corcoran tone topics trying voice vote Wendell Phillips words write