That way you can glance at your notes when you are not behind the lectern.
You never saw him stationary, holding onto a lectern like many people making a presentation.
Instead, place your notes on one side of the lectern at a 90 degree angle.
Once he was at the lectern he would look up and out at his audience.
Following Solicitor General Clement to the lectern was Joshua Rosenkranz representing the law schools.
Ten minutes before the speech an assistant flattened all the pages on the lectern, according to Tedlow's biography.
L. The press corps had thinned out by then, and a succession of anonymous engineers took to the lectern.
If there is a lectern nearby you can use that for your notes.
Leighton Andrews took centre stage at a Foreign and Commonwealth Office lectern flanked by two huge red dragon flags.
Mr Jones took the smiling and clapping, mind-your-body-language seat at the top table, Mr Smith took to the lectern.
It has stone sculptures on the walls, stained-glass windows and a carved lectern.
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Back in those days the choice of which inspirational figure to stick behind a lectern in front of your new M.
Daughter Christina Foreman said she came to the lectern to deliver the message her parents would have wanted her to share.
He says that crumbling up the course like this forced him to study his own teaching more than he had at the lectern.
Lined up behind the lectern in polo shirts or jacket and tie, they could have been spliced seamlessly into an old Apollo newsreel.
He admits that every time he steps in front of a lectern, it could turn into another count against him in his court-martial.
There was no lectern - just a couple of discreet glass paddles for the autocue between the first minister and his audience in Llandudno.
This way, you can seemingly just be walking by the lectern with your head down as if you were spontaneously thinking up a new idea.
Each cardinal then approached a lectern, placed his right hand on the gospel and, in varying accents, pledged in Latin an individual oath of secrecy.
I. conference room with some dozen people who he said would be affected by the policies that he was going to discuss from the lectern.
In the centre of the soccer-pitch-sized interior courtyard stands a similarly outsized white marble lectern, an almost ethereal sight among the falled buttresses and overgrown weeds.
Conservative justices took a greater voice in the second half of the arguments as former Solicitor General Theodore Olson stepped to the lectern to challenge Proposition 8.
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When it was his turn to speak, Jones rejected the lectern that had been set up for him, saying that it reminded him too much of college.
Miller stood alone at the lectern, scowling into the spotlight.
Following Waxman to the lectern, Solicitor General Clement all but threw in the towel on some of the argument the Bush administration made in its briefs to the court.
On a screen behind the lectern at the briefing, Doug McCuistion, the director of the Mars program, projected a poster with a halftime score on it: Mars 24, Earth 15.
On a recent morning Alexei Miller, head of Russia's OAO Gazprom, the world's largest public energy company by reserves, strode toward a lectern in a standing-room-only convention hall in Amsterdam.
Before the East Room ceremony, the militaristic and somber atmosphere was lightened by Romesha's son, Colin, who climbed the podium and examined the lectern, briefly playing hide-and-seek with the bemused onlookers.
The Tory leader, David Cameron, even gave his set-piece speech on October 1st from a lectern, calculating that his usual gambit of roaming the stage without notes would be inappropriately showy.
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