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William Goodell Frost, D.D., president of Berea College, will speak under the auspices of the Social Service Committee on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in the Fogg Lecture Room, on "A Mountain College on the Fighting Line...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture by President Frost. | 1/23/1905 | See Source »

...Berea College, situated in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky, is an institution for the education of the negroes, and more especially the "poor whites" of the Alleghany and Blue Ridge Mountains, the stock from which Abraham Lincoln came. It is endeavoring to do for the people of that region what the Tuskegee and Hampton Institutes are doing for the negroes in the south...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture by President Frost. | 1/23/1905 | See Source »

...SOCIAL SERVICE COMMITTEE. "A Mountain College on the Firing Line"--Berea College, Kentucky. President Wm. Goodell Frost. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 1/21/1905 | See Source »

American University, $137,000; Amherst College, $10,000; Berea College, $110,000; Brown University, $1,000,000; Barnard College, $15,000; Bowdoin College, $200,000; Beloit College, $230,000; Carnegie Institute, $3,600,000; Cooper Union, $800,000; Columbia College, $192,000; University of Chicago, $2,675,400; Cornell College, $110,000; University of California, $135,000; Colorado College, $50,000; Clark University, $2,350,000; Drake University, $532,500; Dartmouth College, $5,000; Harvard College, $710,500; Hampton Institute, $101,000; Illinois College, $60,000; Lake Forrest University, $79,000; University of Michigan, $27,500; New York University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Public Donations of 1900 | 1/9/1901 | See Source »

...such a city that Paul waited for his friends to come from Berea, and felt "his spirit stirred in him, when he saw the city wholly given over to idolatry." Now what were the idols that so moved him? First in size and importance was the collossal statue of Athena which towered sixty feet high in the centre of the Acropolis, visible for miles around, and the first object sighted by Athenian sailors on their return home. Then, inside the Parthe non was Phidias' famous statue of Athena made of ivory inlaid with gold. Close by, in the Erectheum...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Conference. | 4/15/1891 | See Source »

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