Word: ets
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Several instrumental soloists distinguished themselves, among them: flutists, Sue Alder and Cynthia Crane in the "Et misericordia" and "Esurientes" sections, and Michael Senturia, who played the oboe obligato during the soprano aria, "Quia respexit." The string section as a whole produced remarkably good intonation and tone quality. It is not surprising that the chorus was not quite up to the caliber of the orchestra since the singers were all freshmen. An unfortunate case of extreme flatting occured in the course of the woman's chorus "Suscepit Israel...
Greetings & Meetings. Wife Agnes, 37, gave English lessons to the Hiroshima Maidens before they took off for the U.S. for plastic surgery (TIME, Oct. 24, 1955 et seq.), last year taught a course in nutrition that featured 30-yen (10?) meals and American recipes for Japanese dishes. Meanwhile, in between a grueling daily round of meetings, greetings, speeches and luncheons, Fazl has found time to lecture at the university, spends two hours each week giving English lessons to a group of political-science students. He took time off on his 1955 home leave to persuade U.S. colleges and universities...
...skin"; none gives relief to last "through the night." The complaints gave the offenders 30 days to reply to the charges, set dates early in June for hearings giving them a chance to argue for comforting relief from FTC's decision to put the heat on Heet et...
...different ways evoking the New World. Italy's Dino Campana sees classical images that compare the noble Indian savage to Venus, Federico Garcia Lorca's Brooklyn Bridge Nocturne throbs with Spanish symbolism, while France's Jules Laforgue dreams in Gallic-materialist specifics ("Des venaisons, et du whisky. . . et la loi de Lynch") and Walt Whitman shambles forth in his pagan-hobo way, singing The Song of the Open Road. Trying to follow each poet's vision, the music seemed to have little vision of its own, but it was skillfully scored. It evoked a lusty...
...Zwirner and Dick Knorr in the triangular meet, or of Cornell's John King in the Heps certainly did not hurt the varsity. Yet such an argument is valid only if the varsity had not had its own troubles. For had Joel Cohen, broad jumper Dave Gately, Robertson, Anderson, et al. not been injured, the varsity's power would have reached frightening proportions in comparison to its Heptagonal rivals...