Word: forth
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...will be held in Appleton Chapel on Wednesday evening, December 20, at 8 o'clock. The College chorus assisted by a chorus from Radcliffe College, will render a special program of Christmas music, which will be as follows: 1. Organ Prelude: "Andante Cantabile." Widor 2. Salutation. 3. Choral: "Break forth, O Beauteous Heav'nly Light," Bach 4. "Lo, How a Rose," Praetorius 5. Carol: "Good King Wenceslas." 6. Scripture. 7. Christmas Hymn: "While by my Sheep." 8. Congregational Hymn: "Adeste Fideles." 9. Motet: "Presentation of Christ in the Temple," Eccard 10. Old French Carol: "At Midnight a Summons Came...
...rebellion of 1798. In it brother love and mother love, whetted by the sharp incidents and sacrifices during a rebellion, are confronted by love of country; there is a period of suspense that touches the most disinterested heart, the mother swoons, and the son, the less patriotic, goes forth from his home into the night. The play works in and out from itself, upon itself, suggesting sequence, heightening suspense, the fulfilling anticipations in a scene that must linger long in the memory of every observer...
...problem that presents itself the more likelihood there is of getting an undergraduate to help. St. Stephen's attempts to do a large work in one of the hardest districts of Boston. If it is successful at all it is because the work is difficult and because it draws forth the efforts of men of ability...
...first 20 minutes the University team played a close game with the second team in which the former scored one touchdown by Storer but missed an attempted drop-kick by Potter from the 15-yard line. During most of this time the ball went back and forth in mid-field, neither side being able to score. Campbell got away three times for long runs but when the play approached the second team goal line, the defence stiffened, and the first team backs were powerless. Of the three times that the goal line was endangered, one chance to score was lost...
About the middle of this month the entire country was startled by the publication of a wholesale indictment of American colleges, and among them, Harvard, by Mr. R. T. Crane of Chicago. The extravagant language and the grossly exaggerated statistics called forth a host of editorial comment and protest. The figures were so distorted that, to all who were in any way familiar with college life, they refuted themselves...