Word: forth
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...Governing Board of the Union has instituted a series of lectures or conferences, with the general title of "Lectures on the Professions," with the idea that in each academic year there shall be given six or more lectures setting forth to undergraduates the nature of the principal professions...
...prose story "A Woman There Was," is a study of a coquette, thoughtless but not all bad, and a sturdy unsophisticated rustic youth. The phases of feeling and the development of character are well set forth; but how could the young lady be "enclosed by her background," and what is a "perennial" sermon? The warning against believing all we read in newspapers, "The Tyranny of the Press," is timely. "From Clatsop to Nekarney" is a vivid and interesting description of a long walk on the coast of Oregon. The tragic story of the young musician Roderigo is well told...
...Athletic Committee has issued a pamphlet in which are set forth the regulations governing athletics in the University. These are divided into six articles under the following heads: 1--The Committee. 2--Rules of Eligibility. 3--Schedules and Games. 4--Captains and Managers. 5--The Use of the "H." 6--General regulations. This pamphlet may be obtained free of charge at the Publication Office, University...
...figures are after all not the essential thing. If there was more attention to college duties on those two Saturdays than in the previous years and less distraction due to the intercollegiate contests, we have taken a step in advance. If a brief statement of the Student Council, setting forth the situation in concrete form, is instrumental in reducing the number of absences it has justified its position by just so much, both to the students and to the governing boards. Even in this regard, what does it matter in the long run whether or not this has been...
...take the place of common sense; the lovers discuss idealism with an ingenuity that is hopelessly literary. Mr. Britten discusses the charm of the sea, his point apparently being that such discussion is entirely profitless to anyone. Mr. Sheehan, in a sort of religious monodrama of three pages, sets forth cleverly the shortcomings of the monastic life. The rest of the verse is of the usual undergraduate variety; for the most part it consists in the rather ingenious phrasing of things which might nearly as well be left unsaid. The leading article, on "Student Guiding at Harvard," finally extracts...