Word: forth
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...carried the ball over the line. Jackson missed the goal. Soon after the next kick-off Brown gained possession of the ball and carried it to the Freshmen's four yard line but lost it there on downs. During the rest of the game the ball went back and forth near the centre of the field...
...include for example, College buildings from every point of view, streets in the vicinity of the College, especially such as are most likely to change their appearance, houses of professors, interiors of College rooms and of professors' houses, College customs, College characters, groups, athletic events, society buildings, and so forth. WILLIAM C. LANE, Librarian...
...aspects of nature. The men first in this movement were unfortunately limited in technical power and it was not until the time of Turner that the new art found its full expression. The art of Turner was stamped with the creative spirit and governed by an insight that bodies forth with the finest expressive characters, an ideal conception. Dealing with new materials and new motives, his art was unconventional. To the other artists of the day it was entirely incomprehensible and accordingly it was condemned at once...
...Whitman who was also the designer of the large window in the transept of Memorial. The subject is a classical one, the young Cornelius Scipio being the ideal instance in both panels. In the first panel he is represented as going to battle, an angel sending him forth; and in the second, returning, kneeling before the angel, with his shield and the two spears of victory. In the base of the first panel is written the word "Honor" and in the second, "Pax." Above the two panels in the small triangular lancet is the class year...
...Boylston prizes for Elocution, the two first prizes were awarded to John R. Locke '01 and Henry J. Davenport '00. Locke recited "My Lord Carnal and I Play at Bowls," by Mary Johnston, rendering the selection with deliberation and force. "Cyrano's Theory of Life," as set forth in E. Rostand's "Cyrano's de Bergerac," was declaimed skillfully and vivaciously by Davenport. The winners of the second prizes were W. Morse '00, who recited "Soldier's Field Oration," by Henry Lee Higginson; H. A. Yeomans '00, who delivered "Napoleon the Little," by Victor Hugo; and H. W. Palmer...