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...Raiche, of the French Department, presided, and Assistant Professor Lord '06, Dr. S. E. Morison '12, and Dr. R. L. Hawkins '03 were the judges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ROBERTS WON MEDAL IN PASTEUR DEBATE | 5/19/1916 | See Source »

...Raiche, of the French Department, will preside. The judges are Assistant Professor R. H. Lord '06, Dr. S. E. Morison '12 of the History Department, and Dr. R. L. Hawkins '03, of the French Department...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Debate for! Pasteur Medal Tonight | 5/18/1916 | See Source »

...phrase: "And that to live at ease may be to die." Arthur Ficke has put into his "Irises" the sound of the "Passing water of the cool stream, Coming from afar," and leaves a faint impression of a passion for which the real Iris would be no solace. Augustus Lord's "By Autumn Seas" is a manly utterance on the old theme of world desolation and the comfort of "Love's dauntless cheer." Conrad Aiken has solzed perforce upon the poetry of the unpoetic in his "Vaudeville." He loves the verse of contrast, the skipping danseuse edging back and forth...

Author: By Albert BUSHNELL Hart ., | Title: Anniversary Advocate Admirable | 5/12/1916 | See Source »

Believing, with the Lord's Day League, that one day a week should be devoted to absolute rest and quiet, the CRIMSON ball team has set aside today for the purpose, and has accordingly scheduled a contest with the Phi Beta Kappa nine for this afternoon. Weary with intellectual toil, the scholars will creep to Soldiers Field in time to meet the journalistic juggernaut at about 3.30 o'clock. Partisans of the superlative students say that they will show a lot of inside baseball; but this does not discourage the CRIMSON. Past experience shows that Phi Beta Kappa baseball...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON TO CONTINUE CONQUESTS | 5/11/1916 | See Source »

...that the poem was originally written in imitation of Euripides. To the large chorus have been assigned two lyrical passages which serve to break up the regular rounds of speeches by the three friends and Job's responses. At the beginning of the play occurs a colloquy between the Lord and The Adversary similar to that between Athene and Poseidon in "The Trojan Women" or to that of Apollo and Death in the "Alkestis," and with this is presented Job's calamity as a forceful prologue to the suffering caused later. In the debate that follows Job in his agony...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE BOOK OF JOB" TONIGHT | 5/8/1916 | See Source »

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