Word: beholders
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...indicates the fatigue undergone when a subject tries rhythmically to lift a weight by flexing a finger. The subject bends his finger and pulls, till his finger will bend and pull no more; then the experimenter encourages him by suddenly crying in his ear: "Pull! Pull!" And lo and behold, in the fire of his aroused self, the subject can and does pull! All of which serves to illustrate the importance of mass meetings before, and a wild cheering section during, a game. Enthusiasm can "egg on" a strong fighting team to work wonders. Pennsylvanian...
...Year the undergraduate might well resolve to take a greater and wider interest in the affairs of the time. Europe begins another year of blood; the United States enters upon another election year to determine issues which may affect the world's destiny; men are struggling to behold an era of progress emerge from the present chaos...
...topics of the services for the coming week are as follows: Sunday, "Behold we go up to Jerusalem; Monday, "The House in Bethany;" Tuesday, "Priests and a Prophet;" Wednesday, "Rulers and one who Serves;" Thursday, "The Hour in the Garden;" Thursday evening, "The Sacrament of Service;" Friday prayers, "Denial and Betrayal;" Friday morning, "Between two Thieves;" Saturday, "The Return of Christ;" Easter Sunday, "Alive unto...
Music is a daily increasing factor in Harvard life. In the Musical Review we behold the latest and most potent evidence of its hold on the undergraduate. That the editors should have felt themselves called to the work of issuing a new paper in the face of discouraging odds, and that they persevered and succeeded does them high credit. If the first number is a criterion, the Harvard Musical Review has already taken its place among the undergraduate publications...
...these amazing days, when we no longer respond to the sight of a friend's name on a theatre program with that emotional thrill compounded of surprise and righteous satisfaction at successful prophecy,--so commonplace a thing it now is to behold some vanished Tom, Dick or Harry's fame glowing above the play-house door,--it may be pertinent to ask, where are the Harvard Poets? In the past we sought them in the pleasant pages of the Monthly, and found them there, Moody, Mackaye, Carpenter, and Hunt; today they are gone, and the bubbling Castalian spring of college...