Word: calls
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Will you permit me to call attention in your columns to the carelessness of some students in not returning the property of others which comes by chance into their possession? The loss of what may seem to them a thing of little consequence may often mean great inconvenience to the owner, entirely incommensurate with the apparent material value of the article, or with the slight trouble of restoring...
...these are books of reference for several courses their loss is considerable, and anyone having any of these books or information concerning them is requested to call as soon as possible at the office of Phillips Brooks House...
...your columns to call the attention of music lovers in the student body to the coming concert by the Choral Art Society of Boston? This society, which consists of a remarkably fine professional chorus of mixed voices under the leadership of Wallace Goodrich, has for its special object the rendering of the a capella compositions of Palestrina. Lasso and other mediaeval composers of sacred music. It also performs the madrigals of the famous English school, Powland, Vilbye and others. This year the society renews its generous offer of the past few seasons by admitting any member of the Music Department...
Will you permit me to call attention to the address to be given this evening in the Common Room of Divinity Hall by Dr. Henry Van Dyke on "The Ministry, its Requirements and its Opportunities"? The Divinity Club has arranged for this and for other addresses from the Preachers to the University on various aspects of the profession: and these informal talks are open to members of the University. Students who have any inclination toward the ministry would. I feel sure, get both instruction and inspiration by hearing Dr. Van Dyke and his colleagues. FRANCIS G. PEABODY...
Allow me through your columns to call the attention of the student body to the performance of "Medea." to be given next Thursday, December 6th, at 2.30 P. M. in the Colonial Theatre, by Mr. Conried's lrving Place Theatre Company of New York. Grillparzer's "Medea" is one of the few really great modernizations of a Greek subject, and ranks in elevation of feeling and purity of style with such masterpieces as Goethe's "Iphigenia" or Sophocles' "Antigone." From the criticism of the New York papers it appears that Mr. Conried's company is this year particularly good...