Word: come
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...with Our Lord's Prayer. Chorale, "Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light," Bach Carol, "Listen, Lordings, Unto Me," Osgood Chorus, "The Shepherds' the Holy Family," Farewell to Berlioz Scripture readings: St. Luke II, 1-20. Christmas Hymn, "While By My Sheep I Watched at Night," Unknown Congregational Hymn, "O Come, All Ye Faithful," J. Reading Old French carol, "Bring a Torch, Jeannette, Isabella." Carol, "Christmas Bells," Osgood Carol, "The First Noel," Traditional Chorale, "O God of Life Whose Power Benign," Bach Prayer and Benediction. Organ postlude, Toccata, Widor
...ability, it tends to make a more mechanical and more efficient scoring machine. All four forwards stayed together in line last night and were therefore able to pass accurately and get by the opposing defence. Baker's and Townsend's goals were the only ones which did not come from a series of well-executed, down-the-rink passing...
Whenever the sunlight shines through small apertures it makes small circles--elusive, golden and beautiful. They are perhaps most often noticed in the morning when the weariness from a day's work has not come over one. They are small floating islands of joy which the child laughs at and seeks to capture. In life at college one may also find numerous sun circles. A person with a real smile makes the difference of a cloudy day changed to a sunshiny day. The slightest semblance of a joke, in a tense atmosphere of a class room, often causes the whole...
...without the secret fear that unholy struggle may soon disrupt the peoples of the globe again, and that the new peace may be merely a truce. The hateful thoughts which have grown in these years of sorrow are so abundant that they will last and ruin the peace to come; the nations, it seems, will make true harmony impossible for generations...
President Eliot will speak on "What Good for Humanity May Come Out of the War," at the fortnightly meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club in the club rooms, 7 to 8 Holyoke House, tonight at 8 o'clock. Ever since the beginning of the present war President Eliot has been studying and writing about its different phases. He has spent an especially large amount of time studying the conditions existing after wars, and has drawn some conclusions as to the probable conditions after this conflict. The question will be thrown open to a general discussion after his address. Some important business...