Word: crosses
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Intruse" by Maeterlinck has also been chosen in place of "L'Etincelle" as formerly announced. "L'Intruse" is a realistic and tragic cross section of an evening at a bourgeois foyer...
Professor Cannon has held his present post at Harvard since 1906. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the Society de Biologie of Paris, and during the War was president of the Medical Research Society of the American Red Cross. He is the author of several books, among them, "A Laboratory Course in Physiology", "The Mechanical Forces of Digestion", and "Traumatic Shock...
...wedges to the Pacific. Southward they trekked to Hungary, Albania, Greece. By the sth century A.D. they had ceased to be a nation, were even losing race consciousness. Gradually the widespread Slavic peoples adopted Christianity. The 15th century martyr, Bohemian John Huss, was their most eloquent devotee of the cross. Today only the esoteric significance of language, as understood by pedants, betrays the Slavic as the most numerous of European races. Miscegenation and environment have destroyed racial semblance, shattered racial pride. There are more than 150,000,000 Russians, Poles, Kashubes, Serbs, Czechoslovaks, Polabs, Slovenes, Serbo-Croats, Bulgarians...
...University Cross Country team will see action for the last time this afternoon when it enters eight men in the Intercollegiate Cross Country Run at Van Courtland Park, New York City...
Captain J. L. Reid '29, running his last cross country race for the Crimson, is expected to take one of the first three places of the field of 223. He took third place a year ago, while William Cox of Penn State and H. L. Richardson of Maine, who took first and second places last year, are again in the running. Cox, however, was beaten by Reid in the Intercollegiate last spring...