Word: ets
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...take, the quick retort, the eloquent argument,--all these are interesting as they occur from day to day, the victories when they come, the unmerited defeats, lend a constant zest to life and are pleasant to remember, for even of defeats the lawyer finds the prophecy true "Forsan et haec olim meminisse juvabit...
...annees out passe et m'ont fait home. Deja jai Coeur et monde, et me voice enfin divan I'll reeve. Mais jen'y trouve plus que tristesse et amour disenchantment...
Search in the past for a source for the motto used on the Harvard seal has been without avail. But according to a paper recently read before the Colonial Society in Boston there are two incidents which might have inspired Harvard men to adopt the phrase "Christo et Ecclesiae." The first possible influence came from a Dutch academy, the University of Franeker established in 1585. Here, during the first half century of its existence, the words "Christo et Ecclesia" were used at its dedication, in its first law of government, as its coat-of-arms, in an indictment...
...follows: Cherubim Song Rachmaninoff De Profundis Old Chant O Sacrum Convivium Viadana Glee Club Sonata in G. Major, Brahms Vivace ma non troppor, Adagio. Allegro molto moderato. Mr. Kreisler Has Sorrows Thy Young Days Shaded, Irish Folk Songs Love Songs, Brahms Cavalier Song, Stanford Glee Club. Chanson Louis XIII et Pavane Couperin Variations Tartini Air Rachmaninoff La Fille aux Cheveux de Lin Debussy (Arranged by Arthur Hartmann.) La Gitana Kreisler Mr. Kreisler The Nightingale Weelkes Heart-ache Dvorak Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones, 17th Century German Melody Glee Club Carl Lamson accompanist for Mr. Kreisler
...Corneille" which is being given by Professor Henri Guy, Dean of the Faculty of Letters at the University of Touluse and Exchange Professor of French Literature, will be given in Emerson D at 8 o'clock this evening. Professor Guy will speak in French on the subject "Pierre Cornielle et Victor Hugo." The lecture is open to the public...