Word: face
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...notice, but who had had nothing to do with its insertion, waited in vain for his class. It is with chagrin that we must publicly announce that there is still among us a man who stoops to forgery as a means of avoiding attendance at his lectures. Afraid to face the result of his own cuts, he has adopted the method of the coward. Unfortunately this individual will remain in our midst, enjoying the undeserved respect of his fellow students...
...many dormant minds to whom this Review with its new and unknown character and possibilities will supply a wholesome awakening stimulus; and doubtless, their critical attention will be a stimulus to the Review. The second motive comes from the mood of expectation in which multitudes of our worthiest men face the future. It was said of Emerson that every new person to whom he was presented was greeted by him as if this person might prove to be the friend for whom the seer had been looking, but whom he had hitherto failed to find. The expectation of the serious...
...fifth Noble lecture, given last night in Sanders Theatre by Bishop C. H. Brent, D.D., was on "The Power of Fellowship with the Divine." The speaker emphasized the fact that the leader whose influence is to be more than passing must reach out beyond the things seen and come face to face with the verities that lie behind mortal things and with the great personality...
Football for another year has already been launched with the election of a new captain, and we congratulate next year's eleven upon a leader who promises to be one of the best of Harvard captains. From the outset Burr will face a more complicated situation than his recent predecessors. Not only must-provision be made for next year's coaching. More far-reaching than this is the demand from undergraduates and graduates that some continuity in football coaching should be assured. We realize that football is not the sum total of our existence. But it is of enough importance...
...last of the plays, "La Gifle," is a short and witty face, with repaid action and amusing lines. Blanch-Misseron, a deputy of the Chamber, desires to fight a duel, in order to silence the mockers who have ridiculed his passive attitude toward his adversaries. He therefore picks a quarrel with an army officer, Jules Chamberiot, who has come to the office of the ministry to file a claim for a cross of the Leghorn of Honor, but who lacks the necessary deputy's, endorsement for his petition. Blanche-Misserone agrees to endorse the solder's petition, and Chamber...