Word: life
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...into English Verse," by W. E. C. Leonard, A.M., '99; "A Working Grammar of the English Language," by J. C. Fernald '60; "Limitations of the Right to Strike," by W. G. Merritt '02; "Times of Sunrise and Sunset in the United States," by R. W. Willson '73; "The Higher Life in Art," by John La Farge '01; "Mars as the Abode of Life," by Percival Lowell '76; "The Art of Painting in the Nineteenth Century," by E. R. O. von Mach '95; "Pedro Sanchez," by Jose M. Pereda, edited by R. W. E. Bassett '89; "Modernism," by Paul Sabatier, translated...
...Ethical Teaching in Mark, and in the Other Common Sources of Matthew and Luke; the Oldest Sources"; March 1, "Estimate of the Ethical Teaching in the Sayings of Jesus which are Peculiar to either Matthew or Luke;" March 3, "Jesus's Conception of the Basic Qualities of Life; A Study of the Beatitudes"; March 5, "The Great Motives Underlying the Sermon on the Mount; Summary of the Whole Discussion: has Jesus an Ethical System...
...composed of the two members elected yesterday and the Treasurer, as well as the three Marshals and the Secretary, who serve ex-officiis. The work of the Class Committee commences on the day of graduation, after which it has charge of all affairs of the class throughout its life. The duty of the Committee is to make arrangements for all class reunions, gifts, and all matters representative of the class as a whole...
...come in contact except through some such means as a smoker. Before these elements become too firmly fixed in their particular interests, it is well to mix them up together as thoroughly as possible and give the other man a broader idea of what the first year of University life should mean. Let every Freshman take it upon himself as his first act of duty to the class of 1912 to go to the smoker and thus help to make it successful...
...actors, the earliest to distinguish himself was H. G. Eisenstadt '12, who played to the life a naive peddler. Hartwell himself was taken by R. M. Middlemass '09, whose acting grew steadily better from beginning to end, a gentle, noble, and at every crisis finely impassioned figure. Miss Gragg in an uneven role gave through the last two acts so sincere a performance that the house broke into applause at her defiance of the Rabbi, and then at the last became physically uncomfortable over her anguish at Hartwell's well-acted deatn. Her appeals, her sobs, her despair, were surprisingly...