Word: loved
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...opening in the wild Indian country near the great lakes, is developed in colonial Boston during the early days of the Revolution. The great men of the day appear upon the scene, though he author has been singularly temperate in the parts which they are made to play. A love story of no great power runs through the book, but the most striking features depend upon the number and the depravity of the villains, the great mortality among the characters and the stage-setting afforded by such events as the Boston Tea Party and the battles of Lexington and Bunker...
...musical programme for the Vesper Service this afternoon is as follows: "The Lord is My Shepherd," Shaw; "More Love to Thee," Barrell; "Christian, the Evening Waits," Shelley...
...association, who briefly sketched the history of the organization since its founding in 1802 and described the religious work which it carries on now at Brooks House in Cambridge and in Boston. Rt. Rev. William Lawrence '71, Bishop of Massachusetts, spoke on Phillips Brooks--and especially of his uncompromising love for the truth of his belief in the binding obligation of truth on a man's life as well as his thought, and finally of his conviction that all search for moral truth would end sooner or later in alliegance to Jesus of Nazareth...
Henry B. Wright, Yale '98, speaking for "The Yale Association," dwelt upon the unity of Harvard and Yale in all their religious aims. President Eliot spoke on "The Function of Religion in College"; he defined religion as primarily love for man and for God; and set forth the unity of ideals and interests, that under all differences of creed and condition, exists among men. W.T. Reid '01, replying to the toast "Athletics," spoke of Christianity as the best impulse in athletics and in life, because it infuses that united spirit and that inspiration which means success. Col. N.P. Hallowell...
...Philippine group and hinge upon the abdication of the King. The King cannot decide whom he would best appoint as his successor. This uncertainty leads to a great deal of clever plotting on the part of the three aspirants for the throne, and to many amusing complications. The customary love story runs through the play, ending happily in the coronation of the hero and his betrothal to the heroine...