Word: readings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Christmas evening the Phillips Brooks House will keep "open house" in the forms of a Christmas Eve entertainment for those who remain in or near Cambridge during the recess. Professor R. B. Merriment '96 will speak in behalf of the faculty, and the entertainment will include readings by Professor I. L. Winter, piano solos by W. M. Horton '17, southern melodies by R. M. Rogers 3L., and recitations By Mrs. W. R. Ohler. Mrs. Ohler read last Christmas Eve, and those who heard her then will attest to her popularity. Refreshments of ice cream, candy, nuts apples, etc., will...
...Chapel of the Andover Theological Seminary tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock, under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison '06. The Seminary Choir, assisted by Miss Ethel Rea, soprano, will present a program of Christmas music. The Reverend A. P. Fitch '00, President of Andover, Theological Seminary, will read selections from the Scriptures and will preach his annual Christmas sermon...
...student would sit down "in moments of depression and be relieved of his sorrow in a poem or a story for the Illustrated." Does he not still give scope to his feelings in the college literary magazines? Let us only hope that nowadays the undergraduate public does not read his effusions, excellent as they may be. The college literary magazine is made to be written, not read; the healthiest sign of collegiate life nowadays is the widening of interests to include the maturer world...
...Chapel of Andover Theological Seminary on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison '06. The Seminary Choir, assisted by Miss Ethel Rea, soprano, will present a program of Christmas music. The Reverend A. P. Fitch '00, president of Andover Theological Seminary, will read selections from the Scriptures and preach a Christmas sermon. The service will be open to the public...
...deserves praise for its poetic quality. Mr. Howe's "Morning Song" fills two Sapphic stanzas, each of which has in the third verse one more syllable than the orthodox number. Mr. Howe follows the rhythm of the Latin Sapphic scanned rather than the rhythm of the Latin Sapphic merely read--the rhythm of Swinburne rather than of Cowper. Also he introduces rhyme. In substance the song is less interesting...