Word: reverend
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...cram between classes and exams. That’s right—reading period actually began a paltry 79 years ago, under the auspices of then-University President A. Lawrence Lowell. “Reading period was initially a faculty benefit, and students benefited indirectly,” says Reverend Peter J. Gomes, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Minister in Memorial Church. In 1927, Clifford H. Moore, the Chairman of the Committee on Instruction, penned a confidential proposal to the Committee on Instruction; he suggested shortening the periods of formal teaching in order to give the faculty a break...
...marked by not just beauty, but life and character. The dancing is not only technically precise, but spirited.City boy Ren McCormack (Kevin Barlowski) moves from foot-tapping, music blaring Chicago to the sleepy small town of Bomont, only to discover that the town’s head honcho Reverend Moore (Sean P. Bala ’09) has outlawed dancing. McCormack assumes the role of town troublemaker and sets out to bring the moves back to Bomont and romance to the Reverend’s daughter Ariel (Sarah Jayne Blackmore). A production usually has an obvious “star...
...your-chair, musical whirlwind is about young, energetic protagonist Ren (Kevin Barlowski) who moves out of the city with his monther to a rural town that has outlawed dancing. So what does this little revolutionary sparkplug do? He puts on a dance, much to the chagrin of the uptight Reverend Moore (Sean P. Bala ’09), but to the delight of the Reverend’s daughter and his own love interest Ariel (Sarah-Jayne Blackmore...
...time you tune in, you might catch a song by “Acid Mothers Temple and the Cosmic Inferno,” or alternatively, Zemlinsky’s “Symphonic Songs” played by the Concertgebouw Orchestra. Come Sunday, you can tune in to hear Reverend Gomes preaching to the fold in Memorial Church; “Crimson Sportstalk” comes on a half-hour later...
...last initial and were told to pray for a quick recovery with no complications. Fifty-nine percent of the people who knew they were being prayed for had complications after surgery, while 52 percent of the people who did not know whether they were being prayed for experienced complications. Reverend Dean Marek of the Mayo Clinic, a researcher who worked on the study, said in a press release that he didn’t anticipate these results. “Obviously, my research colleagues were surprised by the unexpected and counterintuitive outcome,” he said. Knowing that they...