Word: silent
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...clock. The service will consist of reading from the Scriptures, and Christmas carols sung by the College Choir assisted by a chorus from Radcliffe under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison, Jr. The following program has been arranged: Organ Prelude: Pastorale, Rheinberger Fiat Lux, Dubois "Silent Night," Haydn "Listen, Lordlings," Osgood "The Sleep of the Child Jesus," Gevaert "While be My Sheep," Unknown "Christmas Bells," Osgood "Glory to God in the Highest," Pergolesi "The First Nowell," Traditional "Ah! Dearest Jesus," Bach Organ Postulude: Toccata (fifth Symphony), Widor
Organ Prelude: Pastorale, Rheinberger Fiat Lux, Dubois "Silent Night," M. Haydn "Listen, Lordlings," Osgood "The Sleep of the Child Jesus," Gevaert "While be My Sheep," Unknown "Christmas Bells," Osgood "Glory to God in the Highest," Pergolesi "The First Nowell," Tradition. "Ah! Dearest Jesus," Bach Organ Postlude: Toccata (fifth symphony), Wider...
...Bathing, lunch, baseball game, and track sports (relay race between Class Odor and Class Poet). 5.00 P. M., or thereabouts: Homeward bound. Half of Class sees a sea-serpent. Other half sees two. On landing, meeting is adjourned to hear Harvard Night at the Pops. (NO Silent Knight either, believe...
...acting in it was immeasurably superior to that which preceded and followed. Miss Gragg, as the wife, was strong and convincing, perhaps her manner might have been more spontaneous, less charted, but her voice and facial expression were excellent. Mr. Woodward represented a man of stone, unemotional, silent; Mr. Searle a sly, evil, cowardly lover; both were well-nigh perfect. "Alaric Jourdan's House" was a brilliant achievement...
...least once every year and usually oftener, some individuals inflict upon the University a cheap publication which is supposed to be witty enough to conceal the purely mercenary purposes of its anonymous perpetrators. With silent disapproval and fast tiring patience the University has allowed itself to be subjected to these fatuous money-making schemes. Each time the University has hoped that there would be no more and that the present one would not get beyond its walls...