Word: van
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Arrowsmith, Biddle, Briggs, Brooks, Cate, Clapp, Cobb, Cooper, Crandall, Crocker, Currie, Dana, Devereux, Dougherty, Evarts, Farquhar, Farwell, Forchheimer, deFritsch, Galatti, Garfield, Gilbert, Gilman, Gleason, Goepper, Good, Gray, Graydon, Green, Harding, Harrower, Harwood, Henry, Hoffman, Howes, Jones, Kennard, Knauth, Lee, Niemann, Niles, Osborne, Paine, Powel, Rackemann, Richardson, Simpkins, Swift Turner, Van Rensselaer, Vaughan, Ver Weibe, Waite, Warner, Whipple, White, Wilder, Willetts...
...opportunity to do philanthropic work in the Church and other clubs of Boston and Cambridge. The society has conducted a series of three conferences, the first under Rev. E. S. Dunn, D.D., of the Episcopal Theological School of Cambridge, on "The Personality of God"; the second by Dr. Van Allen, of the Church of the Advent, on "The Faith Delivered Once for All"; the third under Rev. Henry S. Nash, D.D., Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, on "Is the New Testament a Trustworthy Witness of the Mind. Work, and Person of Christ?" A class in missions has been conducted together with...
Princeron defeated Yale in baseball yesterday by the score of 4 to 2 in 11 innings, thus winning two out of three games in the series. Heyniger was very wild at times, allowing six bases on balls to Van Vleck's one. On the other hand, Heyniger was much more effective, striking out seven men to Van Vieck's one. Princeton made seven errors, several of which were very costly and which nearly lost them the game. The score by innings: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Princeton...
...MUSIC LOVER. By Henry Van Dyke h.'94. Moffat, Yard...
...Music Lover" Henry Van Dyke describes with his usual felicity of style the tranquilizing and uplifting effect made upon a toil-worn man of the world by a performance of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in C minor. Subjective interpretations of musical masterpieces are fraught with danger, as the same music may mean one thing to one hearer and something else to another. But Mr. Van Dyke has shown discretion in selecting for his possibly too rhapsodic treatment a work of Beethoven which is intensely subjective and even, as far as absolute music can be, definitely autobiographic. It is well known...