Word: wording
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Albert Parker Fitch '00, President of Andover Theological Seminary, will conduct morning prayers in Appleton Chapel at 8.45 o'clock today. The general theme on which the addresses for this week will be given is "Mirrors for Men in the Old Testament." This morning's subject is "The Last Word in Friendship." I. Samuel 20: 1-13. No seats are reserved...
...whether of the East or of Europe, have more real vitality than any other class of paintings, for they express the deepest and highest ideals of great nations in great periods. The fact that the manner and technique of these masters is not realistic in our sense of the word makes their work more imaginative and more suggestive of the unseen. The Christian religion and the Buddhist both arose in Asia, the birth-place of religions. They then spread to Italy and Germany, and to China and Japan, where men could nobly express their ideals in art. An interesting comparison...
...Voice of the People" is a social drama in the best sense of the word. It draws a picture of a ward in any tenement district of any large city in this country at the time of a closely contested election. Its plot centers about the contest and victory of a young Irish girl over the ward boss, her uncle...
...elevator doors will be of metal and the others of wood. On the first floor there will be telephone booths for the use of patrons of the library, built in as part of the building. It may be said that the specifications for the contract call for the last word in library construction, and Harvard may well feel proud of its million-dollar library made possible through the munificence of Mrs George D. Widener of Philadelphia
...board of editors of the Advocate continues to show uncommon enterprise and no small amount of journalistic instinct. The current issue may not represent a type which we should like to see become permanent, but is what the ready-made clothing advertisements mean by "different", when they write the word in quotation marks. It has two articles which especially show that the editors are wide-awake. One is an allegory on Harvard College by Benjamin Franklin, which is as far from flattering as it is near the truth as to the conditions of our own day. The other...