Word: authorizes
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...lecture tour of the Northeast, speaking on both war questions and on the subject of prohibition. He is the fourth of the series of distinguished speakers who have appeared before the Graduate students this term. Dr. Henry Van Dyke, former ambassador to the Netherlands, Ian Hay Beith, British soldier-author, and the Hon. Albert Halstead, ex-consul-general to Austria, have given the previous talks, all of which have had for a subject some phase of the world conflict...
...Institute announces the fourth of its series of talks, beginning on Wednesday of next week. They will be given in Huntington Hall by Mr. H. Charles Woods, on the subject of "War and Diplomacy in the Balkans." Mr. Woods was a member of the late Grenadier Guards, is the author of "Washed by Four Seas," "The Danger Zone of Europe," "La Turquie et ses Voisins," and has been military and diplomatic correspondent of the London Evening News. He has also acted as special correspondent in the Balkans for the London Times and the Graphic...
...Agassiz House, Radcliffe, at 8 o'clock, and will be given again this evening at the same time and place. The first play given was "The Simms-Vane Incident," written by J. E. Pillot Sp. Miss Doris Halman 1G, who is playing the part of Lucille, was the author of "Rusted Stock," presented by the Workshop twice last March, and also of "Will o' the Wisp," a one-act fantasy, which was given in December...
...editorials and a book-review close the number. The editorial on Russian relief work is particularly timely and valuable. The reviewer of "Christine" is, we think, quite right in assuming the letters therein to be fictitious. He does not mention the interesting theory that Owen Wister is the real author. Yet there are obvious similarities between "Christine" and "The Pentecost of Calamity" in point of style and method...
Major Ian Hay Beith of the British Army, author of "The First Hundred Thousand," will deliver an address before a meeting of law and graduate students of the University, to be held in the Phillips Brooks House tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. The subject of the talk, as announced by Major Beith, will be "Carrying On," and his words will deal with conditions in the war at present and with his own experiences and impressions during his most recent visit to the trenches on the Western Front...