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Captain Franklin J. Burnham of the Regimental Commissary Department, will be aided by Lieutenant W. W. Austin in the command of the newly organized company, both men being commissioned offers in the U. S. Army, Lieutenant William Renwick, a graduate of the Law School, who presented the Benet-Mercier machine-gun to the State, and who has, in addition, given much of his time to the practical demonstration of this powerful offensive weapon, will teach the men the mechanical workings of the instrument...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO FORM A MACHINE-GUN CO. | 11/17/1914 | See Source »

...fourth act, where she proved an adequate foil to Marlowe's intensity. Miss Emma C. Noyes as "Her Ladyship" looked the part to perfection, and gave it the required degree of snap and self-control, and Mrs. Hutchinson took full advantage of a short part in "Dame Benet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Marlowe" Performance Successful | 6/20/1905 | See Source »

...same club. "Richard Bame" has been assigned to R. L. Lyman, instructor in public speaking. Miss Jane Sever, who will play "Alison," made a memorable impression two years ago in Brattle Hall in "The Importance of Being Earnest." Miss Emma C. Noyes, "Her Ladyship," and Mrs. Hutchinson, "Dame Benet," were formerly prominent in Radcliffe theatricals. W. E. Sachs 1L., will be remembered for excellent work in recent years, both in the Cambridge Dramatic Club plays and in those of the Deutscher Verein...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cast of Radcliffe Play | 6/16/1905 | See Source »

...Kempner '06 Owen, K. K. Smith 1G. Davy, W. F. Wilbur 2L. Francis Archer, F. H. Koch 1G. Rouse, H. Kempner '08 Host of Deptford Tavern, F. M. Wright '07 Jermyn, R. H. Lord '06 Boy, L. Hatch '05 Alison, Jane Sever Her Ladyship, Emma C. Noyes Dame Benet, Eleanor W. Hutchinson Gill, A. M. Hurlin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cast of Radcliffe Play | 6/16/1905 | See Source »

...evening for the benefit of the Radcliffe musical scholarship fund. The age of Queen Elizabeth was particularly a musical one, she said. The gayety of the times and the growth of the masque fostered the development of music, especially vocal music. The prominent composers of the time were John Benet, John Wilbye, Thomas Ford, Peter Phillips, Thomas Campion, and William Byrd. Selections from their compositions were very well received...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Concert-Lecture by Miss Webster. | 3/3/1905 | See Source »

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