Word: comical
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Lampoon team is an example of vast incongruity, where sympathy enters into and prevents our appreciation of the comic. From Capt. Herter down through the whole board to Kettell at the bottom, it presents a pitiful mosaic of baseball inability. In lieu of anything better, H. G. Francke '14 has been secured to umpire...
...entire page of the "Independent" is to be edited by the Lampoon, the first issue to appear within a few weeks. This plan was originated by W. R. Burlingame '13, formerly of the Lampoon and now on the staff-of the "Independent." When it was decided to run a comic section in the "Independent," the idea was brought up of intrusting it to college men and the first issue under the new policy has been tendered to the Lampoon. If it proves a success, subsequent issues may be put in charge of other college comic publications, probably to the Princeton...
...dialogue is full of bright epigrams. The difficult lines were skillfully read, and all the parts well taken. Miss Ahrens and Miss Stickney gave plausibility to parts that might easily have seemed too absurd even for a farce. The author played the butler, and his acting was as comic as his play is clever...
...With the possible exception of Benchley, J. R. O. Perkins is the best comic actor Harvard has had for years. He alone would make a show worth seeing. In "The Legend of Loravia," however, he is by no means alone. Hodges does a remarkable piece of acting in two contrasting roles; so completely does he differentiate the twins that one almost expects him to walk up to himself at the end and stand beside himself for the final chorus. Freedley makes a fascinat- ing and talented heroine, and wears his clothes and manages his hands with unusual ease and naturalness...
Every effort should be brought to bear on the directors of the Co-operative to reject the submitted "design" for the new front. This "design" is almost comic in parts, it is ill-related to the buildings around it, possesses no beauty of its own and I do not believe it is even well planned for its purpose. It has met with the most sweeping and unreserved condemnation in the architecture school. Let us hope that such an eyesore will not be foisted on the Square to remain for years to come. KENNETH J. CONANT...