Word: dressing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...members of the University Chapter and members of other chapters who are residing in Cambridge are invited to the banquet. Informal dress will be worn. Tickets for the dinner will be sold for $2.50 at the Union, or may be procured from the corresponding secretary, Professor W. G. Howard '07 at 39 Kirkland street, Cambridge. Undergraduate checks for the initiation fee may be made payable to the Phi Beta Kappa Society, but no additional charge will be made for the dinner...
...avenue. The following men will speak: President Angell of Yale, President Augustus N. Hand of the New York Alumni Association, Mr. William J. Bingham, Assistant Graduate Treasurer of the H. A. A., and Principal Lewis Perry of the Academy. Music will be furnished by Bert Lowe's orchestra. Informal dress will be worn...
...turns are universally clever. Perhaps the most striking is "Klick-Klick", a song revue with novel effects in scenery and costume. The Creightons offer a most amusing impersonation, and something new is presented by Bert and Betty Wheeler. Potential playwrights especially should see Frank Ellis's travesty on "A Dress Rehearsal". In their restaurant act Phil Roy and Roy Arthur break a large amount of crockery for the audience's entertainment. The other acts are all amusing, especially Ruth Roye's songs in various characters...
...widely copied elective system, Harvard has stood for individualism among the students. It makes no attempt to establish an invariable type, either intellectual, religious, or social, to which all must conform or be rejected. Strong and hard to combat are the influences which shame individuality, in matters of thought, dress or manner. Freshman regulations tend to destroy it as well as the prevalent habit of scoffing at anything new or different. No real need of such regulations exists: in the past have not Harvard Freshman classes prospered without them? Why, then, should anyone regret their absence? Of course excessive roughness...
...figures are in mediaeval Italian dress, standing in a meadow, each holding a book. The figure on the left, in profile wears a grey gown over a red robe, and a red cap; he is apparently about to be crowned by a small winged genius. The figure on the right, standing three-quarters towards the front, wears a blue gown with red cuffs, red shoes, and a red hood. On his head, over the hood, is a laurel wreath. The portrait has a reddish gold background...