Word: elizabeth
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Kaltenborn closes a candid review of the season's University dramatic productions with a plea for the formation of a Harvard Dramatic Society, which shall unite the best talent now scattered over a large number of club performances. The highly satisfactory performances of this week in the Elizabeth Cary Agassiz House indicate what might be done by such a union, and there is reason to hope that it is within sight. The author of the article on "Crew Prospects" writes with an assurance very impressive to the ignorant layman. The reviewer gathers that the Varsity eight is to be beaten...
...best numbers on the program is a farce by Richard Harding Davis entitled "Miss Civilization." The rest of the program includes dances by W.S. Weeks '06, R.W. Whidden '08, and A.S.A. Brady '08 and impersonations by S. Baird '08. "A Fete day in the Occident, monolgues by Miss Elizabeth Porter, and a "Gypsy Dance" are also entertaining numbers in the performance...
...nave of Westminster Abbey, said Professor Baker, was used during the reign of Elizabeth as a great social promenade, even while church services were being held in another part. Here was another place where Shakespeare's keen observation found room for free play. Close by the side of the church was the Convocation House, in the yard of which St. Paul's choirboys acted their plays. Another theatrical centre was St. John's Gate, where the properties for the court plays were kept, and where the playwrights gathered. Lastly, the Great Exchange, the business centre for all merchants, gave ample...
This evening at 8 o'clock, in Sever 11. Mr. Copeland will read from "Elizabeth of England," a Dramatic Romance by Professor Shaler. The reading will be open only to members of the University...
...English. Some of these are courses that have previously existed under other names. Professor Wendell's course, English 46, now appears as Comparative Literature 1, "A General Survey of European Literature." Professor Schofield's course on the "Literary History of England and the Continent from the Norman Conquest to Elizabeth," which was formerly English 42, is now called Comparative Literature 6. Professor Bliss Perry will give his new course, "Types of Fiction in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries" under the name of Comparative Literature...