Word: entertainment
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University musical clubs will give a concert in the City Hall at Portland, Maine, this evening at 8 o'clock. This is the first time in 22 years that the clubs have performed in the northern state. In the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Whitehouse will entertain the clubs at a tea-dance at the Lafayette Hotel. After the concert there will be a dance given by the Harvard Club of Maine...
...Missouri, and director of the educational department of the Massachusetts Peace Society, will speak on "America's Conquest of Europe," in the Living Room of the Union on May 10, at 8 o'clock. In addition to this the Fuller sisters, well-known as exponents of folk song, will entertain by giving, in costume, a series of folk songs of the warring nations of Europe...
...Country Club of Portland, Mr., will entertain the Musical Clubs with a tea-dance on the afternoon of May 8 and dinner in the evening. The concert will be given in the Portland City Hall under the auspices of the Harvard Club of Maine, with a dance following. The members of the Musical Clubs will stay in the homes of Portland Harvard graduates, returning to Cambridge Sunday. The last concert of the season will be given at the Chestnut Hill Club on May 14, the concert being followed by a dance...
Owing to the postponement last week of the Senior interdormitory smoker when Thayer was to entertain Matthews and Holworthy, and the consequent distortion of the regular schedule, there will be a double affair this evening. Holworthy, whose turn it is to entertain this Wednesday, will combine with Thayer, and the two will hold an open house to the rest of the Senior dormitories and to all members of the class not living in Stoughton, Hollis, or Matthews. The smoker will be held in Thayer Common Room, middle entry, this evening from 9 until 10.30 o'clock. Refreshments and cigarettes will...
...different courses are so closely related with one another that it is difficult for the professors not to overlap each other or else not to leave unnecessary gaps with the result that the mind of the first-year law man is hopelessly confused and he is apt to entertain the unhealthy notion that the law is a mysterious agglomeration of disjointed matter in separate compartments. These disadvantages will be overcome in so far as it is possible by bringing the School to that state in which every instructor is thoroughly acquainted with the instruction of all of his colleagues...