Word: ever
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Dramatic Association at Yale has again chosen E. M. Woolley as coach for its Christmas production. Mr. Woolley has been successful as coach for the last two years, the three plays given during the Christmas trip in 1913 being generally considered the best ever given by the association. Last spring a noteworthy production of Tennyson's "Harold" was given on the campus. Mr. Woolley was prominently connected with Yale dramatics during his undergraduate career...
...Burk '16, writes on "Browning, the Musician." Browning was ever an explorer into the mysteries: every dusty corner had its fascination; and Browning tried his hand at almost all the arts and several sciences. His love and comprehension of music is revealed in many poems, of which Mr. Burk takes due notice. "Abt Vogler" is reprinted for immediate confirmation of points made...
...special loan exhibition of early Italian engravings in memory of the late Francis Bullard, of the class of 1886, will be held in the Fogg Art Museum, opening today. This will be the most important group of fifteenth and early sixteenth century Italian prints ever shown in this country, an exhibition made possible by friends of the Museum in Boston, New York, London, and Cambridge. Anyone interested in Italian prints will have an opportunity to see some of the finest works of the great engravers as well as the extremely rare anonymous prints which preceded them, many of a quality...
...significant loan exhibition of early Italian engravings will open at the Fogg Museum on Monday. This exhibition has been arranged and a valuable illustrated catalogue compiled in memory of Francis Bullard '86. It is probably the most important gathering of early Italian prints ever brought together in this country...
...this time a difficult task must be undertaken; the wounds which cosmopolitanism has received from the world catastrophe must somehow be healed. Ever since the little meeting of Scandinavian students at Lund, Denmark, in 1842, farsighted university men have been dreaming of an international understanding. All through the second half of the nineteenth century and up to the fateful July of 1914 national and international conferences had been held all over the world to further a spirit which, if followed by governments as well as by individuals, might have saved much to the world. But then came the plunge...