Word: fathers
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...revival, never been acted in Boston--a strange fact when one considers the human interest and particularly the humor that it yields in actual performance. The fat Knight and his followers appear in their most amusing vein; the old King presents a moving figure of a dying monarch and father; and his son, Prince Hal, is a most interesting character study of the mind and heart of one who combines humanity and loyalty...
...CRIMSON wishes to know the "sense" of the University on the question of compulsory membership in the Union. Was the thought father to the wish? Is it not plainly evident that the weight of student opinion is against compulsion? Naturally, if a vote were taken, most of those who are members will murmur indifferently "Yes," while those who are non-members will roar, as one man, "No!" Moreover, there are more non-members than members. Any "sober, thinking, mathematician" can work out a victory for the Non-Union party. Is the vote just or unjust, wise or unwise? Well...
Timothy Cole was the master of the art. He was born in London in 1852, but emigrated to the United States when five years old with his father. Burned out in the Chicago fire, he returned to New York penniless. He had been apprenticed to his trade at sixteen and in New York he had little difficulty in finding work with different periodicals. Mr. Cole's connection with the Century Magazine which he has never completely severed, began in 1875 when the late Alexander W. Drake called him into the service of the magazine, then called Scribner's Monthly...
...Cole was born in London in 1852, and at five years of age came to New York with his father. He was apprenticed to the trade at sixteen, and after the Chicago fire left the firm of Bond & Chandler and found work for a short time with a New York periodical, called "Hearth and Home," before joining the "Christian Weekly." On the failure of Sutton's "Aldine Press" the late Alexander W. Drake called Mr. Cole into the service of the then "Scribner's Monthly," later known as the "Century Magazine." For the "Century" he has done the major part...
...Memorial Society will meet with Miss Alice Longfellow in Craigie House tomorrow afternoon. Miss Longfellow is to address the society on the history of the Craigie House and its connection with her father, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who occupied it for so many years. There is no question but that Craigie House exerted a strong influence on Longfellow, since it had great traditions and a beautiful view, and one needs only to glance at his poetry for a proof of this...