Word: fifteenth
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Miss Laura H. Dudley discusses Florentine woodcuts; there is a short notice of the "Sacre Rappresentazioni" from the point of view of the student of the drama; and Mr. George Norbet Kates discusses "Paradise in the fifteenth century", as illustrated in one of Savonarola's sermons and by various fifteenth century painters. Letters from Mrs. Henry R. Newman, Miss Margaret Jackson of Wellesley College, and Dr. Denman H. Ross on Mr. Henry R. Newman, the collector of the Savonarola books, give an added personal interest to the exhibition...
...Whiting Recitals, or, to speak more academically, "Five Expositions of Classical and Modern Chamber Music" begin the fifteenth season at Paine Hall, Wednesday evening, December 7. These concerts are specially given for students of Harvard as a demonstration of the idea that the highest forms of music can be enjoyed by most college men if they are given a chance. For years, now, Mr. Whiting has convinced undergraduates that they are naturally more musical than they think themselves to be, as there seems to be a tradition among many that they are too athletic to be able to enjoy...
...conjunction with the University Glee Club, the Pierian Sodality Orchestra will give the first concert of its one hundred and fifteenth season tomorrow at 4 o'clock at the Copley Theatre. The Pierian will play five numbers, while the Glee Club will give two numbers of three songs each. The concert is being given for the benefit of the Frances Jewett Repertory Theatre Club; its proceeds will be devoted to the building fund for the new Copley Theatre...
Remembering last year's book one may be justified in calling the "Register's" work this fall a "come-back." Bigger and better, on the stands by November fifteenth or your money back, that seems to sum up the achievement of the present board in publishing the Harvard "Who's Who", that volume which answers all questions. Apparently the printers strikes, the increased expenses of this, that, and the other thing, the many woes that beset publishers today to the annoyance of the public have left the "Register" untouched. Some power that "we wot not of" must be hovering round...
...Fogg Museum of Fine Arts has recently acquired for its Oriental Department a fine painting of the Tosa School; dating probably from the fifteenth century. The painting represents a daimio on horseback, and near him a standing and a seated figure. The picture is drawn in black on a paper probably once white but now gray in tone. There are slight touches of red in the trappings of the horse and the dress of the figures. The composition is of the simplest, the drawing spirited and sure. It is interesting to note that the picture is remarkably close...