Word: fits
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Sometimes we are tempted to believe in the irony of Fate; especially when, in the intense pre-examination era; Christopher Morley sees fit to ask, in his "Colyum" in the Evening Post (New York), "Why is it that a man who went to Harvard or Yale never forgets it?" To the undergraduate it seems almost like adding insult to injury to put forth such a question at the present time; there are certain days and nights indelibly impressed on our memories--and the shadow of the Widow we have always with us. The waters of Lethe are many miles away...
Further activity has centered about social service. In the fall three men each gave an evening examining boys at the Roxbury Neighborhood House to make sure they were physically fit to take part in gymnasium classes. Also a number of men have spoken at the neighborhood houses, taking up subjects including first aid work, common infections and quarantine regulations, and sex hygiene...
...with a hard part, that was not developed consistently by the dramatist, as did Miss Willard as Lady Clarissa. Mr. Turner as Robert Dalman, Cordway's secretary, is as yet a very amateurish performer, who although he tries hard, rarely seems either to get out of himself or to fit into the scene. He has improved tremendously since joining the company, however. Another player, who is making rapid progress under Mr. Jewett's instruction is Miss Standing. Her performance in what might easily have been a mawkishly sentimental part, was full of grace and charm. Miss Cleveland made a very...
...There is no real communism in Russia", declared Captain Paxton Hibben '04, of the American Committee for the Relief of Russian Children, when interviewed yesterday by a reporter from the CRIMSON. "Communism is a beautiful theory, but it refuses to fit in with the conditions in Russia at present. We in this country hear a great deal about the socialistic form of government under Lenine and Trotsky, but as a matter of fact, there is no such institution in existence there...
...Radcliffe Endowment Fund, the 47 Club is giving its second performance of "Dear Jane" tomorrow evening at the National Theatre. The first performance yesterday afternoon proved that the play is a thin but entertaining comedy that might almost be one of Jane Austen's own novels boiled down to fit the stage. As the charming authoress, Mrs. Massey carried the burden of the acting brilliantly. Miss Hovenden, Mr. Massey, and especially Miss Sibley were attractive in their respective roles, while Alexander Steinert Jr. gave a charming musical interlude on the antique piano of Beethoven. Scenery for the first two acts...