Word: floors
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Fabian Club will hold a joint conference and dinner at Grundmann's Studios, 198 Clarendon street, Boston; this evening at 6.15 o'clock. The topic for discussion will be military preparedness, put as a question, "Shall we Prepare?" Four prominent speakers will open the debate and afterwards the floor will be open for general discussion. Dr. E. H. Gruening '07, Managing Editor of the Boston Traveller, and G. W. Harris, professor of chemistry at Simmons College, will uphold the necessity of greater military protection, while Miss Emily Balch, professor of economics at Wellesley College, and W. H. Cook...
...year. "Plots and Play wrights," by G. E. Massey '15, in Agassiz House this evening at 8 o'clock. The play is a satire on popular playwrights and is written in two parts and an introduction. The first part contains three scenes, each laid on a different floor of a New York boarding house. The second part is the popular Broadway playwright's telescoping of these three scenes and is a lively satire on some of the plays seen in New York last winter. The experiment of having the scenery and lighting done by the Workshop forces will be continued...
...Intercollegiate Socialist Society and the Fabian Club will hold a joint conference and dinner at Grundmann's Studios, 198 Clarendon street, Boston, Wednesday evening, at 6.15 o'clock. The subject for discussion will be: "Shall We Prepare?" Several prominent speakers will open the debate, after which the floor will be open to general discussion. Those who are scheduled to talk are as follows: Dr. E. H. Gruening '07, Managing Editor of the Boston Traveller; Miss Emily Balch, Professor of Economics at Wellesley College; G. W. Harris, Professor of Chemistry at Simmons College; W. H. Crook, 2G., M.A. Oxford...
Forbes-Robertson's greatest reputation in the United States, except for his Shakespearian plays, is in his production of "The Passing of the Third Floor Back," by Jerome K. Jerome, which enjoyed such extraordinary popularity, both in England and America...
...locale of the piece, which is written in two parts and an introduction, is West 111th street, New York City. The first part contains three scenes each laid on a different floor of a New York boarding house. Each one shows the drama that goes on unnoticed by the outside world. In the play they are the artistic playwright's illustration of what can be dramatized from observation. The second part is the popular Broadway playwright's telescoping of these three scenes and is a lively satire on some of the plays seen in New York last winter...