Word: giving
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harvard Dramatic Club announces its first competition for one-act plays to close Monday, January 10. The club intends giving each month during the winter a short one-act play to be acted and staged entirely by students of the University who are not already members of the club. Its purpose is to give men an opportunity for practice in acting and stage-managing in preparation for the spring production. All manuscripts should be sent to G. S. Deming '10, Holworthy...
Professor I. L. Winter '86, of the Department of Public Speaking, will give a reading from "A Christmas Carol," by Dickens, in Appleton Chapel this evening at 8 o'clock. In connection with the reading, a musical program has been arranged by W. A. Locke '69, organist and choirmaster. Old English and German, as well as Christmas carols will be sung by the student choir. H. L. Murphy '08 will assist in the program as soloist, and Dean W. W. Fenn '84 will make a brief address. The exercises will be open to the public. Seats in the front part...
Professor I. L. Winter '86, of the Department of Public Speaking, will give a reading from Dickens's "A Christmas Carol" in Appleton Chapel next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. In connection with the reading a musical program has been arranged by Mr. W. A. Locke '69, consisting of old English and Christmas carols. Mr. H. L. Murphy '08 will assist in the program as vocal soloist, and Dean W. W. Fenn '84 will make a brief address. The exercises will be open to the public...
James MacKaye '95, will give the last of a series of five lectures on "Political Engineering" in Emerson D this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. The special subject that he will treat is "The Utility of Man". The lecture is open to the public. Mr. MacKaye will be in Emerson F tomorrow afternoon at 4.30 o'clock to answer any questions on the subjects of his lectures...
...most important changes come at the end of the season. To have the first game of the Yale series played in New Haven will give a different color to the Cambridge game in the week of Class Day. The transfer of the third game, which has been so often necessary to decide a tie that it may almost be called a fixture, to Boston, and arranging it for the day preceding Commencement, would add interest to that empty interval between Class Day and Commencement. The best feature of the changed dates is that the men on the baseball teams...