Word: hagedorn
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...spring of 1909, four one-act plays were staged: "Death and the Dicers," by F. Schenck '09; "Five in the Morning," and "The Horse Thieves" by H. Hagedorn '07 and "The Heart of the Irishman," by L. Hatch...
...Symphony Orchestra," by M. A. DeWolfe Howe '87; "Clark's Field," by Robert Merrick '90; "The Judicial Veto," by Horace A Davis '91; "Boys of Eastmarsh," by Fisher Ames, Jr., '92; "The College Course and Preparation for Life," by Albert Parker Fitch '00; Faces in the Dawn," by Hermann Hagedorn...
...casual glance at the contents page of the current issue of the "Outlook" impresses one with the number of names of Harvard men found there. First, is another article, on the Progessive Movement by Theodore Roosevelt '80; following this, is a short poem by Mr. Hagedorn '07, who until this year was an instructor in the English Department; Professor Albert Bushnell Hart '80 has contributed an article on "Gideon Welles's Diary," and Percy Mackaye '97 has called to our mind Professor Copeland's reading of "Bouillabaisse," by contributing a poem in memory of its author Thackeray, "The Bard...
...Hagedorn, Hermann, Jr. e. Nieder-wolluf, Germany...
...real point of the Monthly's attack. As a call to higher service, it is not without reason. Mr. Parker and Mr. Macgowan appear to have proved that the CRIMSON could afford to give its readers less of advertisements and leaded space, and more of reading matter. Mr. Hagedorn forcibly intimates that the CRIMSON would do well to rely less on the "average intelligence" of its reporters, and call into play more of that "exceptional literary ability," which they at present held to be superfluous, -- and which the Monthly can doubtless instruct them how to procure. Of Mr. Westcott...