Word: lets
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...although it may be said to have won a recognized place for itself, its fight is not yet over. The undergraduate although he has heard of the remarkable performances of the Dramatic Club, is unintelligent enough to prefer to spend far more money to see a play in Boston. Let him remember that plays produced by the Dramatic Club have been, and will be produced in Boston theatres. He is not seeing inferior plays or inferior acting when he attends the dramas to be given in Brattle Hall tonight. The Dramatic Club needs and deserves the financial support and backing...
...through the quiet byways of Cambridge. Should such a scout happen upon the Harvard Dramatic Club's spring production of four one-act plays, he would witness the work of at least one new writer whose name it would pay him to jot down in his note book. But let us begin at the beginning...
...well as the Faculty are being drawn into a friendly relation with the city that has not always been a tradition in the past. These friendly relations have led the city and the University to fulfill their duties to one another in a wise and more effective way. Let us hope that these relations may become even more friendly, so that the co-operation of the one with the other may result in further advantages...
...wholly on the interest shown by the size of the Opera Association on April 14. The CRIMSON has believed ever since it first gave voice to this movement, that a large number of music-loving undergraduates would take immediate advantage of just such an offer as has been made. Let us not alone show an easily expressed interest in Grand Opera, but also demonstrate our gratitude for the Company's generosity by at once signing the blue-books which have been placed in the Union and at Leavitt & Peirce...
...good breeding and conventional table-manners. We sincerely hope that this sort of "fun" will be omitted this evening. If an appeal to the members' sense of decency and regard for gentle-manly conduct (as opposed to the manners of a fourth rate boarding house) can have any effect, let us be free from a custom at once hopelessly childish and also capable of great evil to the College as a whole...