Word: lyceum
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...there will be the following: Hippodrome, "America"; Winter Garden, "Pleasure Seekers"; Shubert, Forbes-Roberston, "Hamlet"; Maxine Elliot's Theatre, "The Lure"; 39th Street Theatre, "At Bay"; Cort, "Peg o' My. Heart"; Wallack's, Mr. Cyril Maude, in different plays; Empire. Ethel Barrymore, in "Tante"; Astor, "Seven Keys to Baldpate"; Lyceum, Grace George, in "Half an Hour", preceded by "The Younger Generation"; Geo. M. Cohan's Theatre, "Potash and Perimutter"; Eltinge, "Within the Law"; Long Acre, "Adele"; Belasco, "The Auctioneer"; Republic, "The Temperamental Journey"; Knickerbocker, Donald Brian in "The Marriage Market"; Globe, Richard Carle and Hattie Williams in "The Doll Girl...
...Sanctum was at first in this same building, one flight up, reached by an outside wooden staircase in back. It was changed to a small room on the second floor of the Lyceum Building, the present Co-operative, in 1886; and in 1889 again returned to Fairfax Hall...
...author of the famous ode, and it is now proposed by Harvard men in Charleston, South Carolina, to establish a room to his memory in the church in which he served for over forty years. While an undergraduate, Gilman was an editor of the "Harvard Lyceum," the first undergraduate publication. After graduation his life was one of quiet and devoted service in the ministry. His greatest service to the University was as the author of "Fair Harvard," and the CRIMSON commends the thoughtfulness of the Harvard men of Charleston, in creating this appropriate memorial to a man who made such...
Subjects for the Freshman and University triangular debate will be chosen at a meeting to be held at the Lampson Lyceum, New Haven, next Saturday at 5 o'clock. The subject receiving the highest number of votes will be selected for the University debates and that receiving the second largest number for the Freshmen. The date of the debates and other matters of detail will also be decided at this meeting. M. Suravitz '13 will represent Harvard at the conference...
After his graduation, Mr. Laws was employed by various firms in Boston, until 1902, when he became superintendent of the Co-operative Society. His administration, which extended over the period of the moving of the Society to its present quarters in the Lyceum Building, was a marked success, the efficiency of his management being shown by its growth during those years. In 1911, he retired to accept a position with the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, with which he remained until his death...