Word: mentionable
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Madame Simone makes the most of her two "big" scenes--one where her father forces her secret from her and the other where she discovers Robert's suicide. The artistic restraint as well as the emotional power of her acting deserve the highest praise. And mention must be made of Mr. Corrigan (the father) and Mr. Arden (Robert). Each was unusually successful in an unusually difficult part. Credit, too, should be given to the translator of the play the English version has little of the "importedfrom-France" atmosphere. Altogether, not a play for post-examination revels, but for the serious...
...periods, even in the history of the Lampoon, when it would have been a distinct disadvantage to all but the sleepless at the Infirmary, but during the past few months, I think, we have all welcomed extra pages. This time the twelve additional pages of reading matter not to mention the new advertisements--make the paper just long enough to carry us joyously through the intermissions at the Game, to add the spice of laughter to our content or to lighten--but the Lampoon nowhere suggests gloom...
...speaking well has been increasing very considerably of late among undergraduates. In 1891 there was but a single course in Public Speaking at Harvard, attended by about 90 men. At present five courses are being given in Public Speaking with at attendance of over 400 men, not to mention two courses in the Divinity School and four courses in the Summer School...
...second, in the same library nine years later. The second act also has two scenes, the first in the cotton mill, the second in a one-room cabin of typical "poor-whites." Act three shows the exterior of the mill; act four, the cabin again. Sixteen characters, not to mention ten women's voices speaking out of a mob, mark another difference. Finally the structure of the play is in quite another vein from that of Miss Lincoln's. Where "The End of the Bridge" gradually evolved the story of Peter and at the same time showed the recovery...
...Menorah Prize to Harry Wolfson '12, of New York, for an essay entitled "Maimonides and Helevi: A Study in Typical Jewish Attitudes toward Greek Philosophy in the Middle Ages"; honorable mention to Harry Wolfson '12 for an essay on "The Linguistic and Literary Development of Modern Hebrew," and to David Rubin '12, of Cleveland, Ohio, for an essay entitled "Hellenic and Hebraic Conceptions of Justice...