Word: mightly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
College theatricals as a whole. However, are a good thing for dramatics. Mr. Gold believes. In every large group of young men or women such as one finds in the colleges, there is bound to be some stage talent, which if it were not for the college dramatic clubs, might never be brought forth "Many who originally participate in college plays more for the fun of it than because of the recantation that they can act, later become well known actors," the playwright went on. "The few that enter college with a dramatic career in mind have ample opportunity...
...Colonial club for almost 40 years has been one of the most prominent social organizations in Cambridge. The officers are Mr. Deitrich, president; John Amee, treasurer, and Dr. Charles Stevens, secretary. The club was organized in 1890 so that a place might be provided where the men from the various sections of Cambridge could meet, to work together in matters pertaining to the good of the city...
...formation of such a society would be of little interest if there were any place in Cambridge, or even in Boston, which filled such a position, but with none in existence it opens and entirely new sphere of activity. There was a time when men concentrating in Fine Arts might complete a course of undergraduate study without opportunity for seeing any large number of original works. That time has passed with two of the best permanent collections in the country situated in Boston, and with the growth of the Fogg Art Museum, but in the field of contemporary work...
...might have been tempted to question his initial premise of Harvard-Yale rivalry two years ago or one but not in December 1928, with the recollection of a glorious afternoon in the Bowl still extremely new. Dartmouth is in town and now and then gets scalped and the joy of the University still does not overstep too far the margins set by indifference. But fifty years of opposition more than half of them alternately as host and as guest, have set a unique seal on Harvard's meetings with Yale...
...greatest Senior under the elms; there were only the dud explosions of the professional reformers or the envious non-quites to cry down an antique custom. Conditions charged in the next couple of decades, but yet it fell to the Junior Fraternities to take the blame. Tap Day might be a deadly twenty-four hours, but it came in the spring, when one reads of Blue teams only on page ten; the lesser elections blossom perversely in the antumn, and that is the time when football, and only football, should all the mind. Down came the axe; and the corpse...