Word: missing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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There are to be six positions on the commission. It is rumored that other probable appointees are Daniel L. Roper, former assistant postmaster-general, and William S. Culbertson, who has had much experience with South American trade. Other doubtful reports are to the effect that Miss Ida M. Tarbell will be invited to serve on the commission. It is understood that President Wilson is particularly anxious to have the commission take up the question of changed economic conditions after the war. The personnel of the board will probably be announced this week, so that the appointments may be sent...
...cast--Miss Grace George has finely appreciated the role of Barbara, and does more than justice to the part. From enthusiasm to discouragement, she is always the artist, and the noticeable suppression of ranting and rank melodrama is quite evident. Barbara is a dignified character and Miss George makes her fascinatingly so. Mr. Ernest Lawford as Adolphus Cusins is very successful, and his interpretation of the Greek professor could not well be improved upon by the present generation of actors. Two members of the cast as originally played in New York were missing, Mr. Louis Calvert, whose voice so suggested...
...Speakers: Hon. F. J. Rice, mayor of New Haven; Professor G. H. Nettleton, of Yale; President A. T. Hadley, of Yale, and D. L. Jacobus. M. S. Mandell, president of the Association, presided. B. E. Dirks 1S.A., gave the response. Concert: Mrs. Nancy Goodyear Andrews, Mr. J. N. Sanford, Miss Charlotte Beebe, Mr. R. P. Freemantle and Mr. A. J. Bowen, soloists...
...evening. The company gathered before the open fire in the parlor to enjoy one of the most entertaining programs ever given at these gatherings. After Professor George Herbert Palmer '64 read the story of Christ's birth from the Scriptures and the "Hymn" from Milton's "Ode on Nativity"; Miss Margaretta Josephene Penick, of the Emerson College of Oratory, rendered her interesting program entitled, "An Evening of Dialect." E. E. Dale 2G entertained the guests with a sketch of cowboy life, and C. W. Chenoweth '13G read several selections. Vocal music was rendered by a quartet composed...
...Miss George, however, discovered in the manuscripts submitted last year writing of promise by several members of the University and wrote to two students in Professor Baker's course that while she regretted her inability to use the manuscripts submitted, she considered the work of these men unusually promising, and would be glad to read plays they might write in the future...