Word: mr
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Harvard Dramatic Club has secured the services of Mr. George H. Trader of New York as coach for the semi-annual play to be given on December 7, 9, and 11. All men in the University desiring to try for parts in the play will register their names between 9 and 5 o'clock on Thursday with E. E. Hunt '10 in Stoughton 9. Mr. Trader will arrive on Friday and conduct the first trials. The final cast will be chosen before November 15, when regular rehearsals will begin...
...Tozzer '00, of the Department of American Archaeology and Ethnology, will leave Cambridge today to take charge of an expedition for research in Central America and British Honduras on behalf of the Peabody Museum. With Mr. R. E. Merwin 4G. he will go to New Orleans by train, proceeding from there to Belize, British Honduras, by boat...
...each of the next two regular Thursday afternoon teas of the Cosmopolitan Club some prominent man has promised to speak. On the fourth, Mr. Lincoln Steffens, and on the eleventh, Dr. Edward Meyer, the German Exchange Professor, will address the club. Dean W. R. Castle, Jr., '00 will give an illustrated talk on the eighteenth...
...Mr. Savery contributes an interesting account of "Clyde Fitch, the Man and Playwright," which seems to be based on personal acquaintance with Mr. Fitch, and helps in the understanding of his work. Mr. Lippmann writes earnestly, though somewhat extravagantly, "In Defence of the Suffragettes." Mr. Douglas gives some effective pictures of incidents in the service of a "rookie" in the recent war games of the Massachusetts militia. Mr. Snedeker, in his "Pity Women," shows power to portray persons vividly and to convey a sense of sadness. Professor Neilson's appreciation of Mr. Hagedorn's important volume "A Troop...
...Mr. Grimes's thoughtful sonnet "The Beaten Trail," Mr. Greene's graceful translation "From the French of Rousard," Mr. Seegar's very melodious "San Cristoval," Mr. Gilkey's "Song," containing a poetic idea, Mr. Reed's charming "Melisande," and Mr. Thayer's ambitious "Midnight"--these together, one is happy to see, attest a widespread power among Harvard students to write finished and fine-spirited verse. More sustained effort is manifest in Mr. Hunt's adaptation of the delightful Middle-English lay "Sir Orfeo." This rendering--of which half is postponed to the December number-- is of striking excellence. Mr. Hunt...