Word: novels
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Another instance of the active interest of Harvard men in the theatre is the dramatization by Grover Harrison '13, of Earl Derr Bigger's novel, "Thieves." This work was written while Mr. Biggers was still an undergraduate and was well received in story form. Congratulations are due Mr. Harrison on the acceptance of his dramatization by the Bijou Theatre, and we hope that his work will receive the general approbation that has been accorded to other Harvard productions...
...novel method of attending the Panama-Pacific Exposition at San Francisco in 1915 is being planned by C. F. Stephenson, assistant University crew coach, in conjunction with a number of students and graduates of the University. There are at present in Chicago three duplicates of the caravels of the fleet in which Columbus caravels of the fleet in which Columbus discovered America, brought over from Spain for the World's Fair at Chicago in 1893. With these three caravels, the Santa Maria, Pinta, and Nina, Mr. Stephenson and his companions plan to sail down from Chicago through the drainage canal...
...quality of its training and the spirit of its students, has taken through the students a significant step to give the community the advantages it possesses. Of course, the benefits of the new Legal Aid Bureau will be mutual, both the law students and the community benefitting by this novel plan...
...building concrete reservoirs. In spare time they enjoy a variety of sports. They fish for trout and salmon, have dog-team races, and take long jaunts on skis. There is a good opportunity in this way, was Dr. Little's conclusion, for college men to do something useful and novel in the summer time...
...Dromios. Mr. Zinsser spoke the few lines of the Courtesan with delightful clearness, drawing swiftly at the same time a well defined character. A determined effort by the rest of the company will make the acting in the second performance as interesting and effective as the novel setting...