Word: numberous
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...regular graduates' night performance of the play was held in Brattle Hall Monday evening. Although a number of the characters are little more than figureheads, the excellent and very natural acting of three or four of the leading characters made the production a success. The plot centres in a typographical error in which the name "Godard" is printed "Bodard." As both men are candidates for the office of "SousPrefet," much confusion is caused, in which Cecile Boulinard and her father appear. At the eleventh hour, when Bodard's change of winning Cecile depends on his appointment, a telegram from...
...Boulinard," the play which the Cercle Francais presented for the first time last evening at Brattle Hall is decidedly an amusing farce. Although there are a number of characters who are little more than figureheads, the excellent and very natural acting of three or four of the leading characters made the production a success...
...within easy travelling distance of Cambridge, and that these men will naturally go home over each week-end. Of the many who remain, some will establish relations with churches of their own denomination in Cambridge or Boston, though on account of the transitory character of the student community this number will never be large. Some there will always be who will not go to church at all, and some who go only on exceptional occasions, being discouraged from regular attendance by the remoteness of the churches which they would like to attend...
...current number of "Harper's Weekly" is given a very interesting prospective plan for the future architectural development of Harvard University. This plan has been made possible by the gradual investment by a few interested graduates, who, by acquiring the land from Massachusetts avenue to the river between Holyoke and DeWolf streets, have opened a way for a model university plant...
...drawings by Ruskin. The exhibition is made in memory of Charles Eliot Norton '46. A large part of the drawings in the exhibition were given by Ruskin himself to Professor Norton, and are loaned by members of the Norton family. In addition to the drawings, there are a number of etchings by Ruskin and engravings after his drawings, besides reproductions of original drawings in volumes of the Library Edition of Ruskin's Works, shown in the cases in the Print Room...