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...this and other performances may be had at Herrick's and Jordan Hall, Boston; Co-operative branch store, Harvard square; and from H. S. Ballou, Jr., '15, Brentford 22. Dan Magee, S. J. Hume '13 Tom Foley, J. K. Hodges '14 Bob Johnson, H. R. Sanford '13 David, I. Pichel '14 Flynn, J. A. Donovan '13 Jennings, N. B. Clark '16 Alice Magee, Miss Marian Gragg Cathleen O'Donovan, Miss Jessie MacDonald Mrs. Johnson, Miss Edna Behre Mary Johnson, Miss Bessie Carpenter Becky, Miss Dorothy Sands Sally, Miss Sara Mazur

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE" | 12/10/1912 | See Source »

...Cambridge performances may be obtained at the main store of the Co-operative Society and from H. S. Ballou, Jr., '15, Brentford 22. Dan Magee, S. J. Hume '13 Tom Foley, R. D. Whittemore '13 Bob Johnson, E. W. Hammond uC. David, I. Pichel '14 Flynn, J. A. Donovan sL. Jennings, N. B. Clark '16 Alice Magee, Miss Marian Gragg Cathleen O'Donovan, Miss Jessie MacDonald Mrs. Johnson, Miss Edna Behre Becky, Miss Dorothy Sands Mary Johnson, Miss Bessie Carpenter

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC CLUB CAST CHOSEN | 11/29/1912 | See Source »

...meeting of the board of editors of the Harvard Monthly held yesterday, Scofield Thayer '13, of Worcester, was elected secretary to succeed James Donald Adams '13, of New York, resigned. The following were elected literary editors: Charles Hartshorne, Weston '14, of Merion Station, Pa.; Irving Pichel '14, of Pittsburgh. Pa.; Charles Merrill Rogers, Jr., '14, of Cambridge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monthly Elections | 11/9/1912 | See Source »

...rest of the number should not be neglected. Mr. Harris's story, "The Cripple,"--a courageous attempt to reproduce Herculaneum on the last night of its existence--is promise which rises encouragingly near to performance; Mr. Weston's "Whitsuntide in Germany" is pleasing, if not important; Mr. Pichel's "The Quake in Unbelief" has life enough to make up for its crudeness; Mr. Wright's "Parsifal," in terza rima with one verse left unrhymed, is so much larger and more imaginative than most undergraduate poetry that one may hopefully overlook its faults. Many readers will find Mr. Seldes's discussion...

Author: By L. B. R. briggs., | Title: Review of Current Monthly | 10/3/1912 | See Source »

...chant are "merely formed for the use of tenors and fat women." Wagner, he says, "dissatisfied with the figure of the historic Christ, transformed him into a German prig with a nasty-minded distrust of feminity". That's Parsifal! There's plenty of go in the Monthly still. Mr. Pichel in his helpful "note" on Strindberg,--which, by the way, was written before Strindberg's death--does not find it necessary to be so vehement. That "note" suggests the query, whether or not it looks well to have the items on the title-page all labelled "verse", "essay", "fiction...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monthly Reviewed by Dr. Webster | 6/4/1912 | See Source »

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