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Usage:

...dramatist of the first rank but for his keen interest in every branch of social reform. He has used the stage as many men use the pulpit or lecture room, and he has used it with far greater effect. Some of his best known plays are "La Robe Rouge," "Simone," "Les Avarieux," and "Les Trois Filles de M. Dupont...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IN HONOR OF M. EUGENE BRIEUX | 12/14/1914 | See Source »

...discuss them openly in a sound manner. There must also be other men who are keenly following the march of events in other fields, and Forums of the future will welcome those who did not take part in the discussions last evening. Now that a Forum has donned a robe of success, it is hoped that it will become a permanent institution in the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FORUM. | 11/4/1914 | See Source »

...sooth, it is the beginning of the end. The cap and gown garb is a sort of cocoon from which the Senior will emerge as a very humble moth in June. But the cocoon days are happy ones, and rightly. The soberness of the robe signifies no corresponding gloom in the class; Nineteen-fourteen has not assumed black to mark its declining days. On the contrary, Nineteen-fourteen is just beginning to live. What with Junkets and picnics, and bright days and gay nights, cap and gown time will pass quickly and merrily. So, paraphrasing the advice given...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE ARMOR SCHOLASTIC. | 5/1/1914 | See Source »

...ancestors in the universities at Oxford and Cambridge had apparently fully as varied, and as violent tastes, as the comic supplements assure us are the first characteristic of the modern college man. So England made a law which compelled students to cover their rainbow costumes with a dark robe. Oxford obeyed for a time, but forgot the archaic regulations in more lenient times; Cambridge has always kept them religiously until very recently. Within the last few months the required wearing of the gowns during certain times of the day--even to the restaurant or the theatre--has become irksome...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AESTHETIC AS WELL AS TRADITIONAL | 3/23/1912 | See Source »

Exhortations in formal vein having proved themselves formerly in vain, the CRIMSON casts aside its arterial robe and dons for the moment Lampy's purple and yellow gymnasium suit. Its purpose is to lay bare the shocking nakedness of Ellis and other equally deserving islands to the eyes of the University. Gentlemen! their chattering teeth exposed to the furious tempests, their blue-black lips crackling and rustling in a vain attempt to produce the sadly sweet notes of "Aw, wert thou in the cauld, cauld-slaw" these shivering inhabitants of a deserted island beg you on their unbendable and likewise...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BROOKS HOUSE CLOTHING COLLECTION. | 11/1/1911 | See Source »

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