Word: ruth
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Loring repeated his success of last year. Powel filled creditably the part of the scheming Grand Vizier. Roekler could not have been better in his representation of the perfect butler, and Schenck, Barton, Lanigan, Cate, and May showed that much can be made of a small part. Blagden as Ruth made a very pretty girl indeed; his singing was good; and his acting startlingly realistic. Gardner, in one of the most difficult parts of the show, deserves great credit for his portrayal of an unappreciated maiden...
...Loring repeated his success of last year. Powel filled creditably the part of the scheming Grand Vizier. Roekler could not have been better in his representation of the perfect butler, and Schenck, Barton, Lanigan, Cate, and May showed that much can be made of a small part. Blagden as Ruth made a very pretty girl indeed; his singing was good; and his acting startlingly realistic. Gardner, in one of the most difficult parts of the show, deserves great credit for his portrayal of an unappreciated maiden...
...Loring repeated his success of last year. Powel filled creditably the part of the scheming Grand Vizier. Roekler could not have been better in his representation of the perfect butler, and Schenck, Barton, Lanigan, Cate, and May showed that much can be made of a small part. Blagden as Ruth made a very pretty girl indeed; his singing was good; and his acting startlingly realistic. Gardner, in one of the most difficult parts of the show, deserves great credit for his portrayal of an unappreciated maiden...
...prophet, F. Schenck '09 Foreman, K.S. Cate '09 Ship of the Desert, H. Gray '09, J.M. Groton '09 Jacob, a workman, C.L. Lanigan '10 Ethiopian Attendant, H.B. Barton '09 An Architect, G. deC. May '09 A Private Secretary, G. Lewis '09 Queen Semiramis of Egypt, R.H. Hutchinson '10 Ruth, F.M. Blagden '09 Esther, an unappreciated maiden, G.P. Gardner, Jr., '10 Babylonian courtiers, ladies, workmen...
This fellowship is supported by a fund of $50,000 given to the University in 1905 by Elizabeth Rogers Cabot, Henry Bromfield Cabot, Ruth Cabot Paine, Elise Cabot Forbes, Walter Mason Cabot, and Mabel Cabot Sedgwick. It was the desire of the givers to provide "an additional remuneration to some distinguished man in recognition of his eminence...