Word: shows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Boyden, Jr., '16, at the Hasty Pudding Club House. A special performance will be given this evening, open only to graduate or undergraduate members of the club. "The Fattest Calf" is a two-act musical comedy dealing with the adventures of some members of the Hasty Pudding show on a tour, who become stranded in a rustic town without their money. The second act act is a modernized version of Shake speare's "Merchant of Venice," the burlesque taking its name from the fact that Shylock takes a mortgage on Antonio's fattest calf instead of the conventional pound...
...camps will sit on the chairman's right, and those opposed to them on his left. In the centre there will be a small section for neutral persons. At the end of a speech anyone may change sides, without necessarily admitting that he has been won over, merely to show his approval of the speech. Any who are forced to leave before the end of the meeting may give their votes to tellers who will be stationed at the doors. At the close of the meeting the men will separate, joining one side or the other, and each group will...
There is not here the space to show the insidious perversions with which your editorial writers have deluded themselves. Fortunately the Forum, tomorrow night, will give the undergraduates an opportunity to disprove the impression given to the world that Harvard men are unwilling to sacrifice a little of their time and pleasure for the safety of their country. A. FORUMMY...
...this year follows the lead of past performances and consists largely of musical and dancing numbers interwoven with the general run of the plot. The book is by D. C. Josephs '15 and J. A. Richards '15 and deals with the adventures of some members of the Hasty Pudding show on a tour who become stranded in a rustic town--Warm Water Junction--Separated from their manager...
...Nymph," we find a vagrant memory fixed in a present mood. The lines, except the second, are musical; Mr. Clark has secured his effect with rare economy of effort. The two sonnets by Mr. Norris, "An Old Story," and "Winter Sunrise," dealing with more clearly defined subjects, show more direct treatment. In form, they are slightly irregular, and suffer from a jerkiness due to the large proportion of end-stopped lines. But the description is good; and Mr. Norris is particularly felicitous in his closing lines...