Word: successful
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...concerts in all the cities are under the auspices of the various local Harvard Clubs. Many entertainments have been planned by alumni, which should serve to make the trip a great success socially. Al example of the festivities to be tendered the clubs is the program which has been arranged at Syracuse. The men will be met at the train by automobiles, and taken around the city. At one o'clock they will have luncheon at the Century Club, and at 4 will be entertained at a tea-dance at the Sedgwick Farm Club. The clubs will give their concert...
...arrangements for the Dramatic Club's trip to New York on December 29 and 30 have been completed and this new enterprise of the Club should be a success. Two performances of the Club's fall comedy, "Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater," will be given at the Garrick Theatre on December 29 and 30. Almost the entire original cast will make the trip...
...plays, each of an entirely different type. The first, a dramatization of Leacock's "Behind the Beyond" deals with the absurdity of problem plays and ridicules those who go to see them. "The Ghost of Jerry Bundler", by W. W. Jacobs which has been acted with much success by Cyril Maude, has been characterized as "A play of dark shadows and blue moon light in which the old inn, the old story, the old practical joke and the old tragedy--all combine to make a new and powerful drama...
...Dramatic Club is undertaking its first venture away from Cambridge and Boston with two performances in New York next week. The play to be produced is highly representative of the work being done in histrionic fields in the University and the success of its Cambridge and Boston Performances assure creditable presentations. The expense of the production, however, will be comparatively large and to assure complete success, the play must be well patronized at both performances. The members of the club, themselves, have contributed generously to the establishment of a reserve fund, which it should not be necessary...
Harvard's relations with the college on its exchange list are increasingly cordial, and every year the number of men from the West who are attracted to the University by its faculty representatives in the West grows larger. No more tangible evidence of the success of the exchange system could be given than the meeting of the Knox men. If the feeling between the Eastern and Western colleges, which unfortunately is at times not cordial, and which militates against co-operation is to be overcome, the exchange system is going to be one of the strongest agencies in the process...