Word: sultanic
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...theatricals. The book is not at all times equal to the occasion, but the dance songs and travesties follow each other so closely that the audience gets its impression from the excellent action and lyrics. The "Morocan atmosphere of the show, especially in the costumes of the Sultan's harem, almost deserves the term "climate...
...annual play the Hasty Pudding Club will present this year a light musical comedy entitled "The Wanderer." The principal points in the play are the kidnapping of an American by the Sultan of Morocco; the winning of the Sultan's friendship by the American; the American's love for one of the Harem; his rise to position of Sultan pro tem; the troubles caused by his unexpected dignity; and finally his eagerness to depart from the scenes around which the play is built...
...play is divided into two acts, in the first of which the scene shows a street in a large Morocco city, and in the second the country near the Sultan's palace. The costumes are those of the present time in Morocco...
Following is the program: 1. (a) "Alma Mater," Cornell Songs (b)Alumni Song, Cornell Glee Club Cornell Songs 2. Rhine Wine Song, Zoliner Harvard Glee Club. 3. "Pepeeta," Hildreth Cornell Banjo and Mandolin Club. 4. "Dixieland," Haines Harvard Banjo Club. 5. "Sultan's Dream," Rosie Harvard Mandolin Club. 6. "The Goblins," Parks Cornell Glee Club. 7. "Up the Street," Morse '96 Harvard Banjo Club. 8. "Clover Blossoms," Hawley Harvard Glee Club. 9. Medley, Cornell Banjo and Mandolin Club. 10. Overture, "Lustspiel," Keeler-Bela Harvard Mandolin Club. 11. Hawaiian Song, Harvard Glee Club. 12. "The Dremmaker Man," Nevin E. Wilder, Cornell...
Morocco, M. Millet said, has an excellent position, commanding as it does the Mediterranean and the Atlantic; but, because of the weakness of the government, it has never played an important part in the history of the world. The sultan enjoys a semblance of power on the coast; but in the mountainous interior is not even recognized. This absence of a strong central government has often caused international trouble. To establish it, Spain, England and France have each tried to gain a foothold in Morocco, but all attempts to do so have failed...