Word: written
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Goldthwait, J. C. McMullen, F. L. Stagg, and R. S. K. Irvin, has announced the first meeting for next Wednesday evening in the Trophy Room of the Union at 7.15 o'clock. All Freshmen who have had any experience in acting, or managing, or who have ever written any plays are particularly urged to attend...
...Hume '13 and T. M. Spelman '13, is to be produced with scenery in the style of Gordon Craig under whom Hume has studied. G. Hale '15 has assisted in the designing and painting of the set. "Home Sweet Home," a serious play of tenement life was written by Miss Violet Robinson, recently of Radcliffe. Professor Richard T. Holbrook has revised his translation of the old French farce "Pierre Patelin" specially for this performance. The chief purpose of the "Workshop" is to fit original productions for public performance, but this last play is to be given in accordance with...
...artist's model smirks on the cover; but the contents of the excellent November number show here and there ravages of the bacilli that beset the ten-cent magazines, Mr. Petersen, for instance, has caught the--Red Blood Craze. His cattleship story called "Murph"--well-constructed and boldly written and vivid as it unquestionably is--is too full of perspiration and profanity and filth. Mr. Petersen's leading character has nothing distinctive about him, excepting an odor like a New England barnyard after an April shower." This sentence is more suited to a report of the Sewer Commission than...
...always been in touch with men active in national affairs and has written many books and articles, some of which, notably the political ones, have attracted much attention. Two of the most noteworthy of these he contributed to Harper's Weekly, one on President Roosevelt and the other on President Taft, at the time when the former was going out and the latter coming into office...
...University were never issued owing to lack of funds. Again others have been issued under various imprints and so are not connected in the public mind with the institution at which they were produced. The Harvard Alumni Bulletin says, "Only last year an historical treatise of great importance, written by a Harvard Master of Arts, now a member of the Faculty of Arts, now a member of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, was given to the Press of a sister institution for publication." That the University Press is doing much to remedy this evil is shown by the fact...