Word: young
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Social Question: Francois Curel and M. Antoine's Theatre" was the subject of the sixth French lecture yesterday afternoon. The lecture dealt with the history of the small theatres that have sprung up in response to the efforts of young authors who are trying to gain a reputation. Of these theatres the chief are the Theatre Antoine, Theatre Libre, Gaiete Montparnasse and Menus Plaisirs. For the fifteen years in which these theatres have been in vogue many popu ar plays have been represented there, such as "L'Evasion," by Alexander Villiers; "Le Pain du Peche," by T. Aubanel; "Rolande...
...audience the exact counterpart of what he represents. He does not act; he lives his part. He never panders to the whims of the public: for instance, unlike other actors, he does not hesitate to turn his back on the audience. He likes to act the plays of young and comparatively unknown authors, and it is his boast that he discovered and fostered such men as Brilleux and Henri Lavedan...
...Lincoln, P. Lorillard 3d., R. E. Marshall, T. H. Miller, J. T. Otis, R. W. Rivers, F. D. Roosevelt, W. E. Sachs, L. H. Schoff, J. T. Souther, 2d., J. Swift, T. T. Rogers, W. L. Tufts, R. G. Whiting, N. K. Wilcox, G. O. Winston, H. B. Young...
While I hesitate to use the knowledge which I have in regard to the case of the young man who was referred to in yesterday's CRIMSON as having left College on account of ill health, yet I feel that, in justice to the correspondents of the Boston newspapers, I should make a slight explanation. The gentleman who wrote the communication yesterday was greatly mistaken when he thought the unfortunate student in question ate sufficient food. Among the waiters at Randall Hall it was often remarked that this student ate the least of any man in the Hall, and that...
...Mountains, young and old. Professor Davis...