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...cast of "Death and the Dieers," by F. Schenek '09, is as follows: Death, R. L. Niles '09 Aleyn, dicer, H. W. H. Powel '09 Watt, dicer, N. S. Simpkins '09 Simpkins, dicer, J. A. P. Millet '10 Innkeeper, R. E. Rogers '09 Juggler, W. K. Blodgett '11 Boy, O. W. Roosevelt '12 Girl, Miss Marian Gragg

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CASTS OF DRAMATIC CLUB | 5/14/1909 | See Source »

...life that is often lost sight of in our discussions of three-year degrees, and incentives to work. "Leisure," the author says, "means a time for quiet reading, thinking and talking." Emphatically it does not mean a time of stagnation. Neither is it time taken away from study. A boy entering college is at a very impressionable, formative period. We, the teaching force, should find means to stir him intellectually, to rouse his ambition to do, and should also give him time to think, for all the new ideas to expand and develop. We should advise him, because...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: W. R. Castle '00 Reviews Advocate | 4/7/1909 | See Source »

James Savage '54 as a boy was not bright, but very thoughtful; full of fun and energy, and possessed of strong personality which commanded respect. He enlisted at the outbreak of the war and was killed at Cedar Mountain. Edward Dalton '55 died of exhaustion after the war. James Lowell '58 was shot once and returned to the North; later he went back to the front and was killed at Glendale. Stephen Perkins '56 was pleasant and witty, a brilliant student, standing at the head of his class in College. He was shot in the battle of Cedar Mountain. Robert...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAJOR HIGGINSON'S SPEECH | 1/7/1909 | See Source »

...when he has become a still more successful and well-seasoned playwright, he will probably stand abashed at the remembrance of all he did and dared in his maiden effort. For however much traditions may be shocked and polite conventionalities shattered, the fact must go on record that this boy from Harvard, backed only by the courage of his own convictions, and with Mrs. Fiske as both actress and stage manageress standing as a tower of strength behind him, has given New York the most daring play that this town has ever seen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "SALVATION NELL" REVIEWED | 12/18/1908 | See Source »

...Translated into English verse," by T. C. Williams '76; "An Outline of Economics," by John Daniels '04; "The Rotation Period of the Sun as Determined from the Motions of Calcium Flocculi," by G. E. Hale and P. Fox '90; "The Teacher," by G. H. Parker '64; "The Wireless Telegraph Boy," by John Trowbridge '65; "Jack Harvey's Adventures," by R. P. Smith L.'01; "A Full-Back Afloat," by Dr. J. G. Mumford '85; "Buddhism and Immortality," by W. S. Bigelow '71; "As Others See Us," by J. G. Brooks D.'75; "Documents Relating to the Seignorial Tenure in Canada...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Recent Books by Harvard Graduates | 12/7/1908 | See Source »

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