Word: greets
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...system, which are more interesting to student audiences and immediate relatives of the cast than to the public at large. A new high is set in Princeton satire, however, with a song which demonstrates how to become a member of one of the better Princeton clubs, particularly how to greet classmates on the main campus thoroughfare, McCosh walk. "Doing the McCosh walk" advises young men to arch their backs, protrude their chests, ignore less fortunate friends while grinning servilely at prominent classmates. Incidentally, the tune is one of the liveliest in the show. Other appealing melodies: "Something...
...keen competition for the international scholarships already in existence enables one to greet the new Charles and Julian Henry Fund stipends with more than nominal welcome. How much good is done to the cause of world peace by such exchange scholarships is largely a matter of opinion. No doubt can exist, however, that there is a large number of men eager to have the opportunity of foreign study, and that the new awards will be sought for in a market where the demand far exceeds the supply...
...Philip Ben Greet and his Company of English players will give, at the invitation of the Department of English, two productions in Sanders Theatre this winter, it was announced yesterday by F. C. Packard Jr. '20, Professor of Public Speaking. The first quarto of "Hamlet" will be given on Monday, January 12, and on Tuesday, January 13 "As You Like It" will be presented...
...Greet and his players gave "Everyman" in the Sanders Theatre in 1903 and a series of open sir Shakespearean performances on one of the University lawns in 1904. This year he has been touring the United States with his company and last spring played the first quarto of "Hamlet" in San Francisco before an enthusiastic audience...
...every scene closes with a subtle gesture that completely wins the audience. At the juncture at which the Twentieth century Peter Standish arrives, the stage is darkened, the door opens and a shaft of light reveals the very beautiful Kate Pettigrew, Louise Pressing, sweeping into a superb curtsie to greet her betrothed just as the curtain falls. It is a succession of moments like this that makes "Berkeley Square" so thoroughly entertaining...