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...opportunity for the bringing out of the pathetic as well as the comic. The action takes place in the time of Louis XI. At the opening of the play, the king is sitting at table with Olivier-Le-Daim, his barber and favorite, when a great commotion is heard in the street, and Gringoire, the vagabond poet, is seen without. Gringoire has incurred the enmity of Olivier, who summons him into the mansion and compels him to sing a ballad of his with which all the streets of Paris are ringing. The ballad is directed against the king, and Olivier...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Provisional Casts for French Plays | 10/15/1907 | See Source »

...members of the expedition left here early last May. They went overland to Seattle, Washington, where they chartered the schooner Lydia for their long trip. Nothing was heard of them until they landed in safety at Seattle again on September 11 after a successful trip...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Return of Prof. Jaggar's Expedition | 10/2/1907 | See Source »

...those who enjoy the "absolute shall", the dogmatic assertion that fundamental reforms can and must be put through without a moment's delay, Professor Beale's "Reorganization of the University," will prove delightful. We have heard the "College system" recommended, but Professor Beale commands it. The article is fairly melodramatic; each sentence, sharp, clear-cut, sweeping, provides new excitement. When we have finished, we wonder breathlessly how Harvard can continue to exist if all the things Professor Beale says are true...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 9/27/1907 | See Source »

...note with pleasure the recent announcement that the Musical Clubs have arranged to give an undergraduate concert in Sanders Theatre on the evening preceding the Yale baseball game. Often in the past we have heard the criticism that Harvard undergraduates too rarely have an opportunity to hear their own musical organizations. Without passing judgment on the justice of this criticism, we do feel that the arrangements and date for the coming concert are especially fortunate. Many Seniors will surely be glad of this opportunity to entertain their families and friends who come to Cambridge to attend the festivities of Class...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MUSICAL CLUBS' CONCERT | 5/28/1907 | See Source »

Once again Lampy has gone back to the bull rushes! His weary Ibis is a sad, sad sight, sunken deep in the mire, weary from lost battles on the ice, the track, and the diamond. Far off in Cambridge only the fame of the CRIMSON is heard. The score was 16 to 14. All Lampy's bombs, jeers, kicks, jokes (?), beer, cheers, and bean blowers were of no avail before the cool experts of the pride of American journalism. Nothing could overtax the nerve of the men who had braved the terrors of Memorial Hall's fishballs. Small fry from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lampoons Defeated in Baseball | 5/25/1907 | See Source »

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