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In the afternoon, the first round of matches was played, at the end of which four Harvard men were left for the second round. Curtis defeated Pyne 3 up, Lindsley won from Bates 1 up, Wadsworth from Edwards 6 up, and Richardson from Byers 3 up. The other players remaining...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Individual Golf Championship. | 5/10/1901 | See Source »

The subject would be popular, without a doubt, for not one undergraduate in ten knows about anything that happened here before, say, 1885; except, perhaps, that John Harvard died in time to found the first college in America, leaving it his name and a few books. Under the circumstances, is...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Suggestion for University Lectures. | 5/3/1901 | See Source »

The history of the Greek Satyr play, of which the Cyclops is the only surviving example, in an interesting one. Both tragedy and comedy in Greece were the results of evolution, continuing over a long period of time. From its origin the theatre was closely connected with the worship of...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Book Review | 4/24/1901 | See Source »

The play moves very slowly at first, but toward the end it becomes more interesting and several ingenious situations are rather abruptly developed. The dialogue, though a little stiff and formal, is clever and very entertaining, and the performance went off smoothly. J. H. Holmes '02, as Charles, the scholar...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Performance of D. U. Play. | 4/9/1901 | See Source »

Of the jokes and stories, the shorter pieces are the best, with perhaps one exception in favor of "Sherlock Holmes in Cambridge." The latter stays closely enough by its model to avoid too much exaggeration, and succeeds in being decidedly absurd. Nearly all the jokes are pointed; and they, like...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Lampoon. | 4/3/1901 | See Source »