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...several years the increasing scope and excellence of the Dramatic Club productions have been attracting consider-able attention and favorable comment outside the University. In Cambridge, however, students make up but a small part of its audiences. As home-made performances the Dramatic Club plays have to overcome the prejudice against unpaid good acting. In their present form they are amateur only in the fact that the club members stage, manage, and act the plays without compensation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE PERVERSENESS OF PAMELA." | 12/14/1915 | See Source »

...current Harvard Graduates' Magazine, in short, is brimful of good things. Its scope is so broad that it will prove as entertaining for undergraduates as it is to the graduates for whom it is primarily intended. For Harvard men--and for most other people--not a page in this publication is without fascination, inviting not only perusal, but also scrutiny...

Author: By E. H. P., | Title: Graduates' Magazine Abounds With Articles of Interest | 12/8/1915 | See Source »

...Culture," is easily the most significant, despite the high quality and able critical attitude displayed in the other contributions. Professor Spalding demonstrates with cogent reasoning the appalling limitations existent in the estimation, as to what constitutes cultivation, appeals justly for a more concrete realization of the intellectual and emotional scope afforded by music of the highest type, and establishes the unassailable right of the arts to occupy a position as a means of culture fully equal to that afforded by literature. In view, of the astounding failure to grasp the comprehensive attributes of music as a cultural factor. Professor Spalding...

Author: By Edward B. Hill ., | Title: "Musical Review" of High Standard | 12/3/1915 | See Source »

...member of the United States cabinet stated recently that, in his opinion, Harvard alone, of all the American colleges, could lay true claim to the title of university. No doubt excellent grounds for such an assertion are to be found in the wide scope of the University's curriculum and in its national character, as shown in the fact, for example, that men from 144 different colleges are attending the Law School. Both these phases are well known. Not so commonly realized, however, is an equally conclusive evidence derived from the number of men holding University degrees...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY. | 12/2/1915 | See Source »

...scenery department of the Workshop has been reorganized and is now in the hands of men, interested in stage experimentation, who can give as much of their time as is needed towards extending the scope of the department. The first problem of staging is now being worked out and in co-operation with Mr. T. P. Robinson, of Derby and Robinson, architects, the scenery department will devise the four sets of the first production from one large combination set. By lighting, different color schemes of hangings, portieres, etc., the difference between the sets will be emphasized. This is an elaboration...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WORKSHOP SELECTS TWO PLAYS | 10/29/1915 | See Source »

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