Word: teas
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University sincerely hopes that Tatiana will pay us a call. We can give her tea at Phillips Brooks House and show her the glass flowers, or if she cares for informality we can always take her to a soccer game and then give a dinner in her honor at the Union. We suggest that the Student Council think over the matter of inviting the Grand Duchess to Harvard. She can always take a special course in Slavic and it would be an attraction to have enrolled in U4 the illustrious name of Tatiana Romanoff...
...Extension Courses. Of reference here are the special series of lectures and meetings, such as that of a course of carefully prepared war talks which is announced today from Wheaton College, or the Tuesday afternoon "faculty lectures" which have been given for several years at Williams College, with afternoon tea in the offing. These are "open to townspeople and students...
...were yards of silks and satins for those costumes of 1830, and what the Messrs. Shubert saved in decollete dressing they had to spend in hoop skirts. The free hand that equips Winter Garden shows did the pouring when money was put in to "The Star Gazer." In the tea scene of the second act, for instance, real sugar was used...
...outline of the events arranged has been completed. Friday, November 9, will mark the opening of the anniversary activities. An address dealing with the extensive and varied history of the school will be given in an amphitheater of the Medical School, which will be followed by a tea and reception at the Dental School, where the orthodontia clinic showing one of the most interesting features of the work of the school, and an historical exhibit will be on view, to which the friends and patients of the alumni will be invited. It is planned to devote the morning of Saturday...
Apart from the editorials, this Advocate is divided between four short stories, an article on "Tea Drinking," and thirteen pieces of verse. Of this the prose on the whole is less important than the verse. The light, little, rambling essay on "Tea Drinking," by Mr. Alfred Putnam, has good comment and observation, but it seems less spontaneous than other contributions of the same author to the Advocate. The four short stories are all very short, with the exception of "The Shadow of Death," by Mr. Emerson Low. This is a story that catches and holds the attention, a story...