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...conducts through a Parisian evening in a study of the contrast between Basque impetuosity and English simplicity, pay a very modest price in losing the outside as well as the inside of their pocket-books; in fact, they 'get off easy'; but I don't care about them; I want to know what became of that American boy who danced so well and over whose head the plate was smashed. Was his skull fractured? And what manner of man was Mr. Kornfield's Sergius, so stirred by a chromo, competent analyst of Oscar Wilde's tremendous ballad, victim...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD MONTHLY REVIEW | 2/3/1913 | See Source »

Members of the Class from Gallagher to Moffat inclusive should make appointments at Tupper's Studio, Harvard square, today. All men who are leaving College at mid-years should also make appointments at once if they have not already done so. It costs you nothing unless you want pictures for personal use, and the Committee urges every man to attend to this matter at once. Do it now. 1913 PHOTOGRAPH COMMITTEE...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Seniors Must Make Appointments | 1/29/1913 | See Source »

Members of the class from Gallagher to Moffat inclusive should make appointments at Tupper's Studio, Harvard square, today or tomorrow. Men who are leaving College at mid-years should also make appointments at once if they have not already done so. It costs-nothing unless you want pictures for personal use, and the Committee urges that every man attend to this matter at once. 1913 PHOTOGRAPH COMMITTEE...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Notice | 1/28/1913 | See Source »

...Fitch said that youth is not primarily interested in the science of religion, that it does not want to be pious. It does want to be brave, clean, honest, and useful. It does, behind a deep and shy reserve, revere itself, its Maker, and its brethren. Here is a youth's conscious idea of his religion; that as boyhood ends, character must begin; that as manhood is consummated, capacity to serve must be its essential witness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "UNDERGRADUATE RELIGION" | 12/9/1912 | See Source »

...play is a presentation of the conditions which corrupt politics. The Boss becomes the spokesman of the people he represents--giving them what they want because their wants are his wants--because he is their mouthpiece, and being like them, no better and no worse, he understands them. The scene is laid in a large American city, and the conflict is between the Boss who justifies himself to himself, and his neice who sees clearly the destruction that his altruistic intentions--altruistic though they are avaricious -- precipitate. But from blaming the Boss, she comes to understand that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" | 11/2/1912 | See Source »