Word: currents
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...current number of the Harvard Musical Review for March is true to the principal cause of its organization; i.e, the conviction that there was sufficient interest in musical matters among the students of the University and adequate skill in the expression of personal views to warrant a special magazine devoted to music. The leading article on "Opera and the City" by S. F. Damon, is indicative of the serious attitude which Harvard men take in regard to the present condition of opera in Boston and the question of its steady growth or gradual decline. It is an open secret that...
...Speakers Club will hold the second of a series of meetings for the discussion of current events in the club house at 36 Quincy St., tonight at 8 o'clock. A review of the principal topics of interest since the last meeting will be given by Professor L. J. Johnson of the Department of Civil Engineering, and an informal discussion will follow his talk. The meeting is open to members of the University and all who wish to are expected to participate in the discussion...
...Speaker's Club will hold its second meeting for the discussion of current events at the Club House, 36 Quincy St., tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. Professor L. J. Johnson, will give a review of the principal topics of interest since the last meeting. Following his talk there will be an informal discussion in which all members of the University are invited to participate...
...second of the meetings for the discussion of current events will be held in the Speakers' Club on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Professor L. J. Johnson will give a review of the principal topics of interest since the last meeting, and following his talk will come at informal discussion in which all members of the University are invited to participate...
...current number of the Advocate should be dedicated to O. Henry, for the three stories depend on the problem of mistaken identity which he handled so supremely well. Of them, P. R. Mechem's "Burley knows a Cubist" alone is done with any particular skill. The style in description and conversation is light and the characters are cleverly sketched, although the close is distinctly weak. W. D. Crane in "Bully" and L. Wood, Jr., in "Short, Sweet and Bitter" do not succeed so well in following the difficult master. Both attempt what few people can accomplish skilfully in clearing...