Word: expected
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...revival of business which we expect to develop during the spring months will be of only moderate proportions. The grounds for this conclusion are found in the continued dragging of the speculative curve, and more particularly, in the comparatively slow easing of money rates. It is the course of the latter which will largely condition the next upward swing of business...
...respect to Dr. Davison and the members for the splendid results achieved, we feel that the Glee Club is not a glee club but a choral society and should be named accordingly, and that a real glee club should exist to sing the college songs which most people expect and want to hear when they attend a glee club concert. We have repeatedly heard this same opinion expressed by non-Harvard people as well as by graduates, and we feel that this should be brought to the attention of the University. F. L. FOSTER '10. J. H. HARWOOD...
...this reason that the CRIMSON advocates the adoption of the name of "Choral Society",--an improvement which would be beneficial to both the College and the club. Those who expect a "vaudeville" rather than a "concert" would find entertainment in the Instrumental Clubs and the Double Quartette. With a "Choral Society" and the "Harvard Instrumental Clubs", there would be no confusion between the totally different aims of the two organizations...
...wholehearted applause that met the Club's performance at every concert on the Christmas trip would hesitate before generalizing thus from some specific instances of dissatisfaction on the part of those who were unpleasantly surprised at encountering a concert instead of a vaudeville performance. The Glee Club did not expect to please everyone in its audiences, (and it is hardly fair for those who have not been to a concert to give judgement), nor can it ever hope to do so. Unquestionably there are those who leave a Symphony Concert feeling that they would have enjoyed a jazz band more...
...create excitement rather than to publish facts. No sooner is a committee formed to probe affairs of public interest than the newspapers prepare for an orgy of "startling disclosures", for blazing headlines containing the names of men in the highest ranks of public and private life. For an expectant reading-public there are graphic accounts of untold wealth secured by graft, of prosperous men off to prison, via the hastily called Grand Juries. All this publicity is exciting; but it may do more harm than good. By the time our numerous investigating committees have concluded their affairs--if ever they...