Word: feastings
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...swimming teams will disport themselves, and the thirsty ones will attend to their own divers business. A special feature this year will be the presence of a number of gentlemen of color, who will endeavor to dodge any missiles which the Seniors may wish to throw. A hearty feast of sea-food and fruits in season will be then consumed by the ravenous picnic party, who will finally wind their way back to Cambridge sadder but wiser...
Many households far and near will keep the feast of plenty, many others through want and poverty will not. We do not live in a state of communism sharing all things alike, nor will the hungry be filled miraculously. Thanks given merely in words are empty and will have no significance unless they actuate a spirit of altruism and deeds of charity...
Following is the programme of the Pop Concert at Symphony Hall tonight: 1.Pomp and Circumstance, Elgar 2. Suite, "Boabdil" Moszkowski a. Valse. b. Malaguena. 3. Overture, "Stradella." Florow 4. Salut d'Amour, Elgar 5. Ride of the Valkyries, Wagner 6. Dance of the Sun Feast, Walier 7. Largo, Handel Solo violin, Mr. Ondricek. Organ, Mr. Snow. 8. Danse Macabre, Saint-Saens 9. Overture, "Poet and Peasant," Suppe 10. Selection, "Gondoliers," Sullivan 11. Singen-Laden-Tanzen Waltz, Ziehrer 12. Polonaise, Chopin
Following is the programme of the Pop Concert at Symphony Hall tonight: 1. March Slave, Tschaikowsky 2. Overture, "Richard III," E. German 3. Chanson de Nuit, Ed. Elgar 4. Overture, "Martha," Flotow 5. Dance of the Sun Feast, Henry Waller 6. Slavonic Dances, Dvorak 7. Largo, Handel Solo Violin, Mr. Karl Ondricek. Organ, Mr. Snow. 8. Overture, "Merry Wives of Windsor," Nicolai 9. Serenade, Moszkowski 10. Selection, "Gondoliers," Sullivan 11. El Turia, "Valse Espagnole," Granado 12. Tannhaeuser March, Wagner
...Soon the subject broadened into other fields and the dramatic element increased at the expense of the choral element. But the conservation of the stage and perhaps of the priests of Dionysus preserved in the satyr play an interesting memorial of earlier days. Each tragic poet presented at the feast of the patron-god four plays; the last of these was the satyr play, which was really neither tragedy nor comedy, but a tragedy of the old type with all the rudeness and boisterousness of earlier times. Such a play is the Cyclops, the subject being the blinding of Polyphemus...