Word: glees
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Harvard Glee Club will join forces with the Smith College Glee Club in a concert to be given at 8 o'clock tonight in the John M. Greene Hall at Smith College Dr. A. T. Davison Hall '06 will conduct the 60 members of the Glee Club who will make the trip, while the Smith Club will be led by Professor Ivan Tinoteevich Gorokchoff of the Smith College Music Department...
Each of the Glee Clubs will give a separate program with the "Gypsy" by Zolotarieff as the final number to be sung by the two clubs together. The program to be given by the University Glee Club will be as follows Tu Pauperum Reingium DesPres Selection from "Jepthah" Carissimi Crucitixus Lotti New Let Every Tongue Adore Thee Bach My Bonnie Lass Morley Three Christmas Carols. Christians, Hark! (Breasan) Bring a torch (Old French) Le Miracle de Saint Nicholss (Lorraine) Soloists, Peroival Dove 1R. S. and J. M. Mitchell 21. Love Songs Brahms Marching Brahms Chorus from "The Gondoliers" Sullivan
...clock tonight, the Glee Club will give a concert at the Union with Joseph Frederick Lautner '21 as the assisting soloist. Mr. Lautner was prominent in the Glee Club while in college and, since his graduation, has studied in France and America, giving several concerts in the neighborhood of Boston. The concert will be open to all members of the University...
...concert will open with Fair Harvard, sung by the entire Glee Club. Among the songs which Mr. Lautner will sing in connection with the Glee Club are an Irish Folk Song called "The Foggy Dew and a special adaptation of Sir Arthur Sullivan's chorus from "The Gondoliers". The "Suabian Folk Song" and Handel's "Halleluvah, Amen", two songs on which the Glee Club have been spending much time under Dr. A. T. Davison '06, the conductor, will also be on the program...
Litterateurs shrieked with dismay when President Roosevelt tried to force simplified spelling down the throat of the Congressional Record. Esperanto was tortured to death with fiendish glee by the barbed criticisms of philologists. And yet Mr. Eurique Blanco, writing in the international Book Review, has tempted the lightning of such a champion as Mr. Mencken by declaring that English is not "easy to learn" and that before if can become a world language its innate perversity must be destroyed...