Word: halle
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Miss Amy Lowell will give a lecture, under the auspices, of the Division of Music, in the Concert Hall of the Music Building next Monday evening at 8.15 o'clock. Her subject will be "Some Musical Analogies in Modern Poetry", with illustrations from her own works and those of other poets. The proceeds will be used for the benefit of the American Friends of Musicians in France. Tickets at $1.50, $1.00, and fifty cents, are on sale at Amee Brothers Bookstore and at Herrick's in Boston...
...Pier this morning at 11.45. The Presidential party will then parade from the pier to the Copley-Plaza Hotel, the route being through Summer, Winter, Park, Beacon, Charles, Boylston, Arlington, Commonwealth Ave., and Dartmouth streets. After luncheon in the Copley Plaza at 1, the President will proceed to Mechanics Hall, where he will make his only Boston speech at 2.30. Two hours later a special train will carry the party from the South Station on its way to Washington...
Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh Cabot '94, commanding officer of the University Surgical Unit in France, will speak under the auspices of the St. Paul's Society in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, on March 5 at 7.45. The subject of the lecture is "The Causes for the British Retreat on the Somme in the Spring of 1918". All members of the University are invited to attend...
Years from now, it is safe to state, those who are present at today's ceremonies will recall the Mechanics Hall speech as a landmark in the history of American policy. It will in all probability be the first of a series of great efforts to convince the people of the United States of the wisdom of his doctrine. Whether or not we agree with the details of the plan we must confess that the motive behind it is of the noblest--the abolition of useless war. Let us hear him first and then judge the advisability of entering...
James Russell Lowell was a product of Harvard, brought up in an atmosphere which unconsciously makes for a strong and enduring devotion to the nation. All one need do is look around him to find where Harvard gets these traditions. The Washington Elm, Soldiers Field, Memorial Hall, are mute testimonials of the part Harvard and Cambridge have played in the national crises of the past...