Word: hymned
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Things are very little different today. The coming election will not be celebrated like Hutchinson's by hymn-singing in Holden, nor like Harrison's by "horse sense" and "hard cider", with too little of the former and too much of the latter. But the interest is still there and tonight at the Union, the open meeting of the newly organized Republican Club, with men like Senator Moses and Senator Wadsworth speaking, will be crowded with students "zealous in their interest for the public welfare...
...habits among the young, though its advice, if followed now, would violate child labor laws. It urged to work unceasingly: to work while the dew was sparkling, in and "mid springing flowers"; to work through the "sunny noon" and till the "last beam fadeth". But it was a joyous hymn, except the line which anticipated the coming of the night "when man works no more". It is this sort of advice, but set to another tune, that Lenin has given to the Russians...
...skilled workmen are slipping back to the land, where they can find a living, at any rate. Lenin has intervened, enjoining them to work, not for the zest of it, but for the triumph of their Soviet system. "Grin and bear it" is the suggested refrain of his hopeless hymn, which anticipates the coming of the night when there will be no more work because there will be no money to pay the workers. "They cannot live without pay", cries. Lenin, "and until the industrial machine gets properly running again there is no pay to give them...
...publishing the Class Song and the Class Hymn, the committee has perpetuated some excellent musical compositions--all things being considered--and some words to those compositions, of which the authors will be heartily ashamed in about three years. The line, "full of the pep, that has made Harvard's rep" in the song is beyond words--and we hold no particular brief for the words of the Hymn--"for God, for Harvard, and for "greatest anticlimax ever written", perpetrated a number of years ago by a devout Eli. We reiterate, however, that the music is good--but then...
...Glee club songs with which the concert will start are: "Harvard Hymn" by Professor Paine, "Give a rouse" by Rantock, "La Garde Passe" by Gretry. "Dainty, Fine Sweet Nymph" by Morley, and "Salsmaleikum" solo by C. D. Whidden '28. The audience and the club will then sing several of the football songs. "Veritas" "Fair Harvard...