Word: movements
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Following is the program for the Pop Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: 1. March, "Black Bess," Strube 2. Overture, "The Barber of Seville," Rossini 3. Waltz, "Wiener Blut," Strauss 4. Selection, "La Tosca," Puccini 5. First Movement from "Symphonic Sketches," Chadwick 6. Selection, "Carmen," Bizet 7. Overture, "Mignon," Thomas 8. Hungarian Dances, Nos. 5 and 6, Brahms 9. Selection, "A Waltz Dream," Strauss 10. (a)Remembrance, Carmichel (b)Serenade, Nozkowski 11. Waltz, "Grubenlichter," Zeller 12. March, "Wein bleibt Wein," Schrammel
...argumentation. It is the CRIMSON'S desire to see debating at Harvard soon placed on a sounder and more representative basis, which will bring us back to the place of pre-eminence we held so long. May last night's victory be but the forerunner of such movement and such a result...
...need more names, however; not one-third or one-half, but the names of all the undergraduates. This is an undergraduate movement, an effort to set on foot an effective remedy for athletic distraction. If it fails, the Faculty's remedy will be the result. If it succeeds, the undergraduates themselves will be responsible for the maintenance of their sport...
...prices which the protected capitalists get. Dr. Clark was engaged from 1902 to 1906 in investigating economic and social conditions in Australia, as an agent of the Labor Department, and is an authority on economics in that country. His investigations are noted in his book, recently published, "The Labor Movement in Australasia." The lecture will be open to the public...
...Harvard alone in the movement. All the colleges are beginning to realize that, much as we need intercollegiate athletics, we need something more, in order to put athletics in general on a proper footing. Dr. Born, speaking for Yale, points out that the intercollegiate athlete is physically away ahead of the average student (a strong argument in itself for intercollegiate athletics), and that by more general participation the physical vigor of the whole student body will be increased. The Daily Princetonian, voicing the Princeton undergraduate sentiment, says: "We do not believe intercollegiate contests to be harmful, but rather a most...