Word: organism
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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 from "The Damnation of Faust," Berlioz 2. Overture, "Martha," Flotow 3. Selection, "II Trovatore," Verdi 4. Valse Lyrique, Emery 5. Overture, "Si j'etais Roi," Adam 6.Andacht for violin, Harp and Organ Johnson 7. Selection, "La Boheme," Puccini 8. Rid of the Valkyries, Wagner 9. Overture, "Orpheus," Offenbach 10. Melody, Rubinstein 11. Waltz, "Estudiantina," Waldteufel 12. Fest-March. Trenkler
...Symphony Hall this evening: 1.March, "Black Bess," Strube 2. Overture, "The Beautiful Galatea," Suppe 3. Waltz, "Pres de toi," Waldteufel 4. Selection, "Faust," Gounod 5. Overture, "Midsummer Night's Dream," Mendelssohn 6. Scene Religieuse, Massenet Solo Violoncello, Mr. J. Keller. 7. Ballet Music, "Coppelia," Delibes 8. Overture, "1812," Tschaikowsky Organ, Mr. Marshall. 9. Selection, "La Grande Duchesse," Offenbach 10. Two Dances from "Henry VIII," German 11. Narcissus, Nevin 12. March, "Mit Bomben und Granaten," Bilse
...this performance will be repeated in the Worcester concert on April 16. The other performance is a joint concert with the Brown University Glee Club, to be given in Providence on a date now under consideration. The program will consist of several numbers of the annual concert, an Organ Toccata by Bach, and a group of three songs composed by Harvard men and sung by F.R. Hancock...
...composition shall be written in four voices, for chorus, with or without solo voices, and with organ or piano accompaniment; and the time required for its performance must not exceed six minutes. The words shall be either English or Latin, religious or secular, original or selected. A prize will be awarded only in case a composition is submitted which fulfills the requirements of the committee...
...hard for me to adapt myself comfortably to the fact that the Advocate is no longer an organ of College opinion. Can it be that the internal economy of the University is so perfected that there are no continuing evils to assail, no grievances so lasting as to call for the use of heavier journalistic ordnance than the daily musketry of the CRIMSON? I must look, it is clear, at the Advocate not as a semi-monthly spokesman of College views, but as a carrier of light waves--of verse, stories, and the occasional essay. If the old Advocate...