Word: peering
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Weaver b. Truly, Arr. by R. L. Weaver 4. Harvard Glee Club a. Russian Folk Songs Fireflies, Song of the Life Boat Men, At Father's Door. b. Drake's Drum, Coleridge-Taylor 5. Princeton University Orchestra a. Nocturne from "Midsummer Night's Dream, Mendelssohn b. Peer Gynt, "Ases Tod", Grieg c. Selections from Puccini, Arr. by R. L. Weaver Intermission 6. Harvard Glee Club a. Fire, Fire, My Heart, Morley b. Football Songs 7. Harvard Banjo Club a. Officers of the Day March, Hall b. Medley, Arr. by Rice 8. Princeton Chorister Glee Club a. Lullaby, Brahms b. Princeton...
...following program will be given at the "Pops" concert this evening at 8.15 o'clock in Symphony Hall 1 Marche Militaire Schubert 2 Overture to "William Bell" Rossint 3 Valse Triste Sibelius 4 Fantasia, "Samson and Deltish" Saint Saens 5 Rhapsody, "Espana" Chabrier 6 Asa's Death from "Peer Gynt" Suite Grieg 7 Slavonic Dance op No 3 Drovak 8 Finale, Fourth Symphony Tschkovsky 9 Dance of the Hours Ponchiell 10 Waits, "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" Strauss 11 Ride of the Valkyries Wagner
...most of it is so very good indeed! "The Deacon Speaks" is so much the real Kipling that Kipling need not be ashamed to own it. The Dunsany piece, "Apotheosis and the Peer", strikes this particular admirer of Dunsany as one of the high points in the collection. "A Wessex Tale" is quite Handyesque in tone and manner, though a keener study of Hardy might reveal to the writer the secret of that sureness of touch that makes the consumate artist. Joseph Conrad in the bathtub is almost Conrad's self, and Edgar Masters' cutting edge is in at least...
...concert program will be as follows: March, Front Section, Bagley Overtune, Raymond Thomas Suite, Peer Gynt Grieg Selection, Bohomian Girl Balfe Cornet solo Dr. P. B. Karcker '18 Harvard Marches Barcarolle, Tales of Hoffman Offenbach Say It With Music Berlin March, Federation Klohr Fair Harvard
About the ticker only the three or four lucky ones can see the tape. The rest have to stand on tie-toe and peer over the shoulders of the man in front. They don't care. Some one will always read the results aloud, just as a woman will read aloud the cut-ins at the movies. The one who is doing the reading usually throws in little advance predictions of his own when the news is slow in coming, with the result that those in the back get the impression that the team has at least a "varied attack...