Word: popularization
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...arrangement of our College day has not kept pace with the growing interest in "athletics for all." As matters now stand, men frequently cut their "two-thirty" classes; some for University athletics, and a larger number for mere exercise. The "two-thirty" is unfortunately prominent in the list of popular antipathies of college...
First thought may prophesy unpopularity for earlier classes, but college men are not the "molly-coddles" that popular action would have the world believe. An hour taken from the middle of a precious afternoon and placed before the "nine o'clock" would mean no hardship. On the contrary, such a change would put the academic and the athletic each in their proper spheres, and would make an arrangement of the college day much more logical and much more generally beneficial than that now existent...
...thirtieth season of the "Pop" concerts given by the Boston Symphony Orchestra will open in Symphony Hall on June 1. At these concerts programs of popular and classical music will be presented, and refreshments served. They will continue into July. As usual an evening will probably be set aside as "Harvard Night," when college airs will be played and sung, but the date for this has not been determined...
...first time the orchestra is at present on its way to California where it will deliver a series of popular concerts at the Panama-Pacific Exposition. The orchestra will return late in the month...
...Sanders Theatre tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. The program will feature Borodin's First Symphony, in accordance with its custom of presenting each year some work which is new or unfamiliar to American audiences. Borodin is one of the modern Russian composers, and his works are full of popular modern innovations...