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...appearance this year in Boston. The program will include Brahms, Faure, and Handel, and there will also be English and Scotch folk songs: Mr. Alfred Holy, of the Symphony, will accompany with the harp in Brahms' "I Hear a Harp" and in Faure's "Requiem". The following students will render solos in the concert tomorrow evening: D. E. Terrell 2L., in "Salamaleikum"; W. C. Atwater '28, in "Agnus Dei"; C. W. Duhig '29, in "In Paradisum". Tickets for the concert may be purchased at the Harvard Cooperative Society, as well as at Symphony Hall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GLEE CLUB APPEARS IN SYMPHONY HALL CONCERT | 2/15/1928 | See Source »

...common schools afford. After the decision of the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth had disallowed the combination with the Massachusetts institute of Technology, the School of Engineering was again reorganized, this time for both undergraduate and graduate work, and it is perhaps in the latter that the School can render its most valuable service to the community. There are plenty of schools giving excellent undergraduate training, but few have the advantages that are found here for graduate work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FEWER FRESHMEN REGISTER YEARLY FOR ENGINEERING | 1/30/1928 | See Source »

...critic--even the trained critic versed in past as well as present literature--is never infallible. Professorial critics, however, who of all others should render verdicts most trustworthy, make too frequent concessions to that infallibility. Because one's judgement is respected by thousands is no reason for one to hall each worthy book as a new masterpiece--even though the foundation of one's criticism be admittedly purely personal and individual. Professor Phelps is undoubtedly the target for the Nation's rebuke, and it must be admitted that Professor Phelps has given sufficient cause on certain occasions. His penchant...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THOUGH THEY KNOW BETTER | 1/30/1928 | See Source »

...I.C.C., which sits behind a long desk much like the Supreme Court's to render decisions and build up a body of law almost as fundamental as Supreme Court precedent, is composed mostly of lawyers who have gained reputations for patience and probity. They are not "distinguished" men, as distinction goes, but they are able and honorable. Commissioner John Jacob Esch of La Crosse, Wis., chairman of the Commission last year, served in the U. S. House of Representatives for 21 years before his work with Senator Albert Baird Cummins of Iowa on the Transportation Act of 1920 brought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RAILROADS: St. Paul's Conversion | 1/23/1928 | See Source »

...accorded a ham novelist in the current prints. Milton, Byron and Whitman were not unacquainted with the critical raspberry in their lifetimes, and it is certain that the mere getting out of the rubber-tired hack and rolling them off to the cemetery did not rectify their deficiencies, render more agreeable their not infrequent dullness, nor sublimate their frowsy cliches into epigrams of the Roi Cooper Magrue order...

Author: By Lucius BEEBE. G., | Title: LITERARY BLASPHEMIES. By Ernest Boyd. Harper and Brothers, New York, 1927. | 1/23/1928 | See Source »

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