Word: theme
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...program will consist of the following numbers: Fugue in G minor, Bach Andante Cantabile, Franck Minuet, Boellmann Arabesque, Vierne Adagio (6th Symphony), Widor Allegretto, Volkmann Psalm, Marcello "Sur un theme breton," Ropartz Grand Choeur, Guilmant
...future by the development of the instinct of self-assertion and self-advancement in the individual or in the group? I do not. It is not gushy sentimentalism or flat self-abnegation that I advocate; backsliding of the individual or unwarranted self-humiliation have no part in my theme. What I should like to see in our schools and colleges is less concentration on the purely materialistic aspects of human knowledge and understanding, more regard for the complete self-development and self-ennoblement of the individual, which can never be accomplished by slighting or ignoring those sources of inspiration that...
...theme, too, was remedy and not defect. I had aimed to give, in the "Illustrated," a bit of advice that seems sometimes to have helped young men when they face that troublesome problem of choosing a life career. In very condensed form that advice is, to bear in mind that those interests and proclivities which one acquired spontaneously as a boy, outside of the schoolroom, and which one has more or less kept up or more or less neglected during the more exacting years of high-school and college, that those proclivities are still a part of oneself. They...
...pianoforte racital in the John Knowles Paine Concert Hall, Music Building, tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock. He will present the following program: Organ Toccats and Furgue in D-minor, Bach-Busoni Rondo in G major, Beethoven Sonats in F minor, Brahms Balade(in the form of a theme with variations), Greig "By the Seashore," Smetana La Cathedrale engloutic, Debussy Poissons d'or, Debussy Prelude in A minor, Debussy La Nutt, Glazounow La Campanella, Paganini-Liszt
...cover of the new Lampoon. It may be the bomb bursting in air or merely the printed legend, "Christmas Number," but there is something worth looking over anyway. The front cover is rather impressive, by the way--much better in its colors of red and blue and its unusual theme than a "Merry Xmas" affair, done in the orthodox red and green. Not a holly leaf in sight, either. You take the laurel sprig for this num- ber, Lampy...