Word: tremont
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...Rabindranath Tagore, the noted Indian poet, musician, educator and winner of the Nobel Prize in literature in 1913, will speak at Tremont Temple, Boston, tonight. The subject of his lecture will be "The Cult of Nationalism." Tagore has been acclaimed by many as the greatest living poet. His writings reflect the romantic spirit of the East, and most of his poems are written to a weird moaning Rengali music, which he himself composes. He has translated many of his own works, among them his short stories in the writing of which many critics claint his greatest genius lies. Tickets ranging...
Tickets for the performance are on sale in Boston at Ritter and Co., Boylston street; Schoenhoff Book Co., Tremont street; Herrick's and Charles Wirth, Essex street, and in Cambridge at the Co-operative Branch, or from E. R. Milton '19, Claverly 7 or P. O. Box 67, at $1.50, $1.00, 75 cents and 50 cents...
...representative of a civilization which has in the past contributed much to the wisdom of the world Sir Rabindranath Tagore, now on a visit to this country, should be of particular interest to Americans. His lecture tonight at Tremont Temple on "The Cult of Nationalism" presents a characteristically Eastern solution of the problem of world- peace by the abolition of all nationalistic principles. Contemporary American opinion looks to its solution by means of the recognition and employment of national instincts through the medium of some organization such as the much- talked-of "League to Enforce Peace...
...have joined the National Wilson Alliance will receive certificates of membership from headquarters in the next few days. A very successful week of campaigning closed Saturday night with a rally at Tremont Temple, preceded by a torchlight parade...
Boston leads in the number of opportunities offered to a student for close observations of great questions. One has only to search the columns of any daily paper to find the variety of predigested information furnished in the city, much of it on Sunday. Ford Hall meetings, Tremont Temple addresses, public library meetings, Lowell lectures and Faneuil Hall meetings, not to mention special lectures, crowd into view. The majority of students sleep half of Sunday and loaf the other half, or spend the entire day seeking a mild sort of amusement. How much better to utilize Sunday afternoons and evenings...