Word: window
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Following is the program for the Pop Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: Operatic Night. 1. March, "Boccaccio,"Suppe 2. Overture, "Mignon," Thomas 3. Waltz, "The Merry Window," Lehar 4. Selection, "Naughty Marietta," Herbert 5. Overture, "William Tell," Rossini 6. Selection, "Thais," Massenet 7. Selection, "Tannhauser," Wagner 8. Cortege, "The Queen of Sheba," Gounod 9. Overture, "Rienzi," Wagner 10. Selection, "La Vivandiere," Godard 11. Waltz, "Die Fledermaus," Strauss 12. March, "Salve Imperator," Fucik
...Stock," verses read by E. S. Martin at the last annual dinner of the Harvard Club of New York, is followed by an appreciation of Judge Lowell by F. J. Stimson, in which the important character of Judge Lowell's decisions is emphasized. The anonymous Graduate from his window amuses himself with what in the main is very good and good-natured fooling at the expense of the recent case of Monthly versus CRIMSON. Professor A. B. Hart describes the new treaty of reciprocity between Harvard and some Western colleges. A very enthusiastic review is given of "The Mediaeval Mind...
...subject represents a brilliantly lighted interior with a furnace, and a man standing before it, seen through a square dorway from a dark canal. At one side is the end of a gondola, above which a face is just visible peering out of a window...
...Graduate from his Window tries to make out a difference between the loyalty to their colleges of English and American graduates. The difference is not so great as appears, I think. Loyalty is shown in different ways. The generosity of Americans is a trait distinctly national; the people of the old world expect the state to do what individuals attempt on this side...
...dozen or so of these smaller sketches. A few of these, however, are excellent, notably the article on the late William Everett by Rev. P. R. Frothingham '86. But many of them are mere summaries, such as we should expect to find under the departmental notes. "From a Graduates' Window" comments with not wholly fortunate jocosity on the growing cosmopolitanism of Harvard. Mr. Holman's account of "Living Harvards and their family records" is sufficiently entertaining; and it is interesting to know that the name is still borne by relatives, though not descendants, of John Harvard himself. The author...