Word: woodlands
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...regular "Pops" concert this evening at 8.15 o'clock in Symphony Hall in Boston follows: 1. "Entrance of the Gladiators" Fucik 2. Overture to "Jeanne d'Arc" Verdi 3. Waltz, "Tres Jolie" Waldteufel 4. Fantasia, "Romeo and Juliet" Gounod 5. Prelude to "The Mastersingers" Wagner 6. Flute Solo, "Woodland Stream," (Arthur Brooke) Wetzger 7. Waltz, "Souvenir" Krogmann 8. Finale, Fourth Symphony Tachaikovsky 9. Overture to "Mignon" Thomas 10. Barcarolle from "Tales of Hoffmann" Offenbach 11. March "King Cotton" Sousa
...University golf team will meet the undefeated Dartmouth golfers on the links of the Woodland Golf Club in Auburndale at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Six single matches and three best-ball four-somes will be played. With the exception of the first and second positions on the team the Crimson sextet will line up as in the prevous league matches...
Yale's magnificent new gift, from an anonymous donor, of seven hundred and fifty acres of woodland on the outskirts of New Haven, stands out in refreshing contrast to the members of half-given or useless legacies which are the bane of education today, embarrassing the beneficiaries as much as they inflate the names of the benefactors. Although it has been said that over half the title of college president is the office of continually passing the hat; it is more and more becoming the fashion for a captain of industry to justify his gains by largesse thrown...
...result of the semi-finals and finals of the University Golf Tournament R. T. Jones '23, playing two matches at once at the Woodland Country Club, defeated his two opponents in both rounds. In the semi-final round he defeated R. S. Phillips '24, 4 and 3, and in the final round he overcame Clark Hodder...
Forest Preservation was long ago brought forward as a movement essential to the nation's future economic welfare. Associations, bureaus and clubs of nature lovers all have joined in the attempt to preserve the woodland of the country for future generations by the adoption of scientific methods of lumbering which in the long run would prove to be economical. The unprejudiced observer, interested in these efforts, would be forced to admit that, although some local societies have done a great deal, their activities have not reached that national scope necessary for any long-time effect...