Word: formed 
              
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 Dates: during 1900-1909 
         
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...attempt to picture the relations of the motives and characters of the drama proper. There are four ideas, fantasy, love, grotesqueness, and aspiration; each of these will be treated with respect to its relative importance. The prologue is, however, from the standpoint of the musical analyst, in strict sonata form and can be fairly called an overture...
...this rink, to be known as The Boston Arena, special arrangements have been made to accommodate spectators and players in the intercollegiate hockey games. Seats, arranged in the arena pit form, will provide for about 5,000 spectators. Under the seats 16 locker-rooms with shower baths have been set aside for the players, and the ice surface, 90 by 250 feet, will afford a hockey rink much larger than that in the St. Nicholas Rink in New York...
...Harvard Committee on Legislation was organized with R. S. Hoar 2L., as president, and W. Lippmann '10, as secretary, at a meeting of representatives of the University political clubs yesterday afternoon. The following were selected by the presidents of the respective organizations to form this committee: Political Club--J. E. Dewey 1L., G. L. Harding '10, R. S. Hoar 2L., A. P. Loring 1L.; Democratic Club--L. D. Bejach 2L., J. J. Donahue 2L., R. W. Stewart 1L.; Republican Club--E. B. Caiger 2L., N. C. Nash 3L., J. R. Gilman 1L.; Socialistic Club--K. R. MacGowan '11, W. Lippmann...
Those Harvard graduates who have chosen to continue their benefactions to the University in the form of the concerts under Mr. Whiting's direction, are expressing their generosity in a unique and altogether delightful manner. In the two years that the concerts have been given a multitude of music lovers have found pleasure and profit in the excellent music and the no less excellent descriptive talks. Sufficient proof of the popularity of this course, were such evidence needed, exists in the necessity of a transfer this year to a larger hall...
...undergraduate verse one is likely to see in a long time, and the entire poem, though it does not keep up to this high level, is notable in its sincerity and vigor. Mr. Pulsifer's "The Riderless Horse" presents a striking idea with effective brevity, the difficult verse-form is fairly well handled, and the phrasing is at times admirable. The same writer's "Third Down," however, suffers from its close resemblance to four lines of Browning's "Meeting at Night...