Word: straussed
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March, "There's Only One Vienna"Schrammel *"Die Fledermaus," Overture Strauss *"The Old Refrain" Kreisler *"Wine, Woman, and Song," Waltz Strauss "Spring Night in Vienna," Waltz Crist *Unfinished Symphony (First Movement) Schubert *"La Valse," Choreographic Poem Ravel *"By the Beautiful Blue Danube," Waltz Strauss *Rhapsody in Blue Gershwin Piano Soloist: Jesus Maria Sauroma *Strike Up The Band Gershwin Selections checked (*) are available on records at Briggs & Briggs Music Store, Harvard Square...
...Pomp and Circumstance Elgar *"The Bartered Bride," Overture Smetana "Whispering Flowers" Blon *"Aida," Fantasia Verdi *"Finlandia," Symphonic Poem Sibelius *Prelude to "The Deluge" Saint-Saens Violin Solo: J. Theodorowicz *"The Cid," Suite Massenet *Victor Herbert Favorites Arranged by Sanford *"Roses from the South," Waltz Strauss *Bacchanale, "Samson and Delilah" Saint-Saens...
...most sincere, and for that reason perhaps the best contribution is the story, "Community Nurse" by J. A. Strauss. The self-conscious detachment which the criticism labored to maintain is here replaced by an unaffected and sensitive objectivity. It is true that the realism is frequently too studiously casual, yet the tension and the pathos of a small town in the Southwest have been caught with remarkable fidelity. The articulation of the story is sometimes creaky; Jack and Laura, for instance, as characters are lorded more heavily than their shoulders can bear. Yet it would be well...
...editors of The Harvard Advocate announced last night that a new and rather unusual issue of the magazine would appear on the news stands on Friday morning, April 27. The feature article, by John A. Strauss '36, is entitled "Community Menace," a long tale of adultery in the Middlewest. Strauss avoids all that is vulgar and repulsive in this theme, which, as a result, is a very sane treatment of sex conditions in that section of the country...
...walks through the Yard he will appreciate more than ever the verdant, luxuriant growth of a plant filled with chlorophyll, a plant called grass. From one end of the Yard to the other his eyes can feast upon the expanse of grass. From Holworthy to Wigglesworth, from Thayer unto Strauss he can take pride in both those plots of grass that still survive. He can erect a bronze tablet in honor of those brave young blades that pushed through the morass in front of Sever. He can rejoice, too, in the saving that the Maintenance Department effected for the Budget...