With vacation only a few hours in the future and the prospect of leaving Harvard for a few, short days looming up as a welcome change to the brain weary vagabond, his thoughts turn to the many happenings in Boston during the next week.
However, the Vagabond may continue his quest for knowledge for two hours, in Economics 2 at 9 o'clock, and in History 13, at 10 o'clock. In Economics 2, Professor Gay will lecture on "Railroad Development Since the War". Dr. Baxter will speak on "Great Britain and the American Civil War" at 10 o'clock in Sever 35. This should be of especial interest to all Southern students in the University, and the Vagabond invites all to meet him there.
Believing in music as a soothing method of beginning his vacation, the Vagabond will drag his weary body to Symphony Hall, in Boston, tonight, to hear another program, presented by Serge Koussevitzky and his Boston Symphony Orchestra. Here he may hear two scores by American composers. Chadwick's Ballad. "Tam o'Shanter", and Sessions Symphony in E minor. The closing part of the program will comprise Strauss tone poem, "Death and Transfiguration", and the Dance of Salome from the opera, "Salome".
After a good nights sleep the Vagabond may return to Symphony Hall and listen to a program of "request favorties", sung by Roland Hayes, the negrotenor, who will make his last Boston appearance for more than a year.
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Eastward Ho