Word: barbering
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...Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: March, "Hoch und Deutschmeister,"Ertel Overture, "La Belle Helene, Offenbach Selection, "The Little Cafe," Caryll a. Etoile du Soir. b. Toreador et Andalouse. Prelude to "The Mastersingers of Nuremberg," Wagner Waltz, "Rathausballtanze," Strauss Intermezzo, "Pagliacci," Leoncavallo Selection, "La Boheme," Puccini Overture, "The Barber of Bagdag," Cornelius Aria from "Louise," Charpentier Selection, "Modeste Suzanne," Gilbert March, "Wien bleibt Wien," Schrammel
Madame Marie Sundelius, soprano, will be the soloist; the following program will be rendered. Symphony in C minor, No. 5, Op. 67, Beethoven Overture to the Opera, "The Barber of Bagdad," Cornelius Recitative, "E Susanna non vien?" and Aria, "Dove Sono," from "Le Nozze di Figaro," (Act III, Scene 8), Mozart "L'Apprenti Sorcier" ("The Sorcerer's Apprentice"): Scherzo (after a Ballad by Goethe). Dukas Aria, "Je dis que rien ne m'eponvante," from "Carmen", Bizet Caprice on Spanish Themes, Op. 34, Rimsky-Korsakoff
Several of the parts were taken in a way that recalled the best performances of previous years. Mr. Gifford as the barber-count, Mr. Rice as Sir Humphrey Noddy, and Mr. Loring as Trim, one could hardly have wished better; while Mr. Harvard and Mr. Fenn also acted with spirit and intelligence. Wildish had serious defects in voice and delivery, and was unfortunately reluctant to face anyone he addressed...
...their name, Fantast, and who are extremely eager to take up the latest arrival in fashion from Paris. Two old gentlemen of the town are continually playing practical jokes which would now be regarded as social errors rather than as marks of a cultivated intellect. The Londoner, a French barber, launches into the society in the disguise of a French count and becomes the social lion of the moment. He succeeds in winning the hand of the "younger lady of culture," and the complications which ensue are most amusing and possibly not out of date...
...have their offices in either of these institutions, but rooms are available for any bodies desiring to use them, although they have been closed to musical clubs. In Byers Hall there are a few rooms which are rented to students, but there are no guest accommodations. There is a barber shop in the same hall, and smokers' articles are on sale in the billiard rooms. Byers is more used than Dwight and is the more active of the two in providing recreation for students. One university paper, the Yale Sheffield Monthly, has its office in the basement of Byers Hall...