Word: accordioned
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...Bedford Hotel. After the performance, a dance will take place. The program is as follows: Banjo Club Officer of the Day Hall Vocal Club Pop Goes the Weasel Schaffer Johnny Harvard Piano Solo Edwin G. Davis '38 Magicians Mansfield Branigan '36 Edward L. Barnes '38 Gold Coast Orchestra Accordion Solo Edward O. Miller '37 Mandolin Club Intermezzo from Naila Delibes Pizzicatti from Sylvia Delibes Chicago Quartet Edward L. Barnes '38, Francis L. H. Wendell '38. Ralph Hamill '38, Joseph W. Valentine '38 Banjo Club Clicquot Reser Vocal Club John Peel Arranged by Andrews Football Songs Medley Fair Harvard...
...songs and popular four-part semi-classical numbers. The Mandolin Club and the Banjo Clubs present suitable tunes, and with the Gold Coast Dance Orchestra, offer places for almost every kind of an instrument. The Specialty Division has included in the past few years tap dancers, magicians, quartets, an accordion duet, a ventriloquist, a juggler, and unicyclist, soloists, and other humorous stunts. This year there is a great need of new Specialty acts, and it is hoped that a number of things will be worked up before we start our concert reason...
...announced first that the haunting strains of Billie Traske's voice would fill the Union during and for a short time following the intermission, and followed this up with the news that an accordion player of note would also demonstrate his craft...
...Large Living Room downstairs, there will be no dancing, but a professional pianist and crooner will play and sing requested selections throughout the evening. Upstairs a prominent accordion artist will entertain in the Common Room. In addition, a couple playing the violin and guitar will stroll through the building entertaining those who are not dancing...
...party was not rowdy. Next morning fog again bound the vessel off Cape Cod and it became apparent that it could not land in time for the game. Philosophically the passengers turned to Hochheimer wine. An electrician repaired the radio, wrecked the night before by a jealous accordion-player. Doubly disappointed was Walter J. Salmon who had elected to go to the game rather than watch his horse, Dr. Freeland, run in the $25,000 Maryland handicap at Bowie; and Nicholas ("Nick") Roberts, ardent Yaleman of Montclair, N. J. who had not missed a Yale-Harvard game in 30 years...