Word: bauer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...musical life of London in 1888 had more Maggie Moores, Mile. Colombatis and Mme Belle Coles, forgotten today, than Pattis, Nordicas, Richters. Corno di Bassetto, busy with political agitating, missed a new Dvorak symphony and a concert by Harold Bauer (who played the violin for the first ten years of his career before becoming a pianist). Shaw on Patti: There has not yet been witnessed a dramatic situation so tragic that Madame Patti would not get up in the middle of it to bow and smile if somebody accidentally sprung his opera hat. She is simply a marvelous Christy Minstrel...
William M. Bauer, Evanston, Illinois, assistant in Electrical Engineering; John H. Hollister, Atlanta, Georgia, assistant in Chemistry; Glen W. Kilmer, State College, Pennsylvania, Penn State '36, assistant in Chemistry; Louis Long Jr., Cambridge, assistant in Chemistry; Richard W. Nebel, Parlin, New Jersey, Princeton '36, assistant in Chemistry; and Oliver H. Lowry, Chicago, Northwestern '32, instructor and tutor in Biochemical Sciences...
...onto their campus ashiver with excitement one day last week went all the 500 boys and girls of Los Angeles Junior College. The college faculty gathered to watch from a porch. Facing each other on the grass stood sturdy, curly-headed Student Robert Cousineau and wiry Student Harold Bauer, each stripped to the waist and each armed with a sword. As the excited audience chattered and peered, cameramen recorded the scene and newshawks watched intently. With full faculty approval, a duel was about to be fought. When Students Cousineau and Bauer finished posing, they put on fencing masks, but left...
...fencers," was Los Angeles Junior's lively Fencing Coach John Tatum, who exulted: "We have been trying to arrange an affair like this for three years to popularize fencing." The college publicity department had timed it to coincide with a campus dance. Nothing was at stake except Student Bauer's desire for the No. 2 rating on the fencing team, which Student Cousineau enjoyed by virtue of his showing in the Pacific Coast fencing tournament last month. Nursing a three-inch cut, Fencer Bauer had to content himself with the No. 3 rating...
Passing through the Guggenheim collection last week, critics noted that even such ardent non-representationalists as Rudolf Bauer occasionally slip. Painting No. 57, Blue Balls, showed obvious and unmistakable balls, in blue...