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...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Basset Horn | 10/11/1937 | See Source »

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...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INCREASE NUMBERS OF UNIVERSITY FACULTY | 6/7/1937 | See Source »

...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: First Blood | 5/31/1937 | See Source »

...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: First Blood | 5/31/1937 | See Source »

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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Non-Objects | 2/15/1937 | See Source »

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