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...liberals' only direct loss came when Sydney J. Freedberg '36, professor of Fine Arts, defeated Jean L. Bruneau, professor of French...

Author: By Nicholas Lemann, | Title: Four Conservatives Win Faculty Council Election | 6/10/1974 | See Source »

...sfossés, 47, the mission superior. "They had wild, glassy eyes and were naked to the waist. They had been smoking hemp." After asking for money, the rebels ordered the missionaries to their knees. "They let go with arrows and guns," said Canadian Sacred Heart Brother Jean-Guy Bruneau, 29. "Marechal [one of the lay teachers] fell on me, dead. I took a shot through the wrist that almost tore off my finger." Brother Maurice tried to run, but was hit in the leg with an arrow. He got up again and ran on. "Kill him, kill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Congo: Again, the Savages | 3/6/1964 | See Source »

...Cold Care. Bourboule businessmen promptly hired Gentleman Jockey André Bruneau. Loaded with Bourboule cash and blessed with a sharp eye for not-too-sick selling platers, Bruneau bought a four-year-old bay named Pyrame, a short-winded chronic wheezer with an unimpressive record on the track. A special stall was built half a mile from La Bourboule's best spring, outfitted with hot and cold running water plus steam pipes, and Pyrame began the cure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Winning Waters | 7/30/1956 | See Source »

...Symphony Hall at 8.15 o'clock, tonight: Overture to "H Matrimonio Segreto" Cimarosa Ballet Suite Gluck-Mottl Overture to "Matilde de Shabran" Rossini Overture to "Benvenuto Cellini" Berlioz "A Night on Bald Mountain" Moussorgsky Salome's Dance, from "Salome" Strauss Prelude to "Carmen" Bizet Entr'acte from "Messidor" Bruneau Polortsian Dances from "Prince Igor" Borodin

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: At the Pops Tonight | 5/28/1928 | See Source »

...interest with musical vitality. It also attracts the student of opera for two reasons. First, it is the outcome of sincere experiment in substituting a story of "real life" among the working classes for the romantic or history subjects previously in vogue. Furthermore its text, following the example of Bruneau, a great admirer of Zola and the literary cult of "realism" is written not in verse but in prose by Charpentier himself. Secondly, its scene is laid in the Montmartre quarter of Paris when that section was the native habitat of Bohemian artists, literary men and musicians...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bohemian Montmartre of Paris is Locale of "Louise", Opera Chosen for "Harvard Night" | 1/21/1928 | See Source »

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