Word: church
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...next concert of the Pierian Sodality will be in Dr. McKenzie's Church, Cambridge, on April 11. 1. Overture, "Light Cavalry," Suppe. 2. Vorspiel and Siciliana from "Cavalleria Rusticana." Mascagni. 3. Recitative, "Ne Trionfa d'Allesandro." Aria, "Susinghe Piu Care." Handel. Miss Eaton. 4. Entre Act No. II. Schubert. 5. Symphony No 2 in D major Haydn Andante. Meunetto. 6. Overture, "Iphigenie in Aulis." Gluck. 7. Air de Salome from "Herodiade." Masseuet. Miss Eaton. 8. March from Lenore Symphony. Roff. 9. Hungarian Dances, Nos. 1 an 2. Brahm...
...Hirsch is professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy in the University of Chicago, and is one of the foremost Semitic scholars of the United States. He is a rabbi in the Hebrew Church. Dr. Hirsch graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1872. He received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Leipsic in 1876. He has edited the "Zeitgeist," of Milwaukee, the "Reformer" of New York, and the "Reform Advocate" of Chicago...
...selections will include "An Elegy Written in a Country Church Yard," "John Gilpin's Ride," "Mary Morrison," "The Banks and Braes of Bonny Doon," "My Love is Like a Red Red Rose," and "John Anderson...
...such principles as these that Mr. Conried works, believing that there are 'three forces which control the state--the church, the school and the stage.' He is, moreover, opposed to the star system and insists on the equal merit of all the actors, giving subordinate parts to excellent actors and thus producing a thoroughly artistic whole. As a proof of his success, Norman Hapgood '90, one of the most prominent dramatic critics of New York, says, that the best thing without exception which he had seen during last winter was a performance of "Wilhelm Tell" at the Irving Place Theatre...
Members of the Radcliffe Idler Club last night presented "Sunbonnets" to a very appreciative audience. The play, a farce comedy, by Miss Marian D. Campbell, death with the complications arising from two rival missionary societies of a village church. The characters were accurately drawn and the dialect was natural. The cast was well selected, Miss Campbell, as Mrs. Du Bois, a summer boarder, and Miss Katherine Searle, as Mrs. Butterfield, the hostess, being particularly good. The performance, however, suffered slightly from over acting, a fault common to amateur theatricals. Miss Mabel W. Daniels sang between the two acts...