Word: fritz
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harvard Glee Club concert at Symphony Hall Friday evening was an unqualified artistic and financial success. The capacity audience was doubtless partly attracted by the assisting artist, Fritz Kreisler, but the singing of the Glee Club was of the same high order as his playing...
Tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock the University Glee Club will held its "Kreisler Concert" at Symphony Hall. This is the only time that Fritz Kreisler will appear in Boston this year. The concert tomorrow evening is the beginning of a new policy for the Glee Club, which has never before undertaken such a difficult program. During the course of the year a number of concerts on this style will be put before the public. Tickets may be obtained at the box office of Symphony Hall at $250, $2, $1.50, and $1, (plus 10 per cent...
Preparations for the Glee Club concert to be given a week from tomorrow night in Symphony Hall are now completed. Violin solos by Fritz Kreisler, and selections by a chorus of one hundred voices, composed of Glee Club and Appleton Chapel Choir singers to be led by Dr. A. T. Davison '06, comprise a well balanced program. The selections, all of standard quality, are of various moods. There are still a limited number of tickets available at the box office at Symphony Hall...
...have just read in the CRIMSON a letter from Mr. Fleek, another in the series of attacks that springs up wherever Fritz Kreisler appears in a concert. The whole indictment against Kreisler seems to be that he was, by chance, born in Austria, and that he performed his duty to his native country, as it appeared to him, by serving in her army during the first year of the war. I have never had the slightest sympathy with the German-Austrian cause. I was strongly pro-Ally from the beginning of the war in 1914, and enlisted to serve against...
...want to appear to take a conciliatory attitude toward Germany. No one could be more emphatically opposed to the spirit: "Now it's all over, let's shake hands and forget it." But I do think it is illiberal to the extreme to raise ery against Fritz Kreisler, in view of his record before and during our participation in the war. With all respect to Mr. Fleek's opinion, I hope that his protest against the proposed concert of Feb. 27 will prove unsuccessful. J. B. RICHARDS...