Word: samsons
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...given at Jordan Hall tomorrow afternoon at 2.30 o'clock, and in the evening at 8 o'clock. At each performance two plays will be presented: "L'Affaire de la Rue de Lourcine," a farce, by Labiche and Martin, and "La Famille Poisson," a comedy in verse, by Samson. Tickets can be procured at Herrick's and at Schoenhof's in Boston, and at Thurston's in Cambridge, or at Russell 2, today and tomorrow. The price of tickets...
...Cercle Francais will present two plays at its annual performance at Jordan Hall, Boston, next Friday afternoon and evening. The first is "L'Affaire de la Rue de Lourcine," a farce by Labiche and Martin, and the other is "La Famille Poisson," a comedy in verse by Samson. Tickets for the plays may be procured at Herrick's and Schoenhof's in Boston, at Thurston's in Cambridge, or at Russell 2, until the day of the performance. The price of tickets is $1.50. CASTS OF THE PLAYS. L'Affaire de la Rue de Lourcine. Lenglume, J. Heard...
Professor G. H. Palmer '64 will read from Milton's "Samson Agonistes" in the parlor of Phillips Brooks House at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. After the reading he will give a short talk in connection with the three-hundredth anniversary of Milton's birth which comes next Wednesday. "Samson Agonistes" appeared in 1671, three years before the poet's death. J. G. Gilkey '12 will conclude the entertainment with the following program on the violoncello...
Following is the program for the Pop Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: 1. March from "Damnation of Faust," Berlioz 2. Overture, "Oberon," Weber 3. Waltz, "Bei uns z' Haus," Strauss 4. Selection, "Provatore," Verdi 5. Overture, "Gwendoline," Chabrier 6. Searf Dance, Chaminade 7. Selection from "Samson and Delilah," Saint-Saens 8. First and Third Preludes of "Lohengrin," Wagner 9. Overture, "Poet and Peasant," Suppe 10. Waltz, "The Merry Widow," Lehar 11. Selection, "Mile, Modiste," Herbert 12. March, "St. Bernard," Carter
...variety. The incident is related in the first person, but the style hesitates in a disconcerting way between the colloquial and the literary. Mr. Sheldon's "Delilah" is badly named, for the pathetic female figure finds no prototype in the Philistine woman, and the hero is anything but a Samson. But the dialogue is well-managed, and the incident is only too true to life. Mr. Carlo's "Sin of the Angels" is a college story dealing, not undiscerningly, with the man who would be president of his class but who is absolutely out of the running. It reflects seriously...