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Master Oma Halbert, the talented young violinist, whose playing was the subject of glowing tributes by both Mr Tossy Spivakovsky and Mr Edmund Kurtz, who heard Oma during their visit to Invercargill. They recommended that the boy be sent abroad, within twelve months, for further study in New York under Louis Perssinger (the teacher of Yehudi Menuhin), and in Paris under Enesco, both of whom, the visitors said, would undertake to teach the boy personally.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19330614.2.71

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 22041, 14 June 1933, Page 8

Word Count
75

Master Oma Halbert, the talented young violinist, whose playing was the subject of glowing tributes by both Mr Tossy Spivakovsky and Mr Edmund Kurtz, who heard Oma during their visit to Invercargill. They recommended that the boy be sent abroad, within twelve months, for further study in New York under Louis Perssinger (the teacher of Yehudi Menuhin), and in Paris under Enesco, both of whom, the visitors said, would undertake to teach the boy personally. Southland Times, Issue 22041, 14 June 1933, Page 8

Master Oma Halbert, the talented young violinist, whose playing was the subject of glowing tributes by both Mr Tossy Spivakovsky and Mr Edmund Kurtz, who heard Oma during their visit to Invercargill. They recommended that the boy be sent abroad, within twelve months, for further study in New York under Louis Perssinger (the teacher of Yehudi Menuhin), and in Paris under Enesco, both of whom, the visitors said, would undertake to teach the boy personally. Southland Times, Issue 22041, 14 June 1933, Page 8