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Word: woman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

Following is the program for the Pop Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: Vienna Night. 1. March, "Hoch Habsburg," Kral 2. Overture, "Gypsy Baron," Strauss 3. Waltz, "Donauweibchen," Strauss 4. Slavic Dance, Dvorak 5. Waltz, "Sounds from the Vienna Woods," Strauss 6. Mazurka, "Woman's Heart," Strauss 7. Perpetuum Mobile, Strauss 8. Waltz, "Morning Journals," Strauss 9. Hungarian Dances, Brahms 10. Humoresque, Dvorak 11. Waltz, "Vienna Girls," Ziehrer 12. March, "Wien, bleibt Wien," Schrammel

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Pop Concert | 5/28/1909 | See Source »

Professor Lefranc traced briefly the growth of the Renaissance movement for the education of woman. Moliere took an active part in this quarrel, as in others. His attitude, as revealed in "Les Femmes Savantes," was not opposed to the education of women, but merely to the excess of this tendency, which, as other excesses, he held up to ridicule...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Last Hyde Lecture Yesterday | 4/13/1909 | See Source »

...program is as follows: 1. Overture, "Orpheus aux Enfers," Offenbach 2. Selection, "Faust," Gounod 3. Waltz, "Wine, Woman, and Song," Strauss 4. Prelude to "The Deluge," Saint-Saens Violin Solo by J. J. Demolins. 5. Selection, "The Prima-Donna," Herbert 6. Waltz from Serenade for Strings, Volkmann 7. March, "Second Connecticut," Reeves

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pierian Sodality at Parker Memorial | 3/26/1909 | See Source »

...Speakers' Club, which will present Rostand's comedy "The Romancers" in Brattle Hall on April 3, has secured Miss Charlotte Adams, a Radcliffe graduate, to take the only woman's part, that of Sylvette. The cast is as follows: Pasquinot, C. B. Johnson 1G. Bergamin, F. F. A. Pearson '11 Straforel, O. L. Lyding '09 Percinet, S. J. Perret '10 Blaise, M. Prince '10 Sylvette, Miss Charlotte Adams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Parts Assigned for "The Romancers" | 3/15/1909 | See Source »

...concluding, Dr. Eastman gave a fine tribute to Sitting Bull, the greatest of the tribe. "Nobody ever knew of his great deeds. He never killed anybody but white soldiers, and was never known to kill a woman or child under any conditions. I remember when I was a doctor at Pine Ridge, the soldiers disarming the whole reservation and shooting down the defenceless Indians and afterwards chasing and killing the women. Human nature is the same the world over. We have been barbaric, we have been cruel, but you take a poor negro, cover him with oil and burn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Eastman on "Indian Character" | 1/26/1909 | See Source »

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