Word: barringtons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
William Edward Burghardt DuBois was born in the small rural community of Great Barrington, Mass. on February 23, 1868. In his autobiography he remembered these years as being free of racial conflict or identity. His ancestry was mixed--his father, a shopkeeper, was of French and West Indian extraction, while his mother was African and Dutch...
...Charlemont 4 chairs, T-bar, J-bar 1,050 2 Blue Hills Canton Chair, 2 T-bars 350 3 Boston Hills North Andover Chair 290 4 Bousquets Pittsfield Chair, T-bar, 2 Pomalifts 750 5 Brodie Mountain New Ashford 3 chairs, T-bar 1,250 6 Butternut Basin Great Barrington 3 chairs, T-bar 1,000 7 Indian Head East Pepperell 2 T-bars 150 8 Jiminy Peak Hancock 2 chairs, 2 T-bars 1,130 9 Klein Innsbruck Franklin 3 chairs 200 10 Mount Mohawk Shelburne 2 T-bars 300 11 Mount Tom Holyoke 2 chairs, 2 T-bars...
...good news came at the end of a balmy weekend tournament which saw the field hockey team lose to Barrington College 2-1, to Brown 3-2, and to the University of Vermont...
...blacks appear to be jealous." Adds Mary Davis, the Chicago urban planner: "I'm tired of white liberals always reminding you that if you take two steps forward, you always have to remember your un fortunate brethren. Look at white people who live in the rich suburb of Barrington Hills. They don't go down to Cicero and mingle with the blue-collar workers." The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, once jokingly reprimanded a black doctor from Detroit for driving a Rolls-Royce. Responded the doctor: "Reverend, I said I would help...
Common Law. To inform women of the law in regard to their names, several organizations have been formed around the country, including Name Change in Newton, Mass., and the Center for a Woman's Own Name in Barrington, Ill. They explain, for example, that Hawaii is the only state that specifically requires a woman to adopt her husband's name. Under English common law, which prevails almost everywhere else, women may select any name they choose so long as they use it consistently and are not committing a fraud. In some states, however, specific agencies may require...