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Word: dreamed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...which all members of the University who play orchestral instruments will be welcome to join. The first of these meetings will be held at the Music Building on Thursday, November 14, at 8 o'clock. The program will be Beethoven's "Coriolanus Overture," the Nocturne from "Midsummer Night's Dream" by Mendelssohn, and the Fifth Symphony by Beethoven. Complete instrumentation will be available. Future sight-reading programs are also being considered at which original compositions and orchestral arrangements by members of the orchestration classes will be performed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PIERIAN SODALITY WILL OPEN SEASON TONIGHT | 11/9/1933 | See Source »

...prancing off with blue ribbons for five- gaited saddlehorses, until last Sept. 11 at Louisville, Ky. when Mrs. Locke Brown's Bell Lee Rose outpointed her. Again last week Sweetheart on Parade faced such potent mounts as Bell Lee Rose, Roger Selby's stallion King Genius, American Dream, Lady of Lexington. Time and again the judges had them go through their tricks of changing nimbly from walk to running walk to rack to trot to canter at the slightest touch of the rider's finger on the rein. Sweetheart on Parade stepped flawlessly, again took the blue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Horses at Chicago | 11/6/1933 | See Source »

Utilizing radiant energy from the sun is a dream that has harried many an experimenter. The sunshine falling in eight hours on a square mile in the tropics is equivalent to the energy stored in 7,400 tons of coal. The difficulty is to devise a sunshine catcher which is not expensive out of all proportion to the power produced. This is the defect of the commonest solar machines which have appeared so far-huge concave reflectors which focus on a boiler, make steam to drive small engines. One of the most optimistic U. S. experimenters, Dr. Charles Greeley Abbott...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Suncatcher | 11/6/1933 | See Source »

...Turn Back the Clock," the other movie, shows Lee Tracy and very little else. The plot I shan't attempt to explain; it involves something about a dream, which takes the place of the real life of the characters, and something about a man who goes back and lives his life over, thereby being able to predict stock crashes and do other uncommon things. It is lively enough to watch, at least if you like the great Tracy; and the antics of snake-hips Karen Morley should entertain those renegades who won't listen to Doctor Worcester...

Author: By S. H. W., | Title: THE CRIMSON PLAYGOER | 10/16/1933 | See Source »

...dream the metamorphosis of Romanticism transformed the young writers of Germany. As in a dream they responded to the mystic inspiration of Fichte, uniting in the quest for the blue flower, seeking the impalpable of the ideal. Friedrich Schlegel, opium-wafted Buddha, contemplated the concentric circles of an impenetrably intricate philosophy. August Wilhelm Schlegel, poseur, literateur, bon-viveur, set forth to win poetic glory, is remembered for his translation of Shakespeare. Ludwig Tieck's majestic, melancholy search for the essence of fairyland beauty produced an impossible, capricious comedy, "Puss in Boots." Kleist awakened from his dream of tearing from Goethe...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 10/16/1933 | See Source »

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