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

...role played by J. Heard '12, is certainly the most difficult to impersonate on account of the frequent and sudden changes from delight to despair. C. Chadwick '10, as the cook was the most successful of the women. M. Hoffman '12, as Cecile, was pretty, but not a girl in love, for in her encouragement of her despairing fiance she shows no emotion or feeling whatever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Play of Cercle Francais Criticised | 12/21/1909 | See Source »

Given an imaginative girl camping out alone, a gallant youth happening upon her, and a rainstorm enveloping both, and what will be the result? If you desire a pleasing answer, read in the current Monthly Mr. Roy Follett's "The Fires,"--a story which treats a difficult situation with poetic delicacy of sentiment. Mr. E. E. Hunt's prize poem, "John Milton," may be regarded as a welcome addition to what seemed to some of us our inadequate celebration of the poet's tercentenary; and it deserves the high praise of being called worthy of its lofty theme. Mr. George...

Author: By Ernest BERNBAUM ., | Title: Review of Current Monthly | 6/11/1909 | See Source »

...Clinch R. C. Benchley '12 "DEATH AND THE DICERS." Death, R. L. Niles '09 Aleyn, dicer, H. W. H. Powel '09 Watt, dicer, N. S. Simpkins '09 Simpkins, dicer, J. A. P. Millet '10 Innkeeper, R. E. Rogers '09 Juggler, W. K. Blodgett '11 Boy, O. W. Roosevelt '12 Girl, Miss Marian Gragg "FIVE IN THE MORNING." Broughton, R. M. Middlemass '09 Blair, J. A. Eccles '10 Gallison, P. G. Clapp '09 Sprague K. L. Bennett...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC CLUB PLAYS AT 8 | 5/18/1909 | See Source »

...Dieers," by F. Schenek '09, is as follows: Death, R. L. Niles '09 Aleyn, dicer, H. W. H. Powel '09 Watt, dicer, N. S. Simpkins '09 Simpkins, dicer, J. A. P. Millet '10 Innkeeper, R. E. Rogers '09 Juggler, W. K. Blodgett '11 Boy, O. W. Roosevelt '12 Girl, Miss Marian Gragg

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CASTS OF DRAMATIC CLUB | 5/14/1909 | See Source »

...short space to be effective. Of the stories, "The Man in Puce Waistcoat" relates a humorous incident, apparently in Eighteenth Century England, of how the choleric gentleman, in the costume described, lost five pounds by betting that another wayfarer at the inn could not cure the servant girl's earache. The pain, proved to be caused by an ant which was brought out by means of a ladle of water. The story is well told. "Un Roi de France" and "The Hoss-Thief" are tales of murder and sudden death. In the first, one does not fully sympathize with Pierre...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: W. R. Castle '00 Reviews Advocate | 4/7/1909 | See Source »

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