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

...pasture, gave a warbler and some hawk eggs. Daniel Webster (1782-1852) was interested in the society because he liked hunting and fishing. In 1837 he contributed two stuffed oyster-catchers, gawky birds with gaudy red beaks, black and white bodies. Another famed member was tall, smiling Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz (1807-73), Swiss-American naturalist who called every animal and flower "a thought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Third Museum | 12/1/1930 | See Source »

...Contraltos: Sonia Sharnova, a Chicagoan trained abroad; Jenny Tourel of Montreal. New tenors: Belgian Octave Dua already known in Chicago; Oscar Colcaire, naive of Lexington, Ky., onetime first violinist in the Cincinnati symphony; Paul Althouse, of Reading, Pa., for ten years with the Metropolitan; Frenchman Mario Laurence. New baritones: Jean Vieuille from the Paris Opera Comique, Rudolph Bockelmann from Hamburg, Hans Hermann Nissen from Munich, Eduard Habich from Berlin, Salvatore Baccaloni from Milan, John Charles Thomas. A new stage director, Dr. Otto Erhardt, has come from the Dresden State opera. Soprano Edith Mason, divorced wife of musical Director Giorgio Polacco...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Up Go Curtains | 11/3/1930 | See Source »

...ceilinged 57th Street, Manhattan, studio. Now 54, Artist Lintott looks ten years younger, is large and broad, immensely genial, bears a marked resemblance to London's favorite music-hall comedian, bushy-browed George Robey. As a painter he lived ten years in Paris, studied under the late great Jean-Paul Laurens and Benjamin Jean Joseph Constant, wrote a text book on watercolor painting which is quoted by Encyclopaedia Britannica as an authority, and became a fashionable portraitist. But painting is only one of the many things that Artist Lintott has done. He worked under Lord Northcliffe on the Daily...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Artist Lintott | 10/27/1930 | See Source »

Aside from the repertoire of 20 plays which have been presented in the past and will be put on again, seven new pieces will be on view during Civic Repertory's coming season: Siegfried by Jean Giraudoux; Alison's House by Susan Glaspell (based on the life of Emily Dickinson); Alice in Wonderland; Gruach and Ardvor-lich's Wife by Gordon Bottomley; Noble Prize by Hjalinar Bergman; Rosmersholm by Ibsen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Oct. 20, 1930 | 10/20/1930 | See Source »

...Jean Francois Dufios of Paris, France, is announced as the holder of the Stillman Scholarship, which provides for a student from France to study at Harvard. He will study in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. H. D. Ursell of Cambridge, England, will hold the Choate Memorial Fellowship, founded in memory of Ambassador Joseph Hodges Choate. The award is made annually to a candidate nominated by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TWELVE SCHOLARSHIP HOLDERS ANNOUNCED | 10/16/1930 | See Source »

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