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

...variety. The songs are lively and catchy and are well suited to the development of the plot. The book, by R. E. Edwards 02 and P. L. Coonley '03, presents many humorous situations. The costumes will be copied from those worn by Filipinos and will show the crude but rich colors that are characteristic of their dress. The scenery also is planned to represent as closely as possible the actual houses, streets and landscapes of the Philippine Islands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Pi Eta Play. | 3/22/1902 | See Source »

...grandson and son of the founders of the German Empire, and as admiral of the German navy. Major Higginson spoke of the debt America owes to Germany for her great figures in literature, for her great musicians, for her industrial achievements, and chiefest of all for the rich and many sided manhood of the German race. He spoke of the educational debt America owes to Germany for the work of American students in German universities, the debt the nation owes to those German immigrants who form so considerable a part of its population, and the military debt to Germany...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCE HENRY RECEIVED. | 3/7/1902 | See Source »

...ways are not paralleled in history. It is our duty, he said, whenever the motives of the government can be considered good or bad, to impute the best motives we can, as the best form of patriotism. He then spoke of the applause given, and given rightly, to the rich philanthropists who have given millions for the cause of education. He said that praise also belonged to the many men like Governor Taft and Jacob Riis, with thousands more of less prominence, who were giving more than money, throwing their whole lives into the solution of the problems...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bishop Brent's Address. | 2/13/1902 | See Source »

...broke the frame of this social life, and after the storm was past, each class withdrew to its own circle. The first half of the nineteenth century is well shown by Balzac, with its ideal of commercial honor. But the "bourgeois" class has not been able to receive the rich foreigner as it would like, and only today are they beginning to study and appreciate the energetic, laborious and commercial society of the New World...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Lecture by M. Le Roux. | 2/13/1902 | See Source »

...Demeter's Section III, Sever 30. French 1c: (Assignment of Rooms, French 1c.) Section 1, Adams to Hathaway (inclusive) Sever 23. Section 2, Hersey to Young, Sever 24. Economics 1: (Assignment of Rooms, Economics 1.) Abbot to Gunn (inclusive), Upper Mass. Hackett to Macdonald, Lower Mass. McGirr to Rich, Sever 35. Richards to Thaxter, Harvard 6. Thayer to Zanetti, Harvard 5. Chemistry 2: (Assignment of Rooms, Chemistry 2.) Andrews to Knowlton (inclusive), Sever 5. Krumbhaar to Woodbury, Sever 6. 2.30 p.m. History 1: (Assignment of Rooms, History 1.) Abbot to Goodnow (inclusive), Upper Mass. Grant to Mitchell, Lower Mass. Mitton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mid-Year Examinations. | 1/30/1902 | See Source »

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