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Word: socialism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Pomander Walk" a play of English life a century ago, will be given in Brattle Hall next Saturday evening at 8 o'clock. This play was very successfully presented by the Cambridge Social Dramatic Club last week and as a great many people wished to have it given again, it was decided to repeat it. The proceeds will be given to the Cambridge Red Cross and will probably be used, in part, for the alleviation of suffering among those people who have been rendered homeless...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GIVE "POMANDER WALK" SATURDAY | 5/17/1917 | See Source »

...play is one of the most successful that has ever been given by the Cambridge Social Dramatic Club. Several of the cast are members of the University. The leading part is taken by George H. Browne '78, head master of Browne and Nichols School and an authority on dramatics. Several members of The Players, a dramatic organization of Providence, R. I., are also in the cast and have had much experience in their parts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GIVE "POMANDER WALK" SATURDAY | 5/17/1917 | See Source »

Tickets at $1.00 may be obtained at Herrick's the Co-operative Branch Store, Amee's, the Cambridge Social Union, and at the door...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GIVE "POMANDER WALK" SATURDAY | 5/17/1917 | See Source »

That was a valiant hope. But it was sadly untrue to what history and wisdom might teach us of the courses of revolutions. Freed from that social order and that political burden which had bound them from immemorial time, it was inevitable that the Russian people should grow exuberant with the intoxication of first liberty. Much as we, much as the Allies, might wish Russia to enter in the common war against Germany with renewed fire and fiercer incentive for victory, yet our wishes nor the wishes of the Allies could influence a people before whom an instant and more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SISTER OF DEMOCRACIES | 5/15/1917 | See Source »

...only Boston paper which would conceivably do such a thing has darkly insinuated that preference was given in the choice to Harvard men or other men with social prestige. It voices the woes of those hundreds of unsuccessful applicants who received their yellow slip, but got no further. The inference is that University, and therefore presumably mediocre or incompetent, men were chosen ahead of those sturdy and honest sons of Boston who were more eminently fitted to be officers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRY OF THE DEFEATED | 5/11/1917 | See Source »

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