Word: woman
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Harvard Woman Suffrage Campaign Committee wishes to draw the attention of all members of the University to the Harvard contingent that will march in the college section of the Victory Parade for Woman Suffrage today. We have already a gratifying number of pledges to march, from the Faculty and the students, but we have every desire to make the University eclipse all the other New England college contingents, and to this end it is essential that every available man should report at Charles street at 1.30 o'clock. JAMES H. LEWIS '17 W.HARRIS CROOK...
There will be a mass meeting for students under the auspices of the Harvard Woman's Suffrage Campaign Committee in Mifflin Hall, Brattle square (under Brattle Hall) tonight at 7.30 o'clock. Professor R. B. Perry '97, Professor J. H. Beale '82, Dean Gay of the Business School, and Mrs. L. J. Johnson will address the meeting. There will also be some discussion by undergraduates. The object of the meeting is to stir up interest among the members of the University in the Suffrage Victory Parade on Saturday afternoon. A number of professors have promised to march and about five...
...Students are now eligible who are twenty-one years of age and have lived in Cambridge for a year. And the opportunity is not merely that of choosing between candidates, but of deciding questions of fundamental principle, such as the municipal reorganization of the city and the adoption of Woman Suffrage...
...Erda sinks into the earth, Siegfried enters and inquires the way to Brunnhilde's rock. Wotan lays his spear across the way, but Siegfried shatters it, and advances to the flames, which envelop the stage. Finally they clear and discover Siegfried on the rock. He has never seen a woman, and thinks Brunnhilde is a beautiful warrior. He loosens the helmet, sees for the first time the long tresses of a woman, and is seized with fear. But he stoops and kisses her, and she awakes. She recognizes Siegfried but remembers her former divinity, and tries to repulse...
...blank verse poem on "The Sphinx's Silence" by Mr. J. Gazzam, Jr., is a dignified effort. It includes several excellent lines, but several others, too, which are far from pentametric. With its conclusion that woman is hard to understand there will be no general disagreement. Mr. Heffenger's thoughtful sonnet "Success" is simply but unpoetically expressed. One is less certain of Mr. Rogers' ideas in the long poem "Death"--a large subject--pent in a rather exacting rhyme scheme. If the author had been less vague and more self-disciplined, it might have been easier to share his vision...