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Word: dulle (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...wainscoating will be finished in dull white, with the walls and ceiling slightly tinted. The room will be lighted by means of five tall French windows, and contains a spacious fireplace. The walls will be generously hung with tapestry, which, together with the other decorations, will give the room an extremely homelike and inviting appearance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHRISTMAS EVE RECEPTION | 12/21/1912 | See Source »

...building stands just above the present residence on Quincy street, and the simple and unaffected colonial plan of the exterior is preserved within, where the predominating some will be white. The woodwork will be of dull finished white enamel, wainscoating being used in the dining room, reception room, and entrance hall, in keeping with the colonial style. The doors will be made of dark mahogany, in sharp but pleasing contrast with the lighter colors about them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHRISTMAS EVE RECEPTION | 12/21/1912 | See Source »

...feet in length. The general appearance of the structure is in keeping with the older Harvard buildings and the colonial type of architecture has been followed out in the exterior design. The base of the building is built of granite blocks and the three upper stories of dull Harvard brick with limestone trimmings. A limestone cornice adds the necessary finish to the front of the building. The structure is three stories high, with a basement all but three feet above the ground and a sub-basement entirely dark...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GIBBS LABORATORY READY | 12/20/1912 | See Source »

...Redfield, M. C., on "The New Industrial Organization," the other is by A. H. Whitman on "Opportunities in Business Training." Mr. Redfield's article, which is the second of a series on "The College Man and Current Problems," is sane and well balanced, but somewhat dull and pointless. Mr. Whitman presents a convincing argument in favor of the training furnished by the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. While Mr. Whitman is convincing, he is over modest, for, if the training is as useful as he says it is, it is safe to predict that the School will do more...

Author: By T. N. Carver., | Title: THE DECEMBER ILLUSTRATED | 12/18/1912 | See Source »

...said that if service to one's fellow-man was to be the expression and fulfillment of one's religious nature, it must have behind it more than human sanction, there must be a spiritual as well as a human impulse. Not to serve is to die. Men grow dull, remote and old in the accumulation of riches or of knowledge which they do not share. That youth who is consecrated to this religion of service, giving himself to his God, as he finds God in his fellowmen, that youth is endowed with life's most durable and most precious...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "UNDERGRADUATE RELIGION" | 12/9/1912 | See Source »

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