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Word: window (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1920
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...making of cuts for the daily paper or the pictorial supplement of the CRIMSON, but there are many of interest which have not been published. Every day adds to this valuable collection. The most notable additions are displayed on the Photo-Sales Bulletin Board in Leavitt & Peirce's window. Negatives may be examined, orders for prints entered, or questions pertaining to this service asked, at the Photo-Sales Department office in the Crimson Building, where the manager, or an assistant, will keep the office hours of 9-10 and 7-8 daily...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: START PHOTO SALES SERVICE | 10/15/1920 | See Source »

Senior Spread invitations, tickets and dance orders will be distributed to all those who have made application for them today from 12 to 1 and from 2 till 3 o'clock, from the window of Holworthy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SENIOR CLASS NOTICE | 6/11/1920 | See Source »

...convention at Harrisburg, Pa,; that committees on promotion and publicity were being named, and that they were all going forth with proselytizing zeal to increase their members. The bewildered doeskin stood by his guns, respecting the printers' rule to "Follow copy even if it takes you out the window, as he sent to the compositors the story of the cohesiveness of the organized inebriates to the nation. But he took an inning in the first caption which he made to read; "What Next...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 5/29/1920 | See Source »

...fact. Long have the golfers and tennis players in the Bay State Been deprived with Puritanical ardor of the exercise and recreation so much needed after a week of indoor work. Those how religiously go to church every Sunday and have had to sit all afternoon before an open window, with Plato's "Republic", before them, will no longer have to simulate long "dries" or back-hand "volleys...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUNDAY SPORT | 4/1/1920 | See Source »

...stage and confine him almost exclusively to words, would be to revive the old bombastic melodrama, where, instead of seeing the hero jump onto his trusty horse and dash madly up and down mountain sides in pursuit of the villain, we should have the heroine gazing out a painted window from which she would turn now and then to gasp to us, "There he goes, there he goes, My God, My God, over a ditch, he's getting nearer, he's getting nearer ... ah.. my brave boy, he's got him, thank...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SCREEN VS. SCENE. | 3/9/1920 | See Source »

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