Search Details

Word: basement (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...going to sink into the ground." Construction of the building will begin this summer. When it opens in 1983 it will house galleries and offices for the Fogg's departments of ancient, Oriental, and Near Eastern art, as well as a 300-seat lecture hall in the basement...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Advances | 6/4/1981 | See Source »

...battle was holding onto the GSA office and getting a gay hotline. The University announced the office was closed, because it wasn't being used, and only after several gay students demonstrated to the administration that it was indeed in use, were they allowed to keep the office--a basement room in Memorial Hall. Schatz also arranged a gay hotline after hearing that a large percentage of the phone calls that Room 13, the student counseling service, receives are related to gay concerns. The phone, with an extension on Schatz's room so he could...

Author: By Susan C. Faludi, | Title: Gay Rights: The Emergence of a Student Movement | 6/4/1981 | See Source »

...furnace in the basement is stoked by a hideous hag, an anti-bella donna, who bundles the hapless Snaporaz onto her motorcycle and roars off with him, ostensibly to the train station. Instead, she attempts to rape him in a greenhouse, chickens squawking between them and stuffed cars reposing on a nearby table. Rescued in the nick of time by the rapist's mother, Snaporaz entrusts himself to his attacker's daughter...

Author: By Deborah K. Holmes, | Title: Urban Cowboy | 5/7/1981 | See Source »

When a deal to buy the building currently housing the Advocate fell through earlier this year, the University offered a North House basement to the group, which will be evicted this spring from "a few small rooms" on the upper floors of the Office of Career Services and Off-Campus Learning. Tarver said...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Freshman Register Is Imperiled | 5/4/1981 | See Source »

...Mayo Tsuzuki is majoring in Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the hours she once spent at the piano she now spends in the basement of the Science Center disentangling the mysteries of A.M. 110. She insists she gave up any ideas about becoming a concert pianist before she came to Harvard. But her almost wistful ambivalence about that decision, her commitment to future performing, and even the mementos that crowd her Canaday room, all speak of regret that she cannot at least continue to practice regularly. She admits that if she had arrived here last September resolved on pursuing...

Author: By Sarah Paul, | Title: Practice Made Perfect? | 5/1/1981 | See Source »

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