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Word: dark (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Besides the inclusion of fifteen organizations never before recognized in past albums, other innovations in typography have BEEN designed to brighten the dark corners. Color printing has been used on the title page, the tissues facing the etching and pencil sketches, and on the personnel pages of the Houses. Sparing use has been made of bleed-off cuts, which leave no margin at the edges of the page: on the five division pages and on the panels which frame "Tercentenary Days," The Class Ode, and the Class Poem...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1937 CLASS ALBUM WILL BE READY TO DISTRIBUTE FRIDAY | 5/19/1937 | See Source »

...present version Dame May Whitty is the psychic—a term which is itself a hallowed souvenir—who tries to solve a murder by making the twelve possible suspects hold hands in the dark. Things look bad for Nell O'Neill (Madge Evans) when John Wales (Henry Daniell) is stabbed at the seance, but clear up when, at the next psychic session, Dick Crosby (Thomas Beck) uses lampblack to prove that naughty Dr. Mason (Charles Trowbridge) was not holding hands. The Thirteenth Chair still saves a septuagenarian shiver for the moment when Madame La Grange reveals the murder knife stuck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: May 17, 1937 | 5/17/1937 | See Source »

From the potential economic grief Rearmament, the report passed on to the dark future of gold. Last year's world gold production (35,000,000 oz.) was the highest on record, and output was soon expected to touch 40,000,000 oz., twice the 1929 figure. Industrial use of gold in the meantime has dropped from 20% of totalproduction to about 5%. Blamed by the B.I.S. for this decline was "a distitinct change in the jewelry fashions for women in that gold objects are less in favor and are being replaced on the one hand bycheap jewelry, which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Gold & Grief | 5/17/1937 | See Source »

Tomorrow, chances for a Crimson victory appear dark against the league leading Indians. But if Ed Ingalls pitches in top form and if his teammates play heads-up ball, the pregame dope favoring a Dartmouth triumph may be upset.TOM BILODEAU Plays Despite Injury...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dave Shean Will Twirl for Crippled Crimson Nine Against Cornell Team Today; Ingalls to Face Dartmouth Tomorrow | 5/14/1937 | See Source »

...Schultz at bow, J. L. Erickson at two, and G. C. Gullard at three are J. V. veterans. The two '39 representatives are L. P. Spear at seven and F. W. Kittler at four. Spear was a substitute for last year's fresh crew while Kittler, who is the dark horse of this year's Varsity, was unable to make even the third plebe boat. H. A. Rowe '37, is cox. Navy's crew uses a stroke invented by its own coach, Buck Walsh. It is about half way between the short stroke used by Harvard and Washington...

Author: By Crew Editor, U.s.n.a. Log, and W. L. Savidge, (SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CRIMSON)S | Title: Three Undefeated Navy Crews Drill For Crucial Harvard Tilt on May 29 | 5/13/1937 | See Source »

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