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Word: lanterns (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...similar controversy has been raging at Ohio State since the Lantern announced that an alumnus is planning to donate $300,000 toward a new home for the college president. Numerous letters to the editor have urged that the money be used instead for employees' salaries, books, or new classrooms...

Author: By Faye Levine, | Title: Sweeping Political Renaissance Transforming Nation's Colleges | 4/22/1965 | See Source »

Consummate Cleavage. The second segment was about a lantern-jawed toad (Jack Klugman), whose secretary was so dumb that she wrote him notes so badly garbling the English language that she said RETURN A MOOSE'S HARNESS when she meant RETURN MRS. HARRIS' CALL. It fuzz not fairy hill airy us. But the third was plotted with Elizabethan comedic geometries. The net end of its contrivances was to place a consummately luscious, half-dressed young wife in the same apartment with two unlikely men, both innocent of adulterous intent, while her savagely jealous husband was closing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Tripleheader | 10/16/1964 | See Source »

...Hague, Marcel Breuer built a blunt, lantern-windowed structure as stolid as a Dutch door. In Athens, Walter Gropius used the same Pentelic marble that forms the Parthenon. Edward Durell Stone's grillwork adorns New Delhi like a Hindu temple. In Baghdad, José Luis Sert put up a tentlike structure fit for a caliph and cooled by channels of river water. Saarinen warmed his Oslo embassy with teak screens; Yamasaki lightened his Kobe consulate with airy Japanese panels. The openings of U.S. embassies have come to be as eagerly anticipated as big Broadway first nights. This month...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Opening Nights | 5/29/1964 | See Source »

...would appreciate any information you could give me. F.T. Gaumer Business Adviser Ohic State LANTERN...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BLOWIN' IN THE WIND | 3/19/1964 | See Source »

Banks, Base. The World Trade Center will scrape the sky 1,3531 ft. above an area where nearly every other building is topped with turret, lantern and steeple. The question is not whether it should be modern (it has to be) but whether it is the kind of modern that lives with its surroundings. Yamasaki has avoided the acres-of-glass look, has instead invested the two towers with traceries of stainless steel arches in his familiar style, around the base and again just below the gently beveled roof line. Some people may yet feel that it is too stark...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Onward & Upward | 1/24/1964 | See Source »

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