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Word: nites (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Next Monday night is to be "Harvard Nite" at the Paramount Theatre on Washington Street, it was learned today. The management declared yesterday that they were inspired to do so by the fact that the movie to be shown, "What a Life," has been "acclaimed by college students all over the country...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Paramount Theatre to Hold "Harvard Nite" Next Monday | 10/6/1939 | See Source »

Very similar in design to the new Greyhound busses are the East's first sleeper-busses, introduced on the Chicago-New York run last month by a new company named All American Bus Lines. The West Coast has had sleepers since 1928. Last year Greyhound extended its "nite-coach" service eastward as far as Kansas City (TIME, May 6, 1935). That the East was ripe for a similar facility was amply proven last week by the crowds which filled All American's sleepers to 95% of capacity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Greyhound's Litter | 8/10/1936 | See Source »

...small mild man of 63. His main office is in Atlanta, Ga., where his son handles his correspondence. He has been killing rats for 20 years, has operated all over the U. S. He kills rats free. Then he shows his method to his clients, sells them Nicholes Over-Nite Rat Exterminator (price, 50? a can). In this way he makes more money than if he charged for his work. He killed 49,000 rats in Chicago in 1922, gained much fame thereby. His best clients are food stores, schools, hospitals, colleges. He has killed rats at the Edward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Rat Man | 11/7/1932 | See Source »

...Mannock Brinckerhoff Jackson '32 Lady Jane Mannock Bettye Jean Crocker Freda Mannock Elizabeth Johnson Rt. Hon. R. Selby Mannock, M. P. R.R. Wallstein '32 Digby W.A. Richardson '32 Edward Eversley J.F. Joyce, Jr. '32 Bertie Capp H.G. Meyer '30 John Reader R.H. Jones '30 Lord Carchester Gordon Leach '29 Nite George Curtin Squier Frederick Donald Buteus Maiden Ethelind Elbert Sally Jessica Hill...

Author: By R. W. P., | Title: "SUCCESS" ACCEPTABLY PRESENTED | 12/13/1929 | See Source »

...this time. From unruly Mexico, the Club has shifted to the most polite drawing-room atmosphere of proper England. Of course, A. A. Milne is much too successful in juvenile writing to let slip an opportunity like the Barrie-Kipling dream scene in which the appearance of a Nite, a Squier, and a Buteus Maiden would do any child's heart good. The adult portions of the play are composed of slightly bored dialogue in Act I, a not too effective suggestion of strain in the first scene of Act III, and, in the final scene, a modicum of action...

Author: By R. W. P., | Title: "SUCCESS" ACCEPTABLY PRESENTED | 12/13/1929 | See Source »

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