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Word: window (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...limited number of tickets for the exercises in Sanders Theatre will be distributed to candidates for degrees for the use of their friends. Candidates for the degrees of A. B., S. B., A. M., Ph. D., L. L. B. and D. B. may apply for tickets at the window at the northeast corner of Massachusetts Hall on Monday, June 28, between 10 and 11 a. m.; candidates for the degrees of B. A. S., M. D. V., D. M. D., and M. D. in the Dean's room at the Medical School at the same hour...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Commencement Exercises. | 6/22/1897 | See Source »

...remaining tickets for the Senior spread will be sold Monday at 1.30 from the window of Grays 17. Packages will still be sold...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Spread Notice. | 6/14/1897 | See Source »

...Each suite will contain a study, bathroom, and, as a rule, two bed-rooms, but there will be a few single rooms. Special attention has been given to ventilation and lighting. Every suite will have a street and court frontage, and in every study there will be a large window eight feet wide with a stationary window-seat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A New Dormitory. | 3/18/1897 | See Source »

...must protest emphatically against the spirit in which that was written. The writer, under cover of the name of a department, directs a savage attack against persons about whom he evidently knows nothing, except possibly by hearsay, and about whom he never will know anything until he leaves the window-seat which he is supposed to occupy, and comes down to the ground of common-sense. In the first place, by no means all of the Boston papers pay their correspondents by space-rates. I can mention two notable exceptions, the Advertiser and the Herald. In this way at least...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 3/10/1897 | See Source »

...first of the editorials, "From a Graduate's Window," deals with what it rightly calls a new kind of disloyalty. It is a scathing and richly deserved arraignment of the disreputable element which exists in the midst of the general body of Harvard newspaper correspondents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Graduates' Magazine. | 3/9/1897 | See Source »

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