Word: breakfaster
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...spaces for club tables on the second floor. Applications should be handed in to the Graduate Secretary of the Union or at the Bursar's office. Groups of from six to twelve men at necessary to reserve tables. Only luncheon and dinner will be served on the second floor, breakfast being served on the first floor at regular Union prices...
...White House breakfast parties this last week have been something more significant than the, mere consumption of buckwheat cakes and sausage. "Old Guard" Senators and Representatives have come to talk tax reduction, insurgents have come to be placated (see p. 9), all have come to be jolly with the President...
...70th session their power will be decisive, the votes of any two of them being sufficient to give either the Democrats or Republicans control of the Senate. Calvin Coolidge, however, is no Woodrow Wilson. Last week he set about to placate the insurgents, cajole them, humor them. To a breakfast of buckwheat cakes and sausage at the White House he invited Henrik Shipstead of Minnesota, the lone Farmer-Laborite of the Senate, who usually votes with the insurgents. Then too, the President, after a false step, gave in to Senators Nye and Frazier of North Dakota on the question...
...crest at Cottonwood Pass, down a tributary to Cottonwood Canyon, and so to our first camp, a circuit of about 100 miles in six days. The next day, we started at 5 o'clock. Deducting the time taken or towing a disabled car from the mountain road, and for breakfast, we made the 217 miles in seven and one-half hours. This time prompts a comparison between Professor Whitney and his sides in the sixties and the present. We travelled five of the eight days on horseback over good trails, one day afoot, and 434 miles by auto...
...breakfast, wheat or corn bread, at the choice of each particular, with butter, and milk, or Coffee-au-lait, at the choice of each, no meat...