Word: clothe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...have lost "by one bamboo" and, sportsmanlike, to have taken the post of Foreign Minister as penalty. (P. 13.) An endeavor to stimulate undergraduate thought and learning in spite of the curriculum. (P. 19.) Foch, Marshal of Poland. (P. 23.) More pay for the men who make steel and cloth. (P. 6.) Ambassadorial homesickness as exhibited by Mr. Harvey. (P. 9.) Monte San Nicholas-eternal tribute to the dead. (P. 15.) Captain Thomas Jefferson Jackson See, eager to join with Einstein in debate. (P. 21.) Mr. Taft's reputation, deemed "spotless" even by sensational publishers. (P. 24.) Stambuliski-hoisting...
Barklie Henry (what matter if middle initials have been omitted) and F. H. Nichols said to themselves: "Here is the same old tailoring job. Here likewise is the same old cloth. Let's see what can be done to make another Pudding Show. Not a new Pudding Show--just another. The Formula prescribes that the first act shall be in a modern environment, that the action shall somehow translate the cast to a foreign and somewhat exciting clime, and that until quarter of eleven trouble without end shall visit upon the personnel until a naval leftanent (or its equivalent) shall...
...moving picture performance has been arranged under the auspices of the Industrial Management Department of the Graduate School of Business Administration, to be given at 4.30 o'clock today in Pierce 110. The picture, which is entitled "From Wool to Cloth," will be explained by Mr. Ignatius McNulty, chairman of the Department of Labor of the American Woolen Company. Although the lecture was planned primarily for members of the Business School, it will be open to all members of the University...
...April 2 in Pierce 110 the American Wooolen Company's moving picture entitled "From Wool to Cloth" will be shown under the auspices of the Industrial Management Department of the Business School. Mr. Ignatius MacNulty chairman of the Department of Labor of the American Woolen Company will speak while the picture is being shown, and will explain its various features. This picture and talk will give the men who go to Lawrence during the spring vacation to study the company's mills there, an opportunity to become familiar with the processes which they will later observe. Although the meeting...
...many who may be won over at once by the claim of a French scientist that he had discovered in the human body a "paroptic" sense, or one making sight possible through the pores of the skin. In proof of this the doctor had his subject blindfolded with heavy cloth for ordinary light lays, and with leadfoil for X-rays. The subject then "read", printed cards held a short distance from his nose...