Word: cooking
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Headed by Captain Emile Dubiel, 17 Freshmen have been awarded their numerals in track. Those to receive awards for their work during the past season are Philip S. Brayton, Walter D. Brookings, John M. Case, J. M. Callaway, Hayden Channings, Jr., Howard A. Cook, Joseph G. Duchesne, Jr., Cleaveland Floyd, Jr., Robert F. Hayes, William H. O'Connor, William H. Schmidt, II, Edward L. Young, III, Paul L. Van Cleve, III, Harold I. Miller, Johnson Kingsley, and Eugene H. Walker...
...lack of bail Samuel Insull spent only three of last week's seven days as a prisoner of the People. Those three days were passed in the hospital ward of the Cook County jail where the old man gradually recuperated from the fatigue of his involuntary journey back to Chicago from Istanbul (TIME...
...typical hardy, wayfaring Briton, speaks of "British thoroughness," situations "saved by British coolness," believes the British owe their love of adventure to Viking blood from the Normans. Thus although he gives the Dutchman Willem Janszoon credit for discovering Australia in 1605, he spends more time with James Cook who sailed intrepidly jp the east coast of the continent and won it for England. Yet he admires great explorers of any nationality, particularly Alexander the Great and Marco Polo. He las crossed the same fearful stretch of Persian desert where Marco found the water "so bitter that no one could possibly...
Helen R. Brooks, of Centre Newton, Mass, (Radcliffe College, 1934). Lonis A. Cook, Jr. '34, of Sandusky, Ohio, Edith A. Hickey, of Roslindale, Mass (Radcliffe Coll., 1934). Charles D. Keet, of Pretoris, Transvaal, South Africa, A.B. (Transvaal Univ.) 1919; A.M. (Potchesfsiroom Univ.) 1924. Instructor, Boys' High School, Pretoria, Transvaal, South Africa, Mae F. Rastall, of Washington. D.C. (Mt. Holyoke Coll...
...post-War years when Germany's armies came home to their wives, the 14-year-olds had to do something. Last week Chancellor Hitler offered the 600,000 to the housewives of Germany, as housemaids without pay for one year. The wives will teach the maidens how to cook, serve, wash and clean, will feed and bed them and pay their health insurance premiums. Friedrich Syrup, director of the Federal Institute for Unemployment Insurance, promised to find the girls paying jobs at the end of the "kitchen year." Cried he: "Are young German girls, your daughters, to receive...