Word: kitchener
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...development" plan, Sukarno, who has had a total of four wives and two divorces, confided that he could not "implement this task without the help of women." In the rosy Socialist future, he promised, every Indonesian girl of marriageable age will have a husband, a radio and a modern kitchen (thus making a piker of Herbert Hoover, who in 1928 campaigned under the Republican slogan that merely promised U.S. women "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage"). Capitalism, Sukarno said disdainfully, is "a man's world"; only under Socialism do women have plenty of time...
...Djakarta a pretty girl sniffed: "I can get a husband without Sukarno's help." A disillusioned matron observed, "Sukarno doesn't know his audience. The majority of Indonesians still have arranged marriages, so husbands are no problem. And I, for one, don't think a modern kitchen comes with Socialism." But there was strong evidence last week that Sukarno does know his audience, and especially his women. A poll was conducted to determine "the most popular man" among Indonesians. The easy winner: President Sukarno...
...with advice from a local housewife (whom they jokingly promise to make a saint), sold out at a fair. They put one monk to reading books on jellies and production techniques, assigned another with a degree in economics to run the business, by 1957 had a fully mechanized kitchen...
...fair markup," says Father John Holohan, St. Joseph's subprior (who has permission to talk because he must confer with "the outside world"). "We have never wanted to take advantage of our free labor and our tax-exempt position." The monks are building a new and automated kitchen, have set themselves a goal of 3,000,000 jars of jelly a year...
...Paul suburb of Shoreview, dinner is a neatly scripted ritual, played to soft Brahms and candlelight, that often lasts for two hours. At first, recalls Keys, Margaret was not much of a cook: "She fed me - but she was pretty inexperienced." She learned; the walls of kitchen and den are lined with 254 cookbooks, not counting copies of Eat Well and Stay Well, for which Mrs. Keys supplied 200 tasty recipes. The Keyses do not eat "carving meat" - steaks, chops, roasts - more than three times a week, and a single entree normally is not repeated more than once every three...