Word: lambe
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...butter on their yearly bread instead of the 18 lb. to which they are accustomed. Meat will prove the major food problem, not everywhere at once but in spots gradually. At first there will appear to be an abundance of beef steaks, veal cutlets, legs of lamb and mutton chops as farmers without forage dispose of their stock. But by 1935 herds will be down to such a point that stockmen will have much less meat for sale. Because of the Government's wholesale slaughter of pigs, pork will be about the scarcest commodity this winter. Where ten pork chops...
TIME, June 11, Animals, p. 38, footnote: ''So, rarely, do horses, cows, SHEEP, deer [have multiple births.]" You should feel a little ''sheepish'' about the sheep part of your note. One hundred ten to 130% lamb crops are not uncommon in California. So you see a few of the woolies must double up to bring this about...
Dictators to earthquake. Neither the King of Kings nor President Kemal lacks personal courage. During the fêtes, rejoicings, fireworks, skewered lamb and champagne at Ankara last week news came of severe earthquakes in Western Turkey, the very region through which Host Kemal was about to escort Guest Pahlevi. Neither showed the slightest desire to cancel these plans. The royal Persian junket became an earnest inspection trip through the shaken area down to Smyrna with homeless families watching the Near East's two Strong...
...Memorial Hall Dr. Anderson, Sec. J. L Memorial Hall Mr. Crane, Sec. A. D. Memorial Hall Mr. Daly, Sec. T Memorial Hall Mr. Fox, Sec. B Memorial Hall Professor Frickey, Sec. M. N. Memorial Hall Dr. Hoover, Sec. H Memorial Hall Dr. Hunt, Sec. I, K Memorial Hall Mr. Lamb, Sec. R New Lect. Hall Mr. Leighton, Sec. C New Lect. Hall Mr. Ross, Sec. G New Lect. Hall Mr. Smith, Sec. Q New Lect. Hall Mr. Sweezy, Sec. S New Lect. Hall Mr. Walsh, Sec. P New Lect. Hall Economics 4 Harvard 6 Engin. Sciences 8 Pierce 302 Fine...
...children 3 lb. each, a third child 1½ lb. Only the 4-year-old son retained his weight when the Rev. Fletcher D. Parker of Hartford, Conn, fed his family for a week at a total cost of $2.24. That sum bought potatoes, pork, lamb, canned milk, butter, flour, rice, prunes and eggs. But no fruit, cereal or fresh milk. Those were the foods, that the amount, on which Hartford social workers last week hoped indigent Hartford families could subsist...