Word: uses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...result of a straw vote taken at Monday night's meeting, Charles W. Detjen '50 and Lawrence F. O'Donnell '49 will seek out University Library Director Keyes DeW. Metcalf and tell him that the Council "looks favorably on Radcliffe use of the Lamont Library...
...lines and the supply from the kitchens. Serving methods are subject to question throughout the University. Plastic trays and cups are impossible to heat, and, therefore, cannot keep food warm. Although it is true that the cost of chinaware would be prohibitive, there is a possibility that the use of china cups would be feasible. The enormous wastage, largest at the Union, results generally from extravagant serving. An attitude has come to be accepted of eating only the desired amount from the heap on the tray, and casually throwing the rest away...
Roger Davis, who pitched the Jayvees to a 1 to 0 shutout over Newton last week, will probably toe the mound for the home team. The rest of the lineup is subject to change and depends to some extent on whom Dolph Samborski wants to use in the Varsity game against Dartmouth. It will probably include Web Durant, Gordon Ellis, Bucky Harrison, Fred Glimp, Hal Moffie, John Dunn, John Chase, and Steve Howe...
...acting a winsome part more winsomely. In the somewhat lesser role of Edith, Denise Findley gave by far the best female performance. The sets were as usual wonderful, and the conducting of Isadore Godfrey was for the most part an improvement on the D'Oyly Carte recording. His original use of the accompanying bass and of the French horns was one of the many surprises of the evening. Among other pleasures were the singing of the "Paradox" ("ha-ha-ha-ha") trio and the presence of the pitiful little corps of policemen who wander on and off the stage...
...devious dealings with both the Axis and the Allies during the years 1939-44. Feis needed little filling in on the shifts and turns of the U.S. policy toward Franco; he was instrumental in shaping it. What gives his book its incisive and even exciting quality is his skillful use of captured enemy documents...