Word: wisconsin
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Already Missouri has passed an "antidiscriminatory" bill favored by local brewers (but not by U. S. distillers) seeking protection for their home market, which in effect bars from Missouri the alcoholic produce of 30 other States.* Pending in Connecticut, Illinois, Rhode Island and Wisconsin Legislatures are similar bills. Iowa and Nebraska rejected them...
Professor Beale began his practice in Boston in 1882 after attending the Law School, the University of Wisconsin and the University of Chicago. He first became associated with the Law School in 1890. He was a full professor from 1897 until 1908 when he was appointed Carter Professor of General Jurisprudence. This position he held until becoming Royall Professor...
...birthday, the Mississippi water will figure in the dedication of a statue of the Jesuit pioneer, cast from coppers given by French school children. In the U. S., President Roosevelt is expected to proclaim June 1 Marquette Day, and in the Senate an oration is to be delivered by Wisconsin's Senator Francis Ryan Duffy. At Marquette University in a special convocation this week, honorary degrees were conferred. Twenty-five miles away there were doings of a different sort on a high Wisconsin hill, called Holy because Father Marquette is supposed to have consecrated it during his journeyings...
...Publishing Co.'s feeler into the picture magazine field, Foto is billed as "the Candid Camera Magazine," launched as a 10? bimonthly. If successful, it will supplement Dell's lucrative Modern Screen, Radio Stars and Ballyhoo. Editor West F. Peterson, out of Illinois via the University of Wisconsin and its Daily Cardinal, ordered a press run of 400,000 for Foto's, first appearance. Readers got 66 pages in rotogravure of photographs intended to raise the reader's hair, hackles or eyebrows. Most appalling shot: the corpse of a New York sneak-thief who garroted himself...
...college students of a new, powerful but poisonous brain stimulant called Benzedrine last week kept college directors of health in dithers of worry. Cases of over-dosage have been uncovered at the Universities of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Chicago. Elsewhere students who, while cramming for final examinations, collapse, faint, develop insomnia, or show a slowed pulse rate are under suspicion of using the substance. They call it "pepper-up," "pep pills...