Word: fairfields
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...more years, even though he has already reached the official retiring age for Princeton professors. Professor Scott has been on the Princeton faculty for 45 years, has traveled some 250,000 miles on diggers' expeditions, is almost as well-known scientifically as his Princeton classmate, Henry Fairfield Osborn, president of the American Museum of Natural History...
...contact, and making her society irresistible. . . . We have a very attractive and beautiful home, the house being surrounded by beautiful grounds, artistically laid out and not wishing to boast, it is considered one of the show places of the Cincinnati suburbs, located on a most beautiful street, 3006 Fairfield Avenue, East Walnut Hills. . . . Hoping to receive a favorable reply. . . . (signed) Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Alter...
...meeting of the University Instrumental Clubs held last night, 23 men were elected to membership in the organization: R. D. Bolster '28, A. G. Booth '30, W. R. Driver '29, D. S. Lanier '28, John Fairfield '28, A. F. Porter 2G. B., L. E. Mallinckrodt '30, H. DeW. Wood '30, R. D. Whedon '29, Robert Reinhart '29, R. R. Dickey '30, R. C. Aldrich '31, S. C. Robinson '29, W. L. Stuart '29, S. W. Burbank '29, F. H. Gade '31, P. S. Dalton '31 C. M. Underhill '31, R. W. Pearson '31, F. S. Holmes '31, R. R. Walcott...
...liver, brain, marrow: that is what two men ate and it is all they ate: for 21 days, Vilhjalmur Stefansson, famed Arctic explorer; for 57 days, his friend and erstwhile companion, Karsten Anderson, whose present business is orange growing. Last week, the trial done, Dr. Stefansson went straight to Fairfield, Conn., where after a dinner of beef tongue by choice, he testimonialed: "Before the experiment I felt lackadaisical on getting up in the morning but now I feel like jumping out of bed and getting right to work...
...RISES TO PARNASSUS-Henry Fairfield Osborn-Princeton University Press ($2.50). Ages and ages ago, but eons after primates became distinctly monkeys, apes and men, mankind began his fumbling rise to earthly supremacy. The start was probably on the plateaus of Central Asia and the first men were certainly runners. They hunted to live. Descendants of theirs who wandered into other plateaus of the continents continued the hunting life. Others traveled into forests and became climbers, others into level lowlands and became squatting farmers; others into seashores and became aquatic. Millennia spent in the same sort of places developed distinct types...