Word: stomache
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...entertainment of ladies. Every conceivable sort of fish, mollusc, and crustacean is on the bill, and all are handled well, though simply. The chowder, of all sorts is good; the swordfish, at times, causes an instantaneous migration of the taste-buds into a taste-bud Paradise; and one's stomach, with the appended palate, will almost literally reach out to grasp the blue-points; there is, of course, no langouste, which is a pitty, and liquor is not served. The prices are as low as can be found...
...column, which, many of us think, richly deserves its name, one of the campus figures, V. H. Kramer '35, was rather brutally treated. The fact that he was so treated because of his connection with the Model League, which somehow the CRIMSON in its aloof attitude was unable to stomach, does not change the situation or excuse...
...Louis fortnight ago Mrs. Charles Fricke watched without concern her son Gustavo, 15, crawl into the family living room on hands & knees. He often played that way on the floor with his small brother Eddie. Gustave lay on the couch for a while, complained that his stomach was hurting, crawled off to bed. Next morning at schooltime he stayed in bed. About noon he crawled downstairs, changed his clothes. His father, home for lunch, noticed that his son was pale and glassy-eyed...
...school on Friday he had received a suspension notice, for truancy and general misbehavior. The notice ordered him to appear at the Superintendent's office Monday morning with his parents. Sunday evening Gustave got his father's revolver, went out to the garage, shot himself through the stomach...
...that they were 'fools to have fought in a war for commercialism,' or that I pointed to one of the men who was present and addressed the gathering thus, "There is a man wearing medals, but what good do they do him; he came out of the war with stomach trouble, and is now imprisoned by the government which he protected.'" This was the statement made to the CRIMSON last evening by Louis Balsam, 2G, colony officer at Norfolk in 1929. It has been charged in the Hurley report and in Dillon's 36 charges, that Balsam said these things...