Word: teas
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...November 14, Miss Labenow was given the information for the story by several council members who requested that their names be withheld. Miss Labenow's idea for the story sprang from a statement at an open council meeting that President Jordan would have tea with the council to discuss the "Great Issues" course project further...
Local hockey fans will get a chance to see hockey at tea-time, when the varsity takes on B.U. in the Garden today at 4 p.m. Originally scheduled for a more conventional 9 p.m. face-off time, the game was pushed into the afternoon to free the Garden for an Eastern Hockey League contest...
Judged from previous B.U. Crimson games, though, this affair-B.U.'s opener-promises to be something more than a tea-party. Last year the Crimson scored three times in the last seven minutes to beat the N.C.A.A. finalists, 7 to 6, in the roughest game of the season...
...only art training he ever got was in scrawling naughty words on automobiles in the London working-class suburb of Islington, where he grew up. (His "racing family" refers to his father's occupation as a jockey.) At 14, he got a job sharpening pencils and carrying tea to movie-cartoon animators in Alexander Korda's film company, got his bosses to let him trace some of the smaller details in the thousands of drawings that go to make up a sequence. He taught himself drawing so well that in 1937 Reynolds News gave...
Since 1847, white kids and excessive drinking of green tea have gone out of fad, but snobs are in again, and so is writing about them. The latest snobographer to revive the discussion is Russell Lynes, an editor of Harper's who set himself up in a magazine article last year as an arbiter of high, low and middle brows. In Snobs, Arbiter Lynes patters along in Thackeray's large footsteps, rather like a shrill but amiable terrier at the end of a 100-year leash. His bark is sure to get plenty of attention, and his bite...