What have we here? Miles Standish, Priscilla and a pair of Quakers, keeping company with a lovely Dresden dancing lady and a small, brown postman. But these unique people do not have to be fed, even though their mistress is Mabel Anderson, manager of the Memorial Union food service, for they are only a few of her large doll collection
Mrs. Florence Pen Ho is interviewed and biographically presented through Ruby Jackson\u27s descripti...
Greetings, page 1 Home Economics in Great Britain by Thelma Carlson, page 2 Could You Carve This? by...
This is the first in a series of stories about home economics students who do things. -The Editor
An item on a particular college girl\u27s list of expenses was Feeding the family - $1.50. Her fat...
Fun after graduation! Where will you find it? In your hobbies? In your career? In your friends? In y...
Dorothy Cooley Thompson, \u2725, now Mary Martensen of the Chicago Herald American, came under the...
This is the third in a series of personality sketches of home economics leaders written by members o...
Mabel V. Campbell, \u2705, who is chairman of the Home Economics Department of the University of Mis...
At the recent convention of the American Home economics association, held at Michigan Agricultural C...
Mrs. Olive Wilson Curtiss, H. Ec. \u2787, one of the graduates of Iowa State College who has been a ...
Marjorie Shuler tells about the home economics training of Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt in a reprint fro...
Never has there been a greater need for women trained in home economics, says Josephine Aher
Once a little basement room where a single teacher with a vision of prophecy taught a small group of...
Five-Pound Party Planning, Ruth Hackett, page 2 Homemaking Under the Round Roof, Shirliann Fortmann,...
Mrs. Mary B. Welch, wife of the first college president, compiled a 300-page cook book in 1884. Sinc...
Mrs. Florence Pen Ho is interviewed and biographically presented through Ruby Jackson\u27s descripti...
Greetings, page 1 Home Economics in Great Britain by Thelma Carlson, page 2 Could You Carve This? by...
This is the first in a series of stories about home economics students who do things. -The Editor
An item on a particular college girl\u27s list of expenses was Feeding the family - $1.50. Her fat...
Fun after graduation! Where will you find it? In your hobbies? In your career? In your friends? In y...
Dorothy Cooley Thompson, \u2725, now Mary Martensen of the Chicago Herald American, came under the...
This is the third in a series of personality sketches of home economics leaders written by members o...
Mabel V. Campbell, \u2705, who is chairman of the Home Economics Department of the University of Mis...
At the recent convention of the American Home economics association, held at Michigan Agricultural C...
Mrs. Olive Wilson Curtiss, H. Ec. \u2787, one of the graduates of Iowa State College who has been a ...
Marjorie Shuler tells about the home economics training of Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt in a reprint fro...
Never has there been a greater need for women trained in home economics, says Josephine Aher
Once a little basement room where a single teacher with a vision of prophecy taught a small group of...
Five-Pound Party Planning, Ruth Hackett, page 2 Homemaking Under the Round Roof, Shirliann Fortmann,...
Mrs. Mary B. Welch, wife of the first college president, compiled a 300-page cook book in 1884. Sinc...
Mrs. Florence Pen Ho is interviewed and biographically presented through Ruby Jackson\u27s descripti...
Greetings, page 1 Home Economics in Great Britain by Thelma Carlson, page 2 Could You Carve This? by...
This is the first in a series of stories about home economics students who do things. -The Editor