Ben Of Ben & Jerry s Can Barely Taste Or Smell Delish 5 hrs ago
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The man responsible for setting your ice cream bar so high is none other than Ben Cohen, the co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s. Name another brand that gives you crunch, chew, and creaminess in literally every single bite you can t!
And there s a reason each pint is packed with, well, everything. Since childhood, Ben has had a rare sinus condition called anosmia that has severely limited his sense of taste and smell. As a result, almost all of his enjoyment of food is derived from its texture.
Ben Of Ben & Jerry s Can Barely Taste Or Smell
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At 10 years old, Chuck Page began working for the family business.
He cleaned milkshake collars stainless steel attachments used to keep ice cream from splattering from the top of a paper cup when blending ingredients.
Fifty-seven years later, he’s still at the milkshake machine.
“I love ice cream,” said Page, whose great-grandfather Charles Alexander Page founded Page Dairy Mart in 1951. It’s located at the corner of Becks Run Road and East Carson Street on Pittsburgh’s South Side. His great-great-grandfather bought the land from the Hays family in 1916. The Page family is from West Mifflin.
“I don’t mind cleaning those collars. It’s a necessary part of the business,” he said. “It’s what you do to keep things going.”
The 50 Most Common Jobs Women Held 100 Years Ago
By Ellen Dewitt, Stacker News
On 1/23/21 at 9:00 AM EST
The past century has been a remarkable one for women in the workplace. Today their presence is generally unquestioned and, at least before the pandemic, women outnumbered men. As of December 2020, women held 50.04 percent of the jobs in the United States, not counting farm workers and the self-employed, according to the government s Bureau of Labor Statistics.
In the 1920s, more than 8 million women, or 1 in 5, were earning salaries, typically as clerks, waitresses, teachers, and telephone operators, laboring amid attitudes that women should not work outside the home if their husbands were employed and that working women were taking jobs away from men who needed them more. Plenty of high-paying, powerful jobs were kept out of women s reach, and women often were expected to quit their paying jobs if they got married.
Frances Caldwell
Frances Elizabeth Sherer Caldwell, 78, of White Plains, N.Y., died on November 25, 2020, in Ramsey, N.J., at the home of her daughter, Juliet. Born on August 30, 1942, in Mount Kisco, N.Y., to Mary Brown Sherer and Clark Grosjean Sherer, Frances grew up in Scarsdale hearing her mother play piano and her father sing along with the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts every Saturday. As she once wrote of her early days learning the piano, “I was galvanized by Bach and Beethoven, and practiced so much my parents would leave the house!”
After earning her BA in music from Smith College (’64, Phi Beta Kappa), where she studied piano with Robert Miller and composition with Alvin Etler, Frances stayed on at Smith for one year as a faculty fellow in music, then entered the master’s program at UC Berkeley. She married Peter Devigne Caldwell in September 1966 and moved to Paris, France, where Peter was practicing law. There Frances
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