Word: breaded
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...brief paroxysm of rage over Kerr's action, strikers shut down slaughterhouses, construction sites and steelworks all over Australia. But before long, Australian voters decided that Whitlam's firing was not the main issue after all. Opinion polls showed that voters were more concerned about bread-and-butter issues-inflation, industrial unrest and unemployment-than the constitutional question posed by Whitlam's sacking...
...stench of refuse, open sewers and pigs wallowing in mud hung heavily over the abandoned quarry. Six small children sat around an open wood fire eating their breakfast of bread and coffee. Two women scrubbed clothes in the open while a small boy struggled under the weight of two five-gallon cans of water slung from a pole across his shoulders...
...undoubtedly is. While I have had to earn my bread as a political writer for most of my adult life, I have always paid for wine and dessert by writing on history, humor and the arts. And Harvard today is still crackling with creative energy as well as being steeped in history. Once you find your way around, it is an unfailing source of treasures, pleasures and surprises...many of them living people. Nor is it possible for the old stones and bricks of Harvard Yard, the dormitories, the classrooms, the libraries and the churches, to have witnessed so much...
TACKLES. Steve Niehaus, Notre Dame, 6 ft. 5 in., 260 lbs.; and Ken Novak, Purdue, 6 ft. 7 in., 274 lbs. Niehaus is "the bread-and-butter guy a scout can make a living on." His specialty: running down backs from behind. He made 113 unassisted tackles this fall. Novak is not quite so sure a choice. The scouts do not consider his senior season good enough, but still rate him above the rest of the field because of his size...
With Kathy Garrett I deplore that astronomical production costs have forced the Museum to set the price of the catalogue at $35. I also deplore what production costs have done to the price of bread and milk. But unlike bakers and milk distributors the Fogg has done something about outrageous prices--at least temporarily. Since the exhibition opened, "metamorphoses" catalogues have been available to students and all visitors at $15. This is stated on a large sign at the museum's sales desk. I am sorry that Kathy Garrett missed the sign and failed to inform your readers that catalogues...