Word: breakfasting
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...would almost surely be sustained. Thus the makeshift conference agreement does not change the outlook for continued and chaotic struggle. The conferees have so far demonstrated only that they can agree on something-if, like the White Queen in Through the Looking-Glass, they believe six impossible things before breakfast...
...breakfast with TIME editors in New York City, Hawke noted that it was a Labor government during World War II that moved away from Australia's historic tie to Britain toward a closer U.S.-Australia relationship. He added: "I did say [to Reagan], and I repeat it, that that relationship would not be one of sycophancy or unquestioning acceptance of every decision of the United States." When Australia disagrees with the U.S., he promised, "we won't be slow to tell...
...having served pinball-players and procrastinators for over 25 years now. The cheese steak sub is marvelous at 1 a.m. With these two stalwarts in tow, you'll find little reason to check out Mug and Muffin over the summer, except perhaps for a bagel or blueberry muffin for breakfast...
...ACSR meets twice a year with a subcommittee of the Corporation called the Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (CCSR). On April 4, the entire ACSR joined the four-man CCSR for breakfast at the Faculty Club, expecting an hour and a half of ethical dialogue. What took place was closer to a briefing on Corporation policy. The discussion, as always, was extremely civil. The ACSR, through Professor Salmon, expressed its dissatisfaction with the Corporation's current policy. Hugh Calkins '45, the chairman of the CCSR, reiterated the Corporation's stance, and indicated that the Corporation wanted to avoid using ethical...
Some people are media addicts. Every magazine, every newsletter, every advertisement that gets slipped under their doors--they read them like the back of the Cheerios box at breakfast. If they happen to be Harvard students, they are lucky. This year, the College's regular bumper crop of student publications--from century old stand-bys to newly founded newsletters--kept readers busy...