Word: cafeteria
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...question-not finally answered-was: Would Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, who broke up their topnotch Show of Shows team last spring, do as well separately as they did together? With his own Caesar's Hour (Mon. 8 p.m., NBC), Sid began with a fine skit in a cafeteria, went on to a funny getting-dressed scene. But when Guest Star Gina Lollobrigida showed up, he switched from well-paced pantomime to goo-goo-eyed mugging that suggested Milton Berle...
...addition, food can be an expensive commodity if the student must eat his meals in Ithaca or in one of the University's large cafeterias. Even in the cafeterias, he must pay for his meals individually, since there is no contract rate. Thus board rates an be alarmingly high and cafeteria food can be alarmingly bad. Here again, students with an eye on both their pocketbooks and their digestive processes are likely to find the fraternities attractive...
...university dining halls at Evanston, the dignified Archbishop of Canterbury, in his handsome purple cassock, followed by his wife, moved slowly in line, carrying trays cafeteria-style . . . Both exhibited . . . superb good humor in adjusting themselves to this American style of dining. Refreshing was the Archbishop's intimate fellowship with Presiding Bishop Sherrill of the American Protestant Episcopal Church. Affectionately he called him "Henry," while he in turn called the Archbishop "Jeff." I wonder how many Britishers would dare to say "Jeff" to the man who crowned Queen Elizabeth...
...reach as high as $150,000 a year. In Los Angeles the McCulloch Motors Corp. provides facilities for most popular sports, sponsors such activities as skiing and square dances, and has a $1,000,000 employee recreation hall with twelve bowling alleys and a low-cost, open-air cafeteria (typical three-course lunch: 78?). Recently, an employees' committee asked for additional benefits, including pensions and sick leave. The company explained that its present program, which costs 56? per hour per employee, was all that it could afford. When it offered to substitute the new benefits for some that...
...pampering pays. In the traditionally low-paying insurance business, which pioneered in pensions and sick benefits, some new frills are being added. In Houston the Prudential Insurance Co. of America two years ago put up a $9,000,000 building with a swimming pool, outdoor lounge and free-lunch cafeteria. The company now has a waiting list for clerical help. Says Prudential Vice President Charles Fleetwood: "This building is one of the biggest bargains we ever...