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Word: eating (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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There is no question that Midnight Express is a manipulative film. The fervid indictment of the Turkish nation delivered by Billy ("For a nation of pigs, it's funny you don't eat them.") has occasioned protests of the film from Ankara and Turkish students living in the United States. Other touches added by Parker only underline the anti-Turkish prespective of the film: subtitles seem to have been deliberately omitted, thereby inflicting an incomprehensible gibberish on anyone who does not speak Turkish; the swarthy faces of Turksih prision guards and interrogrators often fill the screen, making them...

Author: By Joe Contreras, | Title: Busted at the Border | 11/4/1978 | See Source »

Korn added she felt the increase would have been even greater freshmen had been better informed about the Oxfam fast. Harvard Food Services will contribute 95 cents to Oxfam for each student who does not eat in the dining halls on November...

Author: By Amy R. Gutman, | Title: Oxfam Fast Draws Student Support In Anti-Hunger Fight | 11/3/1978 | See Source »

...teaching assistants' job to make sure that the bigger sharks don't eat up the little ones," Christensen said...

Author: By Maxine S. Pfeffer, | Title: Panel Speaks About Teaching Small Courses | 10/31/1978 | See Source »

...Pope does not smoke, drinks wine only occasionally, and cares nothing for food, dress, or social distinctions. Says a Catholic editor in Cracow: "He will eat anything that's put in front of him." Another friend adds in jest: "If the Italians knew about his taste in wines, they would never have agreed to have him as Pope." Father Mieczyslaw Malinski, a former classmate of the new Pope's and a longtime friend, notes that "he is a man without pretensions. His driver told me: 'I feel ashamed of the Cardinal. He is always so shabbily dressed. Look...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Foreign Pope | 10/30/1978 | See Source »

...often capable of extracting humor from even the most puerile material. This is one of her rare failures. Bombeck's stale jokes about crabgrass and Tupperware parties defy levitation; the cutesie plot is predictable to anyone who has ever encountered any incarnation of Please Don 't Eat the Daisies. Unfortunately, Burnett doesn't get any help from Director Robert Day. His idea of high drama is to end a scene with a close-up of characters getting up from a couch. The only animated figure on-screen is Charles Grodin, playing Burnett's husband: he charges...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: One Hit, Two Misses | 10/30/1978 | See Source »

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