Word: eats
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...German military training methods." Goose-stepping is out. Off duty, soldiers will be allowed to wear civilian clothing and will be required to salute only immediate superiors. (Formerly, an enlisted man entering a civilian restaurant had to salute every officer present and ask the highest-ranking for permission to eat there.) Civilian judges will participate in courts-martial and soldier-defendants will be free to choose their own lawyers and appeal their cases...
...minute visit to his great-grandmother Queen Mary, confined to Marlborough House with a cold, then back to the palace and the big moment: blowing the candles and cutting cake for a dozen young friends. Along with the cakes were jellies and blancmange (which the host refused to eat because they were "too slippery"). After tea in the gold-and-white ballroom, the party adjourned to Charles's favorite playground, the palace corridors, and his pet game, hide & seek...
...sign for 14 meals a week or 21. Of course, most fraternity men signed for 14 and ate in the fraternity men signed for 14 and ate in the fraternity seven or so times a week. Now Yalemen, like their Cambridge cousins, are paying for every meal, whether they eat...
...McNiff's assertion that "the students are in class only 12 hours a week and have the rest (of the 75 hours the library is open) to study here" ignores the basic freshman needs to eat, exercise, and engage in extracurricular activities. Perhaps if the hours at which the library is available were more wisely set, better use would be made of them...
...people, took advantage of interdorm eating in the past, because of the prohibitive nature of the old system. It provided that if a girl wanted to eat in another dorm, she had to have someone take her place at her own. The Dean's Office vetoed this same plan early last spring...