Word: eats
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...tight. One young marauder gashed a leg while kicking out a window, and his pals tended to the wound as he lay in the aisle near Nick Philippides. Through Nick's mind flashed the advice his fa ther gave him in Greece years ago: "If someone wants to eat with you, sit down and eat with them. But if someone wants to fight with you, move away." But Nick didn't dare move. He sat paralyzed with fear. Only when the train slowed for his stop at Kings Highway station did he get up. And then, before...
...scene reminiscent of the last days of Syngman Rhee, some 12,000 placard-carrying students, cheered on by thousands of adults, marched in drizzling rain down Seoul's Capitol Avenue one day last week, crying "Drive Park out!" and "People are hungry! Let us eat profiteering millionaires!" Outnumbered police opened up with tear gas; the rioters replied with rock barrages, broke through police lines and drove off nine army trucks being used as barricades. The screaming, cursing clashes lasted all day and into the night, left scores of injured littering the wet pavement. Clamping on martial...
...March of 1939 a dining hall strike was averted when the University agreed to grant a preferential shop to employees. The Administration's willingness to allow unionization and to increase wages saved undergraduates from being forced to eat the Square's cuisine...
...truck assembly plant, they are taught new skills-data processing, air-conditioning maintenance-by non-professional teachers who are experts at their trade. Says Harry Lane, 46, who gave up his used-car lot and repair shop to become a teacher: "It's like teaching a baby to eat. You have to do it in small bites." But the work is rewarding: "Three men out of my first class are now making more money than they ever made in their lives...
...domestic sales managers ($8,400).* The fringes are also flossiest in Britain. Almost two-thirds of its sales managers drive company cars, often for private use, but less than one-third of their German counterparts do. Britain is big on subsidized lunches; 40% of the middle managers eat at least partly on the house. France leads in the field of subsidized housing, and the Germans get the best Christmas bonuses, usually two or three months' extra salary...