Word: fold
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Many professionals like the freedom of such a life. John Andrews, 42, a Los Angeles antitrust attorney, remembers working seven weeks without a day off as a young lawyer. He prefers temping at law firms. Says he: "There's no security anymore. Partnerships fold up overnight. Besides, I never had a rat- race mentality, and being a lawyer is the ultimate rat-race job. I like to travel. My car is paid for. I don't own a house. I'm not into mowing grass...
...film is exasperating in the beginning. Rohmer leaves his audience disoriented as he follows Jeanne (Anne Teyssedre), a young philosophy teacher, through a seemingly mundane routine. The audience watches her enter an apartment, fold a sweater, unfold the sweater, and then leave the apartment. Nothing of importance appears to happen...
Down 3-1, Harvard did not fold. Sophomore Diana Clark scored at 3:35 of the third when she took a feed from freshman Holly Leitzes and beat BC netminder Dina Solimini on the glove side with a hip-high shot...
...ugly," Crimson guard Cara Frey said. "The only good thing about the game is that we were down and came back. We proved that we were able to play that ugly basketball--we didn't fold...
...done with the least amount of damage," as a friend puts it. Lake calls this trait "a taste for communal enterprise." During the campaign, that attention to bridge building brought many lapsed Democratic foreign policy heavies like Jeane Kirkpatrick and Paul Nitze back into the fold and helped accomplish the goal, as Berger put it, of "keeping foreign policy off the front pages," so Clinton could hammer away on domestic issues...