Word: grinded
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...entrance price of 10 lei ($1.60) discourages most Rumanians, but the hordes of Japanese and German, English and French businessmen who haunt Bucharest year round take up the slack. The real life of the city is best seen on a winter morning at 5:30 when the first trolleys grind across the frozen tracks and queues of workers shuffle aboard, carrying packets of bread and sausage, to head for the 23rd of August Heavy-Machinery Building Enterprise or the Snagov Cigarette Works. En route, many workers stop off for a hurried plum brandy, a hot coffee, or a fluffy pastry
Life just northeast of Weeks Bridge is quieter now; the great envelope-stuffing era is over. What political ambitious still rest in the hearts of some Dunster men are silently worked out in the daily grind of preparing for law school. Dunster has become just a place to live--and is never anyone's first choice. Everyone' decides Dunster is too far from classes, has rooms that are too small, and has nothing of the elitist or material allure of other Houses. But the people who come to live in Dunster find that most of their premonitions about it were...
Harvard was through for the day. Playing with only three days of practice against a team that was already back in the academic grind. Cooney Weiland's six couldn't maintain the pace...
...Delicacy. By Western standards, sailfish and marlin are practically inedible. Even the Japanese can think of nothing better to do with the coarse oily sailfish than grind it up into fish sausages. But marlin is considered a delicacy in meat-short Japan, where it is served fried or raw-garnished with soy sauce and horseradish to make a dish called sashimi...
Various theoretical arguments can be raised against this tendency, but practical considerations are more to the point. In an era when the pace of social as well as technological change seems to be accelerating at a geometrical rate, the Congress tends to grind exceeding slow. The hyperactive 89th Congress is atypical; on Capitol Hill it is normally easier to obstruct than to enact. To appreciate how Congress usually functions, we need only go back to the first session of the 88th Congress in 1963. Then the House was wallowing in inaction, ignoring the Administration's advice and paying heed...