Word: janitoring
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...records of the University--the most severe punishment the Board can administer. Although this has probably only happened two or three times, it seems to add a medieval touch to the spectrum of punishments. One student is reported to have been expunged for having beaten up a University janitor. Another was rubbed out when it was discovered that he had entered Harvard under a false name without ever having been accepted. An Ad Board recommendation for a student's expungement must be passed by a vote of the Faculty...
...irrepressibly energetic man whose normal gait is a gallop, Javits has been a Senator for nearly ten years. Thus, though that exalted station might once have seemed impossibly remote for a poor boy born in what Javits fondly describes as "the urban counterpart to a log cabin?a janitor's flat in a tenement," its ambit today seems too confining for his vaulting talents and ambitions. Having never previously stood still in any one place for so long, Javits is pawing the track and sniffing the air in quest of a higher prize?a place on his party...
Unable to make good in the new world as a tailor, Morris worked as a janitor for three scrofulous tenements in Manhattan's teeming Jewish ghetto. His stipend: $33 a month and a free two-bedroom flat. He also served as a ward heeler, working under an Irish saloonkeeper who gave him money before every election to distribute (at $2 a head) to tenement dwellers who promised fealty to the Democratic ticket...
...best time to begin work. She acknowledged that no one had realized the extent of the difficulties the decision creates--fifty residents are seniors who will be moving on the same day with heavy furniture, coop boxes, and books. The demolition will take place during exam period. The janitor will have difficulty removing the garbage...
...biggest mistakes. Eerily vatic, she was "informed" of his death on the very day it happened, 5,000 miles away, and proclaimed with Napoleonic theatricality: "Inexorable history is seated on his coffin." She died in Rome at 86, alone except for a few passing strangers who had paid the janitor a penny for the privilege of watching her last throes. >Louis, the third of Napoleon's four brothers, was a double-gaited dandy who knew a thing or two about bad luck. His wife fell in love with his boy friend. To console himself, Louis wrote wispy verses...