Word: jfk
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Even the Boathouse Bar on JFK St. seems quiet. One resident has called the establishment one of "the four most notorious bars in the state"--Grendel's, the Harvard Square Sports Club and Shay's are the others...
Grendel's co-owner Sue E. Kuelzer recently sent a letter to the city council refuting Darrel James' accusation that her bar is among the "four most notorious bars in the state." Kuelzer said she was outraged that her establishment, which has an older clientele than other bars on JFK St., was lumped together with "the bar that has caused most of the problems--the one right down the street from us [the Harvard Square Sports Club...
Although other bar owners may not have had to overturn laws for the right to serve alcohol, they and Kuelzer concede that JFK St. can get rowdy on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. But they place the blame on the management of a couple of bars, and specifically cite a serious fight that occurred last July...
...time. Dwight David Eisenhower, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Lyndon Baines Johnson and Richard M. Nixon all used one or the other. ("Milhous," Nixon's middle name, sounded like another word for puke and looked misspelled anyway. But he had to be RMN--his autobiography is even called RMN--since FDR, JFK and LBJ had so much fun with their initials...
...PAST DECADE, this deceptively sensible and reasonable, if not selfish disposition has been elevated to the level of ideology, to a starting point for decisions about state and society. Largely untested and unchallenged, this individualism has been to the '80s what JFK's call to "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can d do your country"was to the '60s. His idea has simply been turned on its head, and has been done so for two equally potent, yet flawed reasons...