Word: kitchener
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...known about the Baltimore-born Goodman, 37, beyond reports that he had been visiting Israel off and on since 1967 and had only recently been inducted into the Israeli army. Some sources indicated that he had been expelled from Israel in 1978 after beating up an Arab kitchen worker, but had quietly returned to the country some time last year. Despite the suspicion of Arabs that Goodman was neither deranged nor acting alone, there was no evidence last week that the shooting incident had been planned by any of the groups that in the past have been active in insisting...
...Kimmer negotiate a deal on the Western. Austin--whose own script has been junked to make way for Lee's--falls apart. He lies under the kitchen table swilling Jack Daniels, changes his pressed khakis and navy pullover for a sweaty. T-shirt and jeans, and finally gets out to prove himself on his brother's own terms Austin the Eastern-educated, the well-dressed, the content and successful, bets that he can steal a toaster...
...predicament is something that Lee ponders as he sits by the coal stove in the kitchen of his neat, sturdy farmhouse. His feet are covered with thick blue socks; the Amish remove their shoes before entering the home. His blue eyes are gentle behind sensible, old-fashioned glasses, his beard is appropriately patriarchal, his voice surprisingly soft. "I'm a man who wakes every morning and thanks God for what is," Lee says. "I don't worry. I work. I believe that the Government of the U.S. is fair and just. It is not the Amish habit...
...reservations at the Clemson House expired early, and school officials had to scramble to find Harvard new lodgings. The thinclads ultimately wound up in the penthouse of Clemson House at no extra cost, where they enjoyed cushy accommodations including wall-to-wall carpeting, a sundeck, grand pianos, a kitchen, a TV room and luxurious touches...
Tommy's domain at Winter Haven is the kitchen in the clubhouse, just off the pressroom. His title is press steward. He recalls in loving detail when the Red Sox train, with reporters and maybe 40 Old Boys aboard, would leave Boston's Back Bay Station in the years after World War II. Tommy was not allowed to serve drinks in the station. But once the train started rolling, at 8 a.m. sharp, Tommy started pouring. It was a happy crowd that stepped off into the Florida sunshine at 3 o'clock the following afternoon. Spring training...