Word: outlet
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Jackson explains that the worksongs serve a number of purposes: they supply a rhythm for work as well as making the tasks more pleasant, they offer an outlet for the prisoners' anger and frustration, and perhaps most importantly, they change the worker's frame of reference. By regulating the pace of the wor himself, rather than following the cadences of the guards, the prisoner makes the work his, when in reality...
Frequent delays in shipping book orders have forced Technical Impex Corporation (TIC)--the new warehouse outlet for the Harvard University Press--to reorganize its management structure so contract deadlines...
...would wait until 1974. He needed something to do meanwhile, an activity that would still leave him time for political jobs like organizing the telethon that netted more than $2,000,000 for the Democratic National Committee last month. Last August, accordingly, he bought Lum's, a 340-outlet beer-and-hot-dog chain, for $4,000,000 in cash...
...stands quite conveniently in front of a Coke sign, another in front of an advertisement for Patton. A reading of largely symbolic demands by some servicemen at one base literally becomes a part of the night's performance. Even so, the show seems to have been a real outlet of grievances for Army personnel; the film, however, is closed...
...ordinary Joe, likeable to the core, without an ounce of bellicosity in him, wanting to fill a need for people in more ways than being an optometrist. He has an unsynched walk and awry grin before Dresden, but ages believably into a self-controlled human shell who finds outlet for his bank of sympathy by raising a dog named Spot. He is ably supported by Eugene Roche's Derby, a solid man who's based his life on Christian principle (though not aware of its shaky national foundation), moving with that authority even when threatened; and Ron Liebman as Lazarro...