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Word: pubs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...they aim for a tavern European folk ballad, and end up sounding like Perry Como. In fact, this song is so pathetically and limply delivered that it can't even be savored as good camp. "Drei Mann in doppelbett," on the other hand, links a pub chant with a synthopop rhythm with slightly more successful results. Nevertheless, neither the hook nor the rhythm of this song is good enough to warrant its redundancy...

Author: By Marek D. Waldow, | Title: Tutti-Frutti | 11/15/1983 | See Source »

Only a few meals at Ferdinand's and the Ha' Penny Pub, which share a building at 121 Mt. Auburn St. were disrupted when 25 waiters, waitresses and bartenders there picketed outside to protest management's position in contract talks...

Author: By Adam H. Gorfain, | Title: Restaurant Employees Return After Settlement Ends Lockout | 11/9/1983 | See Source »

...waiters, waitresses, and bartenders at Ferdinand's and the Ha' Penny Pub, which are owned by the same company and occupy the same building at 121 Mt. Auburn St., had worked without a contract until yesterday after their previous one-year pact expired Monday night...

Author: By Adam H. Gorfain, | Title: Restaurant Workers to Resume Talks Today in Wage Dispute | 11/3/1983 | See Source »

WILDLY excited, two men dashed out of a side door of Cambridge University's Cavendish Laboratory, cut across Free School Lane and ducked into the Eagle, a pub where generations of Cambridge scientists have met to gossip about experiments and celebrate triumphs. Over drinks, James D. Watson, then 24, and Francis Crick, 36, talked excitedly, Crick's booming voice damping out conversations among other Eagle patrons. When friends stopped to ask what the commotion was all about, Crick did not mince words. "We," he announced exultantly, "have discovered the secret of life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SCIENCE 1971: The Promise of New Genetics | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

...Monika, a petite, brown-haired graduate of the College of San Mateo. Within seven months they were married and took up residence in Britain. But Monika, described by a former high school teacher as "shy and withdrawn," apparently grew weary of her new life of darts at the local pub, golf at the club and loud parties at home. Indeed, she dropped out of sight last March, and police speculate that she may have been killed shortly afterward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: The Good Life | 9/26/1983 | See Source »

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