Word: second-floor
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Jimmy Carter stood in the second-floor hallway waiting for his wife to join him for breakfast. It was eight o'clock, and, in his dark blue suit and polished brown shoes, he was ready for another long day of farewells to supporters. Carter had already been to the Oval Office for an hour of work. Now, back upstairs, he looked down the wide corridor and said in a soft voice: "We've enjoyed living in this house. It will be hard to leave it." Rosalynn Carter, wearing a white wool suit, came out of a nearby bedroom...
...Linda F. Sugin '84, a second-floor resident, said "results do not necessarily mean heat," adding that B&G has yet to give her a space heater promised several days...
...were admitted to that room for the first time, to the obvious displeasure of Burger, who does not admire the press. "There sure are a lot of them," he said to Reagan, glancing at the TV crews. Burger then took the President-elect upstairs to the dark, wood-paneled second-floor dining room to meet the Associate Justices. Burger and Reagan chatted about California wines. Justice Byron White engaged the visitor in talks about Reagan's days as a radio sports announcer, which occurred before "Whizzer" White won All-American renown as a halfback at the University of Colorado...
...Good Morning's three rotating producers, and goes over the day's schedule: an interview with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, a peek at the world's costliest diamond and a look at new and unusual watches. When Selby-Wright leaves, Hartman settles down in his second-floor dressing room to read background material, stopping now and then to sip coffee and take a bite or two of a bagel. To keep everyone awake, ABC has placed coffee urns, cartons of orange juice and plates of bagels and sweet rolls at convenient spots throughout the building...
...explosion came without warning, near the top of the escalator on a second-floor landing; it killed nine people and wounded 81. Fleets of ambulances ferried the wounded to hospitals. Police and soldiers cordoned off the area. Top public security and army officers converged on the scene, along with Peking's mayor and the minister of railways. At first government spokesmen called it an accident. But when the official New China News Agency finally reported the incident the following day, it announced that "the blast was caused by an explosive charge brought into the railway station by an unknown...