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63 Sentences With "lunchrooms"

How to use lunchrooms in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lunchrooms" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lunchrooms". Mastering all the usages of "lunchrooms" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Local staples that stocked supermarkets, school lunchrooms and even Walmart are gone.
During the school year, we're in the lunchrooms every day for breakfast and lunch.
He oversees a $22 million federally funded program to promote "smarter lunchrooms" in nearly 30,000 schools.
As proof, the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement cites the JAMA Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine studies, among others.
But the evidence behind the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, she noted, comes from other work as well.
Lunchrooms will be able to serve low-fat flavored milk, as opposed to only non-fat flavored milks.
His competitors soon followed with medical facilities, employee exercise and lunchrooms, educational training, vacation programs and medical clinics.
Back to the Roots is among a growing number of smaller food companies looking to join school lunchrooms.
Another approach involved showing short television segments about health education, delivered by the vegetable characters, in the school lunchrooms.
The association will probably lobby, for instance, for federal subsidies for plant-based milks to be served in school lunchrooms.
The two studies have also been touted as evidence for the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, cofounded by Wansink and Just in 2010.
His research even led the government to spend almost $20 million redesigning school cafeterias, an initiative known as the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement.
The combined company fired thousands of people and stopped stocking the refrigerators in Kraft's corporate lunchrooms with free snacks from the company's portfolio.
Between 2012 and 2017, the duo allegedly skimmed $478,588 from their lunchrooms, pocketing cash students were spending on undercooked pizza or whatever every day.
It is lived in lunchrooms and libraries, in science labs and math classes, or while perched at a tiny desk trying to learn to read.
In essence, fewer people in the hallways, lunchrooms, and other public areas will slow the spread of the virus so that work on COVID-19 can continue.
This study had found that kids would choose apples over cookies when the fruit had Sesame Street stickers — and it, too, had been cited by the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement.
At lunchtime, the office workers descend by elevator and climb a few dozen paces to the arch at Palo Alto's entrance, strolling through the streets to the family-run lunchrooms.
The service members, many of them recent college graduates, are trained to promote wellness, whether that is building school gardens or spending time in lunchrooms introducing students to new foods.
To be sure, utilization of school lunchrooms as nutrition classrooms, promoting better school performance, and saving billions of dollars in health care costs will not "cure" the U.S. obesity epidemic.
The Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, a $22 million federally funded program that pushes healthy-eating strategies in almost 30,000 schools, is partly based on studies that contained flawed — or even missing — data.
BuzzFeed News reported that Wansink's Smarter Lunchrooms Movement — a $22 million federally funded program that used his research as the basis for health eating strategies in 30,78.93 schools — drew upon flawed studies.
"Last week, when everyone was going into quarantine, we were still sitting together in our lunchrooms and on our breaks," said Stephanie Haynes, an Amazon worker in Illinois who joined the Athena call.
"The Smarter Lunchrooms Movement is all about influencing the choice that children make," Nicholas Brown, a graduate student at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and one of Wansink's loudest critics, told BuzzFeed News.
The USDA told BuzzFeed News that it has been talking to Cornell's Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs (the BEN Center), which administers the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, about some of the allegedly flawed research.
Public school lunchrooms have in recent years become the focal point of a battle between parents and administrators over everything from what foods kids can bring from home, to the nutrition value (or lack thereof) of school lunches.
Changing the default options in fast-food restaurants and school lunchrooms could shift the choice architecture, she said, but so could something like Philadelphia's soda tax, an idea Kelly D. Brownell popularized in The Times back in 53.
Apparently Wilson and Pascarelli—who ran the lunchrooms at the local high school and middle school, respectively—never let cashiers count the money in their registers before or after their shifts, and insisted on doing it themselves in their private offices.
Elliott Landon, Superintendent of Darien Public Schools, announced the rule in an email to parents last month, saying that they would no longer be able to sit with their children while they eat in elementary school lunchrooms, according to Darien News Online.
These age discrepancies matter because both studies are touted as evidence for the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, the $22 million, federally funded program that gives advice to nearly 28,211 elementary, middle, and high schools about how to get kids to choose healthy foods.
"It's not sufficient evidence to roll out interventions in thousands of schools, in my opinion," said Eric Robinson, a behavioral scientist at the University of Liverpool, who has found that several of Wansink's studies cited by the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement made the strategies sound more effective than the data showed.
Vida Chan Lin, the group's founder, said that her message each time she goes out to register Asian-Americans to vote — in casinos' employee lunchrooms, in Chinatown shopping malls and at employee orientations for businesses like the Panda Express fast-food chain — is that they have to harness the power of their growing numbers.
Although it is blander than most Tex-Mex dishes, it has long been a favorite dish in Texas club cookbooks and lunchrooms. "A Taste Of South Texas In A 9x13 Dish", All Things Considered, January 16, 2014.
For the people who began these programs, school lunchrooms were the perfect setting in which to feed poor children and, more importantly, to teach immigrant and middle-class children the principles of nutrition and healthy eating. Thus, the original intent of school meal programs was not primarily to increase the food security of impoverished children and alleviate educational problems, but rather to instill cultural norms. During the Great Depression, the numbers of hungry children seeking food overwhelmed lunchrooms. Thus, local programs began to look to state governments, and then the national government, for resources.
A letter with a company stock offering stated, "The lunchrooms operated are of the self-service type and serve a limited bill of fare, which makes possible the maximum use of equipment and a rapid turnover. Emphasis is placed on serving meals of high quality at moderate cost." Gray, Christopher. "Streetscapes," The New York Times, June 3, 2001.
Horn & Hardart's success grew as they opened lunchrooms on busy street corners in commercial areas of Philadelphia. Horn had been inspired by a visit to a new "waiterless restaurant" in Boston called, "Thompson's Spa." But it wasn't until Hardart traveled to Berlin in 1900 to find out more about the German version, called "automats," that their own business changed.
He supported some cabinet appointees in their request for segregation of employees and creation of separate lunchrooms and restrooms. He was highly criticized for this, especially as he had attracted numerous votes from blacks. The policy held for decades.Kathleen L. Wolgemuth, "Woodrow Wilson and Federal Segregation", The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 44, No. 2 (April 1959 ), p.
Clarkstown South building consists of a main lobby, large auditorium, gymnasium (including a wrestling room and a fitness center), music wing, planetarium, two lunchrooms, and three floors of classrooms. In the fall of 2005, a planetarium was built in the rear of the building. A greenhouse was also constructed in 2006. South offers many music ensembles, including chorus, orchestra, concert band, and marching band.
The Pelmolen Rijssen has multiple shopping facilities in its centre, which also accommodates a number of bars, pubs and lunchrooms. It has a large discothèque that attracts visitors from all neighbouring towns and villages. The small town has a fire brigade museum and a monumental church, the Schildkerk. The restored and fully functional mill de Pelmolen is one of the major attractions of the town.
Welfare capitalism was their way of heading off radicalism and regulation then. The benefits offered by welfare capitalist employers were often inconsistent and varied widely from firm to firm. They included minimal benefits such as cafeteria plans, company- sponsored sports teams, lunchrooms and water fountains in plants, and company newsletters/magazines—as well as more extensive plans providing retirement benefits, health care, and employee profit-sharing.Gordon, Colin.
The factory itself was called the "Palace of Light", and was white-tiled, air-conditioned, well-lit with floor to ceiling windows, and equipped with showers, lunchrooms (a free lunch for women – men had to pay 10¢), and auditoriums for the employees. It even had a roof garden with a view of the falls. A representation of the factory appeared on the Shredded Wheat boxes for decades.
The song, especially popular in school lunchrooms and at summer camps, presents macabre horrors through cheerful comedy while allowing children to explore taboo images and words especially as they relate to standards of cleanliness and dining.Westfahl, Gary, et al, Foods of the Gods: Eating and the Eaten in Fantasy and Science Fiction, p 79. University of Georgia Press, 1996.Bronner, Simon J., American Children's Folklore, pp 81-82.
Johnson continued in his federal position until the Wilson administration purged African American and other Republicans from the patronage positions in the customary change after a new president of a different political party was elected. More significantly, influenced by Southern members of his cabinet, Wilson segregated federal offices, lunchrooms, and restrooms for the first time. In 1914 the Civil Service Commission began to require photos with job applications, a means to screen out blacks.
Non-resident students are provided with places in dormitories, where there are classrooms, assembly halls, lunchrooms, internet-rooms, shower rooms for students comfortable living. Students have opportunity for working in the organization for students "Zhasyl El". As of 2017, there are 3 student dormitories with the capacity to host over 1100 students, a library, a museum, 5 canteens, 5 medical centers, sports fields, and the “Prostor” Sports and Fitness Camp near Bukhtarma reservoir.
Teachers are paid extra if they are required to work outside of the regular school day. Daily teaching load for elementary classroom teachers may not exceed an average of five-and-one- half hours of pupil contact per day. Elementary teachers monitoring lunchrooms or playgrounds receive extra compensated at the rate of Sixteen Dollars per hour. Sabbatical leave at one half salary is granted in accordance with the provisions of the Pennsylvania Public School Code.
Without any basis in fact or accumulation of complaints to justify segregation, it became unofficial policy. Signs appeared restricting toilets and lunchrooms, whole offices were segregated by room and workers were paired off by race. A virtual flood of proposed discriminatory laws were proposed in Congress ranging from 'Jim Crow' streetcars to excluding negroes from military commissions to officer in the Army or Navy and anti-miscegenation bills. There were also bills to restrict negro immigration.
Bickford's architect was F. Russell Stuckert, who had been associated with Samuel Bickford since 1917. Stuckert's father, J. Franklin Stuckert, had designed buildings for Horn & Hardart in the 1890s. During the 1920s, the Bickford's chain expanded rapidly with 24 lunchrooms in the New York area and others around Boston. It also acquired Travelers' Lunch, which had been established by Bickford's brother Harold, the White Lunch System on the West Coast, and the Hayes Lunch System in Boston, which was renamed Hayes-Bickford.
In the meanwhile, a small team is being assembled for sales, which will be responsible for getting new lunchrooms/bakeries, any eating-places in other cities/region to join the portal site. This way the venture also works on expanding their market. Because of the delay at the previous stage, the venture did not fulfil the expected target. From a new forecast, requested by the investor, the venture expects to fulfil the target in the next quarter or the next half year.
Samuel Longley Bickford (1885-1959) began his restaurant career in 1902. In the 1910s, he was a vice president at the Waldorf System lunchroom chain in New England and, in 1921, he established his own quick-lunch Bickford's restaurants in New York.James C. O'Connell, Dining Out in Boston: A Culinary History, , 2016, p. 98Christopher Gray, "Streetscape: Bickford's; The Flaying of a Midtown East Art Deco Oddity", The New York Times, July 18, 1993, 10:7 Bickford's lunchrooms offered modestly priced fare and extended hours.
He left NCR to build the Shredded Wheat factory, known as the Palace of Light, for Henry Perky at Niagara Falls. The factory was white-tiled, air-conditioned, well-lit, and equipped with showers, lunchrooms, and auditoriums for the employees and clearly was influenced by Deeds' exposure to the ideas of John H. Patterson at NCR. The Palace of Light preceded the Pure Food and Drug Act's requirements for a clean work environment for food production by 6 years. Deeds was a director of Perky's National Food Company.
Other supportive elements of the environment include ample space for supplies, frequently rearranged to draw attention to their aesthetic features. In each classroom there are studio spaces in the form of a large, centrally located atelier and a smaller mini-atelier, and clearly designated spaces for large- and small- group activities. Throughout the school, there is an effort to create opportunities for children to interact. The single dress-up area is in the center piazza; classrooms are connected with telephones, passageways or windows; and lunchrooms and bathrooms are designed to encourage community.
The new Members' Area was the last of the upgrades, along with new perimeter fence and entry gates. The Members' Area features press and radio media areas, corporate boxes and lunchrooms, as well as the players areas, members' bars and TCA offices. The redevelopment was officially opened on 11 January 2003, when an overcrowd of 16,719 (official capacity 16000) witnessed a thrilling one-day match between Australia and England, the victory going to Australia. Tasmanian Tiger Shane Watson became the hero for Australia, bowling the very tense final over.
The focus also shifted to establishing institutions to serve the blind, funded mainly by donations from members as there were no membership dues. The Sunshine Society set up a sanatorium in Bensonhurst for blind children in 1902 (which became Harbor Hospital fifteen years later), a nursery and kindergarten for blind children in Brooklyn (1905), and the Sunshine Arthur Home for blind babies in Summit, New Jersey (1910). It later opened homes for the elderly and operated schools for orphans, lunchrooms for working women, libraries, and summer camps. The society also championed legislation in aid of the blind in a total of 18 states.
It was located at a convenient location near Broad and Girard Ave that had local eateries, three major fast food chains, a gas station, a CVS Pharmacy, public transportation to the Girard subway station and two major bus routes. This school sat on a beautiful campus that held five buildings that were all connected by bridges. There were so many students in the school before its rapid decline in enrollment, that street lines were put on the floor of major hallways to control student traffic. One building was divided in half and provided two full sized lunchrooms on the second floor.
Port Charlotte, Florida high school A cafetorium of St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. A cafeteria in a U.S. military installation is known as a chow hall, a mess hall, a galley, mess decks or, more formally, a dining facility, often abbreviated to DFAC, whereas in common British Armed Forces parlance, it is known as a cookhouse or mess. Students in the United States often refer to cafeterias as lunchrooms, which also often serve school breakfast. Some school cafeterias in the U.S. and Canada have stages and movable seating that allow use as auditoriums.
In 1936, the business relocated to its present location under the second street parking ramp in Ottumwa, Iowa. It remains an outstanding example of an early to mid-20th century lunchroom. The “Canteen Lunch” reflects on this type of eating establishment that gained popularity in the 1920s and 1930s as social and economic challenges were felt by the Great Depression. Lunchrooms, like “The Canteen” were frequented by those who had a small budget for eating out, but still needed to have lunch. Places like “The Canteen” offered simple short order food in an informal place to meet and socialize.
His term is often seen as one of the worst in the history of the post. At a cabinet meeting on April 11, 1913, just over one month into Wilson's first term his, Burleson "suggested that the new administration segregate the railway mail service," which Wilson adopted. He and other cabinet members also recommended segregated federal workplaces, which Wilson instituted, requiring separate lunchrooms and restrooms, and, in some cases, screened working areas. Since the Reconstruction era, the workplaces had been integrated and African Americans served in numerous positions in the merit civil service as well as in some political appointee positions.
Since 2008, as HealthCorps continued to expand into more schools across the US, the curriculum has been regularly enhanced and updated. HealthCorps staff, board members, and Coordinators are vital to curriculum creation and have edited lessons based on their expertise or practical experiences in the classroom. In order to further enhance the curriculum components, HealthCorps has partnered with evidence-based programs such as Atkins Nutritionals, Alliance for a Healthier Generation, Sahaja Meditation, Share our Strength/Cooking Matters, Baptiste Foundation, Smarter Lunchrooms, the Chickasaw Nation, and Recover Circle. Through the HealthCorps curriculum evolution, emphasis is increasingly placed on students developing knowledge as well as skills.
Teachers were soon reporting "no hostility, no > demonstrations, the most normal day we've ever had." In the lunchrooms, > white children began introducing themselves to Negro children. At Northside > High, a biology class was duly impressed when Donita Gaines, a Negro, was > the only student able to define the difference between anatomy and > physiology. Said she crisply: "Physiology has to do with functions." In a 1964 news story, Time would say, "The Atlanta decision was a gentle attempt to accelerate one of the South’s best-publicized plans for achieving integration without revolution." By May 1961, 300 transfer forms had been given to black students interested in transferring out of their high schools.
In 1919 the Boys' Welfare Association changed its name to the Industrial Welfare Society; this signified an extension of its activities. Much of the Society’s work in the 1920s and 1930s involved the struggle for what is now considered very basic, such as employer-provided lunchrooms and restrooms. It was greatly helped by the willingness of Prince Albert to be President. He was very willing to involve himself through his own personal participation. He visited between 120 and 150 workplaces around the country between 1920 and 1935. He organized and partially attended the Duke of York Boys’ Camps - camps set up for both working class and public school boys.
Closely following national trends, the Tacoma School District began widespread incorporation of nurses, health clinics, showers, and home economic departments, all of which were designed to improve health and hygiene within school property. Tacoma Public Schools also witnessed a significant expansion in social services, including after-school programs, summer school, and availability of on-site lunches. This focus on the civic responsibilities of schools resulted in the improvement of libraries, lunchrooms, administrative offices, and other rooms designated towards providing the necessary space and tools that address new communal values and concerns. United States involvement in World War I had a significant effect on the demographics of both Tacoma and its school system.
In response, Mayor Allen Thompson went on television the next day to portray Jackson as a city without racial inequality, characterizing the NAACP as outside agitators. After gaining permission from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Evers, a Jackson native, gave a reply to the mayor's speech on public television on May 20. On May 27, 1963, Thompson met with representatives from the civil rights movement. The representatives laid out eight goals: form a biracial committee; desegregate all public facilities, including parks, playgrounds and libraries; eventually desegregate all public schools; remove segregation signs from all public places; desegregate lunchrooms and lunch counters in downtown stores; upgrade the salaries of black municipal workers; employ black crossing guards for school zones; and hire blacks on the city police force.
Unlike most cafeterias, there was no tray rail. Waldorf Lunch, Harvard Square, 1918 Interior, Harvard Square, 1913 tile The Harvard Square location opened in 1913 and closed in 1938, when it became a Hayes-Bickford cafeteria. In 2017, when the space was being renovated to become a branch of the local Clover Food Lab chain, the original Waldorf decor, with college pennants in tile, was exposed. Besides operating retail restaurants, the Waldorf System built and operated company lunchrooms.(advertisement), Cafeteria Management, May, 1922, p. 38 In 1919, the Waldorf company went public. By then, it had 38 stores and had acquired Kinney & Woodward (14 stores) and Baldwin's (7),Craufurd Howson, "Waldorf System--A Chain of Cleanliness and Economy", The Financial World, May 24, 1920, p. 9 also founded in Springfield from 1904-1909.

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