Word: barred
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Hershey insisted that it had not busted the guidelines, which call for firms to hold price boosts half a point below the average of the increases they posted in 1976 and 1977. With Hershey, comparisons are tough because the size of its bars has changed. The company is now raising the price of its basic milk-chocolate bar from 20? to 25?, but also increasing the weight of each bar by 14%, so that the price increase on each launchable ounce is 9.3%. That, says Hershey, compares with three price boosts per ounce of bar weight of, respectively...
...participating in political demonstrations. Just as the letters were mailed, students who have been attempting for two years to reform the CRR announced that their efforts may fail because the Faculty Council refused to accept two crucial reforms that would create an autonomous appeals board to the CRR and bar the use of hearsay evidence. In light of the Faculty Council's position, former student CRR members who have been instrumental in the reform efforts urged House committees and the Freshman Council to refuse to nominate students for the CRR at least until the full Faculty agrees to make fundamental...
Charles J. Krause Jr., sanitary inspector for UHS, said yesterday he believes the source of the most recent outbreak is most likely a student spreading the infection either through handling fruit or food at the salad bar...
Women also have less access to the bastions of ward-level power ?the corner bar, veterans' club or Rotary-type organizations. Democratic Congresswoman Pat Schroeder of Colorado says that almost all the forums she attended in her last race were in front of clubs that barred women as members. Says she: "You felt like you were contaminating the food or that you ought to pop out of a cake. It's not like you're one of the boys; you feel like a hunk of meat." Louisiana Democrat Lindy Boggs succeeded her late husband in Congress, but to keep...
...case is not entirely closed. Jascalevich still faces malpractice charges before the New Jersey board of medical examiners, which could bar him from practicing medicine. Farber and the Times, which has paid $285,000 in fines and $700,000 in legal costs, are appealing the contempt citations to the U.S. Supreme Court. Its decision could draw more clearly the line between a defendant's right to a fair trial and the First Amendment's protection of the press...