Word: bolognas
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Shouted a party member from the rear of the crowded ballroom: "Let's talk about Stalinists and anti-Stalinists!" The challenge shocked the 4,000 comrades who jammed Bologna's ornate 13th century Palazzo del Podestá. For as long as he could, the speaker, Italian Communist Boss Palmiro Togliatti, ignored the interruption and continued his prepared address on national politics. Just before he finished, Togliatti replied to the heckler: "We are for the socialist revolution, which has opened the road to a new society. This society has been built by the Soviet Union. Who built...
Camp said the change in suppliers would enable the agency to improve quality and cut prices. As of last night, a bologna and cheese sandwich was going for 35 cents, a five cent reduction. Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches were selling for 25 cents. Camp expressed hope that these prices could be lowered further by the end of the week...
...this change breaks faith with a fellowship far greater than that of one college. The procession of universities stretches from young Swansea through stripling Yale to aging Harvard and continues back through the centuries to ancient Paris and Bologna. When next our President travels to an academic convocation, he must expect to be derided as the man who changed Alma Mater to Foster Mother...
...Italy as a whole, the ratio of priests to laymen is the smallest in the country's history: 1 to 1,008-compared with Ireland's 1 to 75, or even France's 1 to 850. In heavily Communist Bologna, 81 parishes are vacant; in Salerno, there are 60 vacant parishes out of a total 160. Southern Italy, excluding Sicily, had more than 80,000 priests a century ago. has fewer than 10,000 today. Italy's priests, 18% of whom are over 70, are dying faster than they can be replaced: in Florence, for instance...
...bearded Surgeon Petrucci, 38, and his coworkers, Drs. Laura de Pauli and Raffaele Bernabeo, artificial insemination started as a sideline. They began growing test-tube human embryos three years ago, in a tiny lab behind Petrucci's Bologna office, to get newborn cells for experiments in antibody response to transplanted tissue. "We had no intention of creating a 'man in the box,' " says Dr. Petrucci. "Far from it. The problem today is to limit births, not increase them." The doctors collected live ova from Petrucci's female patients during hysterectomy or after sudden death. Since...