Word: cit
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...part, to the fact that Negroes are more concentrated at the bottom of the 'agricultural ladder' than are whites... The income of the average Negro family at any given level of ownership or tenancy is always much lower than the income of the corresponding average white family." (Rose, op. cit. See also G. Myrdal, An American Dilemma-1950; R. Sterner, The Negro's Share...
...Million Gamble. On their island in the Seine (the He de la Cité), Paris Christians first carried stones to the site of Notre-Dame about the 6th century. The church they built was razed by the Normans in the middle of the gth century. A new basilica of Notre-Dame lasted the better part of another three centuries, but by 1140 it was too small, and worshipers fainted away in the crush. A year or so before, a bold, bright farm boy from the provinces was drawn to the intellectual beehive of the schools of Paris...
Uncommitted once again was blonde, beauteous Faye Emerson (No. 3 of Elliott Roosevelt's four wives), who last May appeared in New York's star-studded Cit-izens-for-Eisenhower Rally, but now wants to hear more about Adlai Stevenson...
...centuries, the French city of Limoges was split wide open. The Château was ruled by the viscount, the Cité dominated by the bishop, and both camps were rent by war, pestilence, and famine. Yet even in the time of its greatest troubles, Limoges kept producing enamelwork that was the envy of Christendom...
...University study centers will be established in at least two cities to provide liberal arts and preprofessional courses not given in unit schools. For one center, the University of Paris has already turned over its Cité Universitaire, a foreign students' settlement with 25 buildings. Another will probably be in London. Some G.I.s also hoped for a chance to study at Oxford, where a few U.S. soldiers have taken Army-sponsored short courses while on duty in Britain...