Word: fee
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...will also remain from both Kirkland and Winthrop House, but all Eliot and Dunster residents will shift into their Houses next year. Some of the Dunster men, however, had to be convinced by House officials before they would consent to move. "We fee the location is inconvenient for our men," Mrs. Irma E. Hutchison, House Secretary, explained...
...this week, as he unpacked a new shipment of 22,000 tiles for the church, scowling at each damaged tile through his steel-rimmed glasses, he had a more immediate project in mind. For designing the church (without fee), French Architect Robert Erell, a Protestant, was awarded the Order of St. Sylvester by the Pope. This, according to Bureth, entitles Erell by ancient 'custom to enter St. Anne's Church on horseback. Showman Bureth is arranging to have the architect ride into church astride a horse just before the Canoemen's Mass on Whitsunday...
...most complex issues confronting University officials in their drive for improved health facilities is the problem of student health insurance. It has become apparent that the $37.50 a year medical fee for all students is no longer adequate to meet the varied health needs of the University. Any new health plan must overcome several important deficiencies in the present program...
Since the University fee covers only medical costs incurred during the school year, students who want protection for the entire year must turn to other forms of health insurance like Blue Cross and thus face the unwelcome prospect of a double expense. Moreover, the student who is forced to undergo a serious operation may find himself in acute financial difficulties under the present system. While his University fee pays for such expenses as ward costs in downtown hospitals, laboratory fees, and X-rays, it does not cover another major medical item, the surgeon's fee. And the current program...
Blue Cross coverage for all students has often been suggested as a solution for the insurance problem. But the ordinary Blue Cross program is far from a panacea for the ills afflicting the medical set-up. While Blue Cross would give a more complete coverage than the present University fee, it pays only $12 a day for hospitalization costs. Yet ward costs in any of the local hospitals run to at least $17 a day, a gap that many students would be hard-pressed to fill from their own pockets. In this respect, the current University fee is actually more...