Word: inserted
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...does have drawbacks. It can be difficult to insert and remove, especially for women with long vaginas. But the cap has a decided advantage over the diaphragm: it can be reliably left in place for several days (against hours for the diaphragm) and thus affords greater sexual spontaneity. There is even promise of a cap that could be worn for years. In Chicago Gynecologist Uwe Freese and Dentist Robert Goepp are experimenting with custom-fit devices that have a one-way valve to allow menstrual blood to escape automatically...
...Administration, the U.S. is already moving toward a national financial market. Merrill Lynch, the brokerage firm, allows customers from nearly any state to write checks against their money-market accounts through an agreement with Bank One of Columbus. Holders of American Express Gold Cards will soon be able to insert the cards into automatic teller machines around the U.S. and withdraw cash from their home bank accounts. New York's Citibank plans to move its 5.8 million-customer credit card operation to South Dakota to take advantage of higher interest rates permitted there. San Francisco's Bank...
...long-standing prohibition against such distribution by student groups. However, this rule has rarely been cited, let alone enforced, when non-gay groups asked to make use of the packets. Indeed, the Women's Clearinghouse, the Student Assembly, Room 13, and other organizations have been allowed to insert folders...
That substitute motion, by the way, replaced one proposing that the Gay Students Association (GSA) be allowed to insert its pamphlet, entitled "What You Should Know About Sex. . . Between Members of the Same," into next semester's student registration packet. A member of CHUL brought it before the committee at the request of the GSA, which several weeks ago had asked Dean of Students Archie C. Epps III for permission to include the pamphlet in February's packets. Epps had fished around for a little while before finding a rule saying that, despite past "mistakes" and "exceptions," student organizations...
...only asking the administration to "advocate tolerance and diversity," as Robert J. Kiely, master of Adams House, said at the CHUL meeting. Epps, Law, et al. can still do that by allowing the GSA to insert its pamphlet into the official packets; CHUL is technically an advisory body--the administrators have the final say. But it seems that University Hall is content to overlook its prerogative; unfortunately, the bureaucracy probably won't bother to look it up in the rules...