Word: noted
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...past summers, which saw orchestra dances at the Union at an admission charge of about $1.00 per person, this season will feature six Friday evening dances--three phonograph-record mixers and three square dances--at the cost of only 25 cents per head. And as a sort of climactic note there will also be, for the first time, a semi-formal dance, which will take place in the Union on Friday, August 3. Admission charge will be $1.50 per couple, all Summer School students and their guests are invited, and all are presumably free to make their own definition...
...office will take any incoming telephone message between the hours of 1 and 11 p.m. every day. It then makes two copies of the message, keeping one at hand and sending the other via immediate messenger to the dormitory room of the person being called. If you miss the note in your room, you can always pick up the duplicate at Grays...
Cyprus. Dulles fired off a note to Britain urging new negotiations with the Cypriots; the White House meanwhile fielded a note from Prime Minister Eden indicating that Britain, though keen on talks, first wants to crush terrorism. The State Department now notes privately that the current British Laborite attack on Eden's get-tough policy may help promote the necessary talks; State also believes that talks would be helped along by the return of Cypriot Political Leader Archbishop Makarios from exile. Should this bring about the transfer of Field Marshal Sir John Harding, the island's tough little...
...private life of the royal family," announced a leading Hague newspaper primly one day last week. "The Queen's living room at least should be out of the sight and hearing of those who have nothing to do in there," echoed another. Thus gingerly did Dutch newspapers take note of what elsewhere was sensational headline news. A long-standing royal secret was at last out in the open...
...satisfy the party's dissident elements, more had to be done. The party promptly sacked Prosecutor General Vaclav Ales, the judge at Slansky's trial, and two Cabinet ministers. The conference closed on a note of repression. Newspapers were warned against "incorrect ideas," and "reactionary elements among students" were threatened darkly. Dozens of students were picked up by police. The Czechs were laboring hard to keep...