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Word: ration (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...contest, and it just happened to have on hand the Saturday issue of The Dartmouth, or rather the CRIMSON version of it. Green undergraduates got out of bed after a night's revelry to read that their varsity had suffered food poisoning from a training table candy ration...

Author: By Richard A. Burgheim, | Title: Green Visitors Annually Paint Cambridge Red | 10/25/1952 | See Source »

...where's and when's of long-term brigade work and whether the teacher in question should be sent to an agricultural brigade for the 'Battle of Grain' or a building brigade. It is at these meetings that teachers obtain their share of ration tickets for shoes, raincoats and briefcases...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Communists' Calendar | 10/20/1952 | See Source »

...pooling six nations' annual coal outputs, totaling 220 million tons, and their steel production of 38 million tons, by freeing labor to meet manpower supply & demand without passports, by crushing the tight cartels that keep production low and prices high, the Coal-Steel Community could liberate Europeans from ration cards, ersatz clothing, queues and slums. It might also blaze the trail towards a politically united Europe, free of ugly nationalisms, and able to support itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WESTERN EUROPE: Voice of the Optimist | 8/11/1952 | See Source »

When Ike skyrocketed to power and responsibility in World War II, Mamie stayed out of the limelight, and settled down in Washington's Wardman Park Hotel. She sat out the war playing mahjong and pooling meat-ration coupons with seven other war-separated generals' wives. They had dinner together almost every night. Mamie did not take her turn at cooking, but she always washed the dishes. After the war, in New York, Washington, Paris, Mamie stayed on in the background, and her friends predict that if she goes to the White House, she will still avoid the spotlight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: The General's Lady | 6/2/1952 | See Source »

...fortified by an understanding of their plight were the ones best fitted for the jungle-style struggle for survival, in which ethics and conscience are shunted aside and almost lost. Rarely, as an exception to the rule of animal egotism, a group of prisoners would sacrifice part of their ration to give a dying friend a last pleasure. "In those people, I think, some standards of their old superego [conscience] had remained stronger than the influences of the concentration camp," says Dr. Cohen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: One Who Survived | 5/26/1952 | See Source »

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