Word: ruling
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...tonight's contest, at 8:30 in the I.A.B., the Crimson can resume its spoiler role. Last week it administered to Princeton its only home league loss, and came close to upsetting Yale Saturday. Dartmouth must rule as the definite favorite, however, on the basis of its prior 74 to 59 win at Hanover, although that contest was played before a very partisan Dartmouth crowd...
...unprotesting." Organizations like the Voice of America and the Free Europe Committee fulfill their function, although they may not achieve the satellite liberation which they claim as their major goal, besides that of spreading information. Their real function is symbolic, the vocal reminder of an ideological disparity between Soviet rule and government by consent of the governed...
Four centuries ago, Richard Hooker, speaking from the pulpit, said that "Rule there cannot be which public approbation has not made so." Firm adherence to this principle must be reiterated occasionally. Mr. Lodge, from a large pulpit, has underscored the dogma in unequivocal terms. Such explicit assertion is essential, for illegality thrives upon that silence which is often interpreted as tacit assent...
...zeal directed against the bad food and Institute hikes in prices had somewhat abated last night as a result of a statement released yesterday by John T. Rule, Dean of Students. The dean said that the mere presence of a student at "a riotous or unauthorized demonstration" would be "probable grounds for expulsion from the Institute...
Student discontent with room and board charges at M.I.T. crystallized Friday night into a carefully planned boycott of one of the resident dining-rooms, and then, the following evening, erupted in a series of more violent demonstrations along Memorial Drive. Late yesterday afternoon the office of John T. Rule, Dean of Students, issued a statement in which the Institute "deplored and apologized for" the "recent riotous actions by some of its students...