Word: ruling
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...tempt students to pass up the needed coverage altogether. No doubt certain exceptions to the compulsory principle might have to be made, especially in the case of students who are already properly insured on coming to college and wish to maintain those policies. But these exceptions only prove the rule that should guide the University in its decision-comprehensive coverage for all students for their entire University years...
When a freshman arrives at the dessert end of the Union food line and requests a double portion, Mrs. Millic J. Corballis must refuse. "I'm sorry, deary," she apologizes, "but its against the rules." Formerly the boys would take so much ice cream that it spilled from their trays on to the floor: and when an unwary Wellesley girl slipped and skidded on her pride, the one-portion rule was adopted. But, "come back, sweetheart," adds Mrs. Corballis, "there is plenty...
...bothered by the noise and brooding atmosphere of the Union, Mrs. Corballis enjoys her work. "Noise means company and we get plenty of company." Although too young to remember the butter-flipping wars, she recalls the oddly-dressed student who staggered in during a football weekend. Flouting the University rule on eating attire, the freshman, wearing only shorts, tie, and coat, sauntered into the hall and jumped from table top to table top. His exploits, however, won him a suspension. But to Mrs. Corballis such a prank is the exception. "The hall is usually very calm...
...today's meeting, Benjamin Fairless, board chairman of U.S. Steel, was kept waiting on the witness stand while Fulbright and Capehart engaged in another sharp battle over Galbraith. Capehart ignored the chairman's attempts to rule him out of order in order to read a telegram from the economics professor denying that his 1949 booklet, "Beyond the Marshall Plan," shows communist sympathy...
...cities like Hanoi (pop. 300,000), the Communists have instituted a monthly ration of 17 lbs. of rice for children, 33 lbs. for adults, 55 lbs. for their new privileged elite, the Communist party workers. "Rebels eat last" is the rule in the sections where Roman Catholics resist the regime. The Hanoi press extols the "selfless help" of Red China, but Red China (itself in economic trouble) has only sent Ho one shipment of 10,000 tons of rice. "We may have to accept as many as 2,000,000 deaths this year from starvation," a senior Communist admitted...