Word: supplement
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Second, they have applied an economic boycott that is so efficient that Israel loses more from this cause than she gains from any single form of foreign aid. To supplement the boycott, the Egyptians have refused to allow Israeli ships to transit the Suez Canal...
ATOMIC INSURANCE backed by Government will be approved by Congress, provide up to $500 million worth of liability coverage for nuclear power developers. It will supplement $65 million coverage offered by private insurance pools, which atom developers complained was too small. House passed bill providing U.S. liability coverage at low rate of $30 a year per 1,000 kw. and requiring all plants of 100,000 kw. to carry maximum available private insurance...
With these things in mind the CRIMSON has undertaken this year in its annual Commencement Supplement to report on some of the more crucial areas under discussion, and, in some cases, to offer suggestions and criticisms. The opinions expressed in the various articles are, however, those of the writers and not necessarily editorial policy of the paper...
...seems particularly relevant to publish this sort of supplement at this time. The Program for Harvard College has announced an $82.5 million fund drive, which, if it reaches its goal, promises to provide well for the quantitative needs to the College. The Program is a bold venture, indeed a unique one, in American higher education. But complementary to the program for physical improvement, there must be an equally imaginative approach to the University's qualitative problems. Unfortunately, quantity comes easier than quality in education, and the problems of quality which face the University today are issues on which all--Faculty...
...wife (a possible suicide). The literary-minded might make cracks about "The Charnel House of Palmer." But Graves maintains stoutly that Palmer "never killed nobody," was the victim of prejudice and circumstantial evidence in the Cook case. In other hands this story might be merely one of those Sunday-supplement series called "Did Justice Err?" But Old Pro Graves has written a fine cross section of early Victorian life. With his flair for period and his ear for dialogue-he gives a wonderful Dickens-Surtees flavor to his reconstructed conversations-Graves proves once again that a born writer can make...