Word: bed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...takes a risk if he attacks a burglar; in such cases, the courts may consider whether the intruder was a fearsome marauder or just an unarmed teen-ager?and even whether the incident occurred by day or night. Explains Boston Criminal Attorney Joseph J. Balliro: "If you are in bed and the lights are out, and a man comes through the window and says to you, 'Keep quiet or I'll kill you,' you have a right to kill him. After all, how can you tell whether or not he's bluffing? But if the lights are on, it might...
...post, Peterson will oversee the University of Utah's College of Medicine, the College of Pharmacy, the College of Nursing, the College of Health, the 310-bed University Hospital, and the student health services, Gardner said...
...their later work. The Band had it all--five immensely talented musicians and a sound that blended many of the mongrel elements that form the backbone of rock, and despite some personal problems (Danko was so strung out for two years, for example, that he got out of bed as seldom as possible) a devotion to excellence. Given these factors and the group's immense popularity, (The Band's last concert, a gala Thanksgiving Day bash, was attended by 500 people at San Francisco's Winterland last year) this much-heralded "Last Waltz" gig would make a great concert film...
...aristocratic Miss Georgina of Upstairs, Downstairs is loosening up. Lesley-Anne Down graduated to playing a Soviet seductress in The Pink Panther Strikes Again and a bed-hopping socialite in the film version of Harold Robbins' The Betsy. For her next act, in a British television special, Down backs into a role as Phyllis Dixey, the legendary English stripper. What is it like to play an ecdysiast, after Miss Georgina? The roles, says Down, have "no comparison...
Such care is often best given at home with the support of family and friends. Indeed, the first U.S. hospice, established in New Haven, Conn., in 1971, is only now erecting its own 44-bed building as a backup for its home care. It will continue to rely largely on home visits by staff nurses and dedicated volunteers. That home technique has been widely and successfully emulated. Says Dr. Walter Norley, 62, who is dying of bone cancer and is being cared for at home by Riverside Hospice in Boonton, N.J.: "I don't know whether...