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Word: cheatings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...four mornings a year in his hospitals emergency room. "Doctors on hospital staffs should refuse to be exploited any longer," he says. "We should agree to continue serving only . . true medical emergencies. Hospitals shouldn't be permitted, under the deception of maintaining an emergency room, to lie, cheat and falsify the truth to compete with private practitioners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hospitals: Boom in Emergency Rooms | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

Resigned & Hopeful. Fortifying senatorial wariness toward the test ban treaty were doubts voiced by U.S. scientists. "Very serious questions have to be resolved about this treaty," said Physicist Edward Teller. "I'm inclined to believe that it has extremely great danger." Some scientists hold that the Russians could cheat the ban by setting off small explosions in the atmosphere below the "limit of observability." Nuclear tests in outer space are also possible, though the U.S. is well along in the development of methods for detecting nuclear explosions in space (see SCIENCE...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Bumps on the Ratification Road | 8/9/1963 | See Source »

However, we remember that to achieve this happiness he must have cheated on his first wife. Therefore we have to assume he would as willingly cheat on his public...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: May 31, 1963 | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...newsman who has covered Geneva since 1947 says that habitual attendance at East-West conferences results in a tendency to accept the arguments of both sides: "You come to think that the Russians object to controls because they want to cheat, and the West insists on controls because they want to spy in Russia. You reach the conclusion that everybody is equally wrong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Conferences: The City of Lost Causes | 3/1/1963 | See Source »

...University of North Carolina, where the brilliant J. Penrose Harland has taught more students (up to 658 in a single class) and flunked fewer of them than any other professor in the university's 170 years. Last month six of his students shocked the entire state by cheating on a final exam. The ingrates' defense was that everyone knew that Harland's archaeology class was not a "normal" course, in which a grade had to be earned honestly. Harland was dismayed. "If it was such a crip, why did anyone have to cheat?" he cried...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: An A is an A is an A | 2/22/1963 | See Source »

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