Word: chests
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Doctors have moved Charles W. Bender '57, who suffered a deep gash in his chest last Saturday, from Massachusetts General Hospital to Stillman Infirmary. University officials reported the would to be the result of an accident...
Charles W. Bender '57 was resting comfortably at Massachusetts General Hospital last night after he suffered a deep chest wound Saturday night in what University officials reported as an accident...
...dots, a la Seurat. He draws on top of photographs, and occasionally draws imitation snapshots. He can and does mimic passports, old maps, and documents with ink drawings that look fairly convincing and 100% illegible. He will make a thumbprint do for a man's face, a chest of drawers for an office building and a soft roll for an automobile...
Sriswasdi charged out of his corner, butted Kaeh in the chest, kicked him in the thigh, and clipped him on the back of the neck with a wicked elbow. By the middle of the second round, both fighters were smeared with blood. The music rose to a frenzied tattoo. With every blow, the 8,000 Thais in the stadium chanted for more blood. Sriswasdi jerked Kaeh's head down and kneed him viciously under the chin, blocked a feeble counterpunch, spun his man around and jabbed at his ribs with both elbows. Dazed, his opponent backed away. Sriswasdi took...
...materials has been greatly increased. Defense Mobilizer Arthur Flemming announced last week that in fiscal 1955 the U.S. will spend $900 million (some $250 million more than 1954) to buy 22 essential stockpile items, from aluminum and diamonds to feathers and fluorspar. By next year, the bulging U.S. war chest will reach a staggering $5 billion, rivaling the $6.5 billion farm surplus hoard. Since the buying was stepped up after the end of the Korean war, a big question has been raised: Is the strategic stockpile a military program, or is it a vast and expensive price-support program...