Word: dangerously
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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PREMIERE (CBS, 10-11 p.m.). "Call to Danger." first play in this summer dramatic anthology replacing The Carol Burnett Show, stars CBS Regular Peter Graves (Mission: Impossible) and James Gregory as Government agents assigned to recover the stolen master plates for the U.S. $10 bill...
...that the U.S. is in a "prerevolutionary" stage in which the forces of conservatism will use violence to stamp out change. They treated reporters covering the convention as mortal enemies. Like many other radicals, the delegates displayed something of a martyr complex, expressing fear that S.D.S. was in imminent danger of being squelched by "the system...
...American life cannot be separated so easily from American idealism, from the American dream. She quoted the wife of a U.S. diplomat at the U.N.: "America is a place where people really can do something if they pick themselves up and try. It's the beauty and the danger all at once. I saw on TV the women of Dearborn, Mich., the same women who had organized for all sorts of community good works, and now they were on the police shooting range learning how to use pistols." The columnist concluded: "What seems especially American is the depths...
...consists of a gamma-globulin fraction rich in Rh antibodies. Injected into the Rh-negative mother's bloodstream no later than three days after a miscarriage or the birth of her first Rh-positive child, it curtails her immune mechanism's production of antibodies and lessens the danger to future Rh-positive children. The inoculation must be repeated after each miscarriage or birth, but the tests show that RhoGAM is 99% effective...
...danger in administering such medicine is that the IMF, as the doctor in charge, might become a bit ill itself. In financing the French and British drawings, the IMF had to sell off $582 million worth of its own gold reserves. Although the organization's total reserves still remain fixed at $21.1 billion, a growing share of that is held in dollars, pounds and francs-the very currencies that creditor countries have been shunning. It thus would have made little sense for the IMF to try to defend the franc by making its loan to Paris largely in dollars...