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Word: enlistable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...authorization, which allows a first-year appropriation of $10 million, could be used to recruit new doctors, dentists, nurses and other professionals. They will be invited to enlist in the U.S. Public Health Service for duty anywhere in the country. Some of the new personnel will serve in such traditional PHS programs as the Indian Health Service and marine hospitals. But others could go wherever their services were needed, receiving a straight federal salary. Any patient fees not covered by Medicare or Medicaid would go to the Government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Creating a Doctor Corps | 1/18/1971 | See Source »

HORNETS' NEST is a weird little war movie full of bizarre energy and merciless violence, a kind of Dirty Dozen Reach Puberty. The plot has to do with a group of Italian war orphans who capture a downed American paratrooper (Rock Hudson) and enlist his aid in wreaking bloody revenge on the Nazi occupation forces. There is one sardonic sequence where he teaches the kids to shoot machine guns and another, quite brutal, where they all joyously massacre a town full of Nazis. Director Phil Karlson's fadeout is hopelessly sentimental, and there is a subplot about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Stocking Stuffers | 12/28/1970 | See Source »

Convinced that many men fail to re-enlist primarily because their wives are unhappy, Zumwalt ordered all shore-base commanders to set up channels for hearing complaints not only from the men but from their spouses. Zumwalt also said make-work projects must cease, Saturday duty must be minimized and those irksome barracks and personnel inspections, if held at all, should not interfere with weekend liberty. Beer may be dispensed in barracks, and liquor can be kept in those barracks that are divided into rooms. Optimistically, he set 15 minutes as the maximum time any sailor should be ordered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Humanizing the U.S. Military | 12/21/1970 | See Source »

...refuser of the Nobel Prize explains that he did not accept the editorship so much "to defend La Cause du Peuple as to defend the liberty of the press." He does not align himself with the rabid left-wing advice blazed in La Cause's headlines to "Enlist everybody in the Guerrillas." Yet the paper does report with surprising accuracy riots, demonstrations and strikes. By becoming editor, he hoped to defend freedom of expression by following in his predecessors' footsteps and getting arrested. Indignant that the French government refuses to seize him, Sartre says: "If the government would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Print, and Be Seized | 11/16/1970 | See Source »

...Ilia A. Tolstoy, 67, grandson of Russian Author Leo Tolstoy, who immigrated to the U.S. in 1924 and became noted in his own right as an explorer, conservationist and ichthyologist; in Manhattan. As an OSS agent in World War II, Tolstoy led an expedition from India into Tibet to enlist the Dalai Lama's aid in preparing a last Allied redoubt in Asia, to be used if the Nazis and Japanese managed to link forces in India. As a scientist, he developed a hypodermic harpoon for live capture of huge sharks and contributed widely to the conservation of marine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Nov. 9, 1970 | 11/9/1970 | See Source »

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