Word: flow
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...than on strategic considerations. Of 119 free-flag ships that called at North Vietnamese ports in 1965 (v. 401 in 1964), only 44 did so after the President's July decision to build up U.S. military aid to Saigon. The U.S. faces a difficult problem in cutting the flow further, since this nation is not formally at war with North Viet Nam and must rely on persuasion rather than force to stop the trade. But the expressions of disapproval-and the high cost of insurance-have had some effect. So far this year, only eight small non-Communist tramps...
...Nasser threatened the ultimate retaliatory blow: recognition of East Germany. Chancellor Ludwig Erhard hastily suspended the shipments and vowed never to panzer to Israel again. Last week the U.S. confirmed that it had picked up the tank deal with Israel where Bonn had left off. This time the flow of Arab abuse that followed could have been dammed by a Dutchman's finger. Reason: the U.S. coolly pointed out that it had sold arms to the Arabs...
Pedal & Heart. This ability to project the grand design of the music, to crystallize the ebb and flow of its inner voices, is at the foundation of Rubinstein's artistry. His music, especially compared with the neurotic fancy-flights of other pianists, is also remarkable for its sanity, directness and healthy emotionalism. Beyond that, he possesses an elegance of tone that is the envy of the profession. With a combination of pedal, touch and heart, he sings his way into the poetic soul of the music. He can take a diminuendo passage and without spoiling the line, make it grow...
...omentum, the apron of fat that lies over the intestines. Dr. Vineberg closes the diaphragm incision and wraps the omentum around the heart. Although it has been cut away from its natural blood supply, it soon develops new arterial and venous connections, and shares its generous blood flow with the heart muscle...
...agreed on one thing: any surgical repair for the heart's damaged circulation would be impossible without the techniques of cinearteriography developed by Cleveland's Dr. F. Mason Sones Jr. (TIME, Nov. 7, 1960), which enables the surgeon to get moving-picture X rays of the blood flow through the coronaries...