Word: guarded
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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J.F.K. House. In another ugly confrontation, at a police and National Guard roadblock, 21 bullets were sprayed into a car driven by a Negro named Henry Townes, 22. Townes's 16-year-old wife, their seven-month-old baby and her four-year-old son by a previous marriage were all wounded, and a National Guard captain was hit by a ricocheting bullet...
...woman and her two children were eating their evening rice. He noticed at once what a Westerner might easily have missed: there was too much rice for three people. Company was expected, he concluded. Lee and his squad of ten Koreans rounded up the villagers and placed them under guard in three houses. Then his men moved out to set up an ambush. Two hours later, three Viet Cong came to dinner-and died of lead poisoning...
That incident was one of 8,400 ambushes laid by the Koreans of the Tiger Division since they arrived in Viet Nam last November. Assigned to guard the port of Qui Nhon and open long stretches of Highway 1 and Highway 19, the Tigers have accomplished in eight months what eluded the French and Vietnamese for 20 years: securing the lush and prosperous coastal plain of Binh Dinh province. The Koreans have brought some 170,000 Vietnamese in Binh Dinh under government control, and together with the men of the Korean Blue Dragon Marine Brigade in Phu Yen, have killed...
Trinidad's new nurse was the advance guard from a University of Colorado School of Medicine program designed to lighten the work loads of practicing physicians by training nurses to perform most of the duties of a pediatrician, and to carry medical care to the children of poverty-stricken laboring families, including many Spanish-Americans, who rarely consult a doctor except in dire emergencies. To its founder, Pediatrics Professor Henry Silver, 48, the program is immensely promising in every aspect except for the unwieldy name that has been hung on the new breed of nurses: "pediatric public-health nurse...
...strike heaped up confusion and distress, humor and heartbreak, unevenly. New York lost an estimated $500,000 a day in tourist trade, retail sales and entertainment spending, while in Chicago, 50,000 conventiongoers jammed hotel space. Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard pilots airlifted some 4,000 strike-stranded servicemen to their destinations, including 1,500 en route to or from Viet Nam. Yet some commercial flights went out as much as a quarter empty because overloaded phone lines deluded would-be passengers into thinking a trip to the airport would be useless...