Word: hamburged
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...David A. Hamburg, director of the division of health policy management, yesterday called Mosteller "a leading pioneer" in the use of statistics in evaluating medical treatment. "He collaborates extremely well with medical personnel in coordinating patient treatment and believes in fostering innovations to improve service for the individual," he added...
Outwardly, Schmidt reacted coolly to the U.S. decision. In a television interview from his summer retreat north of Hamburg, he said that West Germany would accept the neutron weapon if other European NATO members would, and if arms negotiations with the Soviet Union failed. In private, he gave vent to what one insider described as a "bout of exasperation" reminiscent of the anger Carter used to trigger. The Chancellor has reason to be worried: he has vowed to resign if, at its congress next spring, his party reneges on an earlier pledge to station medium-range Pershing II and cruise...
...eagle that everyone wore in his lapel to prove he'd been in it, had done his part. The awful memories of combat and carnage were bathed away in the great national wash of relief and welcome. Hardly any Americans thought much then, or even afterward, about Dresden blasted, Hamburg gone, Hiroshima and Nagasaki reduced to radioactive powder. All of those American firestorms had, of course, consumed innocent civilians. But, the ceremonies said, never mind, evil went down for the count. Ego te absolvo. You boys did what you had to do. Where were you anyway?the Bulge? Anzio? Tarawa...
Says Werner Lutz, 31, president of the Young Democrats, an affiliate of the Free Democratic Party: "You can't ever talk about 'the youth movement.' It is really many movements. It is peace marchers in Hamburg, antinuke protesters in Brokdorf, squatters in West Berlin. But what they share in common is anxiety over what will happen to them in the future. Suddenly we are being told that economic conditions will worsen, that there are no longer enough resources, that it may not be possible for us to live in peace...
...currents can be ignored or that in their way they do not reflect, even if they exaggerate, feelings of doubt and concern that are new to the West German people at large. Schmidt's pragmatic answer to his nation's current dilemma, given recently to a Hamburg newspaper, is "no blood, no tears, but sweat." Since the end of World War II, the West German's have shown the world that they are willing to sweat to build a new society and a new respectability. The great challenge to the West Germans today is to avoid...