Word: harms
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...jabbed and retreated while Saddler, usually misfiring with his punches, kept up a relentless pursuit. Late in the third round, Saddler caught Willie squarely with a looping left, dumped him to the canvas for a nine count. The champion was jarred, but he got up and danced out of harm...
...Menshevik.' " The Russian atom bomb meant for the Gary, Ind. steel mills "was dropped by grave mischance right on the Chicago Tribune Tower . . . Colonel Robert R. McCormick, warned in time, was safe in his underground shelter; but he emerged too soon, in confidence that no European radiations could harm the hero of Cantigny, and disintegrated within two weeks...
...linked with hospitals, Dr. Hart argued, the young doctor no longer needs further practical experience on hospital wards. At Southwestern, for example, students spend seven out of their twelve terms in Dallas hospitals-"which ought to be enough." In fact, said Dr. Hart, the intern system sometimes does more harm than good. Under a "hierarchy of hospital staffers" the intern comes to depend on continuing supervision, which may make his transition to independent practice more difficult...
...Russians decided that staying out of U.N. was doing them more harm than good. Last week, Russian Delegate Jacob Malik, a Russian career diplomat with a clean-cut, almost American-looking face, was back. It was Russia's turn to preside over the Council for a month, and Malik, through his first week in the chair, made the most of the chance...
Last Stand. On that island outpost, the men of order had another chance. For a time after V-J day, a carpetbagging Nationalist regime did great harm on Formosa. When Chiang's Nationalist government arrived, it carried with it from the mainland many of the weaknesses and the faults it had suffered before, but the realization-always bracing to strong men -of having to make a last-ditch stand had purged the Nationalists. Above all they were removed, if only 100 miles across the Straits of Formosa, from the Reds' corrosive power. Even Chiang Kai-shek...