Word: hurts
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Korea showed that captured U.S. servicemen could be forced by torture, by the threat of torture, and sometimes by the mere promise of creature comforts, to hurt their fellow prisoners and their country. This came as a shock to the U.S. public; it came as even more of a shock to the nation's military leaders, and it was inevitable that they should determine to do something about...
...room between shows, munching a tired-looking sandwich and listening with one ear to cries of "Lillian!" from the street below, Entertainer Briggs surveyed her fast, dazzling rise. "It's wonderful! I love the whole business." The rough rock 'n' roll mob? They wouldn't hurt her-but she makes it a point to sneak out side doors, even though the cops are there to protect...
Although most bankers support the merger trend, they are aware of the theoretical dangers to competition. But few of them feel that competition is being hurt-yet. The indications are just the opposite; mergers have made more banks than ever capable of competing. Said Chase Manhattan's Chairman John J. McCloy before the House Antitrust Subcommittee: "Any attempt to hold banks in a static mold, impervious to the dynamic forces reshaping the rest of society, would be to render them less useful and gradually impotent...
...pistol. "We sat like that for hours," said Powell. "I kept thinking, if only he'd fall asleep I could jump him. I wanted to take him. I wanted to take him real bad. But the kids-I couldn't take a chance they'd get hurt...
Break, Break, Break. In Los Angeles, Lillian C. Armstrong, 45, won a divorce from retired Petty Officer Joseph S. Armstrong, 48, after she testified: "He broke my arm, then broke his promise never to hurt me again, by breaking my ankle...