Word: hurts
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...took out seven fragments. With the pressure off her brain, Sara quieted down. Says Dr. Shultz: "She was a plucky young'un. Once when she was screaming and we tried to quiet her, she said: 'I wouldn't cry so, if you didn't hurt me.'" Even so, one man had to hold her legs and another her head. Dr. Shultz cleaned the bone fragments and put them back, sewed up the wound and gave Sara 250 cc of plasma. A mattress was slipped between Sara and the table, and she slept soundly...
...paper the team split its two overseas meets. Quite obviously, however, it dropped the big one. The loss to the Oxford-Cambridge team really hurt. It wouldn't have been so bad if they were just soundly beaten, but the fact was that they beat themselves. The whole team felt that with usual performances and a little luck the 4-9 score might well have been reversed. Oxford and Cambridge admittedly had some good track men, but not quite as good as the score indicates...
...They had, by their aggression, hurt their chance for gains most of the West had been ready to hand them only a few months ago by default-possession of Formosa and membership in the U.N. Even Britain, which had insisted on Red China's right to both, even while Britons were being killed in Korea, decided last week to side with the U.S.-at least for the present. Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison told the House of Commons: "In view of [Red China's] persistence in behavior which is inconsistent with the purpose and principles of the United Nations...
...west side changed hastily into civilian clothes and were shot trying to escape. As dawn broke, word spread through the city that all was over, that Phibun was safe and still top man. Unlike most Siamese coups (there have been six since 1932), in which practically nobody gets hurt, last week's battling piled up a casualty list well into the hundreds. Like most Siamese squalls, it was a private fight, apparently unconnected with the worldwide struggle between East and West. Foreigners, who feel that Siam is gravely threatened from Red China, could not help feeling that the Siamese...
Trap? Propaganda or not, Mr. Malik had started something, and Washington was generally convinced he had done so because Moscow-to say nothing of China -is being hurt by the way the war in Korea is going; by its strain on Russian materiel and rear-area manpower, it has become a heavy drain on Russian prestige-and perhaps is a hindrance to other ventures. Yet obviously Moscow and Peking still hope to stop the fighting on their own terms. The terms as last stated by Peking: 1) withdrawal of all "foreign" troops from Korea, which evidently would not include...