Word: maintain
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...observation that the University Health Services does not have an ambulance is true but needs qualification. Ambulance service is provided for UHS and the Harvard community by the University Police, who maintain two (soon to be three) dual purpose cruiser-ambulances, fully equipped and always in contact with police headquarters through mobile radio units. Police officers receive emergency training at UHS and physicians accompany them in serious cases. In addition, commercial ambulances serve the UHS regularly for routine transportation and in standby status during large public events. The Cambridge Rescue Service has been of immeasurable help in rare life-threatening...
...treaty of commerce in 1939, and then putting an embargo on petroleum exports to Japan, Roosevelt left Tokyo with "no alternative but to move south for resources to Indonesia." Japan, writes Hayashi, was justified in attacking Pearl Harbor out of self-defense. "How was it possible," he asks, "to maintain peace and order when one guy takes away food from the other and strangles his neck...
...master" appointed by the Supreme Court to make findings of fact reported in October 1961 that the transfer had injured "the reputation, prestige and standing of the Arboretum" as a distinct institution. The University brief contends that the indenture "did not impose any obligation...to create or maintain any reputation or prestige, separate or otherwise...
Style is irrelevant to the good newspaperman. He fights his battles on the editorial page, with ink on paper, one dimension only. His style is not a part of his fight. He lives in the way that best enables him to maintain contacts, to gather information, to report the news. He pooh-poohs questions like which side are you on. In the battleground of Mississippi, where those words are on everybody's lips, the good newspaperman alienates half his readers with every sentence...
...their achievements, modern scientists have yet to find a way to replace a reporter with a computer. But the Guild, in order to maintain status among the power-hungry craft unions of the newspaper business, has recruited members far outside the editorial operation. Its janitors, elevator operators and classified-ad clerks now have as much voice as its columnists and its editorial writers. And its elevator operators and clerks may indeed be replaced by machines in an industry that must do everything it can to cut costs...