Word: savely
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Expectant Treatment. For those expected to die. In this category are men so badly injured (extensive injuries of the respiratory tract or central nervous system, penetrating wounds of the abdomen, multiple severe injuries, extensive burns) that only complicated and prolonged treatment might save them...
Assuming the offer genuine, it represented a major concessio−and comedown−by E.O.K.A. In Athens it was described as giving the British a chance to save face. In London it was seen as vindication of Harding's stern policy of military repression of terrorism. E.O.K.A., said the British, had been sobered both by its losses of men and material and by the fact that the Greek Cypriot populace, which once gave E.O.K.A. almost unanimous approval, has been increasingly distressed by bombings, riots and curfews. (In the past few weeks several Greek Cypriots, including an ex-member...
...Walter Harris, who devised the measure five months ago, remained its main supporter. In a 35-minute speech he hailed the tax as a great boon to Canadian culture, contending that Canadian magazines are in desperate economic shape and that a tax on competing U.S. publications is necessary to save them from "disappearance...
...Maryland peacefully carried on their practices. They also ran their own medical society, which, by state law, appoints a licensing board of examiners. But last week the homeopaths were hassling among themselves and with the law. Subject of the dispute: Dr. Robert H. Reddick's crusade to "save Homeopathy...
...inheritance tax. But she could find no buyer. Irishmen in Dublin, afraid that Killarney would fall into unsympathetic hands, started a fund-raising campaign, could raise only ?10,000. In the U.S., sharing similar fear, the Bartenders Association of Boston voted $1,000 (?357) for a "Save Killarney" fund-also not enough...