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Word: sickness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...plea to the U.S. State Department to release the names of high Japanese officials implicated in taking Lockheed money. The politicians also agreed to hold two days of hearings this week on the scandal. Nine witnesses will be called, but possibly not all will appear. Kodama is still too sick to move, his doctor advises, and former Lockheed Vice Chairman A.C. Kotchian is not bound by U.S. law to go to Japan to testify...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SCANDALS: The Probes Continue | 3/8/1976 | See Source »

...felt the water temperature and temporarily decided against entering the pool. And when his friends invited him into the water, Luis would sputter, "no way," "no chance," and "you guys are sick." Eventually, he did go in, entering on a completely formless dive...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky, | Title: Marc My Words | 3/6/1976 | See Source »

...Communists had planned for their return. Several U.S. reporters saw the march in progress as they traveled out of Cambodia in May, and said there was sufficient food for those on the road. Most evacuees walked, covering roughly 2.5 miles per day and many of the old and sick went by car or truck. People did die on the road, but not by the thousands as U.S. government sources said; most deaths were from cholera caught while in Phnom Penh...

Author: By R. LEE Penn, | Title: Red Scare Over Cambodia | 2/28/1976 | See Source »

...after the evacuation, the Communists did clean them and resume their operation with Cambodian doctors. The Khmer Rouge had developed a system of rudimentary clinics and hospitals in the countryside; evacuees may have gone to these. Whether or not the Khmer Rouge had won in April or not, the sick would have had a hard time, due to the general shortage of medicine and supplies for both sides in the civil...

Author: By R. LEE Penn, | Title: Red Scare Over Cambodia | 2/28/1976 | See Source »

...appointment of minority group members to its teaching staff" and goes on to note with pride the proportion of women in the school's faculty exceeds that of the University as a whole. One wonders if the School of Public Health would similarly define health as "not being as sick as the next person." In comparing itself with the rest of the University, the School of Public Health fails to comply with the law which is quite explicit in this regard. Furthermore, the School of Public Health's goals project a decrease in the proportion of women and minorities...

Author: By William Fletcher, | Title: Affirmative Action at Harvard | 2/24/1976 | See Source »

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