Word: strainingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Further, James points out, seldom buy books in which only short readings are assigned. This puts an additional strain on libraries...
...grisly Flemish taunt at the Walloons, whose symbol is a rooster. Said one journalist: "Nowadays we're supposed to get along with the French, we're supposed to love the Germans, and of course we are expected to embrace the British. All this unity is a strain. Every now and then, you have to let off steam with a little old-fashioned tribal enmity...
Second, despite its record, the Harvard team has not been particularly impressive this season. Times against Cornell and Brown were slow because of muddy racing conditions. B.U., Columbia, and Penn were such poor teams that Crimson runners did not need to strain themselves to win. Harvard harriers have yet to prove that they can turn in fast times when they have to. Tomorrow they may have...
...Neurosurgeon John P. Gallagher, who wanted a safe way to treat aneurysms in the brain. Aneurysms are like blisters in tubeless tires: at a weak spot in its wall, an artery balloons out. The stretched wall is so thin that any rise in blood pressure caused by excitement or strain may burst it. Occasionally and unpredictably, the break is self-sealing and the scar may make the artery wall stronger than before, but more often a fatal flood of blood is spilled into the brain cavity. Usually, the aneurysm first develops a warning leak that causes a severe headache...
Inside nearby Dillon Field House, coach John Yovicsin glanced at the Stadium occasionally, and talked in short phrases. He was obviously beginning to feel the strain and tension of the situation...