Word: strainingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...opinion of New York University's Erwin R. Tichauer, that snow shovel is poorly adapted to its user. For the flabby, middle-aged and out-of-condition male it can be dangerous, since the position of its handle imposes an unnatural and unnecessary strain on the wrist, the arm, and consequently, the heart. A far safer and more efficient design, says Tichauer, would look like this...
...that had united and inspired the Czechoslovak people six or eight months ago. Unnerved and physically exhausted, Dubček in recent weeks has withdrawn almost entirely from public life. Though sympathizing with his plight, many Czechoslovaks felt that his emotional make-up was poorly suited to the daily strain of coping with Soviet demands; they believed that toward the end he had allowed the country to lapse into a dangerous period of drift and indecision. A tough Husák, they hoped, might be able to bargain more skillfully with the Russians and more effectively protect Czechoslovakia...
...several trips she worked successively with two husbands, from both of whom she is now divorced. "Anthropological marriages are like theatrical marriages," she says succinctly. "They add more of a strain to the relationship...
Though they may place a strain on the University's budget, the decreases in Federal aid are not likely to affect students here greatly, Gunness said. "We'll find alternative sources of funds. "We'll work it out somehow," he said...
...This is the second in a two-part series. Yesterdays article told about the problems American medicine is having delivering its product to the American consumer, and about the plan Harvard Medical School has devised to help ease the strain. Today's article tells about what the plan will do in the ghetto, why John Kenneth Galbraith is on its board of directors, and why government and medical officials across the country are watching to see whether the plan can work...