Word: suffering
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...that there would be "substantial risk" that the child would suffer from such physical or mental disabilities as to be seriously handicapped...
...department also offers several parallel sets of courses which cover the same subjects, such as Physics 115 and Physics 131-151, but does not effectively coordinate their content. As a result, Shipman said, upper-level courses suffer because students enter with widely differing preparation...
Nixon will stay at baronial Claridge's, not far from the U.S. embassy. The hotel's vaunted service will doubtless suffer. Scotland Yard already has plans afoot to infiltrate the staff with plainclothesmen disguised as waiters, news vendors, elevator operators and striped-pants front-desk functionaries...
Other Policies. The price of any slowdown, if it comes, would be some job layoffs, with ghetto dwellers among the first to suffer. Though that prospect is filled with obvious political and social perils, the current jobless rate-a 15-year low of 3.3% in December and January-gives the Nixon Administration some room for maneuver. So does the fact that a number of companies are "stockpiling" workers because of the shortage of skills, and may be inclined to hang onto them as long as possible, even if that means some short-term loss of profits. The White House nonetheless...
...latest effort, Shame, and the earlier Seventh Seal very possibly could render him, along with Gunter Grass among novelists and John Berryman among poets, one of the eminences of art of this century. His new film concerns itself with difficulties of a young couple living on an island who suffer through war, invasion, and the proliferating horrors of their plight. It is the most powerful movie, with the possible exception of Freaks, that I have ever seen, and in its super-realistic portrayal of war, it is a superlatively sensible and real indictment of organized fighting, again without peer...