Word: tolls
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...blasted a ferry landing near Quang Khe. Only minutes later, on target-a highway-ferry complex at Thanh Hoa-were Air Force F-105s, and another Air Force wing was soon battering a cluster of barges with 20-mm. cannon. The first day's bombing took a toll of three U.S. planes shot down by antiaircraft fire-one measure of the use to which Hanoi had put the pause...
From the look of things in Indonesia, Sukarno may need all the silence he can get. He himself disclosed sorrowfully that the army-backed anti-Communist purge had taken a toll of 87,000 known dead. And demonstrations occurred in Djakarta nearly every day last week, protesting the government's harsh new economic measures, which included the revaluation of the rupiah, to combat inflation. The result has been a severe reduction in the average Indonesian's buying power...
...Claymore mine, which sprays steel balls in a deadly triangle when,it goes off. It is a favorite Viet Cong trick to set off Claymores minutes after an initial act of terrorism, with the idea of wiping out the rescuers as well. Miraculously this Claymore fizzled, or the toll would have been far worse. It was bad enough: eight dead, including one American, one New Zealander, and six Vietnamese; 137 injured-72 Americans, '62 Vietnamese (including twelve children) and three New Zealanders...
...miles of famed Brookhaven National Laboratories, is the most exciting campus in the system. So new that the ivy is only about six inches up the red brick walls, it expects to challenge any university in physics research within a few years. Its $30,000-a-year President Toll is a theoretical physicist from the University of Maryland; his reputation-plus a $45,000-a-year salary-recently lured Nobel Physicist C. N. Yang to Stony Brook to head an Institute of Theoretical Physics that will have a $2,700,000 nuclear lab. Toll, who has also captured English Scholars...
Opening the envelope would inevitably take a higher toll of American planes and aircrews; close to 150 U.S. aircraft have already been lost over North Viet Nam. Red Chinese planes, possibly troops as well, might be prompted to enter the war. "China doesn't want to risk her air force," a U.S. official points out, "but she may have to, or else lose all her bona fides." Stone-Age Solution. Despite these drawbacks, the Administration has been under intense pressure to bomb the Hanoi-Haiphong complex. Echoing the Joint Chiefs, politicians of both parties -notably Georgia Democrat Richard Russell...