Word: ued
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Maine's Graham Cooper upset freshman Jon Jacobs of Harvard in the fourth round of play Sunday at Harkness Commons, and squeezed through the final round with a draw to Bryan Phelps of the University of New Haven. Jacobs, Phelps, Randy Borgerson and Roger LaCroix of U-Maine tied for second with scores...
...U Curve. The surgery lasted ten hours. Almost 3/2 hours were spent dissecting the adhesions of scar tissue left by an earlier operation in New York to correct an intestinal blockage. Only then was Suruga able to snip out an eight-inch section of jejunum (the upper part of the small intestine) and to fashion it into the shape of a U (see diagram). Next he trained his surgical microscope, working at 20-to 40-power magnification, on the minuscule bile ducts. He exposed them, and with incredibly fine needlework sewed one branch of the U over them like...
...temporary precaution, Suruga led the bend of the U to the abdominal wall and made an opening there; with hair-thin nylon threads running to it from inside the bile ducts to make sure that they stay open, this "window" can be used to draw off fluid or to instill medication. In a few months, if all goes well, the base of the U and the abdominal opening can be closed...
...appointments include a number of other firsts: the first Polynesian (Bishop Pius Taofinu'u, 49, of Apia, Western Samoa), the first Kenyan (Archbishop Maurice Otunga, 50, of Nairobi), the first from the Congo Republic (Archbishop Emile Biayenda, 45, of Brazzaville). But the Pope did not "internationalize" the college as much as some progressives had hoped he might. Eight Italians are among the appointees, bringing the total number of Italian cardinals to 41. France follows with 13, the U.S. with twelve, an all-time high. France, Spain, Australia and Brazil each got two new cardinals, and there was one each...
WHEN JOHN U. MONRO '34, dean of the College from 1958-1967, resigned his post to take a teaching position at an all-black, unaccredited college in Alabama, national magazines were flooded with praise for Monro's "noble sacrifice." The stories used all the current catch-phrases--a Harvard dean, southern blacks and Birmingham, Alabama--but omitted the issues which attracted Monro to Miles College...