Showing 241 - 255 results of 255 for search '"saw"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
  1. 241
    Published November 1932
    “…He has told us that he is going to see that the Report is carried out. I saw that the Prime Minister received a deputation on Disarmament the other day, and after the deputation had spoken he said to them, "You are the people whose pressure we need to support us. …”
  2. 242
    Published 1921
    “…"DEAR MURRAY BRUCE, A line to express appreciation of all I saw on my visit to the Industrial Hospital at Golders Green. …”
  3. 243
    Published [1943?]
    “…Thus Russell Brain (1941) states : "Rehabilitation should begin with the general practitioner or Casualty Officer who first saw the patient ; these need to learn the right psychological handling of the injured man, to avoid suggesting grave disability and hospitalizing light cases.…”
  4. 244
    by Holmes, Walter M.
    Published 12 November 1936
    “…A British reporter wrote: "I saw parents searching for bodies. The bodies had been placed in a small delivery lorry belonging to local grocers. …”
  5. 245
    Published 1943
    “…Recently in the Soviet War News I saw quoted from Pravda an article in which was stressed the fact that everyone was sick and tired of the factory manager who kept his factory in a dirty condition and excused himself by saying "there is a war on.…”
  6. 246
    Published 1921
    “…There are lots of things I can tell about the many cures which were effected and which I saw. Anything which I can do to help on this very excellent work will be gladly undertaken. …”
  7. 247
    by British Medical Association, Smyth, J. L.
    Published 22 October 1943
    “…One man asked whether the B.M.A. wanted the retention of the system under which, years ago, prescriptions were already made out before the doctors saw the patients and all he had to do was to put the patient's name to it. …”
  8. 248
    by British Medical Association, Smyth, J. L.
    Published 22 October 1943
    “…One man asked whether the B.M.A. wanted the retention of the system under which, years ago, prescriptions were already made out before the doctors saw the patients and all he had to do was to put the patient's name to it. …”
  9. 249
    Published 31 March 1950
    “…[P.48] This country continued to enjoy the low incidence of enteric fever of recent years, and in this respect was more fortunate than many European countries, in which the war years saw a greatly increased prevalence that has persisted in the post-war years. …”
  10. 250
    by Linden, Morris
    Published 21 February 1937
    “…Yesterday afternoon at lunch-time I saw a group of girls have a game of skipping within a mile of the front. …”
  11. 251
    “…People took compulsory education lying down; that was compulsory training for the brain; and they should now be asked to accept, in the same way, compulsory training of the body, which meant learning to live. Sometimes we saw people walking about in London — and not always poor people — who were unable to look after themselves, and he wondered whether it would not be as well to put up notice boards, "Look and listen," so heedless were the people who thronged the streets. …”
  12. 252
    Published 30 April 1938
    “…The medical practitioners who provide the service, by virtue of their opportunities for the early detection of disease in the individual, form the first line of defence against communal disease; and they provide also in most cases the best instrument for the prompt application to individuals of those preventive measures and improved methods of treatment which science puts at our disposal. "The year 1933 saw the 'coming of age' of the service, and on appropriate occasions during the year much was said in celebration of the event by public men who had been or were concerned with the origin of its scheme in its various aspects. …”
  13. 253
    Published [1938]
    “…They do not understand. They saw one ship sunk only a short time before; they do not know what this second ship can be and they will not twice suffer the swift transition from joy to despair. …”
  14. 254
    Published 1924
    “…Dickinson Berry (Medical Women's Federation) remarked that before the war she had been strongly in favour of State management of hospitals, but her experiences during the war and since had rather led her to modify her opinions. One saw that everything done by collective or Governmental action seemed to lead to wasteful, unbusinesslike, and stupid methods. …”
  15. 255
    “…At the heart of its strategy was to hold onto West Berlin, the “island in a sea of communism" that conventional weapons seemed less and less able to defend. Given what he saw as the peaceful nature of communism—for all nations’ transition to communism, according to the communist ideology Ulbricht outlined in his speeches, was a natural and inevitable process—Ulbricht sought to paint the West as the aggressor and thus portray his own remobilization (general conscription in the GDR was implemented in 1963) in East Germany as a strictly defensive posture (Subject 300: “Armed Forces"). 3. …”
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