We do not want to quibble over words, 'but "malnutrition" is not quite what we found ; the boys and girls we saw were hungry — weak, in pain, sick : their lives are being shortened ; they are, in fact, visibly and predictably losing their health, their... Civil Rights Digest - Page 341969Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| United States. Congress. House Education and Labor - 1967 - 1626 pages
...every county we visited, obviously evidence of severe malnutrition." The doctors' report continued : "We do not want to quibble over words, but malnutrition...sick ; their lives are being shortened . . . They are suffering from hunger and disease and directly or indirectly they are dying from them — which is... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Labor and Public Welfare - 1967 - 334 pages
...fact of life and sickness, in many forms, an inevitibility. We do not want to quibble over words, tat "malnutrition" is not quite what we found ; the boys...visibly and predictably losing their health, their enegry, their spirits. They axe suffering from hunger and disease and directly or indirectly they are... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Agriculture - 1967 - 902 pages
...children for whom Is a daily fact of life and sickness, in many forms, an inevitability. We dv n .r want to quibble over words, but "malnutrition" Is not quite what we found: thboys and the girls we saw were hungry — -weak, in pain, sick : their lives are heiiiz shortened:... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. Subcommittee on Employment, Manpower, and Poverty - 1968 - 232 pages
...deficiencies, unattended bone diseases, bacterial and parasitic disease, as well as severe anemia. The boys and girls we saw were hungry, weak, in pain, sick, visibly and predictably losing then- health, their energy, their spirits. They are suffering from hunger... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Agriculture - 1969 - 138 pages
...saw children for whom hunger is a daily fact of life and sickness, in many forms, an inevitability. We do not want to quibble over words, but malnutrition is not quite what we found * * * They are suffering from hunger and disease and directly or indirectly they are dying from them.... | |
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