Word: bladders
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...indomitable character and courage of Ivan Dejmal resulted in further repression. He suffers from consequences of hepatitis and has a gall-bladder condition; nevertheless, soon after completing his prison term he was drafted into the army. There he was treated not in the usual manner but as a politically unreliable element.' He was kept under close supervision, and his two years in the army amounted for all practical purposes to a continuation of his prison term...
...early, before the tumors spread so that effective treatment is difficult. Dr. Richard Sternheimer, 74, a pathologist at Chicago's Michael Reese Medical Center, has now developed a staining technique that screens cells in the urine. Because urine is formed by the kidneys and passes through the ureters, bladder, urethra and, in males, the prostate gland before it is excreted, it contains cells sloughed off from all of these organs. To determine if any of those cells are cancerous, Sternheimer stains them with two dyes: a blue coloring that attaches itself to the nucleus of diseased cells...
...thousands walked past the open coffin. The Generalissimo's body was clothed in a black Chinese gown with the red sash of the republic's highest order across his chest; his face, thin and white, bore a slight smile and showed no sign of the heart and bladder disease that had made him an invalid and recluse for most of the three years before his death...
...acidulous critiques. The competition for attention may have reduced the impact of graphic art everywhere. Yet the cartoon seems to be gaining influence. No photograph damaged Lyndon Johnson so much as David Levine's waspish drawing of L.B. J. lifting his shirt to reveal a gall bladder scar-in the shape of Viet Nam. Richard Nixon once admitted, "I wouldn't start the morning by looking at Herblock." Even President Ford, gazing forlornly at a gallery of U.S. political cartoons, recently conceded, "The pen is mightier than the politician...
Unlike some malignancies that are triggered by the action of certain chemicals, notably lung and bladder cancers, breast cancer has no simple, identifiable cause. It is most common among women who have not borne or nursed children and a tendency to develop it appears to run in families. Breast cancer may strike before or after the menopause, but Dr. Arthur I. Holleb, chief medical officer of the A.C.S., believes that age as such is far less significant in the patient's prognosis than the stage at which the disease is diagnosed...