Word: born
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Before the Soviet power can fulfill its function it must be established throughout the world-that is what it was born for!" declared Stalin's Stetsky, "Our country is the shock brigade of the World Proletariat. We will continue to fight as a Proletarian Dictatorship for the World Revolution...
...city in the world. Its five archbishops have been named Hughes, McCloskey, Corrigan, Farley, Hayes. Its handsome Gothic Cathedral on Fifth Avenue is dedicated to St. Patrick. Of the city's priests, policemen, bartenders, politicians, firemen, judges and streetcar conductors, a goodly number are named for the Scottish-born saint who brought Christianity to Ireland. Thus there was plenty of cause for pious feeling last week when the authentic spiritual successor of St. Patrick-Joseph Cardinal MacRory, Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland-visited New York...
Arioli's life history proves unusually interesting. He was born in Hawaii 18 years ago and has lived there ever since. Unlike youngsters in schools in the United States, Peter never had the advantage of competitive swimming. In his first race at Harvard, which was really the first race in his life, he broke the Freshman record. A truly remarkable feat...
...true, however, that an inclusively cut characterization of the strange Chapayev is achieved, mostly through delicate direction. This Garibaldi of the Soviets is probably the best remembered of the heroes who sprang from the people to rid the new Russia of the White armies. A born leader of men, a man of magnificent courage and character, yet uneducated and scarcely lettered, Chapayev was thought to need direction by the high Soviet command. Thus, Commissar Furmanov is detailed to consolidate the army's gains for the Bolsheviks. Making fine use of the delightful Russian sense of humor, the director has told...
...Burwell, who was born in Denver, Colorado, was graduated from Allegheny College in 1914, taking his M.D. at Harvard in 1919, where he remained as a teaching fellow until 1921, when he became an instructor and, three years later, an associate in medicine, at John Hopkins Medical School. In 1925, he was called to the School of Medicine at Vanderbilt College, where he has since remained, being raised to a professor in 1928. He is best known for his work on the heart, and on the reactions of the heart and the blood stream to various drugs...