Word: breasts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...feet. Around his waist was a broad black and silver sash from which hung a red leather holster and a golden dirk of honor. From a shoulder strap to the top button of his tunic ran a golden cord. A black pearl pin ornamented his cravat. On his left breast blazed decorations headed by the Pour le Merite order. The Premier stood out from the brown background of his followers like a silver swan. His smile glittered like gold...
...Corbeil, Ontario the history-making Dionne quintuplets, who were born two months prematurely, continued to thrive in their eighth week (TIME, June 11). Still kept in incubators they wriggled, stretched, arched their backs, waved their limbs and squeaked for food. Montreal mothers sent them 20 oz. of breast milk daily, which Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe last week began to supplement with tomato juice. Mrs. Dionne, who had injured herself by getting out of childbed too soon, was up and about last week...
...peace-offering of fine yellow daffodils in his hand. A gun spat a bullet. Young Vito turned slowly in surprise, walked a block before he showed his wound to a policeman. At the other end of the block Angelina's hysterical scream attracted the policeman. Hugged to her breast was a bunch of fine yellow daffodils, flecked with young Vito's blood...
...unrelated to God." Exactly what positive line the new Nazi Christianity will take remained obscure. "The new German creed will not depend on a future world alone," mysteriously explained Count zu Reventlow. "but on the throb in our souls. We will follow the voice which God put in our breast, our conscience and our divine feeling. The ideas of the New Testament are a mixture of several ancient religions and are insufficient to fulfill our German religious needs...
...associates are dead-Dr. Heublein who invented and financed the x-ray bath; Dr. Henry H. Janeway who pioneered the use of x-rays and radium for cancer, and died of the disease; Dr. Burton James Lee, who showed how radium could best be used in cancer of the breast and who died last year holding the important clinical directorship of Memo rial. Their deaths leave Memorial more than ever a Dr. James Ewing institution. But he is by no means without able associates. Well-beloved Dr. William