Word: chested
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...calmly talk and smile, you move your left foot to the side to step across his right-side body length. A light pivot toward him with your right shoulder and the world turns upside down: you have sunk the knife to its hilt into the middle of his chest...
...bidding for Conoco continues to rise because of the company's huge treasure chest of natural resources. Conoco has oil drilling rigs from the Gulf of Mexico to the South China Sea, coal mines from West Virginia to Alberta, natural gas wells from Texas to the North Sea and uranium deposits from New Mexico to Niger. Since the first oil price explosion in 1973, the value of Conoco's assets has soared from $2.6 billion to $14 billion. The firm's oil and gas holdings alone have a value of $2.3 billion on Conoco's books...
They stand there, barefoot on the stage, until the director sends them through the compulsories--they have to show each part, and so there are 15 calves bulging out at the crowd, 15 buttocks, now 15 backs, and now 15 chests. And then there is free posing; the boys move through routines they have choreographed, practiced, jealously guarded. There's the double-lat spread, lats being back muscles--from a wide V from your waist to your shoulders. There's the double biceps, that classic pose that every six-year-old hits during the stage where he's doing push...
...almost a century, the cornerstone of treatment for breast cancer was the Halsted radical mastectomy. In this physically and often emotionally scarring operation, the breast, underlying chest muscles and lymph nodes in the armpit are removed. In the past decade, however, most doctors have recommended less drastic surgery, particularly for women whose cancer is detected early. Now a major study confirms that women with very small tumors are just as well off with limited operations that spare most of the breast tissue...
...survival. In women with early breast cancer, an estimated 5% to 10% of the 110,000 new cases diagnosed last year in the U.S., "radical mastectomy appears to involve unnecessary mutilation," say the researchers. For women with more advanced cancers, most doctors recommend removing the breast but leaving the chest muscles intact...