Search Details

Word: lunge (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...preferred to spend most of his time on Sapelo Island, with its two tennis courts, two swimming pools and its airstrip. There, Muriel's only real companion was Buck Rabbit, whose disposition had been considered none too amiable even before he came down with pulmonary emphysema (a serious lung disease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Georgia: The Marriage-Go-Round | 1/25/1963 | See Source »

...from Air Alone. Another seeming certainty is that no matter how viruses may be involved, cancer is not an infectious disease in the ordinary sense. Nobody catches lung cancer because a victim of the disease coughs in his face. From animals it appears that something like a virus, plus some sort of physical or chemical irritant, may be needed to bring on the disease. Mice do not get lung cancer from polluted air alone, nor from influenza virus. But they may develop something remarkably like human lung cancer if they are both infected with flu virus and exposed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Virology: Search for Essential Factors In Causes of Human Cancer | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

...Robert Frost, 88, patriarch poet of the U.S., in Boston's Peter Bent Brigham Hospital after surgery for a urinary tract obstruction complicated by a mild heart attack and a subsequent blood clot in his lung; Clifton Webb, 69, courtly film comedian, in a Houston hospital for vascular surgery; Mrs. William O. Douglas, 45, wife of the Supreme Court Justice, with lacerations of the forehead and left knee sustained in a car-truck collision in Georgetown not far from her home; Hugh Gaitslcell, 56, Britain's Labor Party leader, in a London hospital with pleurisy complicated by pericarditis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jan. 11, 1963 | 1/11/1963 | See Source »

...Newman opened her chest. The surgeons saw the rare type of aortic narrowing they had expected, and decided to correct it by putting in a patch. They inserted tubes in the great veins near her heart and in a thigh artery, to hook her up to a heart-lung machine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: A Patch to Help a Heart | 12/28/1962 | See Source »

Died. James Joseph Kilroy, 60, an inspector in Bethlehem Steel's Quincy shipyards, who may or may not have been the Kilroy who was there; of lung cancer; in Boston. In answer to a 1946 American Transit Association contest to discover the originator of the World War II slogan carried by G.I.s to the ends of the earth, Kilroy replied that he had crawled deep inside ships' hulls, chalking KILROY WAS HERE as his inspector's mark. The Transit Association thought enough of his explanation to award him a prize: a 22-ton streetcar, which his nine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Dec. 7, 1962 | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

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