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

Psychologist Vince is not sure what causes the clicking, but she thinks it is associated with lung ventilation and serves as a form of communication be tween the eggs. As more mature embryos move toward the hatching stage, she says, their clicking stimulates faster development of younger embryos in adjacent eggs, so that all of the eggs hatch around the same time. To check her theory, she shortened the normal incubation period of a quail egg by placing it in a nest of other quail eggs that began incubation at least 24 hours earlier. Stimulated by the surrounding clicks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Biology: Egg Communication | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

When tabulation is complete, he will try to relate details of physique to chances of contracting lung cancer and heart disease. With these figures, he hopes that anthropologists and physicians will be able to predict life expectancy much more accurately than is now possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: You Want to Have Sons, Get Fat, Harvard Researcher's Study Shows | 5/9/1966 | See Source »

...TIME, April 29). For more than 41 days, with never a falter after the first hour, it had done three-quarters of the work normally done by the left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber. What suddenly killed DeRudder last week was a rupture of the left lung. A plastic tube slipped through a small cut in his windpipe had been delivering oxygen under pressure to his lungs. What actually caused the rupture was a mystery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: Death of a Patient | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

Died. Leverett Saltonstall Jr., 48, oldest son and namesake of the U.S. Senator from Massachusetts, an agronomy Ph.D. from Cornell who raised grain on his 800-acre working farm; of lung cancer; in Ithaca...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: May 6, 1966 | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

Hours of Decision. The operation began at 7:40 a.m. With a ten-inch incision across his chest, DeRudder was hooked up to a heart-lung machine. And then, as five cameras recorded every step, the surgeons opened his left auricle. They replaced the diseased valve, but even this promised little. The left ventricle, the main pumping chamber, which does more than half the heart's work, was too badly diseased. Standing ready in the operating room was a team of doctors and engineers with the one device that might help: a "half-heart" to assist the left ventricle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: A Better Half-Heart | 4/29/1966 | See Source »

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