Word: peel
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Princess Mary recovered from the appendectomy uneventfully. But her quick excitability and easy fatigue did not disappear. The slightest exertion set her atremble. These and other peculiarities led Lord Dawson of Penn, the King's personal physician, Dr. Knuthsen and Sir Thomas Peel Dunhill, an Australian who achieved eminence as a London thyroid surgeon, to conclude that Princess Mary suffered with exophthalmic goitre...
Most effective nude was The Vase and the Maid by Royal Photographer Fred P. Peel in which the body of a standing model is cut by a strange T-shaped arrangement of black velvet. Most banal photograph was A Pleasant Road by Mrs. Rowena Brownell of Providence...
...Most certainly our duty is clear," declared Baron Barnby, chairman of British industries' recent trade mission to Japan and Manchukuo. Also for intervention were two crusty British civil servants long accustomed to telling Orientals what is best-Baron Lamington, onetime Governor of Bombay, and the Earl Peel whilom Secretary of State for India. As cables flashed off their remarks to Tokyo, provoking sharp retorts (see p. 24), 'other peers rebutted with spirit...
...Vocal Club is presenting "Pop Goes the Weasel" by Schaffer, "Song of the Volga Boatmen," "Song of the Vagabonds" by Friml, "John Peel" arranged by Andrews, "Johnny Harvard" and "Fair Harvard...
Tonight the Banjo Club will play "Officer of the Day," by Hall, and a Football Medley, arranged by Rice; while the Vocal Club will render "Pop Goes the Weasel," "Song of the Volga Boatmen," "John Peel," and "Fair Harvard. "Espana," by Waldteufel, and "Pizicatti," by Delibes will be played by the Mandolin Club...