Word: pregnant
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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There are still other categories: anonymous donors whose sperm will be used for artificially inseminating women who cannot otherwise become pregnant, and would-be fathers whose semen will be consolidated in an attempt to raise their sperm count to a level high enough to cause pregnancy. And there are also a few simple eccentrics-like the Midwestern grandfather who has stored his seed against the possibility that his only son might prove infertile and thus not carry on the family line...
Born in St. Louis. Mother Waddles early learned the necessity of virtue. Her father died when she was twelve, and she was forced to drop out of school to support her pregnant mother and six brothers and sisters. She married for the first time at 14 and was widowed at 19. In 1957 she married Payton Waddles, who now makes $ 11,000 a year at the laundry at the Ford River Rouge complex. She plunged into practical missionary work in earnest. "The Bible says we should comfort one another," she says, "but you can't comfort the hungry without...
...husband's pleasure in his masculinity. One woman told Colman that she felt radiant when her husband looked at her approvingly "as I clambered up the stairs in my new awkward way." But Colman reports the depression that he himself felt after a concert he attended with his pregnant wife. "The pianist and Libby were both creative; I was nothing," he says...
...countries. Perhaps 600,000 were slaughtered. "If they were children," wrote British Historian Leonard Mosley, describing the carnage, "they were picked up by their feet and their heads smashed against the wall. If they were girls they were raped and their breasts were chopped off. And if they were pregnant, they were disemboweled...
...nine developmentally most crucial months of its life in an environment that is not nearly as sheltered from the social impact of the outside world as some seem to think. As long as the social discrepancies in our society are reflected in, the health care and nutrition of our pregnant women, our infants at birth already bear the marks of the social environment into which they are born. Ruth Hubbard Lecturer on Biology