Word: tracing
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...occasion like the Ball gives them a chance to combine their newfound interest with pleasure. As if getting the feel of South American life by learning the rhumba were not enough they will find themselves in the august company of practically every senor and senorita in Boston with a trace of Spanish blood in his or her veins...
...against European civilization began and where it has proceeded to the greatest lengths." He was present at the fall of France which "resounded through the world like that of Rome in the fifth century and Constantinople in the fifteenth." The World's Iron Age is an attempt to trace the connection between these modern disasters...
...where the bacteria went was either by 1) microscopic postmortem examination of tissues or 2) test-tube culture of tissue samples until bacteria appeared in obvious numbers. But hereafter scientists need only feed the bacteria on elements made mildly radioactive in a cyclotron (TIME, June 23), then can trace them through the animal body by the particles of subatomic radiation which they give...
Great Britain replied obliquely last week to increasing pressure for a new expeditionary force. The reply: 36 pages of dispatches by General the Viscount Gort, sent while he was achieving the "Miracle of Dunkirk" in May 1940. There was no trace of the eloquence of the Dunkirk battleground in his reports, only plain speaking with a touch of understatement. > "It was clear from the outset that the ascendancy in equipment which the enemy possessed played a great part in the operations." Germany concentrated at least ten Panzer divisions against the B.E.F., threw five of them at the British rear defenses...
...Peak Egg, an egg substitute, the London Daily Mirror's acidulous Columnist Cassandra wrote: "No hen ever laid egg or eyes on Peak Egg. . . . Take eight ounces of ordinary flour and two ounces of bicarbonate of soda, add a little dye and just a trace of gum. Mix well . . . relax and wait for the great unending public of British suckers...