Word: ana
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...ana Means Today. Meeting in the gilded and brocaded halls of the Pitti Palace, delegates presented a total of 86 new proposals. Among them: a request to draw up a list of sources for an economic history from the 11th to the 16th Centuries, a suggestion that UNESCO collect material on teaching evolutionary biology...
...wrote Communist Mike Gold in last Sunday's issue of Manhattan's Daily Worker. The article also paid touching tribute to Rumania's Red Ana Pauker as "a mature, motherly woman with greying hair set in a youthful bob. She has the finest and-most luminous brown eyes . . ." By way of illustration, the Worker ran a drawing of Comrade Pauker looking tender, handsome and soulful. That picture of Ana Pauker came about as close to what she really looks like as the Worker's account of a free, sunny Rumania came to picturing the country...
...numerology, he let the numbers lead him to "Hutton." "I tried to get a vibration that would make her a lot of money," he says. "It was a five-eight vibration. After that she did fine." By the time the band played Billy Rose's Casa Mañana, Betty had whipped her own vibrations into enough of a frenzy to dazzle Manhattan at last-and to make Rose caution her not to "tear down my theater...
...domestic affairs.-The State Department insisted that Patterson had merely flown to the U.S. for a medical checkup. But as soon as the ambassador had taken off for Washington, a campaign against him broke out in the Guatemalan press. The semi-official Diario de la Mañana labeled him an old-school imperialist. The Guatemalan Labor Federation's leftist political action committee charged that Patterson had engaged in "a great imperialist conspiracy against the leaders of Guatemalan institutions." The windy press charges seemed to sum up just about all Guatemala had to say against Patterson. Guatemala...
...Walter, one of Britain's leading physiologists, does not think Elmer ana Elsie are entirely reliable tools for studying the human nervous system. But they have given him one good hint, he says. The human brain has something like ten billion nerve cells. Elmer and Elsie have the equivalent of only two, but even with this simple equipment, they give a lifelike performance. This observation suggests to Dr. Walter that the cells of the human brain may act in large groups, rather than independently. "In fact," he says, "it is possible that the brain may not be quite...