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

...underprivileged without their own slurp guns, the prices of marine tropicals (very few have been bred in captivity) are high enough to give status to almost anybody. Commonest are Damsels at $2, Angels and Butterflies at $6 to $10 apiece. Sea horses cost about $3. But temptations abound. How exciting to make a pet of a toothy moray from Ceylon ($35), or a lion fish from the Red Sea ($35), who packs enough deadly poison in his spiny ugliness to kill a man. How exhilarating to be first kid on the block with a $400 trigger fish from Zanzibar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hobbies: Come Feed My Trigger Fish | 8/30/1963 | See Source »

Clue in the Neck. Dr. Szent-Gyorgyi (pronounced St. Georgie) entered the cancer field almost by chance. After he fled Hungary's Communist control in 1947, he was able to resume at Woods Hole his long work on muscle. Concentrating on one of the commonest of muscular diseases, myasthenia gravis, he had a clue. Sometimes a victim of "MG" does better after his thymus gland is removed. Searching for the explanation, Szent-Gyorgyi, who has a Cambridge Ph.D. in biochemistry besides his M.D., spent years doing delicate chemical dissections of the thymus glands of calves, supplied by Chicago...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Research: Promote & Retard | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

Double the Retine? Nothing quite like promine and retine has been discovered before, although sex hormones and chemically related compounds are used in treating some forms of cancer. The commonest of the many kinds of cancer, Szent-Gyorgyi notes, are the types that usually develop in middle life. "We have some evidence from ani mals," he says, "that the body's output of both promine and retine may decline with advancing age. But what seems to be more important is that the ratio of the two substances changes. Later in life, the body makes proportionately less of the retarding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Research: Promote & Retard | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

...Yorkers pay each year for garbage collection. They do not support a single superhighway, nightclub, parking meter, strip joint or subway. The suicide rate is Europe's lowest. Crimes of any kind are few and getting fewer-although the authorities admit that the nation's commonest transgression, larceny of pedal cycles, bears watching...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ireland: Lifting the Green Curtain | 7/12/1963 | See Source »

...years ago, Dr. Boerema and his colleagues began operating on youngsters suffering from one of the commonest forms of blue-baby disorder-Pallet's tetralogy, a set of four serious heart defects which nearly always occur together. All the children were under five; they had only about 70% of normal oxygen in their red cells, and they were too ill to risk the heroic surgery that would correct all their heart defects. Dr. Boerema wanted to do a palliative operation, after which a final operation could await a few more years of growth and added strength...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Therapeutics: Operating Under Pressure | 2/15/1963 | See Source »

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