Word: destroyer
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...should not be sorry. . . . London is the playground of the idle rich. ... All this technique of sapping and mining the morale of our people ... is Fifth Column work ... to deride Christianity." "Dry" Thomas closed by quoting Voltaire as saying that if he could capture the English Sunday he could destroy Christianity...
...Hermann Joseph Muller, at the University of Texas, using Drosophila (fruit flies), proved that X-rays also have profound genetic effects. Piercing the nucleus of a living cell, they can destroy or rearrange the genes which determine the inherited characteristics of all new life. But, observes Dr. Failla, "All living organisms are subjected to ionizing radiations throughout their life." Chief sources are 1) potassium, a mildly radioactive element found in all cells, 2) cosmic rays, which constantly penetrate each human being...
...greatness of letters is in the mind they reveal. Pollock's mind was keen, erudite, somewhat suspicious, drily humorous, shyly human. Holmes's mind had a larger quality. There is nothing like battle to mature the mind it does not destroy. The bullet that passed through Holmes's neck at Antietam lodged in his brain. He lived the rest of his life as if the words with which he closed his 90th birthday address were momently true: "Death plucks my ear and says Live-I am coming." He lived with the wise irreverence of a soldier...
Nations do not ordinarily destroy their own vessels, even if locked up in foreign ports, unless they expect that war is close at hand. In Washington the rumor was rife that the Axis was preparing to declare war on the U. S. Yet to many Americans the news of sabotage and seizure seemed not to come as a great shock, or as a fearsome step toward war, but with the feeling "It's about time...
Only the masked violence of time can finally destroy London. But its streets, now being more monstrously manhandled than ever in their history, are bound to emerge from this war profoundly altered in shape and spirit. Through them has run for centuries the life and soul of a great people. In Burke's abundant data this life and soul are glimpsed in brief, suggestive fragments, as though in a 700-year newsreel, whose end is yesterday's bomb...