C. Hirst and J.H. Kearsley, Breast cancer screening: "One swallow doth not a summer make," The Medical J. Austral. 154 (1991), 76 78.C. Hirst & J. H. Kearsley. "Breast Cancer Screening: 'One Swallow Doth Not a Summer Make.*" The Medical Journal of Australia 154 (1991):76-78...
A youth named Tito Speri led and animated the populace. The horrors of the repression make one think of the fall of Khartoum. Not even in Hungary, where he went from Brescia to continue his 'system,' did Haynau so blacken his own and his country's name as here. In a boys' school ...
season—not a day passed without a few hours ofdeluge. Altogether it was a most heart-breaking position. Added to the distress of mind at being thus thwarted, there was also a great scarcity of provision. Many of my men were weak, the whole party having suffered much from fever; in ...
There is a passage from Willa Cather’s novel,Death Comes for the Archbishop, which perfectly expresses the faith and the hope that we arenotdestined to remain in the dark—that we can, by God’s grace, recover the divine light within us. The novel’s protagonist, Jean-Marie Latour, a ...
Make use of it. To give the white-haired father or mother not only respect, but confidence, to tell the joke and the secret to them first, to accord them cordially the central place in the merrymaking, may seem trivial matters, yet they are not trivial to those who, in the twilight ...
2 Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.3 And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure.4 Whosoever...
One swallow doth not summer makedoi:10.1111/j.1445-5994.1991.tb01396.xF. EHRLICHAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine
Breast Cancer Screening: 'One Swallow Doth Not a Summer Make - Hirst, Kearsley () Citation Context ...e equations arise. There is a need to minimize biopsies for benign impalpable lesions—those unable to be felt by touch—detected in breast cancer screening programs for healthy women (Hirst...
How delightful must it be to wander in a summer's evening along these lovely banks, far from the din of the distant world, and where the deep tranquillity is only interrupted by the song of the nightingale, the whistle of the swain returning ...— Travels through the South of France ...
Whiten v. t. To make white; to bleach; to blanch; to whitewash; as, to whiten a wall; to whiten cloth. "The broad stream of the Foyle then whitened by vast flocks of wild swans." Synonyms: See Blanch. See images of 'Whiten' ...