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Alexander breaks the box, otherwise known as television, wide open with her searing intelligence and blistering heart.
More importantly, he says so because while everyone else collapses exhausted, muscles knotting, bottom blistering, heart ready to explode, on Saturday night his Real Valladolid side glided past to claim a polka-dot jersey, a bunch of flowers and a kiss from a couple of marvellous mademoiselles.
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It is the blistering, heart-rending story of two people finding each other and trying to heal themselves through love.
Donna Roth, 50, a makeup artist from nearby Prairie Village, Kan., and a chaperon for Mr. Lynn's visit to New York with her son Donald, answered, "But you should!" Across the hall, Radhames Saldivar, 16, a 10th grader from upper Manhattan, ripped through a blistering rendition of Heart's "Barracuda" on Guitar Hero III.
Unfortunately many of those drugs also damage healthy cells, causing undesirable side effects (like nausea, blistering, pain, and heart issues).
If Larry Kramer's blistering play, "The Normal Heart," now confronting audiences on Broadway, represents the angry breakthrough politics of the early AIDS epidemic, the politics of gay marriage is couples living their lives as neighbors, parents, Little League coaches, colleagues, car-poolers.
Mutations in intermediate filament genes are linked to a variety of human diseases ranging from mild skin blistering to life-threatening heart failure.
Dad walked away unscathed, except for a well-guarded ache in his heart and blisters on his feet from his long trek home.
Picking up many of the same threads of "The Heidi Chronicles," Wendy Wasserstein's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama about a female art historian struggling to reconcile the ideals of the women's movement with her own ambivalent heart, "Rapture, Blister, Burn" can at times seem politically retrograde, as though all the hard-won progress was a Trojan horse of loneliness and regret.
Abu Dhabi's second city, Al Ain, is also worth visiting, an oasis in the heart of the blistering desert.
In his 2006 book, "A Question of Torture," he writes that the Soviets found that making a victim stand for eighteen to twenty-four hours can produce "excruciating pain, as ankles double in size, skin becomes tense and intensely painful, blisters erupt oozing watery serum, heart rates soar, kidneys shut down, and delusions deepen".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com