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...William Einthoven, Professor of Physiology at the University of Leyden, will speak this afternoon on "The Relation of the Mechanical and Electrical Phenomena of Muscular Contraction, with Special Reference to the Cardiac Muscle." The talk will begin at 5 o'clock and will be given in the Amphitheater of Building C of the Harvard Medical School, in Boston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DUTCH DOCTOR AT MED. SCHOOL | 10/22/1924 | See Source »

...sparks of a glowing humanity filtered through. The hero is a mute inglorious Milton?except when selling Gold Strap Food Products. He wins a village girl, a trifle shrilly pitched but cleverer than himself. Unable to fuse his mental ivory and cardiac gold, she elopes with a traveling trombonist. Twenty years' leave of absence from humanity in Alaska bring husband back to the scene still a financial and cerebral failure. Wrenching the play quite out of shape, Miss Gale screws on a happy ending...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: New Plays: Feb. 4, 1924 | 2/4/1924 | See Source »

Died. Montgomery Roosevelt Schuyler, 70, cousin of the late President Roosevelt, at Nyack, N. Y., of cardiac rheumatism. Before Prohibition he and his cousin, Samuel Roosevelt, were sole agents in the U. S. for Haig & Haig, Scotch whisky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Jan. 14, 1924 | 1/14/1924 | See Source »

...contained the not original assertion that 20 years will be added to the average span of life in the next half century, and that the time is near when it will be "a crime" to die under 75 years of age from diabetes, Bright's disease, the cardiac vascular diseases and pos-sibly cancer. Dr. Leonard Williams, London specialist, recently made a similar statement, setting up 120 years as man's probable goal. It is true that the span of life in the United States has increased approximately 15 years since public health work was introduced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Schools and Pathies | 7/16/1923 | See Source »

During the week beginning next Monday, Dr. Thomas Lewis, assistant physician and lecturer on Cardiac Pathology in the University College Hospital of London, and an editor of "Heart," an important medical journal, will come to Boston as visiting physician, pro tem., at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital and visiting lecturer in Medicine at the University. This practice was inaugurated last year when Dr. William S. Thayer, of Johns Hopkins, spent a week here as visiting physician. The local scheme of instruction thus acquires the services of distinguished men who give various student exercises and afford the Medical School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROMINENT VISITING PHYSICIAN | 10/23/1914 | See Source »

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