Word: clinic
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Ever since the early years of the 20th century, the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has enjoyed a reputation as "the court of last resort" for the sick from all parts of the world. When their own doctors despaired of them, or when they despaired of their doctors, patients traveled to the little prairie town and there awaited the word of Mayo's medical sages with the same faith and assurance that the ancients carried to the shrine of the oracle at Delphi. Even today, when the U.S. has at least a dozen similar medical centers capable of giving...
...appears he may be in serious trouble. He went to Mississippi from here about July 30, with a fellow from COFO to join the summer project. He was on his way to mail a letter when he was beaten up. A minister took him to a medical clinic to get aid, and the two were beaten again, arrested and charged with disturbing the peace. Apparently the white community has decided to make an example of John. He is at present near Carthage, and it will be difficult to get him to Jackson, let alone out of the State. He faces...
...year-old Blaine has practiced psychiatry at Bellevue Hospital and in the Veterans Administration mental health clinic in New York...
...second Arab summit conference, which Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser hopes will be an even greater triumph than the first, held at Cairo last January (TIME, Jan. 24). But some top faces will be absent. Pleading illness, Tunisia's President Habib Bourguiba retired to a Swiss clinic and sent his Premier in his place. Morocco's King Hassan II did not even botherwith excuses, and dispatched his younger brother, Prince Abdallah. Saudi Arabia's Prince Feisal grumbled that Arab Kings and Presidents "need to stay home and attend to more serious matters," but finally agreed...
...happily adapted itself to the manufacturing of old junk-so much easier than turning out an 18th century piece of marquetry. To satisfy a current craze for phrenologist's heads, an excellent fake is now circulating heavily in London and New York in three sizes. Advertising the phrenology clinic of one C. Fuller and dated 1882, the porcelain is artificially cracked in a cobweb pattern and the printing is a tastefully faded blue. One of the first of them turned up on Manhattan's Third Avenue last winter, selling at $125; in June there were dozens around London...