Word: clinics
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Thank you for including the Perpetual Mission and Mother Waddles in your story, but I feel it is necessary to point out that Integrated Medical Services (not McKesson & Robbins) of Detroit has totally funded the clinic to date and will continue to fund...
...titles are titillating-and similar to those on the cover of any pulp magazine. But True To Life is published by Emory University, and it is meant to teach, not tease. Noting that most of the women who went to Emory's birth-control clinic in Atlanta were avid readers of confessions, the clinic's family planners decided to write some of their own. Their stories, like those in True Confession, are about torrid love affairs, but the message is different. In True To Life, women learn not to be victims of circumstance, or of men, but instead...
...High School in suburban Virginia. The student helped Dr. Pollner round up 4,000 youngsters, who joined him in a 32-mile march. They raised $6,000 and won pledges of funds and equipment from the United Auto Workers, Hewlett-Packard and several pharmaceutical companies. Pollner's makeshift clinic won the support of the local white population in Mississippi and last summer attracted four registered nurses and some 30 student volunteers. They helped the doctor treat up to 50 patients a day. Now, Pollner observes: "The patients got better out of proportion to their treatment. They knew we cared...
...Ford River Rouge complex. She plunged into practical missionary work in earnest. "The Bible says we should comfort one another," she says, "but you can't comfort the hungry without food, or the naked without clothing or the sick without medical care." She will soon open a free clinic staffed by eight volunteer doctors and fed by a medicinal lifeline from McKesson & Robbins drug company. She herself lives more humbly than one would suppose. A local television station donated the dress she wore to President Nixon's Inauguration in 1969 as one of 50 Michigan residents selected...
...Zhores Medvedev's case, that directive was followed so literally that the precise nature of events-not to say Medvedev's "malady"-was a secret from everybody but the state. In May 1970, he was summoned to the Obninsk Psychiatric Clinic, not far from Moscow, under the pretext of attending a consultation about his son, a teenager with hippie tendencies. While waiting in a small room at a nurse's request, Medvedev looked out of a window and saw his son leaving the hospital grounds. When he turned to go, Medvedev found the door of the room...