Word: colorados
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...caught polio just after his appointment as a psychiatrist here and so was unable to work last year. He is back on a nearly full schedule this fall. He was a resident in a Westchester hospital before two year's service in the Army. He got his M.D. in Colorado...
Although 38 states have laws banning nonessential Sunday work, the laws in most cases are antiquated, vague, unenforced or unenforceable. In Arkansas, Colorado and Michigan, blue laws have either been ruled unconstitutional or are under appeal. In New York, an accountant who was arrested last January for working on Sunday was acquitted by a judge who pointed out that baseball stadiums and theaters have long violated the Sabbath with impunity. In many cities where Sunday-closing ordinances are enforced, merchants sidestep the law by selling from branches outside city limits. Rather than turn away customers, businessmen in such cities...
...daily practice sessions at the Boston Skating Club and the Boston Arena are now primarily in preparation for the World Championship competition next Feb. 26 to March 2. In mile-high altitudes at Colorado springs, Colo., Tenley will attempt to capture the women's world figure skating crown from Carol Heiss of New York...
Last week an energetic Colorado inventor named John Victoreen was trying to replace reliance on luck with a higher degree of certainty. No M.D., but a self-educated physicist who has made a fortune in X rays and nucleonics, Victoreen "retired" from business six years ago to work longer hours than ever in his own research laboratory in Colorado Springs. His interest in hearing aids began when a hard-of-hearing friend. Radiologist Kenneth Allen, asked Victoreen to make him a gadget that would enable him to hear without straining at medical conventions. Size and weight were no object. Said...
...dealers. He has set up a special company to handle the Vicon, insists that he will sell it only on prescription, and will not advertise to the public. He wants doctors, not dealers, to distribute it (at $200 plus whatever fee the doctor chooses to add). So far, Colorado otologists have balked at the idea of acting as distributors because they do not want to be responsible for servicing instruments. "I can't take calls at 2 o'clock in the morning from patients who want a hearing aid adjusted," objected one doctor. Victoreen retorts that under...