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Frank W. Taussig '79, well-known economist who held the Henry Lee Chair in Economics here until his retirement in 1935, died yesterday afternoon from a paralytic stroke in the Cambridge home of a relative, Mrs. Gerald Henderson. Close to 81 years old, Professor Taussig sank into a coma a week ago from which he never recovered...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Frank Taussig, Noted Economist, Dies Here of a Stroke | 11/12/1940 | See Source »

...brain operations while his assassin was treated in a room across the hall. Natalie Sedova never left him. He lost consciousness soon after he was put to bed. If a man's past life passes before him at such times, some strange scenes appeared to Trotsky in his coma: the first trip of nine-year-old Lev Davidovich Bronstein from the farm in Kherson Province to school in Odessa; his first brush with Marxism in the seventh grade in Nikolayev; his conversion to the cause after the woman Vetrova burned herself to death in a prison cell; his first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Death of a Revolutionary | 9/2/1940 | See Source »

...using the mails to defraud, he was paroled in 1930. On his sick bed he was informed last week (by his Explorer Friend Ralph Shainwald von Ahlefeldt) that President Roosevelt had granted him a full pardon, restored his civil rights. Gasped Dr. Cook: "Thanks -happy," sank back into a coma...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, May 27, 1940 | 5/27/1940 | See Source »

...spinal fluid. Many doctors believe that small amounts of surplus fluid must be drawn out to relieve pressure. that patients should be denied liquids. But Drs. Gross & Ehrlich consider drastic dehydration dangerous, achieve the same result in another way. They give hypertonic (heavy) glucose injections to patients in coma or shock. The glucose, thicker than body fluids, sucks out fluid from the tissues through osmotic pressure. thus reduces tension in the brain. ¶ Also harmful, say Drs. Gross & Ehrlich. is the common practice of lumbar puncture (spine-tapping) to examine the spinal fluid soon after a head injury. During...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Head Injuries | 5/20/1940 | See Source »

...surgeon dreads, and watches for, post-operative shock. So precise is the body's harmony that even a slight disarrangement of tissues, a two-degree drop in temperature, and the loss of a cupful of blood may be enough to bog down heart and brain and produce a coma, prelude to death. Shock may also follow severe burns, wounds, lacerations, even blows in the solar plexus. Usually shock does not occur until several hours after injury. Standard treatment: warmth, blood transfusion, oxygen, water injections. But these measures often fail...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Anti-Shock | 3/25/1940 | See Source »

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