Word: curely
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...cancer, leukemia's causes and cure are unknown. Largely as a result of the work of Dr. Steven ). Schwartz of Chicago's Hektoen Institute (TIME, April 11, 1960), there is growing suspicion that the villain is a virus. Dr. Schwartz injected volunteers in Cook County Jail with leukemic fluid and, he believes, developed in them immunity to the disease...
Thinking less feverishly over the following months, Communist Schaff singled out what he decided was the reason for this philosophical blind spot and did his best to indicate the cure. Communism historically has no time or place for the individual because Marx saw society as the solvent for all individual problems. Private ethical dilemmas were submerged, first because the revolution had no time for such niceties, later because they were tainted by association with "idealistic" ideologies. But Philosopher Schaff recognizes that "as long as people die, suffer, lose their loved ones, just so long will questions about the meaning...
...feel we can cure the patient without his fully understanding what made him sick. We are no longer so interested in peeling the onion as in changing it." So said one of the nation's most famed psychoanalysts, attending last week's annual meeting in Chicago of the American Psychoanalytic Association, which was marking the 50th anniversary of the organized practice of psychoanalysis...
...capillaries). Around Christmas 1959, the disease threatened to kill him. University of Washington Internist Belding H. Scribner could have kept Ben A. alive for a few weeks by hooking him up to the artificial kidney at short intervals. But this would have needed frequent surgery and still offered no cure. So Dr. Scribner got together with Medical Engineer Wayne Qumton to figure out a long-term answer
...recent Phillips censure controversy. It seems possible that some of those who were disappointed with the out-come of the anti-Phillips campaign are now entertaining notions of severing relations with the Council in order to disassociate themselves with Phillips. That smacks of cutting the throat to cure the cough. What many feel to be irresponsibility on Phillips' part is not the fault of the Council. When a question as serious as that raised by the Dunster referendum is involved, it is incumbent on all concerned to ascertain that their motives are not the product of personal distaste...