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...provided it. During a 28-day visit to Buenos Aires, Perón attracted huge crowds of cheering supporters to his suburban villa. He also tested his strength by conferring with leaders throughout the Argentine political spectrum. As he headed back to Madrid, he endorsed the candidacy of former Dentist Hector Campora, who described himself as Peron's "obsequious servant." Last March, Campora won the election handily, and the stage was set for Perón to strut again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: An Old Dictator Tries Again | 9/10/1973 | See Source »

Headed by Dr. Delano Meriwether,* 30, a black hematologist, Harvard's Health Careers Summer Program accepts youngsters whose grades and motivation make them good physician and dentist material, but whose lack of finances and educational background tends to keep them out of these professions. The university has little trouble finding applicants. In the program's first year, 267 students applied and 55 were accepted. This summer 2,000 applied and 162 were allowed in. Of those in this year's class, 100 are blacks. The rest are Indians, Chicanes, U.S.-born Puerto Ricans and disadvantaged whites...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Cram Course for Med School | 9/10/1973 | See Source »

...rotteness to bloom was a glamorous picture in the Freshman Register. Not that it was a glamorous picture by the standards of any other place. In any style-conscious suburb, it would have passed as an ordinary look, made out of the touch-up job that money buys: the dentist-made perfect teeth, the smooth complexion, the tan from the West Indies, the European sense of style, the hair subtly streaked, the wide open look and confident carriage from knowing none but a comfortable world. The picture looked like every other rich girl that looks like the "California Girl...

Author: By Emily Fisher, | Title: Goodbye to All That, and Good Riddance | 9/1/1973 | See Source »

...Irish working class kid from Boston who lived across the hall from me told me every other day how I wasn't giving Nixon a chance. Listening to Nixon, for me, is like asking my dentist to give me a toothache. I didn't get along too well with my entry...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: High School Isn't Over | 9/1/1973 | See Source »

...Washington bureaucracy, enjoys the highest per capita income (at $5,446) in the nation. A full 37.6% of Arlington's wage earners are federal employees. "When there are bad times in the country, they hire more people in Washington," observes Dr. Kenneth M. Haggerty, an Arlington dentist and acting county board chairman. In terms of income, he points out, Arlingtonians don't have the economic "peaks and valleys" other parts of the country have. Well, at least not the valleys...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Prospering Bureaucrats | 8/27/1973 | See Source »

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