Word: doctor
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...wanted to gun down an abortion doctor, the Nuremberg Files was your website. It featured names, home addresses and photos of doctors who perform abortions--even the names and ages of their kids. Along with mangled fetuses and dripping blood, it boasted a handy checklist of "baby butchers" who were healthy (in black), as well as those who had been wounded (in gray) or killed (crossed out). It didn't quite make the case for pulling the trigger, but it pointed the way to sites that did. In 1995 Planned Parenthood and several targeted doctors sued the site's backers...
...also features "Swing 'N Sway Dr. Love." This dirty dog, clad in a doctor's uniform and sunglasses, responds to a loving squeeze by bobbing its head and singing a cheerful melody--"Bad Case of Loving You," by Robert Palmer. Like all good gifts, Dr. Love promises to keep on giving...
...exodus from the ghetto was an exodus from fighting," Rosenblatt said. "You'd be surprised how much Jewish influence there is in boxing. There are many Jewish managers and Jewish promoters. Usually the ringside doctor is Jewish," he quipped...
Improving University Health Services (UHS) is another issue we plan to address. By consulting with UHS on the undergraduate survey to be conducted this spring, we will make sure UHS realizes students want to be treated as soon as possible by a doctor. Students need to know they can file complaints with the patient advocate and the Student Health Advisory Committee, so UHS can improve its service. The student body needs more confidence in their health care system...
...Other doctors are not so squeamish. A Manhattan resident was startled last year when her gynecologist handed her a catalog of nutritional supplements (complete with the physician's vendor number) as part of her annual checkup. "Patients in a doctor's office are in a particularly vulnerable situation," says Dr. John Lantos, a medical ethicist at the University of Chicago. They might feel pressured to buy the products just to please their physician. Wouldn't it be less of a conflict of interest, he wonders, only half in jest, if doctors ran a fast-food restaurant in the lobby...