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Word: doctoring (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...there, backstage, listening to his words and repeating my words softly for my own ears, I felt as though my body was being desecrated. Once I looked down and I swear my legs ended at the knees. Oh McBain, vile college lad, why did you poke about in the Doctor's speeches and spoil all the careful development of the younger-generation-knocking-on-the-door theme? There was no method to your wretched emmendations...

Author: By Charles F. Sabel, | Title: The Master Builder | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

...215T CENTURY (CBS, 6-6:30 p.m.). "Jonas Salk," a look at what the good doctor has been doing since he developed polio vaccine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Mar. 1, 1968 | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

...word about the painting that appears in the photograph accompanying the article: Henry Koerner's picture showing me standing next to a bullfighter who is also a pagan priest is entitled The Sacrifice. I am depicted in the crimson robes of a Harvard doctor holding the Torah. Next to me stands the bullfighter with drawn sword. There is a woman dressed in white in front of a bird bath in which there is a severed human head. The meaning is that the archaic and the contemporary coexist in religious ritual, as do the conscious and the unconscious. Thus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Mar. 1, 1968 | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

...addition to doctors and nurses, medical care requires all sorts of supporting troops-hospital orderlies, X-ray technicians, physiotherapists. As care grows more complex, the need for such ancillary personnel rises too. Compared with one health assistant per doctor in 1900, the ratio today is 13 to 1, reports the University of Florida's Dr. Darrel J. Mase to the A.M.A.'s Council on Medical Education. By 1975 the needed ratio will probably reach 25 to 1. Health may then employ 6,000,000 people, and constitute the nation's biggest industry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Health Services: Needed: Support Troops | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

Nobody who has ever known Bobby Hull could doubt the story. It was, remembers the senior Robert Hull, 57, "a cold son-of-a-gun of a night" in Point Anne, Ont., when the doctor delivered his fifth child (of eleven) and announced: "The only difference between your son and you is that he doesn't eat so much." Bobby weighed 12 Ibs. at birth. His father, a 240-lb. cement worker, could lift the front end of a car, and he was also a fair country hockey player-which is what folks do to keep warm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hockey: Hawk on the Wing | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

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