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

...nearly seven years that followed, until he died of cancer in Manhattan's Memorial Hospital last week at 34, Dr. Thomas Anthony Dooley III traveled 400,000 miles, raised $1,750,000, established seven hospitals in four nations, and brought a measure of modern medical care to half a million underdoctored people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: What Few Have Done | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

Many an American male occasionally inspects his complacent life and for a minute imagines himself given over to singleminded, selfless service among the sick and poor of the world. Young Tom Dooley did not seem to be that type. Son of a comfortably well-to-do St. Louis (steel fabricating) family, he graduated with a middling record from Notre Dame and St. Louis University's medical school, and his professors thought him destined to be a society doctor. Instead, Dooley volunteered for duty as a U.S. Navy doctor, was sent to war-torn Indo-China where he took part...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: What Few Have Done | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

Viet Nam's misery in 1954 struck the young socialite with a force that he recorded in a 1956 bestseller, Deliver Us From Evil. "I must remember the things I have seen," wrote Dooley. "I must keep them fresh in memory, see them again in my mind's eye, live through them again and again in my thoughts. And most of all, I must make good use of them in tomorrow's life." Leaving the Navy, Dr. Dooley talked the International Rescue Committee into establishing MEDICO (Medical International Cooperation), to build hospitals in remote areas. He underwrote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: What Few Have Done | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

...Dooley built his first hospital at Nam Tha, a tiny Laotian village just five miles south of the Red China border, and his second at Muong Sing, 20 mi. to the northwest. He handled as many as 100 outpatients a day, wrote two more books (The Edge of Tomorrow, The Night They Burned the Mountain), and recklessly shrugged off the possibility of ambush as he pushed his Jeep through guerilla-infested jungle on daily house calls. A grateful Laotian government awarded Dooley its highest decoration: the Order of a Million Elephants. When critics argued Dooley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: What Few Have Done | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

Doctors were optimistic at first, but the melanoma spread to his back. Thin, exhausted and in pain, Dooley checked into a Hong Kong hospital last November, was fitted with a brace ("my Iron Maiden") that extended from his shoulders to his hips. "I am not going to quit," Dooley insisted, with a typical touch of melodrama. "I will continue to guide and lead my hospitals until my back, my brain, my blood and my bones collapse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: What Few Have Done | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

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