Word: ear
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary: G. F. Jewett '19, J. G. F. Lynch...
...curve on a soot-covered surface, indicates the fatigue undergone when a subject tries rhythmically to lift a weight by flexing a finger. The subject bends his finger and pulls, till his finger will bend and pull no more; then the experimenter encourages him by suddenly crying in his ear: "Pull! Pull!" And lo and behold, in the fire of his aroused self, the subject can and does pull! All of which serves to illustrate the importance of mass meetings before, and a wild cheering section during, a game. Enthusiasm can "egg on" a strong fighting team to work wonders...
...bought land and is about to build. These have gravitated to the School as a centre, but practically do not curtail the mutual usefulness of the Medical School and the older and more remote Massachusetts General, the City, and Women's Hospitals, the Dispensary, and the Eye and Ear Infirmary...
...present unit, which left New York on November 16, will continue its work until about the middle of May. The thirty surgeons who comprise the party include a surgical staff, a medical staff, dentists, a pathologist, a bacteriologist, a roentgenologist, and specialists in the eye and ear. Thirty-six graduate nurses complete the unit. The party went for service under the British War Office, under a clause in the Geneva Convention which allows neutral nations to send sanitary and medical aid to the scene of hostilities without sacrificing their neutrality. The members of the unit have, therefore, not been commissioned...
...Medical Lecture. "The Diseases of the Nose, Ear and Throat and the Prevention of Colds." Dr. George F. Tobey, in the Union...