Word: glenn
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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This knowledge led to a whole series of new operations. Dr. Glenn Meyer, a University of Texas neurosurgeon, reports good results with a process called cingulotomy. Boring holes in the skull, he uses an electric current to cauterize and destroy bundles of nerve cells that connect various parts of the limbic lobe, or feeling brain. Performed on 59 patients, some of them schizophrenics or chronic alcoholics, the operation has produced a vast improvement in half, slight improvement in a fourth and no detectable change in the others...
...winners of the Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships are: Steven Berzin '71-4 of Leverett House and St Nom Labreteche, France; Michael Donnelly '71-4 of Dunster House and Rockville, Md.; Kenneth Haas '72 of Eliot House and New York: Bruce Johnson '72 of Eliot House and Shaker Heights, Ohio: Glenn Most '72 of Eliot House and New York: Timothy Peltason '72 of Leverett House and Urbana, Ill.; Phillip Rapoport '72 Dudley House and Great Neck, N.Y.: and Jon Rosenberg '72 of Currier House and Pittsburgh, Penn...
Four members of last year's Crimson squad, the first ever to shutout Princeton, duplicated their previous performances at four through seven. sophomores Glenn whitman and Archie Gwathmey completed the whitewash at eight and nine...
...them Craig Morgan, who was president of the Kent State student body at the time of the shootings. Brown emphasized that his decision was not intended to "vindicate or criticize the special grand jury, the students, the National Guard or the administration of the university." Though Kent State President Glenn A. Olds applauded Brown's "sensitivity to the interest of justice," many students were not appeased. Said Donna Clark, vice president of the student government: "Four persons are dead, ten were wounded and 25 had indictments hanging over their heads for more than a year. If that is justice...
Banal Lunch. To Falk, it long seemed impossible that he would ever be in the same league with the Glenn Fords. "I always romanticized that artists were a very special species and that ordinary people didn't become actors," he says. The son of a clothing retailer in Ossining, N.Y., Peter was ordinary people all right-a roughneck kid who dropped out of college to join the merchant marine in World War II, later got a master's in public administration at Syracuse University and spent three bemused, bored years as an efficiency expert in Connecticut...