Word: helpern
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...Milton Helpern, 64, New York City's chief medical examiner, then took the stand to pronounce Farber's death a homicide-even though the original death certificate listed the cause as coronary thrombosis. Called in last summer when New Jersey authorities had Farber's body exhumed, Helpern said that he found a fractured larynx, which led him to believe that Farber had been strangled. He said that he found the heart "normal...
Also elected were Phoebe C. Elisworth of Guilford, Conn. (Social Relations); Dana Smith Eisbree of Libonier, Pa. (Government); Penny Hollander Feldman of Silver Springs, Md. (Government); Sheila L. Grinnell of Bronx, N.Y. (English); Joan M. Helpern of New York City (Social Relations); Martha J. Kaplan of Perth Amboy, N.J. (Government); and Sydney Key of Berkeley, Calif, (Economics...
...generally calms down just as quickly. Doctors do rate their occasional rest. But are they taking time off too often, even between vacations? "It has become hazardous to develop a serious illness over a weekend or on a holiday, or even at night;" declared Manhattan's Dr. Milton Helpern last week. "The contagion of the medical day terminating at 4 or 5 o'clock in the afternoon in clinics seems to have infected some of the medical profession in private practice...
...York City's chief medical examiner. Dr. Helpern concerns himself with violent and unexplained deaths-"patients" who are already beyond help and cannot call him in. But he is sufficiently interested in the standing of his profession to have worked his way up to the presidency of New York County's powerful (17,000-member) medical society. It was in his inaugural address that Dr. Helpern told his colleagues...
...Navarone) Irving Rubine, and Millionaire Realtor Arnold Kirkeby, former head of the Kirkeby chain of luxury hotels. Ironically, 17 passengers had transferred to American One at the last moment, when a United Air Lines flight was canceled. So shattered were the bodies that Chief Medical Examiner Milton Helpern ruled out visual identification by relatives as "inhumane," set out to distinguish them by fingerprints and other means...