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

...anyone can work for the Inc. Fund; its current staff, including three whites, is heavy on ex-law-review editors and Ivy League products. Under a pioneering legal-intern program, the fund is training and will subsidize civil rights lawyers to fill an urgent need: fulltime practice in the South. The entire state of Mississippi, for example, has at present only four Negro lawyers. One promising recruit: Julius L. Chambers, son of an auto mechanic and first Negro to edit the North Carolina Law Review...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Civil Rights: Constitutional Commandos | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

...outback in hiring will affect both permanent and temporary positions, but each individual agency will have to make its own decisions about its student intern program, he declared...

Author: By Ronald J. Greene, | Title: LBJ Order May Cost Students Jobs | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

Separate Entrances. Trouble is, most emergency rooms are not organized to handle their burgeoning business. Many of them are out of date and ill-equipped, even for treating genuine accident cases. Many are understaffed; often enough the intern on duty is a foreign-born doctor whose language difficulties become almost insurmountable for the patient or his overwrought family. And the emergency room's new popularity is likely to cram it with cases of infectious disease-which is hardly to be desired for the accident victim brought in with an open wound. It is an unhappy situation for patients, doctors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hospitals: Boom in Emergency Rooms | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

...tired of lying about the truth ... I am tired of my skin ... I WANT OUT!" Jack, Bessie's driver and boy-friend, comes to this hospital, after being turned away from another, asking someone to help Bessie, knowing she is already dead in the car. The intern and the orderly, defying the nurse, go out to confront the all-too-real agony. The play ends with the cries of all combining into one shriek, which soon dies, because it is not heard...

Author: By Alan JAY Mason, | Title: Two by Albee: A Personal Yowl | 7/16/1963 | See Source »

...alternating laughing and mumbling, evokes nothing more than the character of a laugher and a mumbler. This effect may be what the actor strived for. If it is, the acting is so false and strained that the audience is jarred. Franklyn Spodak and Herbert Davis fare better as the intern and orderly. The problem the cast had with remembering lines has, hopefully, been solved by now--for until an actor knows where he is physically in the script, he cannot know where he is emotionally in the play...

Author: By Alan JAY Mason, | Title: Two by Albee: A Personal Yowl | 7/16/1963 | See Source »

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