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...medical or surgical clinics, and some signs of their psychic distress may have been evident at that time. Many people apparently find it easier to go to the general physician rather than the psychiatrist. The results do indicate the value of close collaboration between the psychiatrist and the internist and surgeon, both before and after psychotherapy has begun...

Author: By Stanley H.king, | Title: UHS Study Reveals Catholics Don't, 'Dissatisfied' Persons Do Seek Psychiatrists | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...Daughter of a Larchmont, N.Y., doctor ("He calls himself an internist, which is really a G.P., but he charges a little more"), Joan made her debut in 1960 in a Boston nightclub. She was billed as "Pepper January, Comedy and Spice." She was fired the first night...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comedians: Hot Potato | 10/21/1966 | See Source »

Awareness that Medicare would become official on July 1 made its potential problems Topic A all through the convention. As he took over the office that he will hold for the next twelve months, the new president, Dr. Charles Hudson, a Cleveland internist, counseled moderation. "There are people who think doom is going to fall in on us," he said. "I think this opinion is not justified. We are not stepping off the brink into a bottomless pit of professional destruction and despair." He proposed that doctors "make the most of this new program." If they do, he suggested, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Doctors: The A.M.A. & Medicare | 7/8/1966 | See Source »

Having been "absolutely sterile" for 18 years as the result of radiation exposure, Manhattan Internist John M. Prutting, 56, was hardly pleased last fall when Mrs. Prutting, 35, gave birth to her first child. Without his consent or knowledge, says the doctor, Mrs. Prutting conceived her child by A.I.D. (artificial insemination by a donor). Predictably, Prutting is now suing for divorce on the only ground New York permits-adultery. Unpredictably, his suit poses a curious legal riddle, and a jury must now tackle the key issue: Does A.I.D. constitute adultery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: The Riddle of A.I. | 2/25/1966 | See Source »

...those vibrations bouncing off the bones of their heads. It is definite that they do feel the vibrations, and sometimes when they sing high notes, they feel faint and dizzy, and they often have to sit down. Sopranos are probably not as affected because their voices are smaller." An internist finds the theory scientifically feasible: "Ultrasound shatters molecules, and that's what we are made of. High frequencies in his singing voice could well knock a tenor silly every time he belts out a high...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Singers: The Great Vibration Theory, Or Are Singers Really Stupid? | 8/6/1965 | See Source »

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