Word: londoners
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Britain's canine quarantine regulations were no problem at all for Actress Gayle Hunnicutt, 24, mistress to two Yorkshire terriers named Cathy and Heathcliffe. Gayle simply packed the tiny, heavily tranquilized beasts in a carryall and lugged them past customs at London Airport. Some such illegal dodge was necessary to get around England's strict six-month waiting period for animal immigrants, which recently forced Richard and Liz Burton to charter a yacht to house their animals during a visit. The less expensive tote bag was Gayle's own idea. So was her final coup-getting...
...Hospitals, 19 patients with a variety of clotting problems, including deep-Vein thromboses in the legs and some involving the lungs, have been treated. In at least ten, the result is cautiously reported as "satisfactory." In others, it was equivocal, but all these patients had other complicating problems. From London's Royal Postgraduate Medical School comes a report of nine patients treated, eight successfully. Most important, the Lancet notes editorially, is that Arvin may not only prevent clotting but actually help to dissolve some clots already formed...
...make a patient liable to hemorrhage. Doctors in Malaya, treating victims of pit viper bites, noticed that they never seemed to have trouble with clots, and neither did they bleed excessively. Years of research to purify the active part of the venom yielded a substance named Arvin by London's Twyford Laboratories. Now, reports in the Lancet testify to the potential of Arvin, given intravenously...
...appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week. Considering the makeup of the Liberation News Service, that sort of performance can only be expected. The service is the undertaking of two unruly firebrands: Marshall Bloom, 23, who graduated from Amherst and later was temporarily suspended from the London School of Economics for organizing a student protest meeting; and Raymond Mungo, 21, who kept Boston University in a constant state of nerves when he edited the campus paper...
...their own governmental gold reserves-now down to about $25 billion. France, because it is no longer an active member of the pool, was conspicuously missing from the invitation list. Piqued because of the omission, Charles de Gaulle decided to keep the Paris Bourse open last week after London's gold market had shut down at Washington's suggestion. The result (see THE WORLD) was wild trading and a rise in the speculation price per ounce of gold...