Word: macdonald
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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More than a dozen such cases have been reported, writes Britain's famed Neurologist Macdonald Critchley in the Annals of Internal Medicine, and the more closely they are studied, the less they are understood. Some outstanding examples...
...past few years, they have been particularly successful. The implications of this are great. As Wallace MacDonald '34, acting Dean of Freshman notes, "It seems to me entirely possible that the more successful the intramural athletic program, the less interest or enthusiasm there may be for the competitions which are normally assumed a measurement of freshman extra-curricular activities...
...John B. MacDonald has been named Director of the Forsyth Dental Infirmary for Children and professor of Oral Microbiology in the School of Dental Medicine...
...MacDonald was chairman of the Division of Dental Research and professor of Bacteriology in the Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto. In 1952 he was chairman of a joint committee of the Canadian Medical and Dental Associations...
...males in the cast give generally the most impressive individual performances, with Bruce MacDonald given highest honors because he cannot only sneer and hop, but sing. Benjamin Neilson, as the other Earl, is not troubled by this latter difficulty, but carries himself well and obscures none of the humor, which is all that counts. The Lord Chancellor, Arthur Waldstein, has an even less prepossessing voice, and occasionally his froggish hops seem uncertain and feeble, but he does manage some of Gilbert's speedier lyrics, all the while conveying a most Chancellorial wizenedness. Perhaps less sure of himself on stage...