Word: malte
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...Ronald Malt, a Harvard Medical School professor who performed the first successful surgical reattachment of a human limb, died of Alzheimer’s Disease...
...Malt was the chief surgical resident at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) when he and his team reattached the arm of 12-year-old Everett “Red” Knowles in 1962. Knowles severed his right arm below the shoulder while hanging on the side of a freight train as it passed a stone abutment...
...never considered replantation before,” said Malt in an interview with The Boston Globe in 1987, “but at the very minute Red came into the emergency ward, we were discussing the possibility of causing limbs to regenerate...
...accident, Malt and his surgical team reconnected the arm and restored the blood supply. Four months later they operated again to reattach the nerves. After a period of physical therapy there was one more surgery in which Malt and his team strengthened the arm’s tendons...
...sipped at a bar or competed over during a Beirut game, beer defines Harvard life just as much as the Core curriculum or Larry Summers. So this week, Drinky Drink challenges you to put your well-rested brain to the test and brew some of your own malt beverage. The process, though a little lengthier than a trip to Louie’s (an ale can be made in a week and a lager in one to two months), is well worth it. Rock Bottom’s senior brewer Scott Hutchinson—who makes 570 gallons...