Word: medi
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Willard was elected last week, after twelve years on the Johns Hopkins board and three years as mainspring of a committee that has raised some six millions to expand and endow the Johns Hopkins hospital and medi-cal school. Now he will be, with President Goodnow, the mainspring by which Johns Hopkins means to eliminate its elementary instruction, reorganize itself on its original lines of advanced and research work (TIME, March 8) and raise six more millions to finance the change...
...number of women physicians in the U. S. is now 6% of the total, whereas ten years ago women com- prised about 10%. Dr. Kate C. H. Mead, former President of the Medi- cal Women's National Association, ascribes the decrease to the increased cost of medical education and to increased opportunities of women in social and laboratory work, which attracts women who might otherwise study Medicine...
Publisher Macfadden states that Mr. Katzoff is a "graduate in law, pharmacy and medicine, a prominent physician, psychologist and author." But medi-cal authorities point out that Katzoff graduated from the Georgia College of Eclectic Medicine and Surgery and holds his licenses to practice from the eclectic boards of Georgia and Connecticut, which have been under fire in connection with recent scandals in medical licensing...
...Lancet (founded in 1823), Great Britain's oldest scientific weekly, will celebrate its 100th birthday by an anniversary number. It is at this day one of the leading medi-cal journals of the world. Since its founding anaesthetics, antiseptics, and bacteriology, as well as many other fundamental contributions to medicine, have been made. It has something to celebrate...