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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Brigham, fast becoming the iron man of the Varsity's pitching staff, has won four games and lost none this season. He has pitched the full nine innings on three occasions. Emmet distinguished himself in hitless relief against Princeton last Friday...
...movie as a representation of the novel fails completely except for Cobb's performance. There is no Grand Inquisitor, none of the sequences from the portion of the novel called "The Boys," and the climactic trial scene contains none of the excitement and meaning which Dostoevsky was able to give it. As the movie ends, Ivan finds God; Dmitri finds Girl; cold, old Katya finds nothing; and Alexey finds that the workings of God are, as we long suspected, inscrutable...
...subject, the coming and going, if that's the right word, of a prophet to the Islands. Elaine Ford's The Foil lacks any development of a third character, Berthe, in a love story which is rather nicely handled in her clean style. Yet one has the feeling that none of the stuff in the first issue of The Editor was absolutely crying for publication...
...operation's aftermath came the shocking discovery that Mrs. Lowman, mother of two children, had been born with only one kidney. Now she had none-and no human can stay alive without a kidney. Surgeon Reese's next swift decision was to transfer her to Boston's Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, where he knew that a medical team could keep her alive temporarily with an artificial kidney. Armco Steel Corp., which employs two of her brothers, flew Mrs. Lowman and Dr. Reese to Boston at once in a company...
...preparation at Brigham for one of the most radical operations ever attempted: transplanting a kidney between persons who lack common genes. In recent years, a Brigham team had succeeded six times (and failed once) in kidney transplants-but only between identical twins. Of 17 attempted transplants between unrelated persons, none worked; antibodies in the recipients' blood destroyed the "foreign" tissue. The operations worked for the twins because of the rare match between the patients' genes: instead of being destroyed by antibodies, the transplanted kidneys "took...