Word: organized
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...Richard H. Overholt found that too many of his patients got little benefit and still suffered from the "tyranny and cruelty" of asthma. Now, in the A.M.A. Journal, he reports encouraging results, after all else had failed, from a. relatively simple operation on a tiny, little understood organ...
...currently accompanying its birth. Founded to provide a Harvard education for women, Radcliffe has always had a somewhat relationship to Harvard. In the 1962 Yearbook, President Bunting remarks that in 1943, when classes and educational policy were finally co-, "Radcliffe became a college Harvard University. . . . The had become an organ." But, although "Cliffies will receive Harvard diplomas next year, this is not the same as being a part of Harvard College. According to Mrs. Bunting, the Radcliffe identity provides the incentives as well as the responsibility for full consideration to the special of women students...
Hunt thinks his experiments prove that rats feel small amounts of radiation almost as soon as it hits them. They may do it through some special sense organ or by general stimulation of their nervous tissue. Once the Navy scientists find out just how the rats do their radiation detection, they hope that the experiments can be extended to humans. The nerves and senses of rats and men are basically alike. Humans are presumably less sensitive, but if they are found to be sensitive at all, there is a chance that they can be trained to feel dangerous radiation...
...arterial vessels is likely to lead to infarction (destruction through lack of oxygenated blood) or atrophy (malfunction through an insufficient arterial blood supply of a segment of the kidney, proportional to the diameter of the artery involved, as there are no intra-renal capallary by-passes present in the organ...
...seven soloists also made the rhythms mean something, avoiding the heavy tone so easy in Baroque singing. The women's voices were too frail, but the lines otherwise blended with fluent ease. It is interesting that the very presence of this unusually large group of soloists and of an organ and two strings helped focus our attention on the specific expression in the music. Since the sound and very appearance of a men's chorus have ambiguous associations--with the concert hall and the barber shop--concerts as serious as this one need careful programming to make fully clear...