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...clock. By then the doctors agreed that her first trouble had been a simple, psychogenic stomachache, but it had snowballed until every problem in her life brought gastrointestinal distress. She became a hopeless hypochondriac, obsessed with her mentally tangled intestines, incurably ill with what the late great Sir William Osier, who was not given to psychiatric terminology, called "bowels on the brain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Preventive Psychiatry | 9/22/1952 | See Source »

...longtime Baltimore favorite. A Johns Hopkins tradition attributes the following informal prescription to the great Dr. William Osier: 1) hang a hat on the bedpost, 2) go to bed and drink rock-and-rye until there are two hats on the bedpost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Common Cold | 2/25/1952 | See Source »

Died. Dr. George Dock, 91, famed pathologist and associate of the late great Sir William Osier; of a heart attack; in Altadena, Calif. One of the first full-time professors of medicine in the U.S. (at St. Louis' Washington University), he published the first successful diagnosis of coronary thrombosis, wrote scores of wryly humorous papers on a wide variety of medical subjects (typical Dock title: The Advantage of Using Potassium Iodide Until We Have Something Better...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Jun. 11, 1951 | 6/11/1951 | See Source »

Under Daniel Coit Oilman, Hopkins' first president (1876-1901), the university grew mightily. Lord Kelvin, Lord Bryce and William James were among its distinguished lecturers, Woodrow Wilson and Philosopher Josiah Royce among those who worked for its Ph.D. The medical school, with its famous four-Sir William Osier, William H. Welch, William S. Halsted and Howard A. Kelly-was for years the best in the U.S. Other campuses followed the Hopkins in emphasizing advanced research. Even Harvard's imperious Charles W. Eliot had to concede that "the graduate school of Harvard University . . . did not thrive until the example...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Here Are the Books | 3/5/1951 | See Source »

...graduated from the University of Pennsylvania's Medical School in 1884, before the X ray was discovered. He was a student, and later an associate, of the great Sir William Osier, who died 30 years ago. He was one of the first men to recognize leukemia and Hodgkin's disease as tumors rather than infections. He published the first successful diagnosis on a living patient of the disease now called coronary thrombosis, and made microscopic post-mortem sections of coronary arteries a full 25 years before the process was generally understood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Challenge to Tom Parr | 4/24/1950 | See Source »

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