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...addition to the $53 million he was getting in drugs, food and other goods in exchange for the prisoners. Last week the list of donors to that $53 million was being filled out; some companies had given or pledged more than they had been listed for in previous, partial lists (TIME, Jan. 11). Among them: American Cyanamid Corp., Pearl River, N.Y., $3,300,000 (instead of the previously reported $1,000,000); Richardson-Merrill, N.Y.C., $1,337,000 (instead of $155,000); Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, N.J., $1,011,000 (instead of $350,000); Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, listed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Good for a Million | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

...frustrated by physical helplessness and speechlessness that he has a powerful motive to do the repetitive exercises that will help him to recover. The older the patient, usually, the less powerful this motive. How much of his improvement over a period of months is due to a partial resumption of function by damaged but not quite dead brain cells, and how much is due to other parts of the brain taking over the lost functions, is not known. The number of detailed differences between individual cases is so nearly infinite, says New York University's Professor Clark Randt, that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Neurology: Can Man Learn to Use The Other Half of His Brain? | 1/11/1963 | See Source »

...shapes, or perhaps most significant, of emotionally important events. Even the senses present puzzling problems. Vision may become poorer, but so subtly that the beset patient does not recognize his difficulty. Or he may be depressed by a general decline in his responsiveness to sensory stimuli, or by a partial failure of his mental computer to pull together the stimuli received through different senses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Neurology: Can Man Learn to Use The Other Half of His Brain? | 1/11/1963 | See Source »

...portrayal of R. A. Skelton and the plans he is formulating for the University's map collection, becomes even more interesting and at the same time very much less informative in its exaggerated description of the present state of affairs in the Winsor Map Room. Unfortunately, (I'm rather partial to sweet little old ladies, myself) neither the staff nor the surroundings are quite so picturesque as those described by Gerry; the attendants, although seriously handicapped by the lack of a catalogue, are usually able to come up with a map which answers the reader's question. Perhaps...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SKELTON IN THE CLOSET | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

...maintain himself upright. Five minutes after the injection he trumpeted, collapsed, fell heavily onto his right side, defecated, and went into status epilepticus. The limbs on the left side were hyperextended and held stiffly out from the body; the limbs on the right side were drawn up in partial flexion; there were tremors throughout. The eyes were closed and showed a spasm of the orbicularis occuli; the eyeballs were turned sharply to the left, with markedly dilated pupils. The mouth was open, but breathing was extremely labored and stertorous..." But why go on? "He died 1 hour and 40 minutes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Flying Elephant | 12/12/1962 | See Source »

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