Word: physicians
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...that which you are going to make your life work." To this belief, however, President Lowell is a heretic. One of the objects of a course is to get certain points of view here which are not obtained in later life. If a man is going to be a physician, it is good for him to get a taste of literature in College. Whether right or wrong, this theory has something in it, and the studies which are directly in line with the lifework are not always the most beneficial studies...
...Medical Adviser makes the following announcement: Word should be sent by students confined to their rooms by illness to the Medical Adviser, Dr. M. H. Bailey, Thayer 21, telephone 1073, before 9.30 A. M. if possible. Later cases may be reported at 1569 Massachusetts avenue, telephone 1020. If no physician is already in attendance, patients will be visited as soon afterwards as possible. The nature of the illness and degree of urgency should be stated...
...Spain in 1085 during the period of high Moorish civilization when that country was the only one in which the persecuted race was tolerated. There the Jews held the balance of power. Owing to this toleration he received an excellent education and became a cultured man. He was a physician and philosopher with a charming personality, thoroughly balanced poetic temperament, and a keen imagination. The suffering of his race during the crusades gave form and thought to his poetical power, and he was so impressed with the fact that the function of the Jew is primarily religions, that he became...
After graduating from the Medical School in 1892, Dr. Cabot acted as physician to out-patients, and, later, as assistant visiting physician, at the Massachusetts General Hospital. In 1903, he became instructor in medicine, while, since 1908, he has served as assistant professor at the Medical School...
...Breaking Point" by James Savery '11, deals with an American criminologist, his Russion wife, his brother-in-law, his secretary, also from St. Petersburg, and a detective. Had the physician known of his brother-in-law's existence, he would not have suspected his wife's fidelity: but he could not have known it without discovering that the man was a murderer,--and this, it is carefully explained, would have destroyed his home. The detective may strike some of us as naive; but he simplifies the task of exposition, and the audience is left in no doubt...