Word: physicians
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Prom at Vassar. Possibly the reason for such a large attendance of rivals lies in Harvard's apparently scornful attitude toward marriage and its study. We should also like to point out that there is more than a slight difference between Hygiene lectures for Freshmen given by a college physician, and lectures for the entire college given by eminent specialists and psychologists on a subject which is still very popular among a great many people as marriage statistics will prove...
...American College of Surgeons, American College of Physicians, American Medical Association all bind their members not to split fees. Nevertheless, the practice of dichotomy-by which one physician refers a patient to another for a price-is almost as widespread in the U. S. as it is in France, where it has been regulated. So flagrant has the practice become in New York City, where medical competition is keen and many a physician has to scratch gravel to survive, that last week the president of the Association of Private Hospitals Inc. called in the press to expostulate...
Married, Anne Rebe Wertheim, niece of Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr., daughter of liberal Banker Maurice Wertheim who supports The Nation; and Dr. Louis Langman, Manhattan physician; in Greenwich, Conn...
...Dispensatory, appeared in its 22nd edition. Published by Philadelphia's old J. B. Lippincott Co., edited by Professor Horatio Charles Wood of the University of Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy & Science, the Dispensatory tells how to prepare 28,000 compounds, practically any prescription any physician might order. Last week's issue of the Dispensatory marked a milestone. Billed as the "centennial edition," it was actually four years late because Editor Wood did such a faithful and thorough job that he could not get the book out on time...
Editorship of the Dispensatory has been in the hands of one family since the first volume appeared in 1833. First editor was Dr. George Bacon Wood (1797-1879)> Philadelphia Quaker, physician and pharmacologist. Next came Dr. Horatio Charles Wood (1841-1920), his Quaker nephew, a pharmacologist and neurologist. His Presbyterian grandnephew, the present Dr. Horatio Charles Wood, then took over the job. Last week, when he stacked the first Dispensatory on his desk beside the last, Pharmacologist Wood was looking at a proud scientific family monument...