Word: physicians
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...plumbing has been little modernized; and although an annex for opidemies and contagious diseases was built many years ago, it has not been provided with telephone service. Every effort is made to provide the best possible care for each case, but the fact that there is no resident physician, and that there is a dearth of private rooms makes the care of seriously ill patients difficult, it not inadequate...
...among Harvard students for economical hospital service, but it allows the importance of fulfilling that need overcome its better judgement. It is obviously not equipped to do all that it undertakes. The ideal solution of the problem is the construction of an adequate University hospital, staffed with a resident physician, and provided with a sufficient number of private rooms and proper facilities for the care of contagion. At present such a building is but a dream awaiting the wand of another Harkness to make it a reality. Until that wand is applied, Stillman should be restored to its original status...
...major opportunity to overcome his deficiencies and develop his capacities. All students should have the advantage of the tutorial system. The best relation between tutor and student is dissatisfied he should have opportunity to transfer to another tutor, precisely as a patient who is dissatisfied may change his physician...
...Daisy Jost's case the Mayo Clinic, urged by Daisy's physician, Dr. William Conrad George Henske, went to the rescue. Guided by Bacteriologist Edward Carl Rosenow, a zealot in finding new germs and new forms of old germs, the Mayo specialists infected rabbits with smears taken from Daisy Jost's throat & nose. Declared Dr. Rosenow: "This is the first time that tests in cases of sneezing have been conducted in this world, to my knowledge. We are hoping that we will find a streptococcus that causes sneezing, so that a serum may be devised to combat...
Island of Lost Souls (Paramount) offers to connoisseurs of acting an opportunity to observe Charles Laughton in the role of a depraved physician who sets up a physiological research station on a remote Pacific isle and comes to a bad end at the claws of a crew of extras made up to resemble subhumans. If the principal role in this garish adaptation of H. G. Wells's Island of Doctor Moreau had been entrusted to some one else, it might very well have emerged as a routine nightmare, notable mainly for the presence of Paramount's highly publicized...