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Preparation for this global future will allow you more control over your involvement in this ever changing international workforce. Your knowledge of other languages and cultures, your experience in different settings and environments, your ability to think and to act across geographic borders and traditional discipline boundaries will all be...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: INTERNATIONAL CAREERS TODAY | 10/17/1997 | See Source »

What vocation is more ancient or innately human than the art of bringing people together to laugh, talk and get to know each other? Yes, doctors and lawyers and others with such "real life" jobs have it cut out for themselves, but how do their professional dilemmas compare to those of the matchmaker's? Giving its version of the age-old profession, Hollywood has produced yet another saccharine, 90s Darcy-Lizzy date movie in the form of The Matchmaker...

Author: By Angma D. Jhala, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Task of 'Matchmaker' Trouble-Free in an Irish Disneyland | 10/17/1997 | See Source »

In a period when women were only beginning to enter the field of architecture, Larrabee made large inroads into a profession dominated by men.

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Architect Eleanor Larrabee Dies In New York at 74 | 10/2/1997 | See Source »

...matter what other goals it may achieve, the medical profession has always maintained as its ultimate mission the relief of human suffering. Though the greatest of medical innovators have made their most important contributions for any combination of personal and professional reasons, the background against which their motivations play has never changed. It remains what it has been since earliest s: the constant mindfulness that individual people are enduring the effects of disease and that only through the intervention of others can their problems be addressed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HEROES OF MEDICINE | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

When it comes to treating pain in children, the medical profession has a checkered history. Until the 1970s, the mistaken idea that babies do not feel pain was widely accepted, and infants undergoing major surgery were often given little or no anesthesia, just drugs to paralyze them temporarily. "The reluctance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A CHILD'S PAIN | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

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