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...MOROCCO Medical technologists will work in hospital and public health labs, performing tests and supervising students in their lab work. Generalists will work in labs or TB sanatoriums, doing lab examinations, supervising Moroccan assistants, screening for tuberculosis, and performing routines surveillance of food, water and milk products or will work at the animal hospital. Veterinarians will work with the Moroccan and international staff of the Fes animal hospital. MD's will head a Rabat-based mobils lab unit doing mass screening and health studies and will assist the Director of the Institute of Hygiene...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Directory: '66 Overseas Training Program | 3/3/1966 | See Source »

...moved medical, nursing and welfare personnel out into the countryside so that the poorest sugar-cane workers' children would get the same medical and dental examinations as city youngsters. Now there are clinics for pregnant women and for well babies-along with proper care for the sick. Where TB patients once languished for lack of treatment in a sanatorium, health workers now give out supplies of isoniazid to be taken at home, and then they check to make sure the pills are really taken...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Laurels: Up by the Bootstraps | 10/29/1965 | See Source »

Fitzgerald, after a number of visiting professorships at other institutions, came to Harvard this year. Last fall he taught English Ta, an advanced course in composition, and Comp Lit 201, Studies in Narrative Poetry. This semester he is teaching English Tb and English 283, a course in versification...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Corporation Appoints Fitzgerald As Boylston Professor of Rhetoric | 4/13/1965 | See Source »

Died. Dr. Gordon Stifler Seagrave, 68, the indomitable Burma surgeon who, starting in 1922, built up a 250-bed hospital in the wild northern hill country near China, there supervising the treatment of some 17,000 patients yearly despite his own ill health (TB, dysentery, bubonic plague, beriberi) and a shoestring $75,000 annual budget, part of which came from his best-selling books (Burma Surgeon, Burma Surgeon Returns); of a heart attack; in Namhkam, Burma...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Apr. 2, 1965 | 4/2/1965 | See Source »

...from Limbo. Yet, amazingly, last week Bud Powell, now 39, was back on the U.S. jazz scene, cured of TB and fat as a Burgermeister. The homecoming was staged at Birdland, New York's famed jazz temple, which after a two-month fling at booking rock-'n'-rollers (TIME, May 8) has returned to hosting modern jazzmen. The metamorphosis was complete when Powell forcefully struck the first chords of The Best Thing for You Is Me. His attack was robust and sure, erupting in a series of crashing, dissonant chords, then retreating in flights of delicate melodic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jazz: Bud's O.K. | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

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