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...summary: HARVARD YALE Wolcott, Sprague, Braggiotti, l.w. r.w., Schley, Weygandt, Betts, Levitt Everett, Gilmore, Mays, c. c., Cookman, Noyes, Ammidon Wadsworth, Foster, Sleeper, r.w. l.w., Johnston, Buck, Stone, Patterson Gleason, l.d. r.d., Carroll, Wheeler O. Thorndike, r.d. l.d., Barnes, Clarke Bartol, g. g., Beard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WEEK-END SPORT SUMMARIES | 3/2/1931 | See Source »

Sirs: TIME, May 19, p. 34, heading "Artists." Do Yale's Arthur Hiler Ruggles and Hamburg's Wilhelm Weygandt know of Louise Rice, New York graphologist, and her collection and studies of scribbles? Nationally and internationally known people, big business organizations, detectives, lawyers, unhappy couples, misfits, underworld characters-all take odd drawings and bits of scratchings to her. She's done farming, showboating on the Mississippi, reporting in the Bowery and Chinatown 35 years ago before modern artificial atmosphere, worked behind "Five and Ten" counters-now writes and graphologizes. You scribble. It's unconscious. Rounded lines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jun. 30, 1930 | 6/30/1930 | See Source »

...normal mind which stands closest to insanity. Next come in close order sculpture, poetry, music. Psychiatrists are just beginning to interpret what they have long observed?the close connection between the psychopath and the artist on one hand, the psychopath and the criminal on the other.?Professor Wilhelm Weygandt of the University of Hamburg. His patients produce modernistic paintings?lop-sided faces, elongated beasts, geometrical patterns?comparable to those of the modern masters. But not all such artists, said he, are mentally unbalanced. Some draw

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Mental Hygiene | 5/19/1930 | See Source »

Although, in Ohio, hospitals, being incorporated as charitable in- stitutions, are not liable for damages on account of errors or mis- takes of their employes, the Sam Smith lawyer raised newspaper thunder last week. A county judge, Carl Weygandt, refused the hospital's request to hush up the affair, himself visited the hospital (and Mrs. Sam Smith). He found a nurse, Gretchen Meyer, who had bathed the baby three times during each of the obfuscated days. She "regretted her lack of observation" and said she did not learn the Sam Smith's baby's sex until...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: In Cleveland | 9/26/1927 | See Source »

Exclaimed Judge Weygandt: "This case is unique. More than the lives of the baby and the parents are at stake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: In Cleveland | 9/26/1927 | See Source »

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