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Word: specialists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Their enthusiasm provoked Dr. Gertrude Siegmond Nielsen, 41, Norman, Okla. child specialist, wife of a University of Oklahoma physicist and mother of three, to pop up at an A. M. A. section meeting and cry: "Child bearing is so essential an experience for a woman that the thwarting of its normal course by the excessive use of analgesics may cause great damage to her personality. If she is carried through delivery in an unconscious state, she is deprived of the experience of giving birth to her child and in some cases will pay for this escape from reality by nervous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Childbirth: Nature v. Drugs | 5/25/1936 | See Source »

...homicidal right whenever he is sufficiently annoyed. There is a travesty on the legal profession, and the lawyers, choice victims ever since Plato's time, take another merry trouncing. There is a mirthful experiment in indoor reverberation and a comical discourse on abnormal psychology, debunking the almost proverbial specialist from Vienna. And, as a final endearing gesture, Mr. Cooper takes a crack at the money-changers, and dabbles in amateur Communism. And every bit of this widespread appeal manages to click...

Author: By E. C. B., | Title: The Moviegoer | 5/20/1936 | See Source »

Like many another medical specialist, Dr. Walter Clement Alvarez of the Mayo Clinic suffers from the disease he cures in other people. In Dr. Alvarez' case the ailment is stomach ulcers. Last week, looking and feeling better than he has in years. Dr. Alvarez went to Atlantic City to attend a meeting of the American Gastro-Enterological Association, of which he was president in 1928 and which has a special lecture named in his honor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Sensitive Stomach | 5/18/1936 | See Source »

...father, the late great eye specialist Dr. Frank Buller, died when she was 3. She tried being a Montreal debutante, gave it up to study at Manhattan's Art Students' League. There Kenneth Hayes Miller told her she could improve her flat, overbright pictures by confining her palette to very few colors. To this good advice she credits the three-dimensional reality of her pictures. It takes her about two months for a painting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Clean, Opulent World | 5/11/1936 | See Source »

...reveals too little about that medically significant author's own activities. One unconnected series of jottings, however, is interesting to historian, layman and doctor. That is Dr. Cushing's record of how polyneuritis ambulatoria crept upon him and crippled him be fore he, a nerve specialist, realized what was occurring. The disease frequently is the sequel of some infection like scarlet fever or influenza. Nerves become inflamed, the inflammation progressing along nerve trunks and branches and indirectly causing muscles to waste away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Polyneuritis Ambulatoria | 5/11/1936 | See Source »

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