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Medicine Was Moving: Medicine was moving rapidly in two direc-in recent months, and in both it was ex-ding well beyond the traditional confines of i art of healing. The new emphasis in treat-was on individual and community health er than on illness. Primarily research concerned with the basic processes of lire, studying diseases in terms of the shape behavior of atoms and molecules. At the time medicine was concerned with its ition as a social institution reaching out to vide health care for all the people while ying ways of maintaining the level of com-ceof its practitioners.
Distinguished professor president of the State Stony Brook, Dr. Glass Review of Biology. He the board of trustees of oratory of Quantitative the board of directors for the Advancement of
Dr. Glaser is vice-president for medical affairs, dean, and professor of medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is also president-elect of the Association of American Medical Colleges and a member of the National Advisory Council of the U.S. Public Health Service, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Board of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences.
RADCLIFFE, John, English physician: b. Wakefield, England, 1650 ; d. Carshalton, Nov. 1, 1714. He was graduated from University College, Oxford, in 1669, and from then until 1677 was a fellow of Lincoln College. Meanwhile, in 1675, he obtained a medical degree and practiced medicine in Oxford until 1684. Moving to London, he soon became one of the leading physicians of the period, numbering William III, Queen Mary, and other members of the royal family among his patients, and amassed a large fortune. He was elected to Parliament in 1690 and 1713, and for many years served as governor of St.
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