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desire to cure the sick, crossed out: relieve the afflicted helpless and restore the helpless and make the period of hospitalization as effective and as comfortable as possible. Every day, people with physical or mental troubles [crossed out: entered] crossed the threshold of our hospital with dread, hope resentment or resignment, while others left relieved, improved or cured, and it was a privilege to have helped in the transformation.

In those days of the late thirties both interns and nurses maintained a much closer contact with the patients than they do in these days of nurses aids who bathe, take temperatures and blood pressures and laboratory technicians who draw the blood for chemistries. [lines deleted: We drew those samples before breakfast and therefore heard all that had happened during the night.] Once in a while our duties and functions took on a critical character. This happened to me soon after I started my internship, when one of the attending physicians phoned in the early evening to say that he was hospitalizing Mr. C with lobar pneumonia. "Get the sputum typed and