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註釋Read this book:-If you're a fellow physician, or-If you wish to share in the fascinating tales and secrets of this doctor whose lucky life has been one adventure after another,-If you've lived through the great depression of the thirties,-If you've ever lived in a cold-water flat in Brooklyn,-If you're a veteran who served in our great Air Force or in our(almost as great) Army or Navy,-If you've had a brother, sister or child who has crashed through a plate glass storm door before parents and pediatricians fought for safety glass in storm doors.-If you've helped in the national parent and pediatrician campaigns to make school buses safe,-If you're a mom who thinks that pacifiers can't kill. (Think again!)-Or too, if you want to share in great medical discoveries which, until now, have remained secret.The Author:This very lucky and very loving doctor, son of a Brooklyn General Practice physician, was born during our country's great depression, grew up amongst the poor, attended a rich-boy high school that he hated, attended an upstate New York college with World War II veterans that he loved, gained entrance to a medical school and then entered our United States Air Force. There, against the orders of his commanding colonel, but with the help of a savvy and well-loved sergeant, he organized a whole Air Force Base in the construction of a Pediatric Unit - while his commander was away on a brief vacation. After military service, Doctor Feinberg did research on the respiratory problems of premature babies and came up with prescient and startling conclusions. Thereafter, he entered private practice, where he organized national parent/pediatrician/news media and television campaigns that resulted in child safety legislation for children on school buses. Now, in retirement, he has initiated a Medical Society Emeritus Committee whose purpose is to help the elderly.