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| | TIME.com: Shot Without Pain -- Oct. 27, 1947 -- Page 1 (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10) |
 | | The revolutionary gadget, called the "hypospray," is a kind of air gun that shoots an injection under the skin in a spray so fine that the patient usually does not feel it. |
 | | The hypospray blasts a drug through the pores, using air pressure of 25 to 125 pounds per square inch. |
 | | Georgetown University's Dr. Edward B. Tuohy, who exhibited the hypospray at a Washington meeting last fortnight, foresaw a crop of new whodunit plots: "Why, with this gun someone could readily substitute poison for insulin, shoot his victim by pressing the hypospray gun against him in a crowd, and. |
| www.time.com /time/magazine/article/0,9171,854843,00.html (441 words) |
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