Cite This Item
MLA
United Press International. Machine Keeps Joe Black Alive. Bothell, Wash:-While his wife, Louise, and children, Joey, 3, and Bonnie, 23 months, "visit" him in a hospital-clean room at home, Joe Black lies in bed hooked up to a kidney machine. Black owes his life to the machine- since his kidney do not function and chronic uremia poisoning will prove fatal-- which purifys the waste blood which accumulates in his body. [ca. July 1970]. Web. 05 Jun 2024. <https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/vh540z738>.
APA
United Press International. ([ca. July 1970]). Machine Keeps Joe Black Alive. Bothell, Wash:-While his wife, Louise, and children, Joey, 3, and Bonnie, 23 months, "visit" him in a hospital-clean room at home, Joe Black lies in bed hooked up to a kidney machine. Black owes his life to the machine- since his kidney do not function and chronic uremia poisoning will prove fatal-- which purifys the waste blood which accumulates in his body [Photograph]. Retrieved from https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/vh540z738
Chicago
United Press International. "Machine Keeps Joe Black Alive. Bothell, Wash:-While his wife, Louise, and children, Joey, 3, and Bonnie, 23 months, "visit" him in a hospital-clean room at home, Joe Black lies in bed hooked up to a kidney machine. Black owes his life to the machine- since his kidney do not function and chronic uremia poisoning will prove fatal-- which purifys the waste blood which accumulates in his body." Photograph. [ca. July 1970]. Digital Commonwealth, https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/vh540z738 (accessed June 05, 2024).