You should like your doctor.
Whether or not you like your doctor matters. It matters because if you don t like your doctor, you re not going to be honest and forthcoming. Your doctor needs you to be honest and forthcoming to take good care of you. And you want good care.
But, realistically, you may not like your doctor. You figured that was OK. You probably don t see your doctor that often and .
Arthur Johnson
Beloved father, grandfather, brother, friend, community lawyer and activist
Arthur L. Johnson, a/k/a “Mr. JP” died peacefully at his home in Jamaica Plain on March 28.
Born in Toledo, Ohio, on September 17, 1946, Arthur was the oldest of Edith Dooley Johnson and William Johnson’s six sons. He graduated in 1964 from St. Francis de Sales High School in Toledo, Ohio and in 1968 from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester where he was editor of the campus newspaper and participated on the varsity tennis team.
He served in the United States Navy from 1968 to 1970 and was stationed on a destroyer off the coast of Vietnam. When he returned, Arthur was granted an honorable discharge from the Navy as a conscientious objector to the war in Vietnam.