Decision to Fire JAMA Editor Wrong
By Matt Nisbet | January 25, 1999seventeen-year editor of The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), shocked the medical, science and media world.
seventeen-year editor of The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), shocked the medical, science and media world.
As graduation nears, and I head out into the real world, I dream of a tobacco-free society and a different Republican party.
It was early spring, and I had already spent a weary hour headed back up to Hanover on the Dartmouth Mini Coach from Logan Airport.
In a boomtown, money flows like a raging river. During the 1880s, young entrepreneurs flocked west to legendary boomtown destinations like Tombstone, Arizona.
Four years ago, my high school pal earned acceptance at all eight Ivy League institutions, but decided to stay at home and commute to the State University at Buffalo's Honors program.
Asleaves fall outside our movie theaters and cinemas, Hollywood mounts a fall campaign against the last remaining strains of mainstream American culture.
Isat down to lunch last week with a fierycampus feminist and asked her whether she was in support of Playboy magazine's "Women of the Ivy League" issue.
A Florida hospital recently established a trauma relief and counseling program for all of its employees.
Standing with my arms folded at last Friday's Dave Matthew's Band concert, my stomach began to churn and my mind to turn. The opening act, Ugly Americans, sung such eloquent lyrics as, "Marijuana.
On Super Bowl Sunday, not only will the fortunes of the Chargers and Forty-Niners be decided, but so will a large influence on the Republican Party.