Word: journalizer
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Research published this week has added to a growing body of evidence confirming what common sense has suggested for some time—drinking soda can cause obesity. One of the studies, published in the Journal of Pediatrics, said that increased soda consumption in adolescent girls can predict increases in weight. This study, and another in the Journal of American Clinical Nutrition, add to the growing literature of the ill effects of soda. “Over the long term, the excess calories [from soda] lead to weight gain and there is evidence that over the last decade caloric intake...
According to Pamela K. Keel, associate professor of clinical psychology at the University of Iowa, a study soon to be published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders finds that the general public is likely to view eating-disorder patients as responsible for their own condition...
...tell their parents or get their permission in order to have an abortion, actually reduce the teen abortion rate? Previous scientific studies - and one analysis this week by the New York Times - have cast doubt on the impact of such laws. But researchers writing in the latest New England Journal of Medicine report that in Texas at least, such laws have reduced the abortion rate significantly...
...country’s premier opinion pages made the same contention, attributing Summers’ ouster to the political correctness of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. The Wall Street Journal focused on Summers’ encounter with Cornel West, his support of the military, and his comments on the “intrinsic aptitude” of women in science as the causes of Faculty discontent. The Journal portrayed the Faculty as “largely left-wing” with “about as much intellectual diversity as the Pyongyang parliament.” Arguing from...
...school’s history. Currently a research fellow at Stanford, Camara submitted an article for publication to the Yale Law Journal’s March Symposium Edition. But an anonymous e-mail, sent to the entire Yale Law School student body—after the editors of the Journal had accepted the article for publication—stated that in March 2002, Camara had used racial slurs in an outline he made for a first-year property law course, which was posted on an on-line HLS outline bank. Explaining a case regarding racially restrictive property covenants, Camara wrote...