Word: journals
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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Once having purchased a paper, Newhouse is interested mainly in making it pay - as 12 of the 14 Newhouse papers do. Editorial policy and the practice of journalism are matters he leaves to his editors, who do not even have to carry his name on the masthead and are free to endorse any cause. Says Newhouse: "It may be temperament, it may be inclina tion, but I will not interfere with my editors, or with local affairs." The Bir mingham News is rabidly segregation ist; in Syracuse, the Democrat-leaning Herald-Journal and the Republican Post-Standard carry...
...Andrews decided on a bigger and more scientific test. He kept records on all tonsillectomy cases (more than 1,000) for three years. Sure enough, 82% of bleeding crises occurred between the moon's first and third quarters. Actually, says the doctor, writing in the Journal of the Florida Medical Association, the disproportion was even greater because fewer patients were admitted around full moon. "Perhaps," he suggests, tongue slightly in cheek, "laymen know more about this than we do and are reluctant to enter the hospital at this time." To make doubly sure of his findings, Dr. Andrews...
Head of the research team reporting in the A.M.A. Journal was Dr. Morris Greenberg. Three days before his report and after 40 years of work on rabies, Dr. Greenberg, 69, died of a heart attack suffered while making an after-dinner speech in praise of a retiring colleague...
...latest thing in auto accessories is "jaguar chest" and "corvette hip." So reported Dr. Jerome F. Strauss Jr. of Chicago last week, in a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association. The use of smaller cars has become so wide spread, said Dr. Strauss, that doctors should watch their patients for a "small-car syndrome," marked by complaints of chest and hip aches. He suspects that the aches can often be traced to a smaller car or sports car, which has less room, requires more muscle power to drive...
Bicks was practically born into the law. Both his mother and father (New York District Court Judge Alexander Bicks) are lawyers. Graduating summa cum laude from Yale in 1949, he went to Yale Law School, became Comments editor on the Yale Law Journal. His work attracted another Yaleman and onetime Comments editor: Herbert Brownell, then Attorney General, who needed a bright young man to help him with a newly appointed committee on antitrust laws. Bicks took the job in 1953 and discovered that antitrust work was precisely what he wanted. "One of the few absolute personal values I have...