Word: journalitis
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...Robert Winters, a political observer and editor of the Cambridge Civic Journal, said that he was confident that most Massachusetts voters would agree with the proposal...
...realized that students in general needed more career guidance, according to their Web site. They solicited multiple partnerships, seeking businesses that would be “a good fit in terms of job opportunities,” Allan said. They eventually decided on careerbuilder.com and The Wall Street Journal, which is trying to enter the college market with CollegeJournal.com. Today, the Alumwire team consists of 14 people and is generating revenue from advertisements. Allan said that students have begun to explore the site’s possibilities, especially as entrepreneurship recently has seen an upward trend. “After...
...With the media industry going through tough times in places like the U.S., even a few Western journalists have made the leap. After finishing a master's degree in journalism at Northwestern, Melissa Bell, 27, pondered applying for jobs in the U.S. or returning to India, where she had interned at the Hindustan Times (circulation: 3.85 million). When that paper announced it was launching a new business daily in a content partnership with the Wall Street Journal, she jumped at the chance to be involved, despite her parents' and boyfriend's misgivings...
Racial disparities in health care exist even in high-quality health care plans, says a study by researchers at Harvard and Brown medical schools published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The findings are significant because they reveal more than just an overall racial discrepancy—which has been well documented—but also discrepancies within the same health care plans. “Other studies have focused on whether white and African-American patients are equally likely to receive simple blood tests,” said co-author John Z. Ayanian, associate professor...
...expect. When Raja G. Haddad ’05 left Harvard, he was an important member of the university’s artistic community. He was president of the Signet Society, a published poet, and co-founder of the Cinematic, Harvard’s student-run film journal. But when he returned to Harvard Square’s Brattle Theater two weeks ago, it wasn’t as a visiting director or journalist. He came as an employee of Katzenbach Partners LLP, a New York-based consulting firm. Haddad coordinated a brainstorming session at which Harvard students discussed ways...