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...individual winner was 28-year-old Keith Chiappa, a pre-med advisor in Kirkland. His time of 9:30 was only two seconds off the course record. Chiappa was among the leaders throughout the race, but started moving away to his 25-yard victory as the runners rounded the stadium, three-eighths of a mile from the finish...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Eliot Speedsters Win Cross Country Meet | 10/21/1971 | See Source »

Officials at the Med School and the Office of Graduate and Career Planning (OG&CP) said yesterday that there is no end in sight to the great rise in applications that has occurred at Harvard and at every other medical school in the United States during the last decade...

Author: By Leo FJ. Wilking, | Title: 6000 Seek Admission To Med School Here | 10/6/1971 | See Source »

Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, the Med School's "teaching hospital" in Roxbury, agreed in early August to take legal responsibility for the state's only out-of-hospital renal dialysis unit...

Author: By Robert Decherd, | Title: Suddenly, The Streets Were Empty... | 9/20/1971 | See Source »

...folk hero never raced in competition until a year ago. Meriwether explains that his high school in Charleston, S.C., had no track team, and the football team had no use for "a guy who was 6 ft. tall and weighed 135 lbs." At Michigan State, where he studied pre-med on a scholarship, his only brush with organized sports was a few hot games of volleyball. The first black accepted into Duke University School of Medicine, he specialized in blood diseases, and in 1969 took a job at the Baltimore Cancer Research Center. While caring for and becoming "personally involved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Dr. Meriwether Saga | 7/12/1971 | See Source »

Here the disease is not venereal but spiritual. Its scarlet lettermen are types rather than individuals, traced from undergraduate days to their adulterous 40s. Nichols opens with a series of kinetically hilarious sketches, starring Campus Smoothie Jonathan (Jack Nicholson) and his pre-med buddy Sandy (Arthur Garfunkel). Cinematically, Nichols has never been less tricky or more acute. With dazzling focus he watches Sandy light upon an icily gorgeous WASP named Susan (Candice Bergen). The naif spills every intimate detail to his roommate; with metronomic two-timing, Jonathan moves in on Sandy and with Susan. But the Ivy rake has only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Spiritual Disease | 7/5/1971 | See Source »

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