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According to co-author Mark A. Moskowitz, who is a professor of medicine and public health at the Boston University School of Medicine, the original aim of the investigation was to examine the relative success of those practicing internal medicine...

Author: By Carrie L. Zinaman, | Title: Women Face Barriers To Equality in Medicine | 11/2/1993 | See Source »

Yesterday, in an interview at The Crimson conducted by Roy Moskowitz, CUNY deputy general counsel, and Brenda Carpenter, special assistant to the chancellor, Morgan played a tape of an answer ing machine message he phoned in on October 18 from a CUNY office...

Author: By Brian D.ellison, | Title: CUNY Officials Interview Morgan | 11/2/1991 | See Source »

...Moskowitz and Carpenter did not return to their offices yesterday

Author: By Brian D.ellison, | Title: CUNY Officials Interview Morgan | 11/2/1991 | See Source »

...Moskowitz's vividly imposing red windmill alludes to Mondrian's great early paintings of that motif. The side of the Yosemite cliff in The Seventh Sister, 1981, recalls Clyfford Still and, through that, the American Romantic tradition of heroic landscape. Such works do not escape the second-handedness that comes with quoted images, but at least they are quite without smug prophylactic irony...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Zen And Perceptual Hiccups | 3/12/1990 | See Source »

...Moskowitz's roots lie in abstract expressionism: he studied with Adolf Gottlieb and married Jack Tworkov's daughter. His paintings clearly show that he feels the loss of the pristine Romantic tradition. He has an unaffected appetite for the sublime and its subjects: towers, cliffs, icebergs and heroes (even if we see only the backside of the discobolus, even though the thing in his hand looks more like a bowling ball than a discus). Just as clearly, he doubts if sublimity can be revived. His rendering of a Giacometti sculpture into a long, ghostly streak of thick white pigment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Zen And Perceptual Hiccups | 3/12/1990 | See Source »

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