Word: sleepings
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...result, older doctors warn, is a 9-to-5 mentality that detaches the doctor from the patient. They fear that young doctors don't get the experience they need or build the instincts and muscle memory from performing procedures so many times that they can do them in their sleep. Even the residents may agree: in a 2006 study in the American Journal of Medicine, both residents and attending physicians reported that they thought the risk of bad things happening because of fragmentation of care was greater than the risk from fatigue due to excess work hours. Other residents...
...before the administration of the MCAT test, the pre-medical school exam. While Kirkland House Master Tom Conley said he did not know who enacted the ban, he said he believed it made sense. “The exam is grueling...They need a good night’s sleep before going into the field of battle,” he said. However, some students are finding other ways to have their fun. The Harvard Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgender, and Supporters Alliance (BGLTSA) has turned to an off-campus locale to hold its Friday night party. “Varsity...
...chicken parm). There is no other such institution. Keep this in your minds. Perhaps, however, you are considering other schools, such as the technical school down the street or the community college in New Haven. Stop. Right now. Imagine walking, alone, with your head down. Imagine crying yourself to sleep each night. Now realize that a technical school is not for you. Further, imagine walking off campus and being mugged. New Haven is not right for you, either. Clutch your red folder tightly, oh genius paragon of mankind. You have earned this day, and this great institution has deigned...
...succeed in accomplishing all of this, the likelihood that you’ll attain your sex-symbol status is akin to a senior hooking up with a seventeen year-old pre-frosh next weekend: very high. Just like your role model, Austin Powers, women will want to sleep with you and men will want to be you. Or vice versa...
Aicha el-Wafi, 59, says weeks of stress, a failing appetite and little sleep during the trial of her son Zacarias Moussaoui have left her a wreck. As his trial nears an end and she awaits word on whether he will be sentenced to death, Moussaoui's mother talked with TIME Paris correspondent Bruce Crumley about her son's path to Islamic extremism and what she insists is a show trial intended to make him the scapegoat for 9/11. Excerpts from the interview...