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...soloists--Ellen Hargis, soprano, Laurie Monahan, mezzo soprano, William Hite, Frank Kelley and Arthur Rishi, tenors, and Paul Guttry and David Ripley, bass--were superb as well. Hargis was particularly impressive; she is a specialist in pre-Baroque music, and it shows. She captured the Renaissance style perfectly, demonstrating complete control over her voice so that there was no excessive vibrato, yet no shrill tone. Also greatly enjoyable was the tenor dialogue in the Audi coelum (IX), in which Hite sang his responses to Kelley from the balcony...

Author: By Felicia Wu, | Title: H-R Collegium Musicum Performs Monteverdi Magic | 3/13/1997 | See Source »

Three brilliant virtuosos guaranteed the success of last Friday's Bank-Boston Celebrity Series concert. Leila Josefowicz, a violinist who has survived being branded a child prodigy, performed in two concertos. Andreas Haefliger, a Mozart specialist, was the pianist in another. Jaime Laredo, darling of countless Sony recording projects, conducted the Brandenburg Ensemble and joined Josefowicz as a soloist. All the repertoire was light and bright and ideally suited to the orchestra...

Author: By Matthew A. Carter, | Title: Talented Ensemble Makes for Good, Clean Fun | 2/27/1997 | See Source »

...crops they don?t grow, now proposes to pay hospitals for doctors they don?t train. In a strategy applauded by medical economists, the Medicare program has begun a pilot project aimed at reducing the number of new doctors training in teaching hospitals, on the theory that producing fewer specialists means generating fewer unnecessary medical tests, treatments and hospitalizations. Under the program, New York teaching hospitals, which train more doctors than any other city (15 percent of new residents) will earn $400 million in training subsidies during the next six years so long as they produce 2,000 fewer doctors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paying Hospitals to Train Fewer Doctors | 2/19/1997 | See Source »

...crops they don?t grow, now proposes to pay hospitals for doctors they don?t train. In a strategy applauded by medical economists, the Medicare program has begun a pilot project aimed at reducing the number of new doctors training in teaching hospitals, on the theory that producing fewer specialists means generating fewer unnecessary medical tests, treatments and hospitalizations. Under the program, New York teaching hospitals, which train more doctors than any other city (15 percent of new residents) will earn $400 million in training subsidies during the next six years so long as they produce 2,000 fewer doctors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paying Hospitals to Train Fewer Doctors | 2/18/1997 | See Source »

McCord and three-point specialist Alex Compton provide a strong, experienced inside-out combination for Cornell. Compton is currently shooting 49 percent from behind the line...

Author: By Richard B. Tenorio, | Title: M. Cagers: N.Y. State of Mind | 2/14/1997 | See Source »

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