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Richard Weckstein was one of several witnesses called at the Middlesex Superior Court trial to determine the monetary value of the damage to the plaintiff. Her attorney says the doctors' improper treatment of a cancerous lump reduced her expected lifetime earnings...

Author: By Robert M. Barr, | Title: Economist Estimates Damages In Glicklich Trial at $370,000 | 2/12/1981 | See Source »

...their research was invalid because its initial intent was not to study difference between the sexes. "The study was not a study. It was an accumulation of a numbers of things over a number of years," she said. Fennema also disagreed with the researchers' interpretation from the data that superior male ability in mathematics might be a genetic pattern, pointing out that the study included only a narrow sample of students. "They (the tested sample) are in the upper 2 to 5 per cent of the population. When the researchers try to generalize back to the rest of the population...

Author: By Siddhartha Mazumdar, | Title: Study Shows Higher Male Math Ability | 2/11/1981 | See Source »

...Penn opponent stole the show. The Quaker's shoulder blades seemed to be flat on the mat on eight or nine occasions during the six-minute match, but the referee refused to award the fall, and McNerney had to be content with the five point superior decision...

Author: By Sam Soutter, | Title: Grapplers Edge Quakers, Earn First Ivy Victory | 2/9/1981 | See Source »

...Richard E. Wilson, chief of oncology for Brigham and Women's Hospital, told a Middlesex Superior Court jury that when Dr. Alan R. Spievack first saw Glicklich at UHS, she was in the same condition she had been in "before ever walking into an office...

Author: By Robert M. Barr, | Title: Specialist Testifies for Defense In Glicklich Malpractice Case | 2/7/1981 | See Source »

...problems, though, are only part of the whole American auto industry's troubles, as outlined in a report released last week by departing Transportation Secretary Neil Goldschmidt. The report warns that the Japanese will continue to win a greater share of U.S. sales because of lower labor costs, superior productivity and better business-government relations. Goldschmidt, for example, suggests that Ford may one day be forced to move most of its production overseas, which would severely injure basic U.S. industries like rubber and steel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dressing Up A Merger Partner | 1/26/1981 | See Source »

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