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Livingstone College – Livingstone Newsletter; Meredith College – The Meredith Herald [10] Methodist University – Small Talk [10] Montreat College – Whetstone [10] North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University – The A&T Register [10] North Carolina Central University – The Campus Echo [10] North Carolina State University ...
The headquarters of The Cornell Daily Sun, founded in 1880 at Cornell University, the oldest continuously published college student newspaper in the United States [1]. The following is a list of the world's student newspapers, including school, college, and university newspapers separated by countries and, where appropriate, states or provinces:
PLOS: Public Library of Science – available to every scientist, physician, educator, and citizens at home, in school, or in a library; Plus – popular maths online magazine featuring the beauty and the practical; diverse topics such as art, medicine, cosmology, sport, puzzles & games; Popular Mechanics – magazine; Popular Science – magazine
The news service MedPage Today was founded by Robert S. Stern in March 2005. [4] [5] In January 2010, the organization was provided approval for offering American Academy of Family Physicians-accredited CME credits in collaboration with the Office of Continuing Medical Education at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
ICM School of Business and Medical Careers Kaplan College Hamilton College Kaplan College Heritage College: Kaplan College (Indiana) Sawyer College Kalamazoo College: Michigan and Huron Institute 1855 Kean University: Newark Normal School; New Jersey State Normal School at Newark; Newark State College 1997 Kent State University
The Society for Mathematical Biology (SMB) is an international association co-founded in 1972 in the United States by George Karreman, Herbert Daniel Landahl and (initially chaired) by Anthony Bartholomay for the furtherance of joint scientific activities between Mathematics and Biology research communities.
That same year, the company distributed its first journal, CDC AIDS Weekly, (which later split into AIDS Weekly and Medical Letter on the CDC & FDA) to an international audience. [7] [8] The first subscriber was the Soviet Union. [3] Other subscribers include physicians, educators, government agencies, and pharmaceutical companies. [3] [9]
The article title should be the scientific or recognised medical name that is most commonly used in recent, high-quality, English-language medical sources, rather than a lay term (unscientific or slang name) [1] or an historical eponym that has been superseded. [2] The alternative names may be specified in the lead. [3]