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ifeminists May 27, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Unfit to Print: Case Study in Deceit at the New York Times This is the account of a fact-finding study that was issued by a governmental agency, how the New York Times grossly misreported the study, and how the myth nurtured by the NYT story ultimately influenced the federal legislative process. |
ifeminists June 10, 2003 Wendy McElroy |
The Anti-Male New York Times For years, the Times -- America's "newspaper of record" -- has been a vehicle for political correctness in both subtle and blatant ways. Examining its policies provides an interesting window into the anti-male and liberal bias rampant in most current media. |
ifeminists July 15, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Maureen Dowd Outshines Jayson Blair Gender feminists have long claimed that women can do anything as well as, or better than men. Recent incidents at the New York Times prove how true that statement is. |
ifeminists June 3, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Spreading Misandry at the New York Times In the face of widespread gender bias, we must gasp and wonder, How did America's Newspaper of Record fall prey to radical feminist orthodoxy? |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Cathy Young |
Medical gender wars First came the whining feminists. Next, the inevitable male backlash. Health research has become a casualty of the battle between the sexes. |
Science News May 19, 2007 |
Science Safari: Cancer Risk -- Understanding the Puzzle This new Web site from the National Cancer Institute cuts through the hype to help you understand the plain and simple truth about cancer risk. |
ifeminists October 15, 2002 Sacks & Thompson |
When Men's Health Doesn't Count Congress is sending a message to American men: men's health doesn't count. |
Pharmaceutical Executive March 1, 2006 Patrick Clinton |
From the Editor: Fine Whines What's wrong with so much of what passes as criticism of science, healthcare, and pharma these days isn't criticism at all. It's just whining. |
Reason May 2001 Cathy Young |
False Diagnosis When it comes to gender, doctors don't play favorites... |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Bianco, Rossant & Gard |
The Future Of The New York Times New York Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. has his hands full with weaker earnings, a changing media world and a scandal's aftermath. He also has an ambitious business plan. |
Fast Company August 2003 Warren Bennis |
News Analysis: It's the Culture It takes more than one bad reporter to damage the paper of record. |
Pharmaceutical Executive March 1, 2013 Sillup et al. |
Back in the News Big Pharma takes a fresh licking in our latest audit of US press coverage of business and policy issues. |
Pharmaceutical Executive March 1, 2012 Sillup & Porth |
Pharma & The Press Our eighth annual press audit finds the industry out of the crosshairs for now. |
ifeminists October 29, 2002 Rondi Adamson |
Re-Evaluating the Risk of Breast Cancer As breast cancer became a poster disease for feminism in the 1980s, the attention it began to receive took on unreasonable proportions. In short, the intensity of funding, publicity and research around breast cancer is not based on need. It is based on politics. |
AskMen.com |
Good Health Care News New advice from the American Cancer Society puts a sharper focus on the risks of prostate cancer screening, emphasizing that annual testing can lead to unnecessary biopsies and treatments that do more harm than good. |
Investment Advisor November 2006 Marlene Y. Satter |
Insuring the (Previously) Uninsurable Getting through the underwriting has become a major issue in buying life insurance, whether whole or term. But cancer may no longer disqualify individuals for life insurance coverage. |
BusinessWeek May 23, 2005 Catherine Arnst |
If It Works for Breast Cancer... Studies are under way to see if promising strategies used against breast cancer can be used to fight other killers, such as lung, colon, and prostate cancer. |
Pharmaceutical Executive March 3, 2014 Sillup & Porth |
Pharm Exec: Annual Press Audit 2014 Pharm Exec's latest survey of press issues shows that media coverage continues to remain on balance negative toward the industry, by a slight margin: 47% this year compared to a 46% average over the last seven years. |
Salon.com October 12, 1999 Damien Cave |
Male mastectomy Not many men get breast cancer, but too few are aware of the risk. |
The Motley Fool September 28, 2010 Brian Orelli |
Pfizer's Sutent Fails. Again! No surprise here. |
Salon.com June 20, 2000 Naomi Mendelsohn |
Choosing the knife Healthy women at high risk for breast cancer are choosing to have both breasts removed, even while doctors are advocating less invasive treatments for those who are already sick |
Salon.com November 10, 2000 Laurie Tarkan |
The business of breast cancer Big medicine is making big bucks on the disease, but we're still far from a cure... |