Experts In The News
It has been some time since optimism swirled around Atlantic City. For several years, there has only been despondency.
Chris Singer approaches patients and their families sitting in a doctor’s waiting room with a smile every time.
Chris Singer approaches patients and their families sitting in a doctor’s waiting room with a smile every time.
On average, female doctors made $105,000 less than male doctors last year, and the gender pay gap actually increased.
UNLV’s new School of Medicine has scored its first triumph. Professor Katherine Hertlein, who studies romantic and family relationships for the school’s psychiatry and behavioral health department, has garnered a Fulbright scholarship, one of the most important academic designations in the U.S. It will enable Hertlein, who also is a therapist, to further develop her studies—specifically, how relationships are affected by technology—at the University of Salzburg in Austria, where she’ll teach two classes and conduct a survey starting in March 2019. The Weekly recently spoke with her about her studies and award.
It’s fun to test a college professor. After reading a few chapters from Simon Gottschalk’s new book, The Terminal Self: Everyday Life in Hypermodern Times (Routledge), I emailed him late on a Friday to see if he'd walk the talk. Would he instantly reply (F)? Or would he wait until Monday (A-plus) and resist our culture’s “increasingly pervasive and mandatory interaction with terminals”? After all, according to Gottschalk, a UNLV sociology professor, to fully be alive and human, we should avoid adjusting to “terminal logic.” Well, he aced my informal exam.
FOX5's Peter Dawson shares how you can mark Pi Day in Southern Nevada.
Robert Hunter would have shied away from a feature in the newspaper.