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Vox Verax (Free subscription) | 07/07/2009
A former NHS patient has some advice for Americans skeptical of single-payer, government-run healthcare: You'll get over it. By Clancy Sigal LA Times July 5, 2009 For the first couple of years I lived in Britain, I was an illegal immigrant from the United States, visaless with an expired passport and looking over my shoulder all the time. Even so, from the very first day I arrived at Victoria Station...
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MAXIDEX DEXAMETHASONE WARNING
I had eye surgery and in the post-op ack was MAXIDEX(dexamethasone) drops by ALCON LABS.
Two days later I was BLIND
Use Google and enter EPOCRATES...
anonymous - 07/08/2009
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London Review of Books (Free subscription) | 10/01/2008
Deserters are by nature paranoids who tend to suspect one another of being in the CIA. This curious mixture of brotherhood and mistrust was a permanent part of the atmosphere at the house, which inevitably also attracted its fair share of fantasists, liars, charlatans and, on rare occasions, real live government spies, easily spotted by their ‘tell’, usually a provocateur-style rant designed...
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New Statesman (Free subscription) | 09/04/2008
The Notting Hill race riots, which took place 50 years ago, were the first significant outburst in London against unrestricted black immigration. The American Clancy Sigal, then a young journalist, wrote a revealing account of a casual encounter with a handful of the white youths involved in the attacks. He portrays a group of frustrated young men, the most prominent of whom confesses to being both...
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A Different Stripe (Free subscription) | 08/28/2008
Writer Clancy Sigal was clearly bothered by those obituaries of Elaine Dundy that focused too much on her sex life. Not only that, he stepped up and wrote a polite rebuke to The Guardian about it:"Elaine was a rich kid....
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SoCal Sports Observed (Free subscription) | 11/19/2007
Los Angeles novelist and screenwriter Clancy Sigal turned up in today's letters section in the New York Times Book Review, offering a counter view to the description of mass-market writer Harold Robbins as "always in it for the money" and a peddler of "moronic prurience in insultingly bad prose." Well,...
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 10/29/2007
Miami Book Fair International runs Nov. 4-11, and amid the usual intriguing author appearances is a special performance that pays tribute to the late Spalding Gray, actor, playwright, screenwriter and postmodern critic famous for the film Swimming to Cambodia. The movie was based on one of the monologues written by Gray, who committed suicide in 2004.