Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I entered Harvard Medical School knowing nothing of research.
I wanted to go to medical school. But, I never got a college scholarship.
Medical school education and post graduate education emphasize thoroughness.
I completed medical school at Loma Linda University School of Medicine in 1984.
When I went to medical school, the term 'digital' applied only to rectal exams.
I was the Chair of the first department of medical physics in a medical school in the U.S.
Jews were asked when life begins. For them it's when they finally graduate medical school.
You could be a corrupt doctor, but at least you have to go to the medical school first. Right?
You can't get through medical school if you don't have a strong will and a strong constitution.
I basically applied to law school as a way of telling my parents that I wasn't going to medical school.
Finish last in your league and they call you idiot. Finish last in medical school and they call you doctor.
They don't like thinking in medical school. They memorize - that's all they want you to do. You must not think.
I thought that if acting didn't work out, I'd have done law school or medical school: probably law to be honest.
You know what they call the fellow who finishes last in his medical school graduating class? They call him 'Doctor.'
I was always taught at medical school that you should never do a test unless you could do something with the result.
You can't go to medical school and come out and be like, 'I'm going to be a dog catcher.' That would be so pointless.
Students undergo a conversion in the third year of medical school - not pre-clinical to clinical, but pre-cynical to cynical.
I went to medical school because I wanted to ask the big questions. Do we have a soul? Does God exist? What happens after death?
In my third year at medical school in Birmingham, I joined the Air Force as a medical cadet so that I was sponsored to become a doctor.
I was born and raised in California and benefited from California's excellent public schools, from kindergarten through medical school.
All of the details that most of us memorize in medical school - you don't have to learn those things. They're going to be in your computer.
You basically have to be willing to devote your life to journalism if you want to break in. Treat it like it's medical school or law school.
Instead of writing thrillers to pay for my train bills, I was actually now going to medical school in order to have something to write about.
My parents have been married 50-some years, and I've never heard them fight. I got the chance to attend great universities and medical school.
One goes through school, college, medical school and one's internship learning little or nothing about goodness but a good deal about success.
I never had a conscious fear of death, but I did have a conscious fear of sickness. By the time I completed medical school, that fear was gone.
I founded a launch company called International Microspace when I graduated medical school in 1989. We were trying to build a microsatellite launcher.
My mother was told she couldn't go to medical school because she was a woman and a Jew. So she became a teacher in the New York City public school system.
My parents were actors. And so I was born in New York City, and when I was 7, they quit acting and went back to medical school at the University Of Chicago.
I first wanted to be a psychiatrist. I decided against that in medical school when I discovered that psychiatrists didn't, in reality, do what they did on TV.
When I went to the University, the medical school was the only place where one could hope to find the means to study life, its nature, its origins, and its ills.
I read Freud's Introductory Lectures in Psychoanalysis in basically one sitting. I decided to enroll in medical school. It was almost like a conversion experience.
Now a cholera epidemic was sweeping through Southeast Asia and south Asia in the early 1970s, so I started medical school and I joined a laboratory to work on this.
I saw my friends in medical school seeming to be more engaged with the real world. That provoked a sort of jealousy, and I decided to go to medical school after all.
A Harvard Medical School study has determined that rectal thermometers are still the best way to tell a baby's temperature. Plus, it really teaches the baby who's boss.
I used to be one of the lead actors of a theatre group called Hetu when I was in medical school. Prithvi Theatre was our stomping ground. I'd got many positive reviews.
My parents were born into a secular country. They met in Turkey's top medical school, moved to America in the nineteen-seventies, and became researchers and professors.
In my second year, after moving to the Medical School, I began the courses of Anatomy and Physiology. I had begun to see that I was interested in cells and their functions.
I was a kinesiology major in college, which is exercise science. Then, I was either going to get my Ph.D. or go to medical school, but I was kind of burned out after school.
I went to medical school after having decided to do so somewhere between my junior and senior year at Harvard - very late. I initially wanted to be an intellectual historian.
As we returned to Argentina, I started seriously to work towards a doctoral degree under the direction of Professor Stoppani, the Professor of Biochemistry at the Medical School.
I trained initially as a physical chemist, and then, after becoming interested in biology, I went to medical school and learned how to be a physician. So, I'm a physician scientist.
I set up a laboratory in the Department of Physiology in the Medical School in South Africa and begin to try to find a bacteriophage system which we might use to solve the genetic code.
My best friend in medical school was a magician. And we were shown an X-ray of a sword-swallower, and I tried it and failed. Then I got a sword-swallower as a patient, and he taught me.
I teach in the medical school, the School of Public Health, the Kennedy School of Government, and the Business School. And it's the best perch... because most of my work crosses boundaries.
In medical school, you're taught to write in this convoluted, Latinate way. I knew the vocabulary as well as anyone, but I would write kidney instead of nephric. I insisted on using English.
I used to worry about what would happen five or 10 years from now, but I don't anymore. I thought about going to medical school because that has always interested me, but decided against it.
I really put the medical school thing on hold and really chased after my football dream. And I guess I'm still chasing. I'm eight years in the NFL, and I feel very fortunate to be where I am.
Nan Gorman was born in Memphis, Tenn., on St. Patrick's Day. She moved to Hazard in 1929 when her father, James Hagan, a recent medical school graduate and aspiring surgeon, went to work there.
Without true medical liability reform, our doctors will continue to leave, and young doctors coming out of medical school $100,000 to $200,000 in debt will not be able to afford such onerous costs.