Newport Beach, 1910
Kanter’s goal?
"fixing financial aid, once and for all, so students from poor families can go to college," and strengthening a "broken" academic system in which too few young people move through the educational pipeline to get meaningful certificates and degrees and into the "right careers."
Santa Ana High, class of 1900
"No, the courthouse was closed yesterday because of something called 'Senior Chavez Day' and I'm pissed. (Ten-second pause.) I don't know. I think it has something to do with old Mexicans."
• In this morning’s New York Times, Doctor David H. Newman discusses the widespread phenomenon—among both patients and doctors—of Believing in Treatments that Don’t Work. “The practice of medicine,” he says, “contains countless examples of elegant medical theories that belie the best available evidence."
His examples: cough remedies, antibiotics for ear infections (they do more harm than good), back surgeries (in most cases), and arthroscopic surgery to correct osteoarthritis of the knee.
So, are we going to keep funding these useless medicines and procedures?
Naturally, Newman hopes we don't. But since when do we respond to evidence?
PICTURES: (1) Newport Beach, 1910; (2) "old Mexicans" at work, many years ago, at the Irvine Ranch; (3) Santa Ana High class of 1900; (4) Tustin family, 1895 (All: OC Public Library archive)
2 comments:
Way cute kids, 1895. Seem happy, too.
The little girl on the left looks like our Annie. Interesting!
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