This note offers news of celebrations at the 2013 Nashville TN Conference of APAHC, the Association of Psychologists in Academic Health Centers. Approximately 100 conference-goers and a host of distinguished speakers attended, including Dr. Norman Anderson, CEO of the American Psychological Association, and Dr. Suzanne Bennett Johnson, 2012 APA President. A January 31st evening reception honored the 30th anniversary of the founding of APAHC, the voice of psychologists in academic health centers. A lunchtime celebration the next day honored the 20th anniversary of the founding of this Journal, the Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings (JCPMS), first published in 1994 under the guidance of founding Editor Dr. Ronald Rozensky, and which now is the official journal of APAHC. For the luncheon celebration, Janice Stern, Senior Editor for Health and Behavior, represented JCPMS publisher Springer Science?Business Media. A notable ceremonial event was the cutting-of-the-cake, a blue on white beauty in JCPMS colors (see Fig. 1) provided by Ms. Stern. Executing the cake cutting with consummate skill was a trinity of JCPMS Chief Editors, Dr. Rozensky, Dr. Barbara Cubic, JCPMS second Chief Editor who is stepping down after 6 years of exemplary service to the Journal and is now in her second year as APAHC President, and finally myself, the new and third Editor-in-Chief of JCPMS. The three Chief Editors all have been members of APAHC’s Board of Directors, which reflects the close tie between the Journal and the Association. Our celebrations commemorated change. My father used to say: ‘‘The only thing that never changes is change.’’ However, sources informed by a higher Father tell a different story, namely, ‘‘there is no new thing under the sun’’ (Ecclesiastes). Perhaps ‘‘change with renewal and continuity’’ is the expression that best reconciles these two views of change. Consider the history of JCPMS, in fact, consider the universe of all the journals that we psychologists, as well as other scientists and professionals, read and publish our research and insights. When JCPMS first came on the scene in 1994, authors submitted hardcopy manuscripts that came to the Editor’s desk via U.S. mail, and in turn, the Editor sent hardcopies to Associate Editors via U.S. mail, who in turn sent hardcopies to reviewers, and so forth. At the end of the publication chain, readers received a hardcopy issue of the Journal delivered by U.S. mail. From then to now, much has changed, but much else has stayed the same. Today, manuscripts for editors, reviewers, and readers are delivered directly to offices and homes by our amazing computerized Internet communication system—a change that is real and far-reaching, and qualitatively different from anything that has come before in human history. Yet, many things stay the same, the professionals involved, the tasks they do, the layout of articles, and so forth. Thus, true change is coupled with true continuity; and both deserve celebration. Although three Chief Editors can cut a cake, it takes more than a trio of Editors-in-Chief to make a successful scientific/ professional journal. The interest and efforts of many others are essential: readers and authors; reviewers and Associate Editors; Editorial Board members and Senior Advisory Board members; and just as important, though perhaps less visible, the worldwide human and technical resources of a publishing house like Springer. These stakeholders make Gerald Leventhal (&) University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, USA e-mail: Jerryumdnj@aol.com