Displaying items 25-36 of 208
» View herald-mail.com items only
< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11-18
Next >
-
Des Plaines, Niles, Park Ridge police blotter: May 13
The following items were taken from police reports. Des Plaines •Police say an unknown offender stole an ultrasound machine from a warehouse on the 1300 block of South Mount Prospect Road. The machine, imported from France, was scheduled to be...
Tags: Car Tires, Crime, Law and Justice, Theft, Crimes, Transportation Accidents
-
William and Mary's Tutwiler survives 'miracle' ordeal and recovery
WILLIAMSBURG — As Josh Tutwiler plummeted through the fall Missouri air, the sheer rock face racing past and the ledge from which he fell rapidly receding, he felt his conscious mind split in two. On one side, memories and experiences zipped...
Tags: Physical Fitness and Exercise, Headaches, Hospitals and Clinics, Sports, Physical Therapists
-
Listie man's legally blind journey testimony to God's glory
Daily American Staff WriterAfter spending decades working in the deep coal mines in Somerset County, Johnny Fritz began driving truck for Pile's Concrete Production Co. of Friedens in 2005. The Somerset County native had no way of anticipating that two years later he would drive...Tags: Viral Diseases and Infections, Diseases and Illnesses, Cirrhosis, Liver Disease, Physical Conditions
-
Grammarnoir 5: The Shame of the Prose, complete
The Baltimore SunBy request, and because in a few days I will be at the American Copy Editors Society's national conference with several people who, by the uncanniest of coincidences, bear the same names as certain characters, here is the fifth Grammarnoir serial in one...Tags: Fiction, Scrabble (game), Newspaper and Magazine
-
Loophole may cause release of 86-year-old murder suspect
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge is expected Wednesday morning to decide whether an 86-year-old murder defendant should be released from custody and into the care of his son. Nattie Kennebrew, who is legally blind, in a wheelchair and suffers from...
Tags: Court Preliminary, Crime, Law and Justice, Trials, Defendants, Murder
-
Region 4 Lions work together to assist student who is blind
In January 2013, Sue Davis from the PA Bureau of Blindness and Visual Services (BBVS), contacted Lions Zone Chairman Rob Stemple from Lions District 14M to see if the Lions could assist a student at Shade Elementary School. Davis indicated that 4th...
Tags: Somerset County (Pennsylvania), Helen Keller
-
Canadian Master Arthur Heming Gets Some Overdue Props in Old Lyme
Arthur Heming: Chronicler of the North Through June 2, Florence Griswold Museum, 96 Lyme St., Old Lyme, (860) 434-5542, florencegriswoldmuseum.org Long before Second City Television's Bob and Doug Mackenzie hoisted its banner, Arthur Heming (1870-...
Tags: Hudson River, Canoeing and Kayaking, Florence Griswold House, G7, Sports
-
Bionic eye maker has vision of the future
Robert Greenberg got tired of hearing from senior engineers that it wasn't possible to build his product idea: a bionic eye that gives sight to the blind. "A lot of the folks straight out of school didn't know any better, so I hired them instead,"...
Tags: University of California, Los Angeles, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health Organizations, Technology, Johns Hopkins University
-
Guidelines Aim to Decrease Distractions of Multimedia Systems
KickingTiresIn a press briefing today, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood characterized his four-plus-year campaign against distracted driving as a "crusade." The latest weapon in the government's fight is a set of voluntary guidelines for automakers designed to...Tags: Manufacturing and Engineering, Automotive Equipment, Ray LaHood, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
-
Dance Moms Season 3 episode 17 recap: The View, Screw You, And Cathy, Too
Channel Guide MagazineAs we open this week’s episode, Dance Moms nation, the Pitt Crew is setting up shop at Stepping Out Studios in New York City. Because not only are we all going to appear on The View, but we’re also attending a competition while we’re out... -
Tests for disabled students may change
Last week, I shared with you the disturbing stories of profoundly disabled children being asked to take standardized tests that defy common sense. A tube-fed 10-year-old being asked questions about which fruit he would like to eat. A 9-year-old...
Tags: Education, Teachers, Parkinson's Disease, Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test, Orlando
May 13, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
May 11, 2013
|Story| Hampton Roads Daily Press
May 5, 2013
|Story| Daily American
Mar 30, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 10, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 30, 2013
|Story| Daily American
Mar 27, 2013
|Story| WTXX-LTV
Apr 27, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 23, 2013
|Blog| Cars.com
Apr 23, 2013
| Zap2It
Apr 23, 2013
|Column| Orlando Sentinel
Apr 19, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
Original site for Blindness topic gallery.