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Study results in loss of job
A recent study by conservative think-tank the Heritage Foundation sheds a great deal of light on the sausage mill of policy research, and the courage and integrity of the process of policy research altogether. The Heritage study itself estimated that...Tags: Politics, Heritage Foundation, Migration, Immigration, Ball State University
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How to buy happiness
Imagine that you woke up tomorrow morning to discover $1 million under your mattress. Leaving aside the obvious lumpiness issue, take a moment to think: What would you do with that cash? If you're like many people, contemplating your newfound wealth...
Tags: Rentals, The Happiest News!, Human Interest, Homes, Starbucks Corp.
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Assad says Syria transition talks internal matter, seems to cast down on US-Russia initiative
Associated PressBEIRUT (AP) — Syrian President Bashar Assad said in a newspaper interview Saturday he won't step down before elections and that the United States has no right to interfere in his country's politics, raising new doubts about a U.S-Russian effort to...Tags: Television Industry, Politics, Political Dissent, Religion and Belief, Religious Conflicts
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Newsmaker Q&A: Pat Halpin-Murphy
Pat Halpin-Murphy is president and founder of the Pennsylvania Breast Cancer Coalition. The coalition, founded in 1993, is a statewide nonprofit providing public awareness of breast cancer and encouraging increased public and private funding for research,...Tags: Breast Cancer, Ovarian Cancer, Mastectomy, University of Pennsylvania, Medical Research
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Report: Indy, Baltimore, St. Louis, Philly jails have nation's highest inmate sex abuse rates
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Inmates at jails in Indianapolis, Baltimore, St. Louis and Philadelphia face the nation's highest levels of sexual abuse at the hands of guards, according to a new federal report based on surveys of inmates at U.S. jails and...Tags: Sex Crimes, Justice System, U.S. Department of Justice, Prisons, Sexual Misconduct
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Dr. Frederick L. Brancati, expert on diabetes
Dr. Frederick L. Brancati, an internationally known expert on the epidemiology and prevention of type 2 diabetes who was director of the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, died Tuesday of...
Tags: Pancreatic Cancer, Teaching and Learning, National Institutes of Health, Harvard University, American Diabetes Association
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Hopkins gun research is not biased
In reference to "Harford County Council passes resolution condemning state gun law" (May 15), the article quotes a Harford County councilman who questioned the objectivity of gun policy research at Johns Hopkins University because New York City Mayor...
Tags: New York City, Gun Control, Politics, Personal Weapon Control, Michael Bloomberg
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Case study conservation on the Eames' Case Study House
Surprisingly, little has changed at the Eames House since 1949, when Charles and Ray Eames designed their Pacific Palisades home and studio as a model of affordable modern living. Most of the objects they lived with remain in place at the two-part,...
Tags: Museums, Building Material, Science and Technology, Environmental Issues, Conservation
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USC made its offer to neuroscientists a no-brainer
The courtship that has riveted the neuroscience world blossomed at a Saturday night dinner in a tony Brentwood restaurant. USC provost Elizabeth Garrett and executive vice provost Michael Quick kept the conversation light. Over chicken with braised...
Tags: HGTV (tv network), Teaching and Learning, University of California, Los Angeles, Autism, Engineering
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Misdiagnosis: More Common Than Drug Errors or Wrong-Site Surgery
The Hartford CourantUntil it happened to him, Itzhak Brook, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Georgetown University School of Medicine, didn't think much about the problem of misdiagnosis. That was before doctors at a Maryland hospital repeatedly told Brook his...Tags: Heart Attack, Medical Procedures and Tests, Oncology, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Internal Medicine
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Going gluten-free more common, but not necessarily easier
For more than 20 years, Kristine Kidd tasted what came her way as the food editor at Bon Appetit magazine. But she never felt great. "I had digestive issues my whole life," she says, but 21/2 years ago, the aching joints, bloating, fatigue and digestive...
Tags: Recipes, Allergies, Diseases and Illnesses, Lifestyle and Leisure, Saturday Night Live (tv program)
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GPS system can accurately predict post-quake tsunami, study finds
When the magnitude 9 earthquake struck Japan more than two years ago, there were 1,200 global positioning system stations recording ocean floor movement in real time. None was linked to that nation’s tsunami warning system, which underestimated...
Tags: Indonesia, Science and Technology, Japan Earthquake and Tsunami (2011), Tsunamis, Japan
May 19, 2013
|Story| South Bend Tribune
May 19, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 18, 2013
|Story| AP Member Choice Limited
May 18, 2013
|Story| Allentown Morning Call
May 18, 2013
|Story| AP Member Choice Limited
May 18, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 18, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 18, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 18, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 18, 2013
|Story| Hartford Courant
May 18, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 17, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
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