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Say yes to LNG
The debate about whether the United States should export liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Cove Point and other waterfront terminals has been going on for months. It is time for action. The United States has an abundance of cheap natural gas, thanks to...
Tags: Energy Resources, U.S. Department of Energy, Renewable Energy, Natural Gas, Natural Resources
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Seasonal pasture myopathy cause identified
For decades, hundreds of horses in North America and northern Europe have died from a pasture-associated muscle disease whose cause, prevention, and treatment have remained elusive. Even with early diagnosis, the fatality rate for this disease, known as...Tags: Colleges and Universities, Science and Technology, North America, Hormones and Metabolism, Health and Safety at School
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Chanel No. 5 ban in Europe, edible perfume, sushi cologne
Chanel No. 5 perfume, one of the most popular scents ever made, is raising a stink as European regulators threaten to ban one of the product’s key ingredients. A type of tree moss used to create woody undertones in the fragrance may cause...
Tags: Sushi and Sashimi, Foods and Beverages, Allergies, Chanel S.A., The Huffington Post
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Beer going flat? Molson Coors faces its 'most challenging' quarter
Molson Coors Brewing Co., owner of the Coors Light, Keystone and Blue Moon brands, did fine in its recent third quarter. It’s the next quarter the beer maker is nervous about. Declining consumer demand and high costs in the U.S. and central Europe,...
Tags: Molson Coors Brewing Company
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Eurozone unemployment figures hit a new high
World NowEurope’s economic gloom deepened Wednesday on the back of news that unemployment in the 17-nation Eurozone hit another record high in September as the region’s debt crisis continued to sap the confidence of business owners, investors and... -
U.S., allies marshaling African proxies for fight against terrorism
World NowGlobal Focus: “A quarrel in a far-away country between people of whom we know nothing.” That was how British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain saw the Nazi threat against the Czech Sudetenland in 1938, a sentiment freshly evoked among war-... -
In Little Italy, fresh eyes on American democracy
So intent was Riccardo Migliori on his mission — observing the U.S. election and asking questions about the voting process in Baltimore — that he missed the statues of saints and the oil painting of Pope Leo XIII. So foreign was the idea...
Tags: Justice System, Roman Catholicism, Human Rights, Elections, Freedom of the Press
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PASSINGS: Lois Smith, John Tchicai
Lois Smith Longtime celebrity publicist Lois Smith, 85, a longtime New York City publicist who worked with celebrities including Marilyn Monroe, Robert Redford and Martin Scorsese, died Sunday from a brain hemorrhage after taking a fall during a trip to...Tags: Robert Redford, Marilyn Monroe, New York City, Brain, Denmark
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GM gets new credit lines totaling $11B
DETROIT (AP) — General Motors says it has received $11 billion in credit lines from 35 financial institutions in 14 countries, boosting its available cash and credit to more than $42 billion. The company wouldn't say specifically what it plans to...
Tags: General Motors Corp., Manufacturing and Engineering, Ratings, Finance, Credit and Debt
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Profiles in expedience
WASHINGTON -- As America votes, what can be said about this nasty campaign is that it was dangerously disconnected from the actual problems the victor will face. The textbook version of American democracy holds that elections, by exposing differences of...
Tags: Labor Markets, Elections, Productivity, Mitt Romney, Japan
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Allan Powell: Is the welfare state on its way out?
The election of 2012 is fast approaching and will almost certainly send a message about the status of the welfare state in America. Is the dislike for government health plans and other social support programs so vocally disparaged by the Tea party and...Tags: Interior Policy, Germany, Pension and Welfare, Health Care Reform (2009), The Washington Post
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Marie McG. Leaf, combat nurse
Marie McG. Leaf, a World War II combat nurse who cared for the wounded and dying on the battlefields of Europe, died Thursday of complications from Alzheimer's disease at the Augsburg Lutheran Home and Village in Lochearn.
She was 95.
The daughter of...Tags: Howard County, Roman Catholicism, Nursing, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Germany
Nov 13, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Nov 9, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Nov 7, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Nov 7, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Oct 31, 2012
| Los Angeles Times
Oct 31, 2012
| Los Angeles Times
Nov 6, 2012
|Column| Baltimore Sun
Oct 9, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Nov 5, 2012
|Story| AP Indiana
Nov 5, 2012
|Column| Orlando Sentinel
Nov 2, 2012
|Story| Herald Mail
Oct 29, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
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