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    Mar 29, 2013 | Allentown Morning Call
  1. CDC: No link between vaccination schedule and autism

    Health
    Researchers have released another study about infant vaccinations and autism and the results match up with what other reports have found: The number of vacccines an infant receives is not linked to increased risk of being diagnosed with autism....
  2. Mar 31, 2013 |Story| AM News
  3. Looking Back at Kentucky School for the Deaf

    <em><strong>In 1874, Kentucky School for the Deaf</strong> began publishing a weekly in-house newspaper, the Kentucky Deaf-Mute, to give the male students an opportunity to learn the printing trade. KSD published the newspaper continuously from 1874 to 2004 with only a name change in 1896 &mdash; to the Kentucky Standard. From 1883 to 1942, George M. McClure was the editor of the paper. His relationships with students and wide connections with schools for the deaf throughout the country give a glimpse of the life of students and staff in a residential school for the deaf and show how the community touched the lives of students and staff at the school.&nbsp; </em>
    In 1874, Kentucky School for the Deaf began publishing a weekly in-house newspaper, the Kentucky Deaf-Mute, to give the male students an opportunity to learn the printing trade. KSD published the newspaper continuously from 1874 to 2004 with only a name...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, Snow Storms, Teaching and Learning, Libraries, Movies

  4. Mar 30, 2013 |Story| WSBT-TV
  5. Ind. confirms case of measles in IU student

    BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Indiana health officials say a student at Indiana University's Bloomington campus has a confirmed case of measles. The State Department of Health said Friday that the student did not attend classes while infectious and...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, Indiana University, Diseases and Illnesses

  6. Mar 28, 2013 |Story| Aberdeen News
  7. Flu numbers in SD double last year's totals

    South Dakota is being hit hard by the flu this season, with cases, hospitalizations and deaths about double least season’s totals.  There have been nearly 950 confirmed cases of influenza in South Dakota this season, more than 330 hospitalizations...

    Tags: Flu, Flu Vaccine, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Viral Diseases and Infections, Drugs and Medicines

  8. Mar 14, 2013 |Story| AM News
  9. From our files for March 17, 2013

    <span style=&quot;font-size: small;"><strong>100 Years Ago &mdash; 1913</strong></span>
    100 Years Ago — 1913 For the first time in many years, no church services were held in Hustonville last Sunday and schools in Moreland, McKinney and Hustonville were closed last week due to an epidemic of measles. Hundreds of cases of a very...

    Tags: ABC (tv network), Anglicanism, Belief and Faith, Religion and Belief, Christianity

  10. Mar 14, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. More than a dozen cases of mumps suspected at Loyola

    A dozen or more cases of mumps have been reported among Loyola University Maryland students over the past month, prompting officials to alert the campus community to signs of the rare virus that has spread rapidly across college campuses in recent outbreaks.
    A dozen or more cases of mumps have been reported among Loyola University Maryland students over the past month, prompting officials to alert the campus community to signs of the rare virus that has spread rapidly across college campuses in recent...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, Loyola University Maryland, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Headaches, Disease Prevention

  12. Mar 1, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. 'Noble Savages' looks at one anthropologist's life of controversy

    In 1998, just before Napoleon Chagnon retired from the University of California at Santa Barbara, he signed a contract to write a book about his life as an anthropologist among the Yanomam&ouml; people, who live in the forests of Venezuela and Brazil. It promised rip-snorting adventure &mdash; threats at spear point, psychedelic snuff, wars over women &mdash; from a serious and celebrated academic who had lived among people who had little or no previous contact with the modern world when he began his work in the 1960s.
    In 1998, just before Napoleon Chagnon retired from the University of California at Santa Barbara, he signed a contract to write a book about his life as an anthropologist among the Yanomamö people, who live in the forests of Venezuela and Brazil. It...

    Tags: Culture, Vanderbilt University , University of Michigan, Elections, University of Missouri

  14. Feb 25, 2013 | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  15. White House warns about budget cuts in Florida

    While trying to blame Republicans, the White House predicts big losses of money and jobs in Florida because of budget cuts that will squeeze schools, work-study programs, Head Start, environmental protection, law enforcement and defense. The automatic...

    Tags: Florida State University, U.S. Congress, Economy, Business and Finance, Mumps, Preventative Medicine

  16. Feb 25, 2013 |Story| Petoskey News
  17. White House details budget fallout amid blame game

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House has detailed the potential fallout in each state from budget cuts set to take effect at week's end, while congressional Republicans and Democrats keep up the sniping over who's to blame. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-...

    Tags: Claire McCaskill, U.S. Senate, Children's Health, U.S. Congress, Kelly Ayotte

  18. Feb 24, 2013 |Story| WSBT-TV
  19. A look at automatic budget cuts in Indiana

    Military and education would take big hits in Indiana from automatic cuts to the federal budget set to take effect this week, according to a report the White House issued Sunday. The White House compiled the numbers from federal agencies and its own...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Medical Procedures and Tests, U.S. Congress, Budgets and Budgeting, Economy, Business and Finance

  20. Feb 24, 2013 |Story| Herald Mail
  21. All condemn pending budget cuts, spread blame

    The Associated Press
    The White House and Republicans kept up the unrelenting mudslinging Sunday over who’s to blame for roundly condemned budget cuts set to take effect at week’s end, with the administration detailing the potential fallout in each state and...

    Tags: Republican Party, Claire McCaskill, Haley Barbour, U.S. Congress, Budgets and Budgeting

  22. Feb 21, 2013 |Story| Petoskey News
  23. Flu shot doing a poor job of protecting elderly

    ATLANTA (AP) &mdash; It turns out this year's flu shot is doing a startlingly dismal job of protecting senior citizens, the most vulnerable age group.
    ATLANTA (AP) — It turns out this year's flu shot is doing a startlingly dismal job of protecting senior citizens, the most vulnerable age group. The vaccine is proving only 9 percent effective in people 65 and older against the harsh strain of the...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Disease Prevention, Preventative Medicine, Diseases and Illnesses

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