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    Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Authors M-Q

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} Anthony Madrid Anthony Madrid lives in Chicago. His poems have appeared in Boston Review, Gulf Coast, The Iowa Review, Poetry and Web Conjunctions. His first book is “I Am Your Slave Now Do What I...

    Tags: The Washington Post, Kevin Pang, Colleges and Universities, Authors, Arts and Culture

  2. Apr 12, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  3. Henry Gift: Doctor Was Champion Of Underserved, In Connecticut And Around The World

    After Henry Gift's mother died in Guyana from lack of access to medical treatment, he pledged to become a physician and bring healing to people with no access to doctors.
    The Hartford Courant
    After Henry Gift's mother died in Guyana from lack of access to medical treatment, he pledged to become a physician and bring healing to people with no access to doctors. Gift fulfilled that childhood pledge — he became an internist who provided...

    Tags: Guyana, Nursing, U.S. Army, Waterbury, Health and Medical Professionals

  4. Apr 9, 2013 |Story| WTXX-LTV
  5. Paul Giamatti's Hamlet and Douglas Sills' JFK Both Have Issues With Their Fathers

    <strong>Hamlet</strong>
    Hamlet Ends April 13, Yale University Theatre, New Haven. Produced by the Yale Repertory Theatre. (203) 432-1234, yalrep.org Ride the Tiger Ends April 21, Long Wharf Theatre, 222 Sargent Drive, New Haven, (203) 787-4282, longwharf.org   Greed...

    Tags: Entertainment, Sam Giancana, New Haven (New Haven, Connecticut), Westport Country Playhouse, John F. Kennedy

  6. Apr 8, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. Even after melanoma, some people keep on using tanning beds

    You would think that people who were diagnosed with melanoma -- the most deadly form of skin cancer -- would be meticulously careful about using sunscreen, avoiding tanning salons and generally protecting their skin.
    You would think that people who were diagnosed with melanoma -- the most deadly form of skin cancer -- would be meticulously careful about using sunscreen, avoiding tanning salons and generally protecting their skin. You would be wrong, researchers said...

    Tags: Human Interest, Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure, Medical Research, Sunburn, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  8. Apr 8, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Deep in a former gold mine, scientists hunt for dark matter

    LEAD, S.D. &mdash; The scientists don hard hats, jumpsuits and steel-toed boots to pile into a metal cage for a rumbling 11-minute descent into an abandoned South Dakota gold mine. They step over old mine-cart rails, through rough-walled tunnels and into a bright white room. There, they cast off their dusty garb and enter a lab hidden nearly a mile beneath the Earth.
    LEAD, S.D. — The scientists don hard hats, jumpsuits and steel-toed boots to pile into a metal cage for a rumbling 11-minute descent into an abandoned South Dakota gold mine. They step over old mine-cart rails, through rough-walled tunnels and...

    Tags: University of Maryland, College Park, Science, Colleges and Universities, Entertainment Events, Nobel Prize Awards

  10. Apr 7, 2013 |Column| Herald Mail
  11. South High Boosters to meet Monday

    A meeting of the South Hagerstown High School boosters will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in the media center at South Hagers-town High School. There will be many topics to discuss. Everyone is invited. Diabetes support group to meet April 17 The diabetes...

    Tags: Hagerstown (Washington, Maryland), Education, Diabetes, Housing and Urban Planning, Book

  12. Apr 5, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. With 'Appalachian Spring' Baltimore School for the Arts breaks new ground

    If there is a single work that captures the essence of America in sound and movement, it's "Appalachian Spring," the ballet with music by Aaron Copland and choreography by Martha Graham that premiered in 1944 at the Library of Congress.
    If there is a single work that captures the essence of America in sound and movement, it's "Appalachian Spring," the ballet with music by Aaron Copland and choreography by Martha Graham that premiered in 1944 at the Library of Congress. Although the...

    Tags: Dance, Education, Colleges and Universities, Companies and Corporations, Festive Events

  14. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Antronette Yancey dies at 55; advocate of short bursts of exercise

    For Dr. Antronette K. Yancey, a UCLA public health professor, exercise could be fun and done in short bursts in the workplace, schools and even places of worship. Her campaign to urge people to incorporate physical activity into their daily lives led to...

    Tags: Northwestern University, Disease Prevention, Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Biology, Nutrition

  16. Apr 26, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  17. Mental Illness Fallacies Counterproductive

    The Hartford Courant
    Proponents of Connecticut establishing a law that would allow the involuntary treatment of people with mental illness in the community have recently used two misleading ideas to support their case. They acknowledge that voluntary treatment is...

    Tags: Pharmaceuticals, Diabetes, Behavioral Conditions, Mental Health, Mental Illness

  18. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  19. Obama nominates antitrust expert Shelanski as new regulatory czar

    Reuters
    * Economist and lawyer who has worked in government and academia * Would take on tough job of reviewing proposed rules * Praised for his analysis, pragmatism and affability By Roberta Rampton and Jeff Mason WASHINGTON, April 25 (Reuters) - U.S....

    Tags: University of Maryland, College Park, New York City, Washington, DC, White House, Antitrust Issues

  20. Apr 24, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. When weight is disabling

    Lisa Harrison weighed 527 pounds on the day she was fired from her job at a Louisiana drug addiction treatment center. The 5-foot-2-inch Harrison, who believed her employer considered her "disabled" due to her weight, filed a discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
    Lisa Harrison weighed 527 pounds on the day she was fired from her job at a Louisiana drug addiction treatment center. The 5-foot-2-inch Harrison, who believed her employer considered her "disabled" due to her weight, filed a discrimination charge with...

    Tags: Back Pain, Stranger Than Fiction, Social Security, Career and Workplace, Arthritis

  22. Mar 4, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Hopkins scientist finds link between neurobiology of music, language

    A Johns Hopkins brain scientist is finding a neurological basis for a notion that many people believe intuitively &mdash; that music is as much a form of language as Spanish or French.
    A Johns Hopkins brain scientist is finding a neurological basis for a notion that many people believe intuitively — that music is as much a form of language as Spanish or French. Charles Limb is one of just a handful of researchers worldwide...

    Tags: Education, Science, Colleges and Universities, Fine Artists, Arts and Culture

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