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    Tight ends, fullbacks catching on  Oct 5, 2005
    By Randy Reinhardt rreinhardt@pantagraph ... NORMAL -- The Illinois State football team's frequent use of two tight end formations has had the desired effect ... The Redbirds are averaging 217 yards rushing. (The Pantagraph newspaper)

    Easing the hurt: Activity shows how volunteers could defuse tension  Oct 5, 2005
    Should the Herald w keep producing Mondays paper in the tabloid format ... Search the H & R Archives ... Recent H & R Stories. (Mattoon Journal-Gazette, IL)

    Roberts takes oath as chief justice  Oct 5, 2005
    By Stephen Henderson, CRT Campus Published. Media Credit: Olivier Douliery/KRT CampusJudge John Roberts kisses his wife after being sworn in as chief justice of the United States on Sept. 29 ... When the gavel bangs to open the Supreme Court's new term Monday, the justices will enter a pivotal new era in which new faces - including that of Chief Justice John G. Roberts - will help guide court consideration of familiar, high-profile issues. (East Tennessean, TN)

    Americans Among Nobel Physics Prize Winners  Oct 5, 2005
    "It's a huge surprise, a great pleasure," Hall said, noting that the work was a team effort. Speaking from his office in Munich, Haensch called the award a high point of his career ... "I was speechless but of course very happy, exuberant," he said. (Newsmax)

    Roberts sets serious tone on first day on high court  Oct 5, 2005
    Reverse Phone Lookup ... Associated Press During Monday's investiture of John G. Roberts Jr., second from right, as chief justice, President Bush meets with Supreme Court Justices John Paul Stevens, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, David Souter, Antonin Scalia and Sandra Day O'Connor ... Related photo on the Picture Page, C10. (Buffalo News -- National)

    Heart Center Rakes In Donations  Oct 5, 2005
    Skip directly to the ... Published: Oct 5, 2005 ... More from this channel: This feature requires the Macromedia Flash Plugin. (Tampa Bay Online, FL -- Money)

    More local headlines  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... CUSTOMER SERVICE 24 Hour Call Center - Third Shift ... NURSING Eastern Nephrology Associates Is seeking h.. (The Daily Reflector)

    Write to the editor  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... Do you have something you want to get off your chest ... Do you disagree with something published in The Daily Reflector. (The Daily Reflector)

    Restaurant owner fined says solution in the works  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... By T. Scott Batchelor The Daily Reflector ... The owner of a Greenville restaurant hit with fines for violating an ordinance against charging admission says he and his lawyer are working on a solution to the impasse. (The Daily Reflector)

    Nipsey Russell dies at 80  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... NEW YORK Nipsey Russell, who played the Tin Man alongside Diana Ross and Michael Jackson in "The Wiz" as part of a decades-long career in stage, television and film, has died ... The actor, who had been suffering from cancer, died Sunday afternoon at Lenox Hill Hospital, said his longtime manager Joseph Rapp. (The Daily Reflector)

    Board mulls school plans  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... By Kelly Soderlund, The Daily Reflector ... The Pitt County Board of Education affirmed seven redistricting scenarios Tuesday that the public will have the chance to comment on next week. (The Daily Reflector)

    D.H. Conley remembers student  Oct 5, 2005
    No Headline Identified. Search Site/Web enhanced by ... The D.H. Conley High School Cross Country Team will host a 5-K race in memory of Bo Thompson at 5:30 p.m. Thursday. (The Daily Reflector)

    Buy Britney's stuff to help storm victims  Oct 5, 2005
    Spears Opens Closet to Help Storm Victims. Search Site/Web enhanced by ... Spears Opens Closet to Help Storm Victims. (The Daily Reflector)

    Local health care workers help in Mississippi  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... By Paul Dunn The Daily Reflector ... About three miles north of Waveland, Miss. (The Daily Reflector)

    Suspect in death arrested in N.Y.  Oct 5, 2005
    Search Site/Web enhanced by ... By Corey G. Johnson The Daily Reflector ... A New York man wanted in connection with a Sept. 3 stabbing death at the Hamilton Inn parking lot was arrested Monday night in Queens. (The Daily Reflector)

    Australians Win Nobel Prize in Medicine  Oct 5, 2005
    From the Associated Press ... Two Australians won the Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for a discovery that defied decades of medical dogma and revolutionized the treatment of ulcers ... They showed that bacterial infection - not stress - causes ulcers in the stomach and intestine. (Guardian Unlimited)

    HIV-positive man did not have to tell partner  Oct 5, 2005
    STUFF - STORY - HOME : New Zealand's leading news and information website ... All the material on this page has the protection of international copyright ... A HIV-positive Lower Hutt man, who used a condom during intercourse with a woman he met over the internet but failed to tell her of his condition, was today found not guilty of criminal nuisance. (Stuff.co.nz)

    Nobel discovery 'bloody obvious', prize winner says  Oct 5, 2005
    Robin Warren and Barry Marshall's work on ulcers was pioneering. An Australian scientist who has won the 2005 Nobel prize for medicine has said his discovery was "bloody obvious" ... Robin Warren, who shares the prize with his colleague Barry Marshall, said he was "thrilled" to be recognised, but had always believed in their work. (BBC News -- Asia-Pacific)

    PRIMEDIA Refinances Bank Debt and Calls Preferred Stock and Bonds for Redemption  Oct 5, 2005
    3, 2005--PRIMEDIA Inc. (PRM) today announced that it has closed a new $500 million Term Loan B credit facility and has called for redemption all of its outstanding shares of Series H Preferred Stock (with an aggregate liquidation preference of approximately $212 million) and all of its outstanding 7 5/8% Senior Notes due 2008 in an aggregate principal amount of approximately $146 million. The redemption date for both the preferred stock and the senior notes will be October 31, 2005 ... The... (Yahoo Finance -- Printing & Publishing)

    Harvard physicist, 80, earns Nobel  Oct 5, 2005
    Four decades after his research launched a whole new branch of physics, Harvard University professor Roy J. Glauber was named a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize yesterday for insights into the strange behavior of light that laid the groundwork for high precision instruments from lasers to global positioning systems ... 3 million physics award with Glauber are two experimental physicists -- John L. Hall of the United States and Theodor W. H nsch of Germany -- whose work built on Glauber's... (Boston Globe)

    HPV in Children May Point to Sexual Abuse, Or Not  Oct 5, 2005
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - HPV, the virus that causes genital warts, is usually thought of as a sexually transmitted disease, but it can also be spread in other ways. Therefore, when a child is found to be infected, the possibility of sexual abuse has to be considered ... Although most cases of HPV, or human papillomavirus, in very young children are the result of non-sexual transmission, a medical evaluation should be conducted, researchers say in the medical journal Pediatrics. (MEDLINEplus)

    Discovery of Ulcer's Germ Etiology Wins Medicine Nobel  Oct 5, 2005
    Discovery of Ulcer s Germ Etiology Wins Medicine Nobel - CME Teaching Brief - MedPage Today ... By Michael Smith, MedPage Today Staff Writer Reviewed by October 03, 2005 Also covered by ... Explain to patients that infection with H. pylori is a common cause of peptic ulcers, which means that successful treatment of ulcers requires antibiotic therapy. (MedPage Today)

    FDA Wants Clarity From Valeant  Oct 5, 2005
    Biotech/Pharmaceuticals ... Valeant Pharmaceuticals International (:NYSE - - - ) said Tuesday that it received conditional approval from the Food and Drug Administration to sell a new treatment for Parkinson's disease ... Put another way, before regulators will allow the drug to be sold, they want some type of further information. (TheStreet.com)

    Genentech Gang Fights Back  Oct 5, 2005
    Genentech (:NYSE - - - ) has had the wind at its back for the past year, seeing its share price more than double and reaching an all-time high. But in September, the big biotech found the going a little tougher ... 74 on Sept. 1, the stock began a reversal that saw it drop to $79. (TheStreet.com)

    Secretary Rice to visit Afghanistan  Oct 5, 2005
    Rice to visit Afghanistan to encourage progress - South and Central Asia - MSNBC.com ... Rice to visit Afghanistan to encourage progress ... Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan also on secretary of state's itinerary. (MSNBC -- International)

    PIONEER PRESS INTERACTIVE  Oct 5, 2005
    Here's where you'll find it. for news on the hurricane recovery efforts ... Top Story BY KEVIN G. HALL, Knight Ridder News Service WASHINGTON In a move reminiscent of the 1970s, U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman on Monday urged Americans to drive more slowly, turn down the thermostat and conserve energy as the coming winter threatens to bring record prices to heat a home. (Pioneer Press -- News)

    St. Jude Medical Introduces Ultra-Thin ICD Lead Family to Japanese Market  Oct 5, 2005
    Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE: - ) today announced regulatory and reimbursement approvals from the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare in Japan for the Riata(TM) family of implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) leads. The highly advanced leads, with diameters as small as 6 ... 7 French, rank among the world's thinnest. (Yahoo Finance -- Medical Equipment & Supplies)

    Americans, German win Nobel physics prize  Oct 5, 2005
    Chicago Sun-Times - News ... STOCKHOLM, Sweden-- Americans John L. Hall and Roy J. Glauber and German Theodor W. Haensch won the 2005 Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for work that could lead to better long-distance communication and more precise navigation worldwide and beyond ... The prize was given to the three for their work in applying modern quantum physics to the study of optics. (Chicago Sun-Times)

    2 Australians win Nobel for ulcer research  Oct 5, 2005
    Chicago Sun-Times - News ... Dr. Barry Marshall was so determined to convince the world that bacteria -- not stress -- caused ulcers that he drank a batch of it ... Five days later he was throwing up, and he had severe stomach inflammation for about two weeks. (Chicago Sun-Times)

    State: Tour boat was crewmember short during crash that killed 20  Oct 5, 2005
    Top News Archives for ... The Ethan Allen tour boat is towed after being brought to the surface of Lake George on Monday, Oct. 3, 2005, at Lake George, N.Y. The boat carrying tourists on a senior citizens' cruise overturned Sunday killing 20 people and sending more than two dozen others to a hospital ... AP Photo/Mary Altaffer. (Burlington Free Press)

    Letters to the Editor  Oct 5, 2005
    Opinion Archives for ... I want to say thank you to our Guardsmen, just coming home from Iraq, and then getting sent to New Orleans ... I just wish all our boys in Iraq can come home, and that's including my son. (Burlington Free Press)

    Strike looms as Colchester teachers consider pay, health benefits  Oct 5, 2005
    Local News Archives for ... Colchester teachers stage an informational picket on Blakely Road outside Malletts Bay School and Colchester Middle School on Monday morning ... PETER HUOPPI, Free Press. (Burlington Free Press)

    Keep crisis response under local control  Oct 5, 2005
    Opinion Archives for ... It was evident that the chaos seen in the wake of Hurricane Katrina was brought under control by United States military troops ... However, it would be a mistake for Congress to allow federal soldiers to become first-responders to natural disasters or terrorist events. (Burlington Free Press)

    Supreme Court Returns to Physician-Assisted Suicide, Now as an Issue of Federal Power  Oct 5, 2005
    Skip directly to the. By Gina Holland Associated Press Writer ... Published: Oct 5, 2005. (AP-Breaking News)

    Supreme Court to Revisit Assisted Suicide  Oct 5, 2005
    Most Popular Photos Hot Discussion Topics. Community Highlights ... Oregon is the only state that lets dying patients obtain lethal doses of medication from their doctors, although other states may pass laws of their own if the high court rules against the federal government. (Netscape News)

    New Orleans mayor announces up to 3,000 layoffs  Oct 5, 2005
    (AP) - NEW ORLEANS-Mayor Ray Nagin said Tuesday the city is laying off as many as 3,000 employees - or about half its workforce - because of the financial damage inflicted on New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. Nagin announced with "great sadness" that he had been unable to find the money to keep the workers on the payroll ... He said only non-essential workers will be laid off and that no firefighters or police will be among those let go. (FindLaw News)

    Breast cancer rates increase, but number of deaths falls  Oct 5, 2005
    Sign up to receive our free Daily Briefing e-newsletter and get the top news of the day in your inbox ... Deaths from breast cancer, the most common malignancy among women, fell 2 ... The decrease probably is a result of better treatments and early detection, says Elizabeth Ward, the American Cancer Society's director of surveillance research and an author of the Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer. (USA Today -- National)

    Breast milk shows cavity-causing potential  Oct 5, 2005
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Though breastfeeding is sometimes seen as a way to protect against early cavities, a new study using rats suggests that breast milk may cause more cavities than cow's milk does. However, researchers stress, breast milk appears no more likely to contribute to cavities than commonly used infant formulas -- and the animal findings should not be seen as a strike against breastfeeding ... Cavities can form when certain decay-causing bacteria in the mouth turn sugar into... (Reuters UK -- Health)

    Roberts is no-nonsense as new term begins  Oct 5, 2005
    Roberts is no-nonsense first day on bench ... Roberts is no-nonsense first day on bench ... WASHINGTON - Chief Justice John Roberts set a no-nonsense tone on his first day on the bench, taking a page from his mentor William H. Rehnquist. (AZCentral -- News)

    Pink Partners With Pink-Ribbon Group For Breast-Cancer Awareness  Oct 5, 2005
    " "I was starting not to like the color anymore, but now I have a reason to love it again," she said. That's because Pink took a break from finishing her new album to team "I was starting not to like the color anymore, but now I have a reason to love it again. " Pink Photos, audio and video from this story up with the pink-ribboned Breast Cancer Research Foundation to help kick off Breast Cancer Awareness Month, starting with a free concert Friday night at New York's South Street Seaport. It's a... (MTV -- News)

    Of guts and glory  Oct 5, 2005
    Welcome to Sydney Morning Herald Online ... The Nobel Prize-winning breakthrough was one thing ... Selling it to the medical world was another. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Australia)

    Building Memories - Oct. 3, 2005  Oct 5, 2005
    218 Broad: Crown Cafe, theater ... Block 22, Texarkana, Texas, has housed numerous families and businesses throughout the 130-year history of the city ... Recently 218 W. Broad St., which is located near the western end of this block, and the intersection of West Broad Street and Texas Boulevard, was renovated by Jeff Sandefur and his associates. (Texarkana Gazette, TX)

    3 to share the Nobel in physics  Oct 5, 2005
    TODAY IN HEALTH & SCIENCE ... This year's Nobel Prize in physics recognizes a scientist who worked out a theory of quantum optics - describing the behavior of light using quantum mechanics - and two scientists who used that knowledge to develop a powerful laser technique for identifying atoms and molecules ... The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which administers the Nobel Prizes, announced Tuesday that half of the prize and half of the $1. (International Herald Tribune -- Health)

    August Wilson:  Oct 5, 2005
    August Wilson - What is his legacy, really ... Bringing out the dead ... August WilsonWhat is his legacy, really. (Slate)

    Republicans, Democrats alike conflicted over Miers nomination to Supreme Court  Oct 5, 2005
    Tuesday, October 4, 2005 http://www ... html/national/MIA8376 ... Have a question for 7News health experts. (WSVN-TV Miami, FL)

    OBITUARIES from 9-29-04  Oct 5, 2005
    Freeda Fisher Stafford, 67, former resident of Nuyaka, OK died Thursday Sept. 23 in an Oklahoma City Hospital. She was born Jan. 25, 1937 in Nuyaka to Booker and Fannie (Long) Fisher ... Preceding her in death were her parents, and one brother. (Okmulgee Daily Times, OK)

    Harvard physicist, 80, earns Nobel  Oct 5, 2005
    Four decades after his research launched a whole new branch of physics, Harvard University professor Roy J. Glauber was named a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize yesterday for insights into the strange behavior of light that laid the groundwork for high precision instruments from lasers to global positioning systems ... 3 million physics award with Glauber are two experimental physicists -- John L. Hall of the United States and Theodor W. H nsch of Germany -- whose work built on Glauber's... (Boston Globe -- Nation)

    Two Australians win Nobel Prize for ulcer research  Oct 5, 2005
    Current stories in Health ine ... 2 Australians are honored for their discovery that a bacterium causes the ailment ... Barry Marshall and Robin Warren of Australia won the Nobel Prize in medicine for their discovery in 1982 that bacteria, not stress, cause ulcers. (Houston Chronicle -- Health)

    Shelby man indicted in federal court  Oct 5, 2005
    Shelby County Reporter. Shelby County Reporter, Established 1843 ... Winner of the 2001 Alabama Press Association's General Excellence Award. (Columbiana Shelby County Reporter, AL)

    Scientist who braved ulcer wins Nobel  Oct 5, 2005
    An Australian microbiologist who swallowed mouthfuls of bacteria to prove they cause stomach ulcers was awarded the 2005 Nobel prize in physiology or medicine for his pioneering research yesterday. Barry Marshall, who runs a laboratory at the University of Western Australia, received the award jointly with Robin Warren, formerly a pathologist at the Royal Perth hospital ... The pair will share the 10m Swedish kronor (730,000) prize money. (Guardian Unlimited -- Life)


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