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Chinese drywall investigation could be released Monday
By ISAAC WOLF, Scripps Howard News Service

A highly anticipated federal investigation of Chinese drywall is expected to be released Monday, and it could be worth thousands of dollars for affected homeowners.

That's because the report may trigger the availability of federal funds that affected homeowners could use to lessen their losses, according to a spokesman for Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.

Editorial: The politics of mammograms
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service

The government-funded -- but independent -- U.S. Preventive Service Task Force, made up of 16 physicians and public-health experts, did what it was supposed to, and indeed should be done routinely under any health-care-reform plan, a periodic examination and re-evaluation of current medical practice.

Tucker: Unbeatens create another BCS mess
By JOHN TUCKER, New Hampshire Union Leader

You might not have a lot to take to the bank these days, but in college football, there's plenty you can bank on:

With six unbeatens occupying the top six spots in the BCS standings heading into Week 12 -- and only two matched up before the bowl season -- BCS bashers will be coming out of the woodwork en masse.

The playoff debate will rage anew.

Watch: Palin still isn't ready for political prime time
By ANN McFEATTERS, Scripps Howard News Service

WASHINGTON - "Don't you say anything bad about Sarah Palin," admonished one of my sisters. "We love her. Be nice to her."

"What is this infatuation about Sarah Palin all about?!" said another sibling. "I can't understand it. She has no real solutions. All she does is criticize and look hot."

Flamboyant millionaire becomes Olympics' ticket king
By ROD MICKLEBURGH, Toronto Globe and Mail

VANCOUVER - A flamboyant, wheeler-dealer millionaire is the undisputed ticket king of the Olympics.

For millionaire Sead Dizdarevic, it's a brand-new, above-board world

In California, executive glass ceiling still not cracked by women
By MARK GLOVER, Sacramento Bee

Women are making "no progress" cracking the executive glass ceiling in California, according to a just-released study by the University of California, Davis.

The fifth annual "California Women Business Leaders" study concludes that progress for women at the 400 largest public companies headquartered in the state is little improved since the first survey in 2005.

Two Fla. boys made up story of child abduction, police say
By WILL GREENLEE, Scripps Howard News Service

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. - A reported child abduction that turned out to be a hoax this week apparently started with two young boys mimicking the plot of a crime-related television program and ended with misdemeanor charges, a police spokesman said.

Ambrose: The anti-Palin bias
By JAY AMBROSE, Scripps Howard News Service

Here's what you do if you want an immediate demonstration of media bias in political coverage and to see trap doors open on the heads of leftists throughout the land as little birds step out singing, "Cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo." You speak the name of Sarah Palin and let it be known she's traveling about the land saying stuff.

Mourning N.C. family 'relieved' young mom's body found
By JOSH SHAFFER, Raleigh News and Observer

CREEDMOOR, N.C, - After a 14-month hunt that sent searchers trudging through pastures and peering into open wells, sheriff's deputies found the skeletal remains of Kelly Morris inside a 900-acre tract where dogs chase coyotes and foxes for sport.

Marvez: A talk with 'Swimming with Piranhas' author Howard Brody
By ALEX MARVEZ, Scripps Howard News Service

Howard Brody dealt with quite a shady lot while trying to become a successful pro-wrestling promoter:

A convicted murderer, a kidnapper, international smugglers, suspected yakuza (i.e., Japanese mobsters), con artists, drug addicts.

Not to mention World Wrestling Entertainment owner Vince McMahon.

Clowning around doesn't work for would-be Calif. bank robber
By RICHARD BROOKS, The Press-Enterprise

A would-be robber -- wearing clown makeup and carrying a purse -- tried to hold up a Riverside credit union this week but left empty handed.

"I guess they didn't take the clown seriously," said police Sgt. Skip Showalter.

The brief one-man circus performed at 5:11 p.m. Wednesday at Altura Credit Union along the 3400 block of Fourteenth Street.

The hidden victims: 2,000 men have breast cancer
By BRIAN BETHEL, Scripps Howard News Service

While health care pundits debate over when women should have mammograms, 2,000 men diagnosed with breast cancer this year are in the shadows.

One of them is Marshall Anderson, 52, who works as a medical technologist with Texas Oncology in North Carolina. He takes care of parents all day, but never imagined that he would be diagnosed with breast cancer.

Hired: Be an active listener and stay focused
By MARVIN WALBERG, Scripps Howard News Service

Volumes have been written about the job interview.

Pre-interview research and preparation.

Proper interview dress.

Promptness -- arrival time.

Body language and interview protocol.

Answers to questions and questions to ask.

Thank you notes and follow through.

Consumer satisfaction bodes well for holidays
By TERESA F. LINDEMAN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Stressed-out consumers want comfort food and comfortable clothes at the right price, and the fact that they're relatively satisfied overall with what they're getting may boost holiday shopping.

Real: Search around if you're looking into jumbo mortgages
By HOLDEN LEWIS, bankrate.com

Plenty of lenders offer jumbo mortgages now, although the requirements are stricter than they used to be.

Jumbo mortgages are home loans that are bigger than normal. They exceed the "conforming limit" -- the maximum loan amount that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will buy.

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Editorials & Opinion

GM Car of the Year ... in Europe?

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APEC offers some welcome economic news

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A setback for Chavez

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Be for gay marriage -- or else

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Big contrast between Sacramento, Fresno

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A year to remember, but not to relive

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Stimulus should be big and fast

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Crisp: Don't fear liberal professors

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Boren: Legislators duck their jobs

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Walters: California budget plans fall short

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Dead Wrong

A seven-month investigation into federal mortality records reveals hundreds of thousands of death certificates filed every year in the United States are wrong, meaning we don't really know what's killing Americans. A first-of-its-kind study also found that younger, well-educated and wealthy people are more likely to be autopsied when they die. More men than women are autopsied. And blacks, Hispanics, Asians and Native Americans are more likely to be autopsied than whites.
Autopsy rates differ by race, age, sex, education
Cause of death investigations often dead wrong
Accurate death certificates challenged by poor training
Poll: Doubts persist over accuracy of death certificates
Survey results among different groups
Death poll findings, by questions
What to do if you distrust the death diagnosis
Where to find death records
Deaths by heart disease by state
Editorial: We don't know what's really killing Americans

Navy to deploy dolphins, sea lions to protect sub base
5 comments
Editorial: Water puts moon in a new light
5 comments
Editorial: Cracking down on free speech in name of religion
3 comments
Market decides if you set the right price for a house
3 comments
Editorial: 9/11 planners to return to NYC -- for trial
3 comments
Erbe: Stupak-Pitts shoves women to back of bus
2 comments
Autos: Lincoln's flagship these days is the MKS sedan
2 comments
Lose weight for yourself or for your guy
2 comments
Tuned In: New releases from 'American Idol' stars
2 comments
House bill addresses shortages of primary doctors
2 comments

Recycled Radiation

Thousands of everyday products and materials containing radioactively tainted metals are surfacing across the United States and around the world. But because of haphazard screening, an absence of oversight, and substantial disincentives for businesses to report contamination, no one knows how many tainted goods are in circulation.
Recycled radioactive metal contaminates consumer products
NRC wants to tighten oversight of often-lost radioactive devices
Same batch of radioactive metal from Mexico enters Calif. for 25 years
Radioactive cheese grater case shows lack of oversight
36 states have nowhere to dump low-level radioactive material
Radioactive mesh from China used to make 30,000 filters in Florida
Authorities scrambled to corral radioactive La-Z-Boy recliners
Only U.S. effort to collect radioactive material has 9,000-object backlog
Mandatory screening, reporting needed to stop recycling radiation
Radioactive materials surface in Tennessee scrap yards
Texas has highest number of radioactive metal incidents
Editorial: The hidden radiation around us
Scripps Howard News Service response to comments from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on SHNS' "Recycled Radiation"

The Doctor is Out

A special report by Scripps Howard News Service finds as many as one in five Americans does not have a family doctor. And this translates directly to higher rates of illness and death and higher costs.
Docs: In ERs, more sore throats than cardiac arrests

Interactive database showing U.S. doctors by county

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