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    Oct 3, 2012 |Story| Daily American
  1. It's A Medical Nightmare: A 24-year-old Man Endures 350 Surgeries Since Childhood

    AP Chief Medical Writer
    It's a medical nightmare: a 24-year-old man endures 350 surgeries since childhood to remove growths that keep coming back in his throat and have spread to his lungs, threatening his life. Now doctors have found a way to help him by way of a scientific...

    Tags: Health Treatments, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Georgetown University, Science and Technology, Human papillomavirus

  2. Jun 21, 2012 |Story| Winchester Sun
  3. Down the Lane: Walking for Life

    Last week I attended the cancer survivor recognition events. On Thursday evening, I went to the dinner that was given in honor of those who have or had cancer in Clark County. On Friday evening, I attended the Relay for Life and walked in the survivors walk around the walking track at George Rogers Clark High School.
    Last week I attended the cancer survivor recognition events. On Thursday evening, I went to the dinner that was given in honor of those who have or had cancer in Clark County. On Friday evening, I attended the Relay for Life and walked in the survivors...

    Tags: Breast Cancer, Health Treatments, Leukemia, Chemotherapy, Relay for Life

  4. May 27, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. UMBC senior joins cross-country ride for cancer victims

    The farthest Michelle Wong had ever ridden before was from Baltimore to Washington, a roughly 50-mile bike trek. But the UMBC senior was unfazed by what lay ahead of her Sunday morning as she embarked on a 70-day bicycle journey from Baltimore to Portland, Ore., as part of the Ulman Cancer Fund for young adults' 4K for Cancer ride.
    The farthest Michelle Wong had ever ridden before was from Baltimore to Washington, a roughly 50-mile bike trek. But the UMBC senior was unfazed by what lay ahead of her Sunday morning as she embarked on a 70-day bicycle journey from Baltimore to...

    Tags: Breast Cancer, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Inner Harbor, Cancer

  6. Sep 22, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Gene patent case could impact patients, research

    Every time a woman is tested for gene mutations linked to significantly higher rates of breast and ovarian cancer, her blood is sent to a lab in Utah.
    Every time a woman is tested for gene mutations linked to significantly higher rates of breast and ovarian cancer, her blood is sent to a lab in Utah. That's because Salt Lake City-based Myriad Genetics Inc. owns the patents to the BRCA 1 and BRCA 2...

    Tags: Lawyers, Breast Cancer, Huntington's Disease, Economy, Business and Finance, Biology

  8. Sep 21, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Review: The King's Men rule at the Gibson

    It’s not easy to outdo Kirk Franklin.
    It’s not easy to outdo Kirk Franklin. A major presence in gospel music since the mid 1990s, Franklin is known for his intensity on stage. He doesn’t sing a lot, but as a bandleader in the old-school Cab Calloway mode he does pretty much...

    Tags: Luther Vandross, Randy Newman, Entertainment, Carlos Santana, Cab Calloway

  10. Aug 31, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. Research buzz: 'Provocative questions' about cancer to be answered?

    <b>Description:</b> Two Johns Hopkins University scientists were awarded one of the National Cancer Institute's first grants intended to answer what it calls "provocative questions" in cancer research. They will receive more than $500,000 over a year as they study how and why infections can cause certain types of cancer and how cancer spreads. Other "provocative questions" focus on how obesity contributes to cancer risk, why some cancers can be cured by chemotherapy alone, and why some tumors become malignant after years of being benign.
    Description: Two Johns Hopkins University scientists were awarded one of the National Cancer Institute's first grants intended to answer what it calls "provocative questions" in cancer research. They will receive more than $500,000 over a year as they...

    Tags: Research, Health Treatments, Chemotherapy, Science, Johns Hopkins University

  12. Sep 19, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. Dennis C. Kain, BSO timpanist

    Dennis C. Kain, longtime Baltimore Symphony Orchestra principal timpanist, whose career spanned more than four decades, died Saturday of colon cancer at his Hamilton home. He was 73.
    Dennis C. Kain, longtime Baltimore Symphony Orchestra principal timpanist, whose career spanned more than four decades, died Saturday of colon cancer at his Hamilton home. He was 73. "Dennis was not only a wonderful musician and timpanist, but also a...

    Tags: Manhattan (New York City), Music, Bel Air (Harford, Maryland), Frederick (Frederick, Maryland), Bel Air (Allegany, Maryland)

  14. Sep 20, 2012 |Column| Allentown Morning Call
  15. New program shows what high school sports are all about

    The fall scholastic sports season is well under way and in every corner of the Valley, in every sport, kids are competing for wins and championships. But this year most of our area high school teams are learning that sports is not just about winning....

    Tags: Fogelsville, Bangor, Lehigh County, Catasauqua, Pleasant Valley

  16. Sep 21, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  17. If that don't beat all

    Well, if that don't beat all! Durn the luck, but my brain cavity couldn't see the trees for the forest. I guess I should have remembered the advice from the “Song of the Lazy Farmer,” who used to espouse sitting back and relaxing and letting life's...

    Tags: Greens, Beet Tops, Beets, Healthy Diet, High Blood Pressure

  18. Sep 14, 2012 |Story| AM News
  19. Obamacare will make health care affordable

    In order to have affordable health care, the pool of participants must be expanded. Obamacare does this. By 2014, the following will occur:  - Forty-five to 50 million more people will be covered, even those with pre-existing conditions such as cancer,...

    Tags: Prescription Drugs, Medicare, Insurance, Foods and Beverages, Flu

  20. Sep 10, 2012 |Story| WPIX-LTV
  21. Widow Fights On for Husband's Legacy

    You can see the sorrow still in Jennifer McNamara's face, and her voice still catches at times when she talks about her firefighter husband John, who died after succumbing to 9/11 related colon cancer. &nbsp;But the sorrow resides side-by-side with another more powerful presence: &nbsp;determination.
    @colekirstin
    You can see the sorrow still in Jennifer McNamara's face, and her voice still catches at times when she talks about her firefighter husband John, who died after succumbing to 9/11 related colon cancer.  But the sorrow resides side-by-side with another...

    Tags: September 11, 2001 Attacks, Long Island

  22. Sep 7, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  23. NSU continues to grow bigger, better, brighter

    Good things take time. A good thing happened on the Northern State campus Wednesday afternoon in Aberdeen. The school dedicated its addition to the Barnett Center. It was a 26,411-square foot, 5-some year, around $3 million journey. As with such big...
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