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College athletic scholarships often shortchange expectation

By hdcoadmin | March 12, 2008

A story by The New York Times‘ reporter Bill Pennington and data analyst Griffin Palmer uncovers the discrepancy between the expectations of families and the reality of college athletic scholarships. Analysis of previously undisclosed National Collegiate Athletic Association data showed that scholarships are rarely as lucrative as parents and student athletes assume. “Excluding the glamour…

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Unnecessary transplants boon for clinics at great cost to patients

By hdcoadmin | March 12, 2008

The three-day special report by Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reporters Andrew Conte and Luis Fabregas found that hundreds of patients each year undergo unnecessary liver transplants. The story cites national data for transplants at 127 hospitals across the nation between 2002 and 2006. The reporters looked at MELD scores—a government-approved standard used to determine how urgently a…

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Nebraska fails to oversee death investigations

By hdcoadmin | March 11, 2008

Karyn Spencer of the Omaha World-Herald discovered Nebraska has no state oversight and few standards to ensure quality death investigations by coroners or law enforcement. The lack of oversight and standards lead to murder cases remaining unsolved, coroners skipping autopsies to save money or guessing at the cause of death and bodies being exhumed to…

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Forced Out

By hdcoadmin | March 10, 2008

A series by Debbie Cenziper and Sarah Cohen of The Washington Post looks at the condo boom in the District of Columbia. Tenants are being displaced as landlords convert apartments to condos using “vacancy exemptions” — sidestepping tenants’ approval and avoiding conversion fees that would offset renters’ relocation costs. Through the analysis of government documents,…

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Probe finds trace pharmecueticals in US drinking water

By hdcoadmin | March 10, 2008

A five-month probe by Jeff Donn, Martha Mendoza and Justin Pritchard, of the Associated Press, found traces of medications in the drinking water supplies of over 40 million Americans. While the testing found pharmaceuticals diluted to miniscule concentration levels, some scientists question the long-term effects of sustained exposure. The AP reports: “The situation is undoubtedly…

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Psychiatric screening of military personel still lagging

By hdcoadmin | March 10, 2008

The Hartford Courant‘s Lisa Chedekel and Matthew Kauffman continue their coverage of the U.S. military’s mental health policies with a report revealing that fewer than 1 percent of deploying combat troops received mental-health evaluations in 2007 despite a congressional order to improve screening, as revealed in pre-deployment data for nearly 350,000 soldiers sent to war.…

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Orlando officials talk “green,” yet guzzle gas

By hdcoadmin | March 10, 2008

Despite championing “green” firehouses and pledging to be more environmentally friendly, Orlando’s city officials are driving some of the biggest gas-guzzling vehicles on the road. Dan Tracy and Mary Shanklin , of the Orlando Sentinel, requested records from about 90 local government agencies and found that Ford Expeditions and Explorers were the vehicles of choice…

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Tactical Response Unit sued for use of excessive force

By hdcoadmin | March 10, 2008

The San Antonio Express-News conducted a three-month study of the Tactical Response Unit of the San Antonio Police Department, a unit created to reduce violent crime. “The unit used force to subdue only three of almost 1,000 Anglo suspects it arrested. By comparison, officers struggled with nearly six times as many minorities per 1,000 arrests,…

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Little punishment for doctors who overprescribe

By hdcoadmin | March 7, 2008

In a third installment of “Dangerous Doctors,” Gina Barton of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel showed how doctors who prescribe too many painkillers to patients in Wisconsin are rarely disciplined— even when patients are harmed. One man who overdosed had three doctors with troubled pasts, including a doctor who would later go to prison for selling…

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North Carolina selects university leaders in secret

By hdcoadmin | March 7, 2008

An investigation by Corey G. Johnson of the Fayetteville Observer finds that North Carolina is the only state in the nation that selects the top leaders of all its public universities in secret. The Observer surveyed every state university system and more than 50 individual universities in the U.S. and analyzed approximately 113 responses for…

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