Jimmy Carter, the 39th US president, has died at 100How long ring fingers can point to a love of alcohol
Hicks 3-6 0-0 7, Konan Niederhauser 6-7 2-5 14, Baldwin 6-14 6-7 20, Dilione 4-11 0-0 9, Johnson 2-6 0-0 4, Kern 4-8 3-3 11, Dunn 0-1 0-0 0, Nzeh 1-2 0-0 2, Carter 0-1 0-0 0, Stewart 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-56 11-15 67. Schieffelin 7-15 4-4 18, Wiggins 6-10 0-1 14, Lakhin 2-7 2-2 6, C.Hunter 4-12 6-7 17, Zackery 2-4 2-2 8, D.Hunter 0-3 2-4 2, Jones 4-6 0-0 10, Reeves 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-57 16-20 75. Halftime_Clemson 38-36. 3-Point Goals_Penn St. 4-18 (Baldwin 2-6, Dilione 1-4, Hicks 1-4, Carter 0-1, Dunn 0-1, Johnson 0-2), Clemson 9-19 (C.Hunter 3-6, Zackery 2-2, Jones 2-3, Wiggins 2-4, Lakhin 0-1, Schieffelin 0-1, D.Hunter 0-2). Rebounds_Penn St. 28 (Konan Niederhauser, Dilione, Kern 6), Clemson 31 (Schieffelin 13). Assists_Penn St. 18 (Baldwin 11), Clemson 17 (Schieffelin 8). Total Fouls_Penn St. 19, Clemson 15.
Christina Schmid was the poster girl for grieving war widows - But now, after a gin-fuelled, violent attack on her second husband, friends say her darker side was 'always there' By CHRISTINA SCHMID Published: 20:30 EST, 29 December 2024 | Updated: 20:30 EST, 29 December 2024 e-mail View comments At the height of Britain's war in Afghanistan , Christina Schmid came to epitomise the sacrifice made by service families everywhere when she fulfilled a promise made to her bomb disposal expert husband. If he was killed in the line of duty , she vowed, she would be there to welcome his coffin home. Who can forget the heart-rending sight of Christina back in November 2009 when, after waiting at RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire, she joined the crowds who regularly lined the streets of nearby Royal Wootton Bassett during military repatriations? Dressed in black and clutching two red roses, she mouthed 'love you, love you' and even applauded to show her pride as the hearse carrying Staff Sergeant Olaf Schmid passed by. During the grief-filled months and years which followed, she campaigned for better equipment for troops and improved pensions for bereaved families. She penned a best-selling memoir, rubbed shoulders with the Camerons at Downing Street and went to Buckingham Palace to collect her husband's posthumous George Cross. How on earth, then, did this inspirational woman end up in the dock at Plymouth magistrates court last week, a convicted criminal waiting to be sentenced for violently attacking the second husband she married in the wake of the tragic death of her beloved 'Oz'? Handed a 12-week suspended jail sentence, ordered to attend rehabilitation sessions, carry out 150 hours unpaid community work and abstain from drinking for 60 days, the 49-year-old former poster girl for British war widows was accused of 'spreading lies' by the judge who sentenced her and chastised her for 'displaying absolutely no remorse'. Christina Schmid, 49, has been handed a 12-week suspended jail sentence for violently attacking her second husband Christina attacked 43-year-old Adam Plumb during a late-night row at their £1.6million Georgian manor house in Devon Christina's attack on 43-year-old Adam Plumb during a late-night row at their £1.6million Georgian manor house in the village of Ugborough in Devon was utterly shocking in its depravity. According to Mr Plumb, mother-of-two Christina was 'behaving like a dog' when, after downing gin, she flew into a drunken rage and kicked, scratched and bit him in September last year. More, in a moment, of the dramatic and violent events which ended her ill-fated second marriage. Above all, this is the story of an extraordinary fall from grace, the roots of which stretch all the way back to that terrible moment when, just 24 hours before he was due to return home, 30-year-old bomb disposal expert Oz lost his life while trying to defuse a Taliban roadside bomb in Helmand. This week, the Mail has spoken to those who know Christina, including a close friend of her tragic first husband. He believes she has been 'irreparably damaged' by Oz's devastating death and needed 'some sort of psychological intervention' to help her. 'I am not sure she will ever be able to heal,' says Siegfried Westphal, who trained and served with Oz in Afghanistan and was with him the night before he died. 'Her loss is so great and clearly she is struggling to form another relationship,' adds the 62-year-old former Army officer, who regarded Oz as a brother and supported Christina in the wake of his death on October 31, 2009. 'I don't think any other man will ever match up to Oz.' Others who know former pharmaceutical company account manager Christina are less sympathetic, however, not least her dead husband's family. A friend of the Schmids, who live in Cornwall, said Oz's elderly mother Barbara was upset by her former daughter-in-law's recent behaviour. 'She has been absolutely devastated by all of this,' said the friend. 'Christina could be a difficult and demanding woman before Oz died and I have no doubt losing him rocked her to her foundations. But things have clearly gone right off the rails now.' According to another acquaintance: 'Christina can be very controlling, manipulative and suffers mood swings. 'She has a real temper on her. She can go from placid to furious in a matter of seconds. 'I don't think this is something that has happened since Oz's death. It was always there.' Christina, who grew up in Hampshire and studied policy and economics at the University of Portsmouth, was pregnant when she and Oz embarked on a relationship back in 2003. According to Christina's memoir, Always By My Side, the father of her baby 'was a surf dude travelling the world in search of the next big wave. 'I was a career girl, knuckling down to work with a mortgage and a family to keep me rooted'. Oz Schmid, 30, lost his life while trying to defuse a Taliban roadside bomb in Helmand He did, however, act as guarantor for the mortgage on her house in the Hampshire village of Otterbourne. She and Oz, she claimed, had first met as teenagers on holiday in Cornwall and while he was 'not my thing', they kept in touch before meeting up again when she was four months pregnant. They married in December 2007 and set up home in Winchester where Oz, a former head chorister at Truro Cathedral, raised Christina's son Laird as his own. He was, she wrote, 'my best friend and soulmate'. As a member of the Royal Logistics Corps, Oz began his military career as a chef but was later trained in bomb disposal. He became one of the Army's most respected explosives experts and was said to be able to detect the presence of an IED (Improvised Explosive Device) by the smell of freshly-laid tarmac. He died on the last day of his five-month tour in Afghanistan while disarming his 65th explosive device and the fourth he had tackled that day. Witnesses said that, in the moments leading up to his death, he seemed to be hurrying and may have been worried about the fading light. Christina, then 34, was at home with her five-year-old son and looking forward to her husband's homecoming when, late at night, two Army officers knocked on her door. In her book, she recalls opening an upstairs window and shouting down to them: 'Tell me I can still talk to him. I don't care if he's lost his arms and his legs, just tell me he's not dead.' Just six days later she went to meet her husband's coffin at RAF Lyneham and then waited for it to pass through Wootton Bassett, the Wiltshire town which by 2009 had become a focus for national mourning of Britain's dead servicemen and women. At Oz's funeral in Truro Cathedral, she cut a similarly dignified figure, standing in front of the packed congregation, his medals pinned to her chest and urging politicians to 'fight with his spirit, dedication and integrity day in, day out, for peace'. In 2010, Samantha Cameron paid tribute to Christina's 'remarkable strength' when she joined the then Prime Minister's wife as a patron of Tickets for Troops, a charity offering members of the Armed Forces free tickets to major events. When, a year later, she found love again with divorced Mark Clarke, also a serving member of the Armed Forces, it seemed she had found some much-deserved happiness. The couple announced their relationship in 2012 with a romantic photo-spread in Hello! magazine. 'In some ways I have been pigeonholed as a grieving widow and a campaigner,' Christina said in an accompanying interview. 'Don't get me wrong, I was that woman. But I achieved what I set out to achieve and now I want to move forward. 'I want to leave that woman in the past and look to the future.' She and Mark had a daughter in 2014 but split in 2019. When contacted by the Mail this week, Mr Clarke refused to comment on his relationship with Christina. A family friend said: 'He never talks about it now but I know that the relationship was a very unhappy time in his life. Christina met Adam when the divorced property developer took his springer spaniels to the dog-grooming salon Christina ran Christina told the Mail she intends to appeal against her conviction 'In public, Christina was a national heroine but behind the scenes she had quite a temper on her. She suffered mood swings which left him withdrawn and stressed and at times made his life unbearable.' She moved swiftly on to her next relationship, with her future second husband Adam Plumb. They met when the divorced property developer took his springer spaniels to the dog-grooming salon Christina ran. He recently told The Mail on Sunday that 'after telling me about problems with an ex', she suggested going out for a drink and he agreed. 'She was attractive with a curvaceous figure and I enjoyed her company,' he said. 'We had a laugh. We went to country pubs and on walks with our dogs.' No friends or family attended their October 2020 wedding at five-star Bovey Castle Hotel on Dartmoor in Devon. The couple bought their mansion in Devon in May 2021 and lived apart while Mr Plumb refurbished it. He told The Mail on Sunday last month: 'She came every weekend to check on progress but she was never happy with what I'd done. 'She wanted more, more, more and would go off on one about the slightest things, the wrong shade of paint, anything. It was horrible, though I didn't realise how bad things had become.' He added: 'I accepted I had married someone I should not have, but when we bought the house I thought that it was everything she ever wanted.' Instead, said Mr Plumb, the purchase of what should have been a dream home coincided with 'the crazy time, the start of the violence'. When she flew into one of her rages, he said Christina would scratch him with her nails, punch him, rip his clothes and bite him. At other times, she launched verbal assaults on him in public, accusing him of assaulting her and calling him a fraud. He also claimed she had a predilection for hiding his things, including his phone and car keys. In court at the end of last month, magistrates were shown footage, recorded by Mr Plumb on his phone, of Christina cornering him in a 4ft walk-in wardrobe as he tried to leave. Mr Plumb, the son of an Isle of Wight Methodist minister, is heard saying: 'Get off me – you are a disgusting woman' and then adding, 'You f****** bit me. You f****** b****. You horrible woman'. In court Christina tried to claim that her husband had attacked her but District Judge Stuart Smith dismissed her counter claims over and over again. 'I do not find your evidence credible,' he said. 'I find that you have falsely made out Mr Plumb to be the aggressor while all the time it was you who was the aggressor. When police did not fall for it, you became hysterical.' Almost 15 years to the day that she attended Oz's military funeral, she was found guilty of two counts of assault by beating Mr Plumb and another woman who cannot be named for legal reasons. In court last Monday, Judge Stuart Smith was forced to tell a sobbing Christina to 'please be quiet', when she refused to stop talking and railing against Mr Plumb, who was not in court. The judge said she had 'spread lies online' and 'carried out a smear campaign before and after your trial'. Read More EXCLUSIVE Christina Schmid won admiration as the war widow of one of Britain's leading bomb disposal experts In mitigation, her barrister Francesca Whebell said: 'Her life in recent years has suffered a number of traumatic events which have shaped the way things are.' She added that Christina realised that, as a result of her actions, she would lose her 'previous good character'. She was sentenced to 12 weeks for the assault on Mr Plumb and four weeks for an attack on another woman. Her imprisonment has been suspended for 12 months. She has also been handed a two-year restraining order, which bans her from having any contact with either victim and from mentioning them on social media. Oz's younger brother Torben Schmid told the Mail: 'We are aware of what happened at the court case but it is not something the family would want to comment on. 'We have lived our lives very quietly and privately since we lost Olaf and we don't want to change that now.' According to Oz's former Army friend Siegfried Westphal: 'Losing Oz broke Chrissie. I am not sure whether she will ever be able to put the pieces back together. You would have to be a cold-hearted b****** not to be moved to tears by that. She deserves a break. I hope one day she can find peace.' As for Christina, she has told the Mail: 'I intend to appeal the conviction.' She now calls herself Christina Schmid, not Plumb or even her maiden name, Avis. Perhaps it's not surprising that now, at her lowest point, she wants to realign herself with the war hero husband she tragically lost when she was at her happiest. To remind others of the woman she once was. For had Oz Schmid succeeded in that final, courageous mission – as he crouched over an IED, wanting to get the last job of his tour of duty over and done with so he could get home to his wife – how different Christina's life might have been. Share or comment on this article: Christina Schmid was the poster girl for grieving war widows - But now, after a gin-fuelled, violent attack on her second husband, friends say her darker side was 'always there' e-mail Add comment
Willis Group Stock Soars to All-Time High of $320.99Manchester City's struggles continued as Pep Guardiola's side remarkably blew a three-goal lead to draw 3-3 with Feyenoord in the Champions League on Tuesday, while Bayern Munich beat Paris Saint-Germain to leave the French club in danger of elimination. There were also big wins for Arsenal, Atletico Madrid, Atalanta and Bayer Leverkusen, while Inter Milan went top of the standings after five games and Barcelona's Robert Lewandowski reached a century of Champions League goals. However, the biggest drama came at the Etihad Stadium, where City were cruising early in the second half with a three-goal advantage as they sought to end a run of five successive defeats in all competitions. Erling Haaland opened the scoring from a penalty just before half-time, and Ilkay Gundogan's deflected shot made it 2-0 in the 50th minute. Haaland struck again to make it 3-0, but Feyenoord's comeback began on 75 minutes when Anis Hadj Moussa took advantage of hapless defending to round goalkeeper Ederson and pull one back. Substitute Santiago Gimenez bundled in to make it 3-2 on 82 minutes and the equaliser arrived a minute from the end. Ederson was again caught out with Igor Paixao going around the goalkeeper and crossing for Slovak international David Hancko to head in. "We concede a lot of goals because we are not stable," complained Guardiola. "We lost a lot of games lately. We are fragile and of course we need a victory." It is the first time that a team has gone into the last 20 minutes of a Champions League game trailing by three goals and still avoided defeat, as the point boosts the Dutch side's hopes of progressing. City are two points outside the top eight places which offer direct qualification for the last 16, while Bayern moved above them by beating PSG 1-0 in Munich. South Korean defender Kim Min-jae scored the only goal seven minutes before half-time, heading in after goalkeeper Matvei Safonov failed to clear a corner. PSG had Ousmane Dembele sent off in the second half and the French champions have just four points, and three goals, from five games. They are a lowly 26th in the 36-team league, a point adrift of the positions which offer a place in the play-off round in February. "We need to win our last three matches, otherwise we risk being eliminated," admitted PSG coach Luis Enrique. Lewandowski notched his 100th goal in the competition with an early penalty in Barcelona's 3-0 home win over French side Brest. Dani Olmo netted midway through the second half before Lewandowski sealed Barca's win at the death, his 101st goal in the Champions League -- only Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi have scored more. Inter lead the standings with 13 points, a point ahead of Barcelona and Liverpool, after a 1-0 win at home to RB Leipzig which means they are also still yet to concede a goal. Castello Lukeba's own goal made the difference at San Siro, and Leipzig are one of only three teams to have lost five games out of five. Arsenal romped to a 5-1 victory away to Sporting in Lisbon, as the Portuguese side adapt to life without coach Ruben Amorim, who has departed for Manchester United. Gabriel Martinelli, Kai Havertz and Gabriel Magalhaes all scored in the first half for Arsenal, before Goncalo Inacio pulled one back shortly after the restart. Bukayo Saka converted a penalty on 65 minutes after Martin Odegaard had been brought down, and Leandro Trossard headed in to seal Arsenal's win late on. Atalanta romped to a 6-1 win over rock-bottom Young Boys in Switzerland, with Mateo Retegui and Charles De Ketelaere both scoring braces. Sead Kolasinac and Lazar Samardzic also netted for the Italians, with Silvere Ganvoula getting the hosts' reply. Florian Wirtz struck twice, including a penalty, as Leverkusen crushed Red Bull Salzburg 5-0, with Alejandro Grimaldo scoring a superb free-kick and Patrik Schick and Aleix Garcia also netting. Julian Alvarez and substitute Angel Correa each scored twice and Marcos Llorente and Antoine Griezmann once as Atletico romped to a 6-0 win away to Sparta Prague. Christian Pulisic, Rafael Leao and Tammy Abraham were the scorers in AC Milan's 3-2 win at Slovan Bratislava, whose goals came from Tigran Barseghyan and Nino Marcelli. Marko Tolic saw red at the end for Slovan, who are without a point. as/nf
Like a football off McBride's helmet, the Cardinals aren't getting many lucky bounces these days
Braun to restructure Indiana agencies into a Cabinet-style modelGlobal Carbon and Energy Management Software Market Size, Share and Forecast By Key Players-CA Technologies, IBM, SAP, Schneider Electric, ACCUVIO
A Farmingdale High School and Stony Brook University graduate is President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to oversee the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and if confirmed, he’d replace another Long Island native. The nomination of Dr. Dave Weldon, a former Republican congressman from Florida, has provoked concern from public health experts. He sponsored a bill to limit the use of vaccines containing mercury because of concerns the mercury-based preservative thimerosal could cause autism despite the CDC’s and leading health experts’ insistence that it does not, and sponsored a 2007 bill to strip the CDC of vaccine-safety responsibilities and move it to another agency within the Department of Health and Human Services. He would replace Dr. Mandy Cohen, a Baldwin native who in a statement released by the CDC after vaccine critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination for secretary of health and human services, but before Weldon’s, wrote: "I don't want to go backward and see children or adults suffer or lose their lives to remind us that vaccines work, and so I am concerned. Any misinformation coming from places of influence or power are concerning." K.C. Rondello, a clinical associate professor of public health at Adelphi University in Garden City, said in an email that he and others working in public health "are tremendously concerned about the potential impact of appointing a vaccine skeptic and conspiracy theorist to the role of CDC director. [Former] Rep. Weldon espouses beliefs that are contrary to the overwhelming mountain of evidence on vaccine efficacy and safety that has been garnered over decades." The CDC states that many studies have examined potential links between vaccines and autism and "continue to show that vaccines are not associated with ASD," or autism spectrum disorder. Children’s Health Defense, an organization that Kennedy founded, said in a statement: "We believe Dr. Weldon is eminently qualified as a former member of Congress and physician." The organization referred Newsday to an article on its website in which critics of the CDC praised Weldon for his criticism of the CDC’s vaccine safety oversight. Weldon was not available to comment, a Trump transition team spokeswoman said in an email. Weldon was born in Amityville, according to his official congressional biography , and graduated from Farmingdale High in 1971. He was among the first 16 Farmingdale alumni with their names inscribed on the school’s Wall of Honor, Newsday reported in 1998. He graduated from Stony Brook in 1978 with a bachelor of science in biochemistry, earning "high honors," university records show. He received his medical degree from the University at Buffalo in 1981. Weldon was a part-time clinical professor at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Florida, from 2012 to 2019, and served on the university’s board of trustees from 2021 until January, the university said in an email. Weldon represented an east-central Florida congressional district from 1995 to 2009. His 2004 bill regarding thimerosal didn't pass. Thimerosal is added to vaccines to prevent germ growth and, according to the CDC , contains a type of mercury different than the one that is found in some fish. Studies have shown that low doses of thimerosal in vaccines are not harmful, other than minor reactions like redness at the injection site. Thimerosal was removed from childhood vaccines in 2001. It is in flu vaccines for adults and children, but there are thimerosal-free options. Weldon also has expressed concern about the safety of other vaccines, including those against measles, mumps and rubella, multiple news reports said. Dorit R. Reiss, a professor at University of California Law San Francisco and an expert on vaccine policy and law, said, "Weldon isn’t quite as extreme as Kennedy." But, she said, she is concerned that Weldon would push to no longer recommend certain vaccines and change CDC vaccine guidance. A committee of medical and public health experts, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices , advises the CDC on vaccines, but the CDC director can reject those recommendations, Reiss said. In addition, as health and human services secretary, Kennedy would have the power to appoint committee members. Recommendations are critical, because states generally follow them, she said. "Given the way this topic is politicized — which is a really sad thing, because viruses don't care about your politics — if the recommendations change suddenly, the reception would probably vary across states by political approach, and we may end up with a tragic national experiment in which some states stop recommending some vaccines and others don’t," Reiss said. In addition, the Affordable Care Act requires that most insurance plans pay for CDC-recommended vaccines if administered in-network. Many people won’t take vaccines if they must pay for them, Reiss said. "Some [insurance companies] will continue to cover vaccines that are not recommended because it's more cost effective for them to prevent disease than to treat it, but some won’t," she said. The CDC releases other advisories and recommendations. For example, the CDC website currently states that research shows that vaccines do not cause autism. If that changed, it could affect public trust in the CDC and put an official government stamp on baseless information, she said. A Farmingdale High School and Stony Brook University graduate is President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to oversee the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and if confirmed, he’d replace another Long Island native. The nomination of Dr. Dave Weldon, a former Republican congressman from Florida, has provoked concern from public health experts. He sponsored a bill to limit the use of vaccines containing mercury because of concerns the mercury-based preservative thimerosal could cause autism despite the CDC’s and leading health experts’ insistence that it does not, and sponsored a 2007 bill to strip the CDC of vaccine-safety responsibilities and move it to another agency within the Department of Health and Human Services. He would replace Dr. Mandy Cohen, a Baldwin native who in a statement released by the CDC after vaccine critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination for secretary of health and human services, but before Weldon’s, wrote: "I don't want to go backward and see children or adults suffer or lose their lives to remind us that vaccines work, and so I am concerned. Any misinformation coming from places of influence or power are concerning." K.C. Rondello, a clinical associate professor of public health at Adelphi University in Garden City, said in an email that he and others working in public health "are tremendously concerned about the potential impact of appointing a vaccine skeptic and conspiracy theorist to the role of CDC director. [Former] Rep. Weldon espouses beliefs that are contrary to the overwhelming mountain of evidence on vaccine efficacy and safety that has been garnered over decades." WHAT NEWSDAY FOUND The CDC states that many studies have examined potential links between vaccines and autism and "continue to show that vaccines are not associated with ASD," or autism spectrum disorder. Get the latest stories every week about health and wellness, covering topics from medicine and mental health to updates on the coronavirus and new research. By clicking Sign up, you agree to our privacy policy . Children’s Health Defense, an organization that Kennedy founded, said in a statement: "We believe Dr. Weldon is eminently qualified as a former member of Congress and physician." The organization referred Newsday to an article on its website in which critics of the CDC praised Weldon for his criticism of the CDC’s vaccine safety oversight. Weldon was not available to comment, a Trump transition team spokeswoman said in an email. Weldon was born in Amityville, according to his official congressional biography , and graduated from Farmingdale High in 1971. He was among the first 16 Farmingdale alumni with their names inscribed on the school’s Wall of Honor, Newsday reported in 1998. He graduated from Stony Brook in 1978 with a bachelor of science in biochemistry, earning "high honors," university records show. He received his medical degree from the University at Buffalo in 1981. Weldon was a part-time clinical professor at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Florida, from 2012 to 2019, and served on the university’s board of trustees from 2021 until January, the university said in an email. Weldon represented an east-central Florida congressional district from 1995 to 2009. His 2004 bill regarding thimerosal didn't pass. Thimerosal is added to vaccines to prevent germ growth and, according to the CDC , contains a type of mercury different than the one that is found in some fish. Studies have shown that low doses of thimerosal in vaccines are not harmful, other than minor reactions like redness at the injection site. Thimerosal was removed from childhood vaccines in 2001. It is in flu vaccines for adults and children, but there are thimerosal-free options. Weldon also has expressed concern about the safety of other vaccines, including those against measles, mumps and rubella, multiple news reports said. Dorit R. Reiss, a professor at University of California Law San Francisco and an expert on vaccine policy and law, said, "Weldon isn’t quite as extreme as Kennedy." But, she said, she is concerned that Weldon would push to no longer recommend certain vaccines and change CDC vaccine guidance. A committee of medical and public health experts, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices , advises the CDC on vaccines, but the CDC director can reject those recommendations, Reiss said. In addition, as health and human services secretary, Kennedy would have the power to appoint committee members. Recommendations are critical, because states generally follow them, she said. "Given the way this topic is politicized — which is a really sad thing, because viruses don't care about your politics — if the recommendations change suddenly, the reception would probably vary across states by political approach, and we may end up with a tragic national experiment in which some states stop recommending some vaccines and others don’t," Reiss said. In addition, the Affordable Care Act requires that most insurance plans pay for CDC-recommended vaccines if administered in-network. Many people won’t take vaccines if they must pay for them, Reiss said. "Some [insurance companies] will continue to cover vaccines that are not recommended because it's more cost effective for them to prevent disease than to treat it, but some won’t," she said. The CDC releases other advisories and recommendations. For example, the CDC website currently states that research shows that vaccines do not cause autism. If that changed, it could affect public trust in the CDC and put an official government stamp on baseless information, she said. David Olson covers health care. He has worked at Newsday since 2015 and previously covered immigration, multicultural issues and religion at The Press-Enterprise in Southern California.
Former President Jimmy Carter dead at 100None
ASP Isotopes Inc. Responds to Short Seller Report