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Gov. Ed Rendell unveiled a $29 billion spending plan Tuesday that would funnel more money in 2010-11 to schools, prisons and health care for the poor, while not increasing taxes, but local state legislators are already questioning where the money will come from.
Could hundreds of millions of dollars in Georgia sales taxes be going uncollected every year? Maybe, say some Georgia lawmakers. And with the state fighting its way out of a huge budget hole, they...
Remember the nursery rhyme: "Rain, rain, go away, come again another day." As much as I love the sun, and wish winter was behind us, we truly do need the rain. I suppose what I dislike is the cold. I love a good thunder storm.
Vesicular stomatitis virus, or VSV, has long been a model system for studying and understanding the life cycle of negative-strand RNA viruses, which include viruses that cause influenza, measles and rabies.
It's been a few years since my own children walked to school. Living in a small town, I can't help but be aware of school children and the issues that surround getting them safely to - and from - school.
The butcher and the baker remain unscathed, but the lawyer, the plumber and the casket-maker would all be taxed under the state budget proposal unveiled Tuesday by Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell.
Story time is magical. Just ask any child.
ABIS students turn class into coffeehouse
Milford Words of the Week
HARRISBURG -- Gov. Ed Rendell is a man who likes challenges, and he took on some big ones Tuesday when he proposed a fiscal 2010-11 budget that increases state spending by more than $1 billion in a time of recession and proposes eliminating 74 "non-essential" sales-tax exemptions.
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