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By DALE McFEATTERS, Scripps Howard News Service
By ALEX MARVEZ, Scripps Howard News Service
By WYATT BUCHANAN, Scripps Howard News Service
By KAREN MACPHERSON, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By KATHLEEN PENDER, San Francisco Chronicle
By MICHELLE L. KLAMPE and DAYNA STRAEHLEY, The Press-Enterprise
By LESLIE BERKMAN, The Press-Enterprise
By JOHN LINDSAY, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By BABE WAXPAK, Scripps Howard News Service
By DEBBIE ARRINGTON, Sacramento Bee
By JENNI CARLSON, The Oklahoman
By JOSE de la ISLA, Hispanic Link News Service
By JOHN BEIFUSS, Scripps Howard News Service
By DAVE HACKENBERG, Toledo Blade
By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News Service
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- 1 of 1915
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As student athletes return to competition, their parents likely are unaware that barely a third of America's high schools with a sports program have a full-time professional athletic trainer.
A four-month Scripps Howard News Service review found that for every high school that has one or more athletic trainers regularly assigned to the training room, two other schools rely on a patchwork of coaches trained in first aid and part-time athletic trainers, nurses, emergency medical technicians or team doctors.
Despite dramatic improvements in DNA analysis and other breakthroughs in forensic science, police fail to make an arrest in more than one-third of all homicides. National clearance rates for murder and manslaughter have fallen from about 90 percent in the 1960s to below 65 percent in recent years.
More than 100 people die every day on America's killer roads. The routine act of driving has become the riskiest thing most Americans do. Yet sometimes the deadliest roads seem disarmingly safe -- a small country lane winding gently through rolling hills or a perfectly straight superhighway stretching across a vast desert landscape.
America's wild hog population is exploding and spreading across the country, more than doubling in size and range in the past 20 years. Two decades ago, somewhere between 500,000 and 2 million wild pigs roamed the United States in 17 states. Now the population numbers between 2 million and 6 million in 44 states.
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