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The inaugural Southwest Ohio Liberty Conference, a lecture series sponsored by the Ohio Freedom Alliance, is scheduled for November 21, 2009 at Beavercreek Golf Club. The event, which is open to the public, will feature lectures on sound money, state's rights and individual liberty.
Eight years after the September 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, many people in close proximity to the tragedy continue to experience sometimes grave psychological and emotional problems, a new study reveals.
The latest failure of Congress to pass the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act is raising serious concerns among 9/11 victims and their families.
As America approaches the eighth anniversary of 9/11, Ground Zero rescue workers and their families are still fighting for their health benefits and compensations.
The money is by no means guaranteed, but it is a welcome effort in the eyes of 9/11 first responders and the residents of lower Manhattan.
Since September 11, 2001, 283 World Trade Center first responders have been diagnosed with cancer and thirty-three have died. Now doctors are unsure how many more might be claimed by the aftereffects of their time at Ground Zero.
Almost eight years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, a New York judge has laid a road map that may help resolve some of the hundreds of lawsuits filed by first responders suffering from respiratory and other medical ailments.
Relatives of 9/11 victims got their first chance yesterday to observe legal proceedings for detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, charged in the attacks, as three of the alleged co-conspirators announced they are prepared to enter a guilty plea.
Will Mideast publishers embrace the opportunity?
With the full-time debates on fixing health care and the nation’s economic woes, national security seems to be back-burnered. But as we near the eighth anniversary of the World Trade Center attack by Al Qaeda, the question arises: Is the American government losing focus on homeland security issues?
Now, it’s believed, as many as 300,000 are living with diseases that could worsen in the years to come.
The 9/11 heroes who rushed to the site of the World Trade Center attacks were let down by the government agencies in charge of protecting them, according to one prominent official.
In testimony given before the House Committee on Education and
Labor, one prominent physician has suggested that the first responders
who cleared the WTC site are still in grave danger.
More than seven years after the attacks of 9/11, first responders are suffering the effects of the toxic dust thrust into the air by the collapse of the World Trade Center, according to a recent study.
Days after the Twin Towers fell, thousands of first responders aided New York in its devastating crisis, giving Americans a great sense of hope. Seven years later, many of those heroes have been forgotten—and worse, over 15,000 have become gravely ill.
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