Imperial Valley News Center
Walmart Removes Cosmo Magazine from Checkout Aisles
- Details
- Written by National Center on Sexual Exploitation
Washington, DC - Walmart is using its platform to take a stand against sexual exploitation, by instituting a broad sweep of all Walmart stores, removing Cosmopolitan Magazine from each and every checkout aisle. This unprecedented effort will impact more than 5,000 stores across our nation.
Meet Generation Z
- Details
- Written by Food Business News via CDFA
Sacramento, California - “Real food” is the rallying cry of Generation Z grocery shoppers, according to a recent report from The NPD Group.
15th Meeting of the India-U.S. Working Group on Counterterrorism
- Details
- Written by State Department
New Delhi, India - The 15th meeting of the India-U.S. Counterterrorism Joint Working Group was held in New Delhi on March 27, 2018. Led by Ministry of External Affairs Joint Secretary Shri Mahaveer Singhvi and the State Department’s Principal Deputy Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Alina L. Romanowski, the Indian and the U.S. delegations achieved important progress on counterterrorism cooperation between the two countries.
Mysterious skeleton shows molecular complexity of bone diseases
- Details
- Written by Hanae Armitage
Stanford, California - The strange skeletal remains of a fetus discovered in Chile have turned up new insights into the genetics of some bone diseases, according to a new study from researchers at Stanford and UCSF.
Hidden Medical Text Read for the First Time in a Thousand Years
- Details
- Written by Amanda Solliday
Stanford, California - An influential physician and a philosopher of early Western medicine, Galen of Pergamon was the doctor of emperors and gladiators. One of his many works, “On the Mixtures and Powers of Simple Drugs,” was an important pharmaceutical text that would help educate fellow Greek-Roman doctors.
Stanford researchers listen for silent seizures with "brain stethoscope"
- Details
- Written by Nathan Collins
Stanford, California - When a doctor or nurse suspects something is wrong with a patient’s heart, there’s a simple way to check: put a stethoscope over the heart and listen to the sounds it makes. Doctors and nurses can use the same diagnostic tool to figure out what’s going on with the heart, lungs, stomach and more, but not the brain – although that could change with a new device.
Page 1484 of 3785