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| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 16:00:00 EST Children's Health: No Quick Cure for Baby's Acid Reflux |
| Babies spit up. In years past, parents dealt with this fact of nature by holding infants upright and covering the furniture with spit-up cloths. But in recent years, pediatricians increasingly have prescribed acid-suppressing drugs like Prilosec and Zantac for babies with reflux. The only problem: There's no evidence that the drugs help reduce spit-up. |
| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 16:00:00 EST Children's Health: No Quick Cure for Baby's Acid Reflux |
| Babies spit up. In years past, parents dealt with this fact of nature by holding infants upright and covering the furniture with spit-up cloths. But in recent years, pediatricians increasingly have prescribed acid-suppressing drugs like Prilosec and Zantac for babies with reflux. The only problem: There's no evidence that the drugs help reduce spit-up. |
| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 16:00:00 EST Wash. U. Freshmen Found "Frority" |
| A group of Washington University in St. Louis freshmen figured out a way to avoid the wait for spring rush. The students started their own Greek club, called a "frority" because it includes both men and women. Tau Sigma already has five "brothers" and 37 pledges this year, the Student Life reports. |
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| last updated: Tue, 24 Oct 2006 06:10:28 GMT |
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| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 22:38:48 EDT U.S. soldier feared kidnapped |
| A search is under way for a U.S. soldier who went missing in Iraq on Monday evening, amid fears the soldier might have been kidnapped. As part of the search, U.S. forces raided the HQ of Al-Furat TV and briefly seized some weapons, according to CNN correspondent John Roberts, who was embedded with troops conducting the search.

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| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 17:17:43 EDT Poll: Fewer think U.S. winning war |
| One in five Americans believes the United States is winning the war in Iraq, according to a poll. The number has dropped by half since December.

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| Mon, 23 Oct 2006 19:25:02 EDT Ex-Enron chief gets 24 years |
| Former CEO Jeffrey Skilling was sentenced to 24 years in jail Monday for his role in the fraud that brought down Enron. His wife sobbed, as victims of the company's collapse watched the sentencing stone-faced. "If it had been me, I would have given him more time," said Charles Prestwood, who lost $1.3 million when Enron collapsed.

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