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81. All Kinds Of Minds
outstanding public, independent and parochial schools in January 2002. The other schools honored as Exemplary are Campbell Hall School, north
http://www.allkindsofminds.org/release.aspx?id=3

82. Pedestrian Laws
north carolina General Statutes limits lower than those designated in GS20141 for areas adjacent to or near a public, private or parochial school.
http://sggoodri.home.mindspring.com/sidewalks/DriverLaws.htm
North Carolina General Statutes (Excerpts relating to pedestrian safety) See complete NC Statutes at the NCGA Web Site Chapter 20 Part 10. Operation of Vehicles and Rules of the Road. (c) The driver of any vehicle upon a highway within a business or residence district shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing such highway within any clearly marked crosswalk, or any regular pedestrian crossing included in the prolongation of the lateral boundary lines of the adjacent sidewalk at the end of a block, except at intersections where the movement of traffic is being regulated by traffic officers or traffic direction devices. No driver shall enter an intersection or a marked crosswalk or drive onto any railroad grade crossing unless there is sufficient space on the other side of the intersection, crosswalk, or railroad grade crossing to accommodate the vehicle he is operating without obstructing the passage of other vehicles, pedestrians, or railroad trains, notwithstanding the indication of any traffic control signal to proceed. Any person who violates any provision of this section shall be guilty of an infraction and punished in accordance with G.S. 20-176. Violation of this section shall not constitute negligence per se.(1991, c. 368, s. 1.) (a) The driver of any vehicle upon a highway or public vehicular area before starting, stopping or turning from a direct line shall first see that such movement can be made in safety, and if any pedestrian may be affected by such movement shall give a clearly audible signal by sounding the horn, and whenever the operation of any other vehicle may be affected by such movement, shall give a signal as required in this section, plainly visible to the driver of such other vehicle, of the intention to make such movement. The driver of a vehicle shall not back the same unless such movement can be made with safety and without interfering with other traffic.

83. American School Board Journal: School Law Archive: Federal Funding: A Change Of
and a group of parents of parochial school students filed motions in Federal on school law, is an assistant appellate defender of north carolina in
http://www.asbj.com/schoollawarchive/1097schoollawarchive.html
American
School Board
Journal
A change of heart and law
By Benjamin Dowling-Sendor
In the whirlwind of major decisions that closed the U.S. Supreme Court's 1996-97 term in June, the high court issued two major rulings on church/state relations. In last month's column, I discussed one, City of Bourne v. Flores, which struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. This month I'll review the other church-state ruling, Agostini v. Felton. It's rare for the Supreme Court to reverse its own prior decisions, but that's exactly what the court did in this case. The fact that Agostini affects thousands of children across the nation and millions of dollars of school expenditures makes the case all the more important.
Title I funding
The case involves the federal government's Title I financial aid program. Congress enacted Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to provide money for remedial education, guidance, and job counseling to students in both public and private schools who are failing or are at risk of failing. Title I places certain limits on services funded for private school students. Such services must be "neutral, secular, and nonideological," for example, and they must "supplement, and in no case supplant services" already provided by private schools.

84. CyberSports For BasketBall
South carolina High School League Nova Scotia School Athletic Federation Texas Association of Private and parochial schools
http://www.cybersportsusa.com/organization.asp?sport_id=1&lev_id=1

85. Sports : High School -- Ohio.com
north carolina player interested in St. VM As the new football season begins,parochial school Hoban has more boys enrolled than five of Akron s eight
http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/sports/high_school/
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Other searches: Classifieds Events Movies Obituaries ... Sports Saturday, Sep 24, 2005 High School SCORES AND SCHEDULES
More high school results LATEST STORY FROM THE BEACON JOURNAL Devils swarm to win Tallmadge holds Copley star to 38 yards. Miller has 180 Tallmadge made a collective statement as a team, and Jamel Miller made an individual one as a tailback. The Blue Devils (5-0, 2-0), behind the running of Miller and a quick and punishing defense that was a 48-minute force, defeated host Copley 25-13 Friday night in a matchup of Suburban League unbeatens. MORE HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS HEADLINES More high school sports headlines 2005 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Tallmadge running back Jamel Miller is caught from behind by Copley linebacker Chase Klingenstein during first quarter action at Copley High School Friday, Sept. 23, 2005. (Akron Beacon Journal / Phil Masturzo)

86. Sports : High School -- Beacon Journal
north carolina player interested in St. VM 8/05/2005 0301 AM EDT As thenew football season begins, parochial school Hoban has more boys enrolled
http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/sports/high_school/
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Complete Forecast
Search Recent News Archives Web for Jobs Cars Real Estate Apartments ...
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SITE SERVICES RSS Feeds Advertise Feedback Help ... Sports Saturday, Sep 24, 2005 High School TOP HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS STORY 09/24/2005 06:35 AM EDT
Devils swarm to win

Tallmadge holds Copley star to 38 yards. Miller has 180
By Tom Gaffney, Beacon Journal sports writer
Tallmadge made a collective statement as a team, and Jamel Miller made an individual one as a tailback. The Blue Devils (5-0, 2-0), behind the running of Miller and a quick and punishing defense that was a 48-minute force, defeated host Copley 25-13 Friday night in a matchup of Suburban League unbeatens.
MORE HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS STORIES
  • Bulldogs answer coach's growl - 9/24/2005 03:01 AM EDT
    By Darnell Mayberry, Beacon Journal sports writer
    This one, Green will remember forever. Every last detail. The drama in which the Bulldogs rallied from a 14-point halftime deficit for a 21-14 come-from-behind win over rival Wadsworth on Friday night.

87. White House Adviser Is Loathed By Some, But Adored By Others
DC, where Allen attended parochial school and his mother got a job in the In his freshman year at the University of north carolina at Chapel Hill,
http://www.freep.com/news/nw/allen16e_20050516.htm
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  • Portraits of war Today's stories
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    PRINTER-FRIENDLY FORMAT
    White House adviser is loathed by some, but adored by others
    May 16, 2005 BY WILLIAM DOUGLAS
    FREE PRESS WASHINGTON STAFF WASHINGTON Claude Allen recalls the joy and pain of telling his mother about his decision to work for a North Carolina congressional candidate. "I said he was a Republican, and she was most upset," Allen said. "She said 'Oh, please don't do that, you'll ruin your life.' " Nearly a quarter-century later, Allen is President George W. Bush's top domestic-policy adviser, one of the administration's most senior African-American members, and a seemingly unlikely protege of former Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., the conservative who opposed affirmative action and a federal holiday for the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Allen's political path to a second-floor West Wing office was a sometimes controversial one that few African Americans have traveled. Republican Party officials and some conservative Christians regard Allen as a star on the rise, a values-conscious bureaucrat who helped reform Virginia's welfare system and championed sexual-abstinence programs at state and federal levels. "He's done a real good job, a very able man," said former Virginia Republican Gov. James Gilmore, who hired Allen when Gilmore was the state's attorney general. "He knows how to manage; he has a very good policy compass."
  • 88. ET 01/01: Wetlands System Recycles Building's Wastewater
    He has created north carolina s first and only selfcontained wastewater first a public school and then a parochial school before closing in the 1970s.
    http://www.sdearthtimes.com/et0101/et0101s11.html
    Wetlands system recycles building's wastewater
    Halford House believes wastewater is too precious to dump down the drain. So House, a NC State University water quality specialist, has created North Carolina's first and only self-contained wastewater treatment system for an office building.
    provided by North Carolina State University alford House believes wastewater is too precious to dump down the drain. House, a North Carolina State University water quality specialist, has underscored his point by creating North Carolina's first and only self-contained wastewater treatment system for an office building. The system which uses a constructed wetland to imitate natural processes purifies and reuses 1,200 gallons of sewer water daily from the 60 employees who work in the building, a refurbished schoolhouse on the shore of Jordan Lake in Chatham County, NC. "We think of it as mimicking nature," said House, who works for NC State's Water Quality Group. "Nature has been cleansing water for millions of years, so we figure it's got the process figured out pretty well." Like nature, House's system uses soil, plants and microscopic organisms to filter and treat the wastewater. The treated wastewater is used to flush toilets in the building and to irrigate the lawn and foundation plantings.

    89. Great American Cross Country Festival - DyeStat High School Track And Field
    Championship Women Results north carolina jr Shalane Flanagan 1748 5k won an Invitational Division, Small School Challenge and parochial School Race.
    http://www.dyestat.com/3us/2xc/greatam/
    US News 2002 Cross Country headlines Great American 2002 Boys ROC - after the disqualification of five runners, the top 3 were from L
    Mountain View UT sr Mike Steele , Davidson Hilliard OH sr Alan Burkitt , and Mountain View UT jr Steve Strickland
    Chris Solinsky
    1953 Nicole Blood, Amber Harper
    Meghan Owen
    photos by Mike Leary Bobby Curtis
    Ryder Leary
    Saturday: High School
    Nicole Blood and Saratoga girls; Meghan Owen;
    Chris Solinsky; Mountain View boys

    90. NC State News Release
    House, a north carolina State University water quality specialist, housed firsta public school and then a parochial school before closing in the 1970s.
    http://www2.ncsu.edu/ncsu/univ_relations/news_services/press_releases/00_12/302.
      Video News Release and Radio Actualities on the Web
      Check out www.ncsu.edu/vnrs for a video news release or www.ncsu.edu/radio_news for radio actualities related to the NC State constructed wetlands project. Media Contacts: Dec. 12, 2000
      NC State-Designed Wetlands System Recycles Building's Wastewater
      FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
      This electronic color image of Halford House putting in a plant at the wastewater treatment system is available by contacting News Services at (919) 515-3470 or newstips@ncsu.edu Halford House believes wastewater is too precious to dump down the drain. House, a North Carolina State University water quality specialist, has underscored his point by creating North Carolina's first and only self-contained wastewater treatment system for an office building. The system which uses a constructed wetland to imitate natural processes purifies and reuses 1,200 gallons of sewer water daily from the 60 employees who work in the building, a refurbished schoolhouse on the shore of Jordan Lake in Chatham County, N.C. "We think of it as mimicking nature," said House, who works for NC State’s Water Quality Group. "Nature has been cleansing water for millions of years, so we figure it’s got the process figured out pretty well." Like nature, House's system uses soil, plants and microscopic organisms to filter and treat the wastewater. The treated wastewater is used to flush toilets in the building and to irrigate the lawn and foundation plantings.

    91. Bush Flunks Schools
    Private and parochial schools are exempt from the same In the words of theNorth carolina State Board of Education, A school s making AYP is an all or
    http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20031201&s=ohanian

    92. Schools-Private & Parochial, Schools, Schools-Preschools, Siler City, NC On Swit
    Find schoolsPrivate parochial, schools, schools-Preschools, in Siler City, NCon Switchboard Yellow Pages.
    http://www.switchboard.com/Education/Siler City/NC/Yellowpages_Results.html

    Categories
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    Search Results for Education in/around Siler City, NC
    indicates businesses in nearby towns

    indicates businesses in nearby towns About Switchboard Contact Us National Advertising Help InfoSpace Search Resources: Search engines at Dogpile Yellow pages and White pages at InfoSpace Switchboard is a subsidiary of InfoSpace, Inc.

    93. Lambeth V. Board Of Commissioners Of Davidson County, North Carolina (2005)
    Board of Commissioners of Davidson County, north carolina (2005) Connelly Schoolof the Holy Child, Inc., the Court has confined its political
    http://www.belcherfoundation.org/lambeth_v_board.htm
    Lambeth v. Board of Commissioners of Davidson County, North Carolina (2005) [EDITOR'S NOTE: United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit upholds the constitutionality of "In God We Trust" on county government center. Opinion by Judge King, writing for the three-judge panel. Opinion joined by Judges Widener and Floyd.] United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit LAMBETH v. THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF DAVIDSON COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA No. 04-1753 Argued: February 3, 2005 Decided: May 13, 2005 Before WIDENER and KING, Circuit Judges, and Henry F. FLOYD, United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina, sitting by designation. OPINION KING, Circuit Judge: Plaintiffs Charles F. Lambeth, Jr. and Michael D. Lea appeal the district court's dismissal of their complaint in this civil action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Plaintiffs have alleged, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that the Board of Commissioners of Davidson County, North Carolina (the "Board"), violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment when it authorized the phrase "In God We Trust" to be inscribed on the facade of the Davidson County Government Center (the "Government Center"). The district court, upon analyzing the Plaintiffs' allegations, concluded that they failed to assert a violation of the Establishment Clause, as measured by the test prescribed by the Supreme Court in

    94. The Church Of Saint Thomas The Apostle
    By 1838, Murphy was stationed in Fayetteville, north carolina and A parochialschool for African American children was opened on October 11, 1911.
    http://www.onhgs.org/joshep2.htm
    A Brief History of the Church of Saint Thomas the Apostle The Rt. Rev. Dr. Ignatius Aloysius Reynolds, Bishop of the Diocese of Charleston on January 1, 1845, officially formed the Roman Catholic Parish of Saint Thomas Apostle in Wilmington, North Carolina. He appointed the Very Rev. Thomas Murphy as pastor of the congregation. On November 1, 1845, William Berry, Bernard Baxter and Miss Catherine McKay purchased a suitable lot for the erection of a church. The members decided on a subscription list, contributing according to their means. In the course of the following summer Father Murphy collected funds in New York and Philadelphia and with the subscription of the congregation he undertook the building of a church. Bishop Reynolds officiated at the laying of the church cornerstone on May 28, 1846. The contract called for the building of a brick structure (60 by 40 feet). Murphy superintended the construction of the Gothic Revival style building at 208 Dock Street. Although the architect is unknown, the builders of St. Thomas, J.C. and R.B. Wood, constructed a massive central gable and lancet arched windows of three lancer units in place of a tower. The church was finished and dedicated to the service of the Almighty God on July 18, 1847 under the patronage of St. Thomas Apostle by the Rev. J. F. O'Neill of Savannah, Georgia. The building was stuccoed in 1858. A twenty-four by forty foot extension of the church to the rear of the older structure was completed by 1870. It was intended as the bishop's residence. Changes in the interior of the church were made in 1933 and a fire in November 1966 caused great damage.

    95. NC Catholic Online - Diocese Of Raleigh, North Carolina
    on a mission to north carolina by the Franciscan Sisters of Philadelphia. We expected the school Sisters didn t we? - to press on heroically and
    http://www.nccatholic.org/april05/twosisters.html
    Serving the Diocese of Raleigh Sunday, February 20, 2005
    Cover Story
    Columns
    Bishop's

    Column
    ...
    Raleigh
    Two Sisters Remembered by Monsignor John Williams Sister Rosaire Marie Culhane, who died last December at age 85, was one of a number of truly legendary Irish-born educators sent on a mission to North Carolina by the Franciscan Sisters of Philadelphia. A crack mathematician, she invested deeply - for all eight years of its existence - in the little parochial school in Clinton (1958-1966), and later served in Jacksonville, where I came to know her in the late 1970s, and could observe her sensational pedagogical skills. Her rigorous math drills consistently gave her students the edge over their peers about anywhere else around. As for her colleague in the Order, the late Sister Francis Regis Collins, also with her in Jacksonville, this great lady spoke with a carefully polished diction - a great influence in itself - and was an utterly superb grammarian. Her sixth graders could routinely diagram, without hesitation, compound-complex sentences with absolute and appositive phrases - and an array of verbals as well. Would that college English majors had such expertise nowadays!. There is a time for learning how to diagram, and Sister Regis made the practices almost fun. For so long we took their presence for granted, as if they just came from, as we still say in the South, the "gettin' place." We hardly thought of them as foreign missionaries. But they were, and just because of that there were special sacrifices in their lives. I was involved in the Holy Spirit School near Camp LeJeune when Sister rosaire learned of the death of a cherished brother in Cork She withdrew for a whole day to the convent out in Francis Park. I made her a visit - I think we had tea - and without her exteriorizing her deep sentiments I discovered in a moment the cost to her in being across the sea from family at such a time. We expected the school Sisters - didn't we? - to press on heroically and cheerfully in all circumstances. And in fact she was shortly back to the classroom, her pupils barely missing a beat of instruction.

    96. Diocese Of Charlotte - Our Schools
    Sacred Heart School (K8th Grade) 123 north Ellis Street Salisbury, NC 28144704-633-2841 St. Pius X Catholic School (K-8th Grade) 2200 north Elm Street
    http://www.charlottediocese.org/ourschools.html
    Home About Us Offices, Agencies, Ministries Parishes ... Protecting God's Children Search our website
    Site Map

    Diocese of Charlotte Catholic Schools
    Mecklenburg Area Catholic Schools

    (Director of Admissions (704)370-3273)
    Charlotte Catholic High School

    7702 Pineville-Matthews Road
    Charlotte, NC 28226
    704-543-1217 - Fax
    Jerry Healy, Principal
    http://www.gocougars.org
    Holy Trinity Catholic Middle School 3100 Park Road Charlotte, NC 28209 704-525-7288 - Fax Carole Breerwood, Principal http://www.htcms.org Our Lady of the Assumption Catholic School ( K-5th Grade) 4225 Shamrock Drive Charlotte, NC 28215 704-531-7633 - Fax Mary Leva, Principal http://www.olainfo.com St. Ann Catholic School (K-5th Grade) 600 Hillside Avenue Charlotte, NC 28209 704-525-2640 - Fax Sr. Helene Nagle, SSJ, Principal http://www.stannscatholicschool.com/ St. Gabriel Catholic School (K-5th Grade) 3028 Providence Road Charlotte, NC 28211 704-362-5063 - Fax Sharon Broxterman, Principal http://www.myschoolonline.com/nc/stgabriel St. Mark Catholic School (K-8th) 14750 Stumptown Road Huntersville, NC 28078

    97. Walter E. Dellinger III
    at the University of north carolina s Institute of Government. He graduatedfrom Yale Law School, where he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal.
    http://www.law.duke.edu/fac/dellinger/
    DynAPI.setLibraryPath('/js/dynapi/src/lib/') Duke Law Faculty Faculty Profiles
    Walter E. Dellinger III ...
    Contact Information

    Douglas Blount Maggs Professor of Law Walter Dellinger is the Douglas B. Maggs Professor of Law at Duke University. He returned to Duke in August, 1997, after having served as acting Solicitor General for the 1996-97 Term of the Supreme Court. Dellinger argued nine cases before the Court, the most by any Solicitor General in more than twenty years. His arguments included cases dealing with physician assisted suicide, the line item veto, the cable television act, the Brady Act, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the constitutionality of remedial services for parochial school children. Professor Dellinger has published articles on constitutional issues for scholarly journals including the Harvard Law Review , the Yale Law Journal , the Duke Law Journa l and has written articles for the New York Times, the Washington Post, Newsweek, the New Republic and the London Times. He spent 1988-89 as a Fellow at the National Humanities Center. He has lectured at numerous American universities and at Leiden, Utrecht, and Tilburg Universities in the Netherlands, at the University of Florence and the University of Siena in Italy, at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, at Nuremberg University in Germany, at the National University of Mexico, at the Catholic University in Leuven, Belgium and at conferences in Rio de Janeiro and Rome. He has addressed the Judicial Conferences of the DC Circuit, the Fifth Circuit, the Second Circuit and the Fourth Circuit, the American Bar Association, the Association of American Law Schools, the Organization of American Historians, the American Political Science Association, the Modern Language Association, the Federalist Society and other groups. He has been a member of the Board of Editors of

    98. Advisory Newsletter
    The north carolina Housing Finance Agency announced on November 18, private orparochial school, students participating in a high school correspondence
    http://www.house.gov/watt/newsle14.htm
    ADVISORY NEWSLETTER
    November 1998
    IRS Problem Solving Day
    The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is hosting a Problem Solving Day on December 8, 1998 from 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM in the Durham, N.C. office. Taxpayers with cases that have not already been referred to the IRS are encouraged to use this opportunity to discuss their tax-related problems with IRS employees. In order to schedule an appointment in advance, Taxpayers may contact the IRS toll free at (800) 829-1040 or the IRS Greensboro office at (336) 378-2334. An appointment will ensure that IRS staff can provide the best service and attention for the taxpayer's problem, including assigning cases to the best qualified technicians and managers. Walk-in taxpayers, however, will also be assisted. An additional IRS Problem Solving Day will be held in the Hickory, N.C. office on January 12, 1999. My office will keep you posted on these events.
    Affordable Fixed-Rate Mortgages
    The North Carolina Housing Finance Agency announced on November 18, 1998 the availability of mortgages at 5.75%, the lowest rate in the Agency's history. All mortgages are insured by the Federal Housing Administration and can be used to finance new or previously owned detached homes, townhouses, condominiums or manufactured homes on permanent foundations. To qualify, first-time home buyers must not exceed certain limits for household income and the price of the home must not exceed limits which are based on local medians. Individuals may contact participating lenders to apply for a mortgage. For income and home price limits, a list of lenders or other information, contact the N.C. Housing Finance Agency at (800) 393-0988.

    99. Walter E. Dellinger III, Solicitor General
    His father, a graduate of Charlotte High School worked at the American with Honors in Political Science from the University of north carolina where he
    http://www.usdoj.gov/osg/aboutosg/dellinger_walter_bio.htm
    WALTER E. DELLINGER III
    Walter Dellinger was born in Charlotte, NC on May 15, 1941. His father, a graduate of Charlotte High School worked at the American Trust Company, and his mother, Grace Lawing Dellinger, also graduated from Charlotte High School, worked as a sales clerk in clothing and furniture stores. Dellinger is a graduate with Honors in Political Science from the University of North Carolina where he was awarded the John J. Parker Medal for Leadership and the Frank Porter Graham Award as Outstanding Senior. He graduated from Yale Law School, where he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal. For the 1968-69 Term of the United States Supreme Court he served as law clerk to Justice Hugo L. Black. In August 1997, after having served as acting Solicitor General for the 1996-97 Term of the Supreme Court, Dellinger returned to Duke to be the Douglas B. Maggs Professor of Law at Duke University. Dellinger argued nine cases before the Court including cases dealing with physician assisted suicide, the line item veto, the cable television act, the Brady Act, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the constitutionality of remedial services for parochial school children. Dellinger has published articles on constitutional issues for scholarly journals including the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Duke Law Journal and has written articles for the New York Times, the Washington Post, Newsweek, the New Republic and the London Times. He has been a member of the Board of Editors of The American Prospect and a member of the Executive Committee of the Yale Law School Association.

    100. UNC Health Care - Adolescent Girls Perceiving Parental Disapproval Of Sex Are Le
    by University of north carolina at Chapel Hill researchers has concluded. Most family, school and individual factors linked to delaying the start of
    http://www.unchealthcare.org/site/newsroom/news/2005/Jun/sti
    @import url(http://www.unchealthcare.org/ploneColumns.css); @import url(http://www.unchealthcare.org/plone.css); @import url(http://www.unchealthcare.org/ploneCustom.css); Search Home About Us Find a Doctor ... Public Affairs and Marketing Office Quick Links UNC Health Care N.C. Children's Hospital N.C. Women's Hospital Rex Healthcare ... UNC-Chapel Hill
    You are here: Newsroom News Release Archives Jun
    Document Actions June 29, 2005 Media briefing note: Dr. Carol A. Ford, this study’s lead author, will participate in a news briefing conference call at 10 a.m. Tuesday (July 5). Details are at the end of the release.
    Adolescent girls perceiving parental disapproval of sex are less likely to have STIs as young adults: study BY TOM HUGHES
    UNC School of Medicine CHAPEL HILL Adolescent girls who perceive their parents disapprove of them having sexual intercourse are less likely to have sexually transmitted infections as young adults than girls without such perceptions, a study led by University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers has concluded.
    Perceptions of parental disapproval did not have a similar effect among adolescent boys, the study found.

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