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Summer allergies: Fact or fiction?

In this April 7, 2012, photo, Sayer Manning, 5, collects some moss for his moss garden during a family hike at his home in Chatham, N.Y. The Manning family has learned to live with the presence of ticks during their outdoor activities. (AP Photo/Tim Roske)

No need to stay inside, but check for ticks

LISA A. FLAM
In this Thursday, April 12, 2012, photo, Girly, an 18-year-old cat who has been diagnosed with kidney disease, gets a subcutaneous injection of lactated ringers solution, or LRS, from veterinarian Dr. Nina Nardi as her owner Nate Glass watches, at Banfield's veterinary hospital in the Canoga Park district of Los Angeles. Kidney disease is one of the leading causes of death for cats, but there is no cure and no known cause. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)

Kidney disease a leading killer in cats

SUE MANNING
In this Feb. 22, 2012, photo, Clara Beatty, 9, looks at her mother while doing homework at their Winnetka, Ill., home. The fourth-grader was born with facial deformities, including underdeveloped cheekbones and a small jaw, caused by a genetic mutation called Treacher Collins syndrome. Her parents discovered Clara was quite able to cope, sometimes better than they. Even today, her mother, Janet Beatty, is astounded at how well her youngest daughter navigates the world.

Girl with deformed face learns to navigate world

MARTHA IRVINE

GOWEN: Zumbatomic improves kids' focus, boosts self-esteem

BY DR. ROSE M.Z. GOWEN
This image shows the top half of the front page of The Sioux City Journal's Sunday, April 22, 2012, edition, featuring a full-page piece to an anti-bullying editorial after a gay teen committed suicide.  The Sioux City Journal's front-page opinion piece calls on the community to be pro-active in stopping bullying and urges members to learn more about the problem by seeing the acclaimed new film,

Iowa paper devotes front page to fighting bullying

TIMBERLY ROSS

Awareness campaign reminds parents of the importance of vaccination

Autism numbers skyrocketing

PAMELA DOWNING
In this April 4, 2012, photo, Kelly Andrus holds her son Bradley in his classroom at Children's Choice Learning Centers Inc., in Lewisville, Texas. Bradley, who turns three in a couple of weeks, was diagnosed a year ago with mild autism.  For the first time in nearly two decades, experts want to rewrite the definition of autism. Some parents fear that if it's narrowed and their kids lose the label, they may also lose out on special therapist. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Doctors want to redefine autism; parents worried

Christopher Astacio reads with his daughter Cristina, 2, who was recently diagnosed with a mild form of autism, in her bedroom on Wednesday, March 28, 2012, in New York.   Autism cases are on the rise again, largely due to wider screening and better diagnosis, federal health officials said Thursday, March 2012.  (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

More autism reported, likely from better testing

LINDSEY TANNER
Emma Stydahar, 17, of Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y., left, Julia Bluhm, 14, of Waterville, Maine, and Natasha Williams, 17, of East Flatbush, N.Y., are shown at a

Teen girls take on Seventeen over altered images

LEANNE ITALIE
In this undated image released by Park & Bond, a model is shown wearing a suit. Fashion insiders say men are taking a keen interest in how they dress _ and that means developing their own shopping habits.  You now see men dressing for the life they want to lead and image they want to project, agrees Eric Jennings, vice president and fashion director of menswear for Saks Fifth Avenue. Shopping and, even worse, trying things on to ensure a proper fit are necessary evils to get there.  (AP Photo/www.parkandbond.com)

In pursuit of finer things, men finding fashion

SAMANTHA CRITCHELL
In this August 2006 photo provided by Iowa State University, a Phyciodes tharos butterfly is seen at Reiman Gardens, at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. (AP Photo/Iowa State University, Nathan Brockman)

Butterfly gardening offers beauty, fun

AMY LORENTZEN
In this undated image released by Brian Patrick Flynn/HGTVremodels.com, high gloss red IKEA kitchen cabinets are shown in a bedroom. There are many storage options designed specifically for sporting goods and kids' items.

Ask a Designer: Embrace your inner sports parent

MELISSA RAYWORTH

Summer allergies: Fact or fiction?

In this April 7, 2012, photo, Sayer Manning, 5, collects some moss for his moss garden during a family hike at his home in Chatham, N.Y. The Manning family has learned to live with the presence of ticks during their outdoor activities. (AP Photo/Tim Roske)

No need to stay inside, but check for ticks

LISA A. FLAM
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