The New York Times reports on a study by Jean Wactawski-Wende that found periodontal disease in older women is associated with an increased risk for cancer.
Abigail Cooke tells CBS, based on her research from 18 years of employment data, people pointing the finger at immigrants for stagnant wages are pointing the finger in the wrong direction.
Politico reports on UB's new medical school building and the way it will transform the health care industry in Western New York and quotes Michael Cain.
NPR's Here & Now speaks with Mark Bartholomew about a new trend -- selling the naming rights for transit stations. Bartholomew highlights the dangers, saying the public entity loses control over who gets to be part of these deals.
Abigail Cooke tells NPR there's been a ton of research, by a ton of people, and the size of any effects at all of immigration on wages is really, really, really small.
The only way the NFL can have a modicum of credibility, Nellie Drew tells the Bleacher Report, is if they hand cases to people on the outside and follow their recommendations.
Lynn Kozlowski tells the Huffington Post that we need to have more experience in the marketplace with optional trace-nicotine cigarettes before ever making a decision to require that they be the only legal cigarette.