Suzanne Doyle is a bereavement specialist, skilled in grief and loss work with children, adolescents and adults; and has been for four and a half years. Working at one of the largest hospices in the St. Louis metropolitan area, BJC Hospice, Doyle may work with up to 1,500 patients and their families in one year. [...]
About Allison Midori Reilly
Allison Midori Reilly is a freelance writer based in St. Louis, Missouri. Besides posting for Conducive Chronicle, she is also the St. Louis Liberal Examiner for Examiner.com. Born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, Allison Midori Reilly is a 2010 graduate of Saint Louis University, holding a bachelor of arts in international studies and political science. Her specialties include current events, social issues, human rights and public health.
While interviewing for a sales/marketing position, the interviewer told Allison that one of the great things about this particular company is the freedom. One can work his/herself up to management and then be able to take vacations and work more flexible hours. She figured, that as a recent college graduate, she would have no more freedom than right now as new graduate. So why not take the chance?
Website: http://www.stirringmediallc.com
Allison Midori Reilly has written 7 articles so far, you can find them below.
Major Issues Facing America: The Obesity Crisis
This article is the first of 12 articles in a series that will explore some major issues facing America and what can be done about them. The first issue on the agenda is the obesity crisis. Other issues I plan to address are immigration, health care, terrorism, LGBT rights, the economy and education etc. If [...]
Higher Education has a Liberal Agenda: It Starts with the Summer Reading
While at the beach this summer, make sure to indulge on the liberal agenda While surfing the web at 4 a.m., I came across a FOXNews article about a study that found an overbearing and intolerable liberal bias found in this summer’s college reading assignments. I found the ideas communicated in the article and in [...]
Sincerely: The Honesty of Letter Writing
Last Tuesday was the monthly letter-writing meeting for my city’s Amnesty International chapter. We wrote to Cuba, to Columbia, Zimbabwe and the United Arab Emirates. We joked of how we’ve written so many times to Myanmar, that we no longer need to look up the spelling or the pronunciation of Senior General Than Shwe and [...]
Recommendations for More Worldly, More Intelligent, More Newsy News
One of the biggest complaints I’ve heard about mainstream news organizations is that they don’t cover enough international news. Most of the domestic news we get is either highly partisan, celebrity coverage, or just plain commentary. Either way, the fourth estate does not seem to be serving the public good the way that newspapers and [...]
Maternal Mortality in the United States
On March 8, 2010, Amnesty International released its report on maternal health in the United States called “Deadly Delivery.” The report demonstrated the rates of preventable maternal death and called for action to solve these issues. The report also received media attention upon its release from news outlets such as CNN, the Guardian, Time Magazine [...]
The Half Empty Glass: A Positive Look at Water Scarcity
Water is no longer a poor country issue. According to the Associated Press on Oct. 27, 2007, 36 states are projected to have water shortages by the year 2013. This is to affect big metropolitan areas such as Seattle, Atlanta, Chicago and Las Vegas. Reuters on February, 17, 2009 reported on Los Angeles’ water crisis. High-income countries [...]

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