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Senate panel split on smoking ban

...D’Allesandro said senators should vote, “based on the facts presented to us in the public hearings, and not go into hearings with our minds made up.

The public has spoken overwhelmingly.” Larsen said she will lead a fight on the Senate floor to pass the bill.

She said it “needs to become law to protect the lives of New Hampshire workers and children.” Lobbyists for the smoking ban say they will mobilize supporters during the next week to contact members of the Senate.

A poll they commissioned found 79 percent of the public supports the ban.

“Our volunteers will be heavily engaged over the next week,” said William Cahill of the Clean Air Works coalition.

“This is the right thing to do for health and safety in the workplace.” Chris Williams of the Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce, which wants the bill to pass, said, “It’s good for business, it’s good for patrons and it’s good for employees.

We really feel like we’re on the right side on this one.” New Hampshire is the only New England state that does not have a ban in place.

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State chief justice lauds foundation's namesake

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Doctor focused efforts on underprivileged kids

...She was 74.

"Although my mother, through her practice in pediatrics ,cared for children in all walks of life, she was motivated when helping underprivileged children who lacked proper medical care," Dr.

Hoffman said.

"I was touched by the way she comforted the children.

"It was then that I decided that I wanted to become a doctor." Reaching out to help others was a Tylka family trait that dated back to Dr.

Tylka's parents, Michael and Clara, who raised her and her brother, Richard, in Ronco, Fayette County.

"My grandfather, Michael, gave up the opportunity to attend St.

Vincent College in Latrobe on a scholarship in order to support his parents," said Dr.

Tylka's other daughter, Suzanne McCann.

"He continued to work as a coal miner." When Dr.

Tylka graduated from high school, her parents both worked in order to send their daughter to college and later to medical school.

After graduating with honors from West Virginia University in 1956, she entered Georgetown University Medical School, where she received her medical degree in 1959.

Before opening her own private practice in Greene County, Dr.

Tylka did both her internship and residency in pediatric medicine at St.

Francis Hospital in Lawrenceville.

She later served as the executive medical director for the Home for Crippled Children (now Children's Institute of Pittsburgh); held the position of chief of maternal and child health for Allegheny County; served on staff as a ped...

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