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David Mitchener, 89, had been taking vitamin D supplements for at least nine months before he died. Complications related to excess vitamin D and calcium led to him having liver and heart failure. AdvertisementA man who had been taking vitamin D supplements for at least nine months died of a condition linked to excessive levels in the blood. When doctors tested Mitchener's vitamin D levels, the results showed they were at the maximum level recordable by the lab, the report said. For people aged 14 to 70, the recommended daily dose of vitamin D is 15 micrograms or 600 International Units (IU).
Persons: David Mitchener, , Michener, Jonathan Stevens, Stevens Organizations: Service, National Institutes of Health
It is close to several museums, including Bucks County Civil War Museum and Library; Michener Art Museum, which has a sculpture garden; and Mercer Museum, which has a large collection of early American tools and vehicles. A SEPTA station is less than a mile away; from there, trains make the trip to Center City Philadelphia in about an hour and a half. Size: 3,908 square feetPrice per square foot: $512Indoors: A wrought-iron fence lined with neat hedges separates this property from the street. To the right is a family room with a fireplace that has a marble mantel. To the left is a living room connected to a dining room by a wide, column-flanked doorway.
Organizations: Bucks, Civil, Museum and Library, Michener Art Museum, Mercer Museum, SEPTA, Center City Philadelphia Locations: Doylestown, Pa, Hope, Trenton, N.J
“There is a pretty foundational bias against renters in American sociological and political life,” said Jamila Michener, a professor of government and public policy at Cornell. But the number of renters has grown steadily over the past decade to about 44 million households nationwide, while punishing housing costs have migrated from coastal enclaves to metropolitan areas around the nation. More salient to politicians, perhaps, is that renters are increasingly well-off — households that make more than $75,000 have accounted for a large majority of the growth in renters over the past decade, according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. At the same time, the struggle to find something affordable has escalated from lower-income tenants to middle-income families that in past generations would very likely have owned their homes. In other words, renter households are now composed of families much more likely to vote.
Persons: , Jamila Michener, Organizations: Cornell, Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies
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