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DON BABWIN, Associated Press
CHICAGO (AP) —
    Five infants who attend a suburban Chicago day care center have been diagnosed with measles and about 10 more children, including some also too young for vaccinations, could have been exposed to the disease, health officials said Thursday.
    The Illinois and Cook County health departments said in a news release that lab tests confirmed measles in two infants who go to the KinderCare Learning Center on East Palatine Road in Palatine. Tests are pending for three others, but they have been diagnosed based on symptoms.
    Officials had not identified the source of the infections at the center as of Thursday, but Dr. Terry Mason, chief operating officer for the county's health and hospitals system, told a news conference there is no known link between the infants' measles and a recent outbreak at Disneyland that sickened dozens of people.
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says there have been at least 102 confirmed measles cases in 14 states in 2015, not including the Palatine cases. Of those 102, 94 were related to the Disneyland outbreak.
    Mason said children who have not been vaccinated — whether infected or exposed — should not return to the Palatine center until Feb. 24 or until they provide proof of vaccination or immunity to measles, which is spread through the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes.
    It's so contagious that 90 percent of people who aren't immunized are infected if exposed to the virus, according to the CDC.
    The Illinois cases come amid growing concern about children who are not vaccinated, including in California where lawmakers are hoping to follow the lead of two other states with proposed legislation that would require parents to vaccinate all schoolchildren unless a child's health is in danger.
    Health officials do not recommend measles shots before a child turns 1, at which time the government recommends all children get a first dose of the measles vaccine with a second dose between the ages of 4 and 6.
    Illinois law requires one dose of measles vaccine for children in day care by age 2, or proof that they already have had the disease. Two doses are required for those entering kindergarten.
    KinderCare spokeswoman Colleen Moran said that while the company, which operates facilities nationwide, follows local health department guidelines and encourages families to consult their doctors about vaccinations, "We realize some don't (have their children vaccinated) for health or religious reasons and we do not exclude kids who haven't been vaccinated."
    Moran said the Palatine facility has been thoroughly cleaned and KinderCare officials at multiple centers are going through records to determine which children are and are not vaccinated.
    She said she did not have any information about whether any staff members at the Palatine facility were unvaccinated or had been asked to stay away, or whether any other centers have asked staffers, parents or children who have not been vaccinated to stay home.
    The county health department said one of the five children who became ill was hospitalized earlier this week but has since been released. Spokeswoman Amy Poore-Terrell said she did not have any information about their conditions as of Thursday.
    For most people, measles is miserable but not life-threatening. The most common symptoms include fever, runny nose, cough, and a rash all over the body. However, a very small fraction of people get much sicker, and can suffer complications like pneumonia and encephalitis.
    The CDC's immunization chief said last week that some U.S. measles cases this year were linked with travel to Indonesia, India and Dubai. In recent years, most measles cases in the United States were linked with overseas travel.

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JEFFREY COLLINS, Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) —
    Two people died Thursday in an apparent murder-suicide inside a building on the University of South Carolina's campus in busy downtown Columbia.
    The shooting happened about 1 p.m. Thursday as students were changing classes. Even as police cars with sirens blaring rushed to the new School of Public Health and the university sent out an alert that everyone should stay inside, people were walking around the sprawling campus.
    State Law Enforcement Division spokesman Thom Berry said the shooting was "very isolated" but he wouldn't say who was involved, whether it was a student, professor or someone else.
    One of Columbia's main streets was closed, causing massive traffic problems. Security was increased at the Statehouse about two blocks away. The university didn't cancel classes, but planned a candlelight vigil and extended counseling hours.
    By the time the sun set, the increased security was gone and roads were reopened. A number of officers remained at the public health building, many of them crime-scene technicians.
    Berry refused to release the names of the dead or their relationship. He also wouldn't specify where the shooting took place beyond a room in the building, not saying if it was an office or a classroom.
    University President Harris Pastides sent a letter that was texted to students and others, calling the day a great tragedy, thanking the police for their fast response and sending his prayers to everyone affected.
    School officials told professors not to penalize students who failed to show up for afternoon classes, even if they missed exams.
    Student Hayden Dunn, a senior from Myrtle Beach, said he was in the building about 1 p.m., getting in an elevator to change classes, when a police officer also got inside. Dunn said the officer asked whether anyone had heard gunshots, but they hadn't. Dunn said he went to class, then an alarm sounded minutes later, and people rushed outside. Another officer told him shots had been fired, he said.
    "Otherwise, you wouldn't have known anything happened," Dunn said.
    Workers and others fled the building after police told them to evacuate and they went inside other buildings wherever they could, said Barbara Reager, an administrative assistant who works nearby.
    "They had no time to get their keys, to pick up their purses," Reager said by phone.
    The university texted alerts and also interrupted programming on its cable system to warn students and others to stay inside.

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AUSTIN – 

Governor Greg Abbott today announced a proposal to eliminate the Emerging Technology Fund (ETF) and use the ETF’s unexpended balances to establish the Governor’s University Research Initiative.

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