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For those of you with kids in Dublin City Schools, you're probably already aware the district is coordinating H1N1 vaccination clinics. Here's our story from this week's Villager:

District planning H1N1 vaccinations

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Also, I'm curious what fellow parents are deciding about the H1N1 vaccine. My daughter goes to Goddard, so we're waiting to hear from her pediatrician when the vaccine will be available for her. The pediatrician is recommending that all her patients get the vaccine.

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I've decided to get my children vaccinated. At first, I was of another mind about it, but now I don't think it's worth the risk not to vaccinate against H1N1.

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    Dublin history lesson

    Peter and Benjamin Sells came to the area around 1801 from Huntington County, Pa., to buy land. Old Dublin was first platted in 1810 by their brother, John. Surveyor John Shields named the town after his birthplace in Ireland. The town developed the usual assortment of mills, shops and churches, with settlers coexisting peacefully with Wyandot Indians, who camped on Indian Run. The town gained notoriety in the mid-19th century, when a surplus of taverns and rowdy Civil War veterans gave the village a tough reputation. Columbus' growth and the construction of I-270 made expansion inevitable. Dublin achieved city status in 1987.
    Source: Columbus Dispatch library research

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