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Art Review: Jessica Rath at the Pasadena Museum of California Art
Jessica Rath’s project “Take Me to the Apple Breeder” at the Pasadena Museum of California Art, begins with a fundamentally captivating subject: the metaphor-rich science of apple cultivation. After coming across a mention in a book...
Tags: Apples, Arts, Genetics, Arts and Culture, Museums
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Teen dating violence leaves scars, experts say
Sheela Raja remembers treating a victim of teen dating violence who at first felt too ashamed to talk about the experience. Instead, the victim buried the trauma in alcohol until she finally opened up during therapy. Raja, a licensed clinical...
Tags: University of Illinois at Chicago, HIV, Sex Crimes, Colleges and Universities, AIDS
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Richard Artschwager dies at 89; painter and sculptor
Richard Artschwager, an artist who turned his apprenticeship as a cabinetmaker into a distinctive approach to making sculptures and paintings that defy easy categorization, died Saturday in Albany, N.Y., following a brief illness. He was 89. A...
Tags: IBM, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Architecture, New York City, Tuberculosis
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Exercise: Choose your own potential
Long ago I had one of those "choose-your-own adventure" books based on a James Bond movie, and I made bad choices; the poor British spy kept getting consumed in a vat of molten lava, impaled on a bunch of spiky things or became an appetizer for...
Tags: Obesity, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Colleges and Universities, Weight Loss, Research
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Helen B. Wolfe, advocate of women's rights
Helen B. Wolfe, an outspoken advocate of women's rights who also had been a member of the faculty of McDaniel College for more than a decade, died March 5 from cancer at Carroll Hospice Center's Dove House in Westminster. She was 79.
With a head of thick...Tags: Feminism, Politics, Civil Rights, Colleges and Universities, State University of New York
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Is a Facebook 'like' too much information?
Go ahead, click the "like" icon on the "Wicked, the Musical" page on Facebook. You may be telling more people than you intended that you're gay. Click it for Hello Kitty. You may be telling someone you have an "open" personality but aren't as...Tags: Wicked (musical), Adam Lambert, World Wrestling Entertainment Inc., Entertainment, Lifestyle and Leisure
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Dr. Anne Tsao & Dr. Mark Clemens II
Clemens Tsao Engagement Announcement Dr. and Mrs. Keuy-Yeou Tsao of Chicago, Illinois are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Dr. Anne Tsao to Dr. Mark Clemens II, son of Debra Clemens of Washington, D.C. and Mark Clemens of Orange,...
Tags: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Plastic Surgeons, Colleges and Universities, Health and Medical Professionals, University of Chicago
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Ancient grains have the potential to be lucrative crops
Wheat has long been a staple in American diets, but as the nation's population becomes more diverse so is its palate. Einkorn, emmer, and spelt aren't common on mainstream food labels, but these ancestors of modern wheat continue to be popular among...Tags: Diabetes, Natural Disasters, Vitamin E, Consumers, Research
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PASSINGS: Dyer Brainerd Holmes, T.S. Cook, Joel Schaeffer
Dyer Brainerd Holmes NASA manned space flight director Dyer Brainerd Holmes, 91, director of manned space flight for NASA when Americans were making their early forays into space in the early 1960s, died Friday at a hospital in Memphis, Tenn., of...Tags: Three Mile Island Accident (1979), Tuskegee Airmen, Nuclear Power, Electronics, Michael Douglas
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'Noble Savages' looks at one anthropologist's life of controversy
In 1998, just before Napoleon Chagnon retired from the University of California at Santa Barbara, he signed a contract to write a book about his life as an anthropologist among the Yanomamö people, who live in the forests of Venezuela and Brazil. It...
Tags: University of Michigan, Teachers, Research, Northwestern University, Teaching and Learning
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Charles H. Latrobe III, highly decorated Navy fighter pilot
Charles H. Latrobe III, a retired Koppers Co. executive who was a highly decorated World War II Navy night fighter pilot, died Feb. 16 of complications from pneumonia at Roland Park Place. He was 90.
"He was a very private person who had the highest...Tags: Ridgewood, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Japan, Frederick (Frederick, Maryland), Air and Space Accidents
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PASSINGS: Robert C. Richardson, Richard Briers, Shadow Morton, Bill Eadington
Robert C. Richardson Won Nobel Prize for physics in 1996 Robert C. Richardson, 75, a Cornell University professor who shared a Nobel Prize for a key discovery in experimental physics, died Tuesday in Ithaca, N.Y., from complications of a heart attack,...
Tags: Lifestyle and Leisure, Colleges and Universities, Teachers, Brooklyn (New York City), The Good Life (movie)
Feb 17, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 13, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Feb 11, 2013
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Feb 13, 2013
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Mar 13, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 12, 2013
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Mar 8, 2013
|Story| Daily Pilot
Mar 8, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
Jan 15, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 1, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Feb 23, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Feb 21, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Original site for Cornell University topic gallery.