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USC made its offer to neuroscientists a no-brainer
The courtship that has riveted the neuroscience world blossomed at a Saturday night dinner in a tony Brentwood restaurant. USC provost Elizabeth Garrett and executive vice provost Michael Quick kept the conversation light. Over chicken with braised...
Tags: Networking, Colleges and Universities, USC Trojans, Research, Teachers
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Former Wall Street success finds new path reviving Carver baseball
The Baltimore SunThe pitch bores in low and skitters under Ian Anderson's mitt. As he chugs to retrieve the baseball, another enemy runner dashes across home plate, putting the Carver Bears more hopelessly behind. Shoulders slump around this West Baltimore diamond,...Tags: Baseball, Amtrak, Jones Falls Expressway, Under Armour Inc., College Baseball
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PASSINGS: Bernard Waber
Bernard Waber, 91, the author of such children's favorites as "The House on East 88th Street" and "Lyle, Lyle Crocodile," died Thursday at his Long Island, N.Y., home after a long illness, according to a statement from his publisher, Houghton Mifflin...Tags: Authors, Upper East Side, Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), Long Island, Arts and Culture
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US companies are posting more jobs but filling few
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. employers have more job openings than at any other time in nearly five years. That's in part because they seem in no hurry to fill them. And it helps explain why the job market remains tight and unemployment high. Even as...
Tags: Ben Bernanke, Unemployment Rate, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Job Layoffs, Layoffs and Downsizing
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Shoppers may buy more fruit, veggies when prices dip
ReutersNEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Cut fruit and vegetable prices in half and people will load up on them, according to a new study that suggests price regulation may play an important role in future public policy. "Many people argue that we should educate...Tags: Health and Safety at School, Recipes, Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), Services and Shopping, Diabetes
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Will-Herring
Heather Will and Eddie Herring, both of Somerset, are announcing their engagement. Miss Will is the daughter of Jeff and Linnie Will, Somerset. She is a 2002 graduate of Somerset Area High School and a 2007 graduate of California University of...
Tags: Herring
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Do companies that refuse to hire smokers help them or harm them?
The Cleveland Clinic is a world-famous medical center that is consistently ranked among the top hospitals in the country. It goes without saying that the health professionals who work there don’t condone smoking. In fact, since 2007, the clinic...
Tags: Health Insurance Cost, Health Insurance, Quitting Smoking, Newspaper and Magazine, Healthcare Provider
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Wharton School says L.A. company misusing its name
There’s only one Wharton School. The University of Pennsylvania wants to make sure there’s no confusion about that. The university filed a lawsuit accusing a Beverly Hills company of operating an online university that uses the well-...
Tags: Colleges and Universities, Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), Crime, Law and Justice, Trials, Justice System
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Body of work: Einstein's brain and other medical history at Philadelphia museum
Mutter Museum may leave you shocked and horrified or amazed and fascinated. Either way, its collections of bones, bodies, body parts, plus tumors and other terrors, are unforgettable. The nation's finest and oldest medical museum — celebrating...
Tags: Medical Specialization, Abraham Lincoln, Colleges and Universities, Culture, Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
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Cities Must Preserve Farmland, Eat Locally
In the next 40 years, the world will need to produce as much food as it has produced over all of human history. Across the planet, hundreds of millions of people go to bed hungry every night — and more and more of them live in cities. Tackling...Tags: United Nations, Arable Farming
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Your child's brain on math: Don't bother?
ReutersNEW YORK (Reuters) - Parents whose children are struggling with math often view intense tutoring as the best way to help them master crucial skills, but a new study released on Monday suggests that for some kids even that is a lost cause. According to...Tags: Colleges and Universities, MRI (imaging), Research, Teachers, Learning Disability
May 18, 2013
|Story| Allentown Morning Call
May 18, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 21, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 10, 2013
|Story| Petoskey News
Apr 2, 2013
|Story| Reuters
Mar 30, 2013
|Story| Daily American
Mar 28, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 28, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 28, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 27, 2013
|Story| Hartford Courant
Apr 29, 2013
|Story| Reuters
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