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A collection of news and information related to Anthropology published by this site and its partners.

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    May 19, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  1. READER SUBMITTED: Copes Named To The Founding Faculty Of The Frank H. Netter MD School Of Medicine At Quinnipiac

    Hamden
    Lynn E. Copes, of New Haven, has been appointed to the founding faculty of the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University. As an Assistant Professor of Medical Sciences, Copes will teach anatomy to students at Connecticut's newest...

    Tags: Drugs and Medicines, Science, Columbia University, Physiology, Teaching and Learning

  2. May 17, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  3. New AP prep tool: pancakes

    "Good luck AP test takers" scrolled across Costa Mesa High School's electronic marquee Friday morning. At Newport-Mesa Unified high schools this week, Advanced Placement classes culminated with exams that will determine whether students receive college...

    Tags: Landforms, High Schools, Mountains, Pancakes, Teaching and Learning

  4. May 16, 2013 |Story| LAT - HOLD Archive
  5. Eating bugs: Would you dine on cicadas? Crickets? Buttered beetles?

    Mmmm. Just look at that plump little cicada. Can you imagine plucking it off its leaf and popping it in your mouth? Too much? How about after it's flash fried with a little butter, garlic and sea salt? Face it, America. We're inch-worming our way closer...

    Tags: Culture, Restaurants, Cricket, Sports, Dining and Drinking

  6. May 14, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  7. Exclusive: Brazil's Rousseff sides with farmers in Indian land fight

    Reuters
    BRASILIA/SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has ordered her government to stop confiscating farmland to create new Indian reservations, government officials say, a policy reversal with major implications for one of the world's top...

    Tags: Justice System, Judges, Indigenous People, National Government, Interior Policy

  8. May 6, 2013 |Story| LAT - HOLD Archive
  9. 'Cultural Politics of Seeds' at UCLA on May 17

    The UCLA Center for the Study of Women will be presenting a symposium on the &quot;Cultural Politics of Seeds" on May 17, as part of the <a href="http://www.csw.ucla.edu/research/projects/life-un-ltd/life-un-ltd">Life (Un)Ltd</a> project which explores the impact of recent developments in biotechnology and biosciences on feminist studies.<strong></strong>
    The UCLA Center for the Study of Women will be presenting a symposium on the "Cultural Politics of Seeds" on May 17, as part of the Life (Un)Ltd project which explores the impact of recent developments in biotechnology and biosciences on feminist studies....

    Tags: Genetics, Biology, Medical Specialization, Ecosystems, Culture

  10. May 1, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Jamestown settlers ate 14-year-old girl, researchers say

    The early American settlers called it &quot;the starving time," and accounts of the winter of 1609-1610 were so ghastly, and so morbid, that scholars weren't sure if the stories were true.
    The early American settlers called it "the starving time," and accounts of the winter of 1609-1610 were so ghastly, and so morbid, that scholars weren't sure if the stories were true. George Percy, then president of the English settlement of Jamestown...

    Tags: Culture, Jamestown (Jamestown, Virginia), Dismemberment, Museum of Natural History, Colonial Williamsburg

  12. May 1, 2013 |Story| AP Broadcast
  13. Scientists find cannibalism at American settlement in Jamestown

    <iframe width=&quot;600" height="338" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/FGcN9_Gd5zQ?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
    Scientists say they have found the first solid archaeological evidence that some of the earliest American colonists survived harsh conditions by resorting to cannibalism. On Wednesday, the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History and...

    Tags: Culture, Jamestown (Jamestown, Virginia), Museums, Research, Museum of Natural History

  14. May 1, 2013 |Story| Imperial Valley Press Online
  15. Pro-migrant caravan leaves Calexico for cross country trip

    HOLTVILLE &ndash; Blamed for everything from high rates of unemployment to crime, illegal immigration has increasingly been a concern for the public as well as public officials.
    Staff Writer, Copy Editor
    HOLTVILLE – Blamed for everything from high rates of unemployment to crime, illegal immigration has increasingly been a concern for the public as well as public officials. Yet it isn’t exclusively an American or Mexican problem. “To...

    Tags: Roman Catholicism, Mexico, U.S. Border Patrol, Career and Workplace, Human Rights

  16. Apr 9, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Field has mulled selling artifacts

    When the Field Museum sold more than 30 works of 19th-century Western art for millions of dollars in 2004, it eased controversy by announcing plans to spend the proceeds on new artifacts and by holding on to four of the best paintings from the collection.
    When the Field Museum sold more than 30 works of 19th-century Western art for millions of dollars in 2004, it eased controversy by announcing plans to spend the proceeds on new artifacts and by holding on to four of the best paintings from the collection....

    Tags: Political Fundraising, Career and Workplace, John James Audubon, Artists, Science

  18. Apr 24, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  19. Guest column: Anthropologists should do a better job of promoting their field

    Anthropology has been in the news quite a bit lately. The New York Times recently profiled Napoleon Chagnon on the eve of the publication of his memoir, "Noble Savages: My Life Among Two Dangerous Tribes — The Yanomamo and the Anthropologists."...

    Tags: Culture, Emily Deschanel, Sports Illustrated, CBS Corp., Zora Neale Hurston

  20. Apr 23, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Going for a spin of Cal State

    Almost before he had taken his last spin, there was a video posted on YouTube of Cal State University Chancellor Timothy P. White break dancing in front of hundreds of appreciative students at the Dominguez Hills campus.
    Almost before he had taken his last spin, there was a video posted on YouTube of Cal State University Chancellor Timothy P. White break dancing in front of hundreds of appreciative students at the Dominguez Hills campus. It follows the video of him...

    Tags: Culture, University of California, Riverside, Teaching and Learning, Education, Students

  22. Apr 18, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Pedro Ramirez Vazquez dies at 94; architect changed the face of Mexico City

    Pedro Ramirez Vazquez, an architect who changed the face of Mexico City by designing a number of landmark modernist structures, died on Tuesday, his 94th birthday.
    Pedro Ramirez Vazquez, an architect who changed the face of Mexico City by designing a number of landmark modernist structures, died on Tuesday, his 94th birthday. The cause was pneumonia, according to Mexico's National Council for Culture and the Arts....

    Tags: Museum of Modern Art, Mexico, Mexico City, Human Rights, Culture

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