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    Feb 3, 2013 |Column| Hartford Courant
  1. Korky Vann: When It Comes To Deals, Nothing Beats Free

    The Hartford Courant
    Discounts are great, but I really love freebies. There's something fabulous about finding a free stuff in your mailbox, printing out a coupon for a free product from the web or showing up at a restaurant when they're giving out free coffee, ice cream or...

    Tags: Rentals, Advertising, Redbox, Rocky Hill, City University of New York

  2. Feb 7, 2013 | Chicago Tribune
  3. Subject: In defense of the besieged email interview

    Change of Subject
    This school year alone, three prominent college newspapers have issued general prohibitions against email interviews. And since "if it happens three times, it's a trend" is an informal law of journalism, I consider it my duty to weigh in. "We've......
  4. Jan 4, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  5. Crealde opens Joshua Almond sculpture exhibit

    "Micro/Macro: An Installation of Sculpture" by Joshua Almond, opens Friday, Jan. 11 and continues through March 9, at the Alice & William Jenkins Gallery at Crealdé School of Art.
    "Micro/Macro: An Installation of Sculpture" by Joshua Almond, opens Friday, Jan. 11 and continues through March 9, at the Alice & William Jenkins Gallery at Crealdé School of Art. A gallery talk and opening reception will take place from 7-9 p.m. on...

    Tags: Education, Sculpture, Colleges and Universities, Arts and Culture, Rollins College

  6. Oct 3, 2012 | Los Angeles Times
  7. Caltech tops list of world's universities

    L.A. NOW
    The California Institute of Technology once again tops the ranks of the world’s best research universities, while University of California campuses at Berkeley and Los Angeles maintained their top 20 positions despite massive state funding cuts to...
  8. Nov 12, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  9. Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

    — Moving from Chicago's South Side to a public housing development in this city of 32,000 was a major culture shock for Keona Lee.
    — Moving from Chicago's South Side to a public housing development in this city of 32,000 was a major culture shock for Keona Lee. For one thing, she never expected to find a truancy officer at her door, asking why her second-grade daughter had...

    Tags: Housing and Urban Planning, Juvenile Delinquency, Economy, Business and Finance, Carl Sandburg, Chicago Housing Authority

  10. Sep 13, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Screenings to help treat the right cancers

    Cancer is running out of places to hide. A new blood test can ferret out a single cancer cell tucked away among a billion healthy cells. Radiologists are using crystal-clear 3-D mammograms to find suspicious spots and lumps that they never could have seen with an old X-ray machine. And CT scans can detect the earliest signs of lung cancer before a patient even has a chance to feel out of breath.
    Cancer is running out of places to hide. A new blood test can ferret out a single cancer cell tucked away among a billion healthy cells. Radiologists are using crystal-clear 3-D mammograms to find suspicious spots and lumps that they never could have seen...

    Tags: Mammogram, Blood, Lung Cancer, Chemotherapy, Prostate Cancer

  12. Sep 3, 2012 |Story| Herald Mail
  13. The need to feed the world is to 'do something real'

    As you read this column, schools are in session and college campuses are filled with students attending classes in order to fill their time between football games.
    As you read this column, schools are in session and college campuses are filled with students attending classes in order to fill their time between football games. As I reflect on this and other things about education and America, I find we are no...

    Tags: Republican Party, University of Maryland, College Park, Science and Technology, Democratic Party, Agriculture

  14. Jul 6, 2012 |Column| Hartford Courant
  15. Dubious Rules Threaten Navajo Power Plant

    The Hartford Courant
    The federal government is a bull that has found yet another china shop, this time in Arizona. It seems determined to inflict, for angelic motives and progressive goals, economic damage on this state. And economic and social damage on American Indians, who...

    Tags: Environmental Politics, U.S. Department of the Interior, Natural Resources, Forestry and Timber, Barack Obama

  16. Jun 26, 2012 |Story| Petoskey News
  17. Harpist performs Thursday to benefit Brother Dan's Food Pantry

    Harpist Lynne Aspnes will perform a benefit concert for Brother Dan's Food Pantry 7 p.m. Thursday, June 28, at St. Francis Xavier Church in Petoskey. Aspnes, professor of harp in the school of music at Arizona State University in Tempe, served as...

    Tags: University of Michigan, Entertainment, Music

  18. Apr 28, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. 'Weapons of persuasion' from Robert Cialdini

    Mitt Romney on the stump, singles at the bar, car salesmen on the lot: All sorts of people are practicing the art of persuasion, with varying degrees of success.
    Mitt Romney on the stump, singles at the bar, car salesmen on the lot: All sorts of people are practicing the art of persuasion, with varying degrees of success. We like to think that we make our own decisions, that we're in control. But we're all open...

    Tags: Politics, Philosophy, Elections, Steve Martin, Medical Specialization

  20. Jun 15, 2012 | Los Angeles Times
  21. Woman says doctor in murder case provided her hundreds of pills weekly

    L.A. NOW
    A Rowland Heights doctor charged with murder in connection with fatal overdoses from prescription drugs provided one woman with hundreds of addictive painkiller pills a week and wrote prescriptions for the patient’s husband without ever examining...
  22. Apr 5, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Evidence of banned antibiotics found in chicken

    Researchers who examined feather remnants of slaughtered chickens have found that antibiotics banned by federal regulators may still be used in poultry production.
    Researchers who examined feather remnants of slaughtered chickens have found that antibiotics banned by federal regulators may still be used in poultry production. The researchers from  the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health and...

    Tags: Johns Hopkins University, Science and Technology

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Arizona State University Photos
Perkins+Will has named Murali Selvaraj chief informatio...
(February 22, 2013)
Murali Selvaraj, CIO, Perkins+Will
(UWM) where she was associate vice chancellor, interim...
(November 18, 2012)
Patricia Arredondo, Chicago campus president, The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
Cory Hahn, a former all-state baseball player at Santa...
(February 25, 2012)
Cory Hahn