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    Sep 28, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. TV packed with 'girls' this season

    Fall TV: Where the men are men and the women are girls.
    Fall TV: Where the men are men and the women are girls. Three new comedies, "2 Broke Girls" on CBS, "New Girl" on Fox and HBO's "Girls," revolve around female twentysomethings living in New York City. They join, of course, "Bad Girls Club" the Oxygen...

    Tags: Arts and Culture, 2 Broke Girls (tv program), CBS Corp., Television Industry, The New York Times

  2. Oct 24, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Better vision another benefit from playing outdoors

    Children who play more outdoors are smarter, leaner and stronger than kids more inclined toward indoor activities, and a new study finds they have another advantage: They're less likely to suffer from nearsightedness, in which objects in the distance appear blurry.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Children who play more outdoors are smarter, leaner and stronger than kids more inclined toward indoor activities, and a new study finds they have another advantage: They're less likely to suffer from nearsightedness, in which objects in the distance...

    Tags: Amblyopia, Entertainment, Nearsightedness, Gaming, Physical Fitness and Exercise

  4. Nov 2, 2011 |Story| Jessamine Journal
  5. 2011 general election candidate profiles

    news@jessaminejournal.com
    With the general election scheduled for Nov. 8, The Jessamine Journal finishes its two-week profile on the many candidates. This week, using information form the candiate’s websites, The Journal will profile the races for agriculture commissioner...

    Tags: Government, Colleges and Universities, Computer Networking and Internet, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Tompkinsville

  6. Aug 5, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Judge rules that indicted document collector can go home pending trial

    A federal judge rejected Friday a last-ditch effort by prosecutors to keep Barry H. Landau behind bars while the New York collector awaits trial on charges he pulled off one of the country's biggest theft of national memorabilia over a span of years. The...

    Tags: Defendants, Atlantic Ocean, Prosecution, Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin

  8. Nov 15, 2011 |Story| KIAH-LTV
  9. Keen video-gamers' brains may reward them more

    Teenagers who spend a lot of time on video-games have different structures and activity levels in areas of the brain that are linked to reward, scientists have found, suggesting they get more out of gaming than people who tend to play less.
    REUTERS
    Teenagers who spend a lot of time on video-games have different structures and activity levels in areas of the brain that are linked to reward, scientists have found, suggesting they get more out of gaming than people who tend to play less. In a study...

    Tags: Education, Germany, Health, Colleges and Universities, Addiction

  10. Nov 16, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Har Gobind Khorana dies at 89; biologist, chemist won Nobel Prize

    Har Gobind Khorana, who rose from poverty in rural India to become a giant of modern biology, winning the Nobel Prize in 1968 for work that helped decipher the genetic code and explain how cells make proteins, died Nov. 9 in Concord, Mass. He was 89.
    Har Gobind Khorana, who rose from poverty in rural India to become a giant of modern biology, winning the Nobel Prize in 1968 for work that helped decipher the genetic code and explain how cells make proteins, died Nov. 9 in Concord, Mass. He was 89....

    Tags: Genes and Chromosomes, National Institutes of Health, Health and Safety at School, Human Body, Entertainment Events

  12. Nov 18, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  13. Greenhouse gases, water vapor and you

    Greenspace
    Several readers pointed out that water vapor is the biggest contributor to global warming, which was not mentioned in last week’s post about the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s release of its Annual Greenhouse Gas Index,...
  14. Oct 5, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  15. Caltech tops prestigious world university rankings

    L.A. NOW
    Caltech tops Harvard in global university rankings, according to British higher education publication....
  16. Oct 7, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  17. Saturday in L.A.: Peter Gizzi and the Poetic Research Bureau

    Jacket Copy
    Poet Peter Gizzi reads Saturday at a gallery filled with art by Richard Kraft in a show that connects the artist and poet....
  18. Jun 6, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. DNA, Mladic and the science of justice in the former Yugoslavia

    Despite his efforts to stave off his long-overdue date with justice, indicted war criminal Ratko Mladic appeared before a panel of judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague on Friday. Soon he will stand trial for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide, atrocities he planned and executed throughout the 1992-1995 war, from the siege of Sarajevo to the concentration camps of Prijedor and the genocide at Srebrenica. Mr. Mladic's last request before his transfer was to visit the grave of his daughter, Ana, who committed suicide in 1994 with her father's  pistol. But in facing his responsibility for wartime violence, the  graves Ratko Mladic should have visited are those of his victims, such the thousands of tombstones that now fill the Srebrenica-Potocari Memorial Center and Cemetery.
    Despite his efforts to stave off his long-overdue date with justice, indicted war criminal Ratko Mladic appeared before a panel of judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague on Friday. Soon he will stand trial for...

    Tags: Argentina, Colleges and Universities, Columbia University, Crime, Law and Justice, Ratko Mladic

  20. Jul 7, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  21. Technology can both improve and hinder family relationships, survey says

    L.A. Times Tech Blog
    Cambridge University has released a report on how information and communication technology affects family life. The study analyzed questionnaires from 1,000 families each in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia and China. The conclusion:...
  22. Jun 3, 2011 |Story| Herald Mail
  23. Rod Martin is entering a new frontier

    Gazing up into a night sky, it's easy to get swept off into the heavens.
    marieg@herald-mail.com
    Gazing up into a night sky, it's easy to get swept off into the heavens. Thousands of stars appear, like diamonds on velvet, with more graduations of intensity than the naked eye can perceive. Rod Martin was no more than 5 years old when he peered...

    Tags: Graduation, Indiana University, James Buchanan, Colleges and Universities, Science and Technology

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University of Cambridge Photos
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Stuart Jackson, global managing partner, L.E.K. Consulting
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The 19th century was the great age of literary tourism,...
(September 23, 2011)
"Freud's Couch, Scott's Buttocks, Bronte's Grave" (University of Chicago Press) by Simon Goldhill. Nov. 15