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    Mar 8, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Looming budget cuts at Field concern curators

    Pushing back against a cost-cutting plan to overhaul scientific research at the Field Museum, curators are meeting this afternoon with museum president Richard Lariviere.
    Pushing back against a cost-cutting plan to overhaul scientific research at the Field Museum, curators are meeting this afternoon with museum president Richard Lariviere. Several said they hope to share concerns about his planned restructuring of the...

    Tags: Science and Technology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Science, Field Museum of Natural History, Culture

  2. Mar 6, 2013 |Story| KWCH
  3. Authorities release new photos in case of skull found in 2011

    Sedgwick County authorities hope you can help them identify a woman whose skull was found in 2011.
    KWCH 12 Eyewitness News
    Sedgwick County authorities hope you can help them identify a woman whose skull was found in 2011. The skull was found in a creek bed in the 10000 block of S. 343rd Street West. Since then, the skull has been inspected by an anthropology expert and...

    Tags: FBI, Arts and Culture, Culture

  4. Mar 1, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. '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 promised rip-snorting adventure — threats at spear point, psychedelic snuff, wars over women — from a serious and celebrated academic who had lived among people who had little or no previous contact with the modern world when he began his work in the 1960s.
    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: Northwestern University, Biology, Research, Genetics, Chicago Tribune

  6. Feb 14, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. NIU remembers mass shooting

    The pain of the loss persists, but the legacies of five Northern Illinois University students fatally shot on Valentine's Day in 2008 have an even greater resonance.
    Special to the Tribune
    The pain of the loss persists, but the legacies of five Northern Illinois University students fatally shot on Valentine's Day in 2008 have an even greater resonance. A bell tolled Thursday as nearly 500 people solemnly stood on a wind-swept plaza at 3:...

    Tags: Awards and Prizes, Science and Technology, Arts and Culture, Illinois Governor, Pat Quinn

  8. Feb 11, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. UMBC students use new media to document a dying industrial past

    When Eddie Bartee started working at the Sparrows Point steel mill in 1955, about 35,000 men toiled at the eastern Baltimore County plant. Over the next four decades, he made a comfortable life for his wife and their six children as he moved through the ranks at the mill.
    When Eddie Bartee started working at the Sparrows Point steel mill in 1955, about 35,000 men toiled at the eastern Baltimore County plant. Over the next four decades, he made a comfortable life for his wife and their six children as he moved through the...

    Tags: Howard County, Baltimore County, Science and Technology, Customs and Tradition, Culture

  10. Jan 16, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Mexicans now have a bone to pick over relics of revered heroes

    MEXICO CITY -- In the run-up to Mexico’s bicentennial celebration of independence from Spain, then-President Felipe Calderon oversaw an elaborate parade to escort the bones of the nation’s founding fathers from their resting place at Mexico...

    Tags: Felipe Calderon, Arts and Culture, Mexico, Mexico City, Culture

  12. Jan 13, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Shaped from clay: The rapidly evolving pottery of Mata Ortiz, Mexico

    MATA ORTIZ, Mexico —The place felt so familiar. The air was dry and warm and slightly smoky. Streets were unpaved, rutted, edged with weeds below ramshackle wooden fences. Swaybacked horses and muscled pickup trucks dueled for right of way on the dusty roads.
    MATA ORTIZ, Mexico —The place felt so familiar. The air was dry and warm and slightly smoky. Streets were unpaved, rutted, edged with weeds below ramshackle wooden fences. Swaybacked horses and muscled pickup trucks dueled for right of way on the...

    Tags: Fine Artists, Science and Technology, Arts and Culture, Travel, Mexico

  14. Jan 11, 2013 |Story| AM News
  15. Heart of Danville hires director

    The Heart of Danville Main Street program started off the New Year with a new executive director.
    smojica@amnews.com
    The Heart of Danville Main Street program started off the New Year with a new executive director. Bethany Rogers, a Danville native and the daughter of Buck and Jan Rogers, stepped into her new role Jan. 3. Brenda Willoughby, interim director, will...

    Tags: Louisiana State University, Crime, Law and Justice, Judges, Culture, Education

  16. Nov 25, 2012 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  17. Nemours, Rollins team to fight childhood obesity

    It just may take a village to combat childhood obesity.
    It just may take a village to combat childhood obesity. That's why institutions as diverse as Nemours Children's Hospital, Rollins College, Winter Park Health Foundation, "Sesame Street" and nearly two dozen local child-care centers have joined to...

    Tags: Obesity, Sesame Street (tv program), Maitland, Family, Weight

  18. Sep 14, 2012 | Orlando Sentinel
  19. Gov. Scott to students: Plan for future, seek skills to land good jobs in a competitive, global market that “will rapidly change”

    Sentinel School Zone - Orlando Sentinel
    Gov. Rick Scott, busy with his “education listening tour” this week, has continued his school themed week by also penning letters for Florida's high seniors and college freshmen. The similar letters — which Central Florida high school...
  20. Nov 2, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Arthur Jensen dies at 89; his views on race and IQ created a furor

    Arthur Jensen, a UC Berkeley professor whose scholarly contributions to the field of psychological measurement were often overshadowed by the furor over his findings on race-based differences in intelligence, has died. He was 89.
    Arthur Jensen, a UC Berkeley professor whose scholarly contributions to the field of psychological measurement were often overshadowed by the furor over his findings on race-based differences in intelligence, has died. He was 89. One of the most...

    Tags: Medical Specialization, Science and Technology, Religion and Belief, Research, Parkinson's Disease

  22. Nov 16, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Moving up and out

    In 51 years, no concussions. Despite low-hanging pipes that loop across ceilings and snake down walls, work spaces with clearances barely 5 feet high, and a tight maze full of blind spots where customers could easily collide — the Seminary Co-op Bookstore never logged a major injury, said its general manager, Jack Cella, who has worked there more than 40 years and conscientiously padded the danger zones.
    In 51 years, no concussions. Despite low-hanging pipes that loop across ceilings and snake down walls, work spaces with clearances barely 5 feet high, and a tight maze full of blind spots where customers could easily collide — the Seminary Co-op...

    Tags: Hyde Park, Dominican Republic, Religious Education, Chicago Tribune, Nobel Prize Awards

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Anthropology Photos
Central Michigan University anthropology students clear...
(August 13, 2012)
Central Michigan University anthropology students clear away dirt Friday near what is thought to be a posthole from a barn that once stood at McGulpin Point Lighthouse.
Joshua Travis studies on campus. His ISU professor Fred...
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Anthropology major
John "Cliff" Galloway, University of Baltimore laborato...
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Sex at the Zoo at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore