Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 25-36 of 40
» View latimes.com items only
    Dec 12, 2012 |Story| Daily Pilot
  1. Andrew Albers commits to Utah, again

    When it comes to college football, it's safe to say Andrew Albers has come full circle. Albers, a 6-foot-8, 295-pound standout offensive lineman for Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College, has accepted a scholarship to play at the University of Utah,...

    Tags: Sports, Utah Utes, Awards and Prizes, Financial Aid, Football

  2. Nov 5, 2012 |Story| Pasadena Sun
  3. Randy Horton steps down from PHS post

    <span style="font-size: small;">Pasadena High football coach Randy Horton officially stepped down less than 24 hours after his team suffered a stinging 37-7 defeat to Muir in Thursday evening&rsquo;s 59th annual high school football edition of the Turkey Tussle at the Rose Bowl.</span>
    Pasadena High football coach Randy Horton officially stepped down less than 24 hours after his team suffered a stinging 37-7 defeat to Muir in Thursday evening’s 59th annual high school football edition of the Turkey Tussle at the Rose Bowl. The...

    Tags: Sports, University of California, Los Angeles, California Interscholastic Federation, University of Arizona, Football

  4. Sep 27, 2012 |Story| Tribune Media Services
  5. Briefs: New Scientist

    Premium Health News Service
    SLEEP YOUR WAY TO GREATER KNOWLEDGE Wake up and smell the coffee. Or stay asleep and smell it. You might learn something either way. People can make new scent associations while they slumber, which suggests that sleep has real learning potential. "We...

    Tags: Durham (Durham, North Carolina), Psychiatrists, Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Judges

  6. Sep 27, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Paul Theodore Pojman, Towson U. professor

    Paul Theodore Pojman, a professor of philosophy at Towson University and a community activist, died Sept. 20 of lung cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The Hampden resident was 45.
    Paul Theodore Pojman, a professor of philosophy at Towson University and a community activist, died Sept. 20 of lung cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The Hampden resident was 45. "Paul's area was the philosophy of science, and he focused on...

    Tags: Values, Religion and Belief, Philosophy, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Hospitals and Clinics

  8. Sep 25, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. ACLU asks Supreme Court to reconsider gene patenting case

    The American Civil Liberties Union has asked for a second time that the Supreme Court invalidate Myriad Genetics Inc.'s patents on two genes associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancers, the latest salvo in a case with broad consequences for the future of gene-based medicine.
    The American Civil Liberties Union has asked for a second time that the Supreme Court invalidate Myriad Genetics Inc.'s patents on two genes associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancers, the latest salvo in a case with broad consequences for...

    Tags: Economy, Business and Finance, Laws, Research, Trials, Blood

  10. Aug 23, 2012 |Story| Daily Pilot
  11. OCC Football Preview: Losses diminish Pirates

    Orange Coast College football coach Mike Taylor has had enough trouble navigating the annual mine field known as his schedule. In recent years, however, he has been increasingly plagued by the pitfalls, mostly academics, that have posed too great an opposition for his would-be returning players.
    Orange Coast College football coach Mike Taylor has had enough trouble navigating the annual mine field known as his schedule. In recent years, however, he has been increasingly plagued by the pitfalls, mostly academics, that have posed too great an...

    Tags: Sports, Osvaldo Martinez, Canadian Football, Aaron Jones, National Football League

  12. Aug 21, 2012 |Story| RedEye
  13. Chicago universities among nation's most LGBT-friendly

    When it comes to LGBT inclusiveness, two Chicago schools are at the top of the pack, according to a recently released list by Campus Pride.
    RedEye
    When it comes to LGBT inclusiveness, two Chicago schools are at the top of the pack, according to a recently released list by Campus Pride. The organization, which promotes safety for LGBT students in higher education, named both the University of...

    Tags: University of Pennsylvania, University of Chicago, DePaul University, Students, University of Michigan

  14. Jul 16, 2012 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  15. '7 Habits' Author Stephen Covey Dead at 79

    Author Stephen Covey, whose "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People" sold more than 20 million copies, died Monday at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, a hospital spokeswoman said.
    KTLA News
    Author Stephen Covey, whose "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People" sold more than 20 million copies, died Monday at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, a hospital spokeswoman said. He was 79. Covey's family issued a statement, reported by CNN...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, Brigham Young, Jon Huntsman, Jr., Gary Herbert, FranklinCovey Company

  16. Jan 3, 2012 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  17. Why we're fat, Part 4: Outside forces affect what we eat, how much exercise we get

    Beyond what we eat, what we're born with and what we do, our environment contributes in major &mdash; and mostly unnoticed &mdash; ways to our health and our weight.
    Beyond what we eat, what we're born with and what we do, our environment contributes in major — and mostly unnoticed — ways to our health and our weight. All have conspired to make two-thirds of adult Americans and one-third of American...

    Tags: Politics, Federal Reserve, Health, Organic Chemical Industry, Marketing

  18. Feb 25, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. Eileen S. Tarcay, writer and professor

    Eileen S. Tarcay, who had taught English and journalism at what is now Coppin State University and was a prolific contributor of freelance articles to The Baltimore Sun, died Feb. 18 from complications of a stroke at a Salt Lake City nursing home. The former Homeland resident was 97.
    Eileen S. Tarcay, who had taught English and journalism at what is now Coppin State University and was a prolific contributor of freelance articles to The Baltimore Sun, died Feb. 18 from complications of a stroke at a Salt Lake City nursing home. The...

    Tags: Religion and Belief, Ankara (Turkey), Book, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Turkey

  20. Jan 25, 2012 |Story| Herald Mail
  21. Tom Firey: Do we want good laws or laws that seem good?

    In August 2010, 19-year-old Daniel Schatz ran his pickup truck into the back of a tractor-trailer on Interstate 44 near Gray Summit, Mo. The collision set off a chain-reaction accident with two school buses, killing Schatz and a 15-year-old bus passenger,...

    Tags: Health, Cell Phones, Judges, Transportation Accidents, Highway Transportation

  22. Dec 2, 2011 |Story| Aberdeen News
  23. Students helping to redesign Mobridge

    &nbsp;SIOUX FALLS &mdash; Thomas Unterseher is on a mission to make South Dakota's small towns more attractive, and he's starting in the place he knows best: his hometown of Mobridge.
    Associated Press Writer
     SIOUX FALLS — Thomas Unterseher is on a mission to make South Dakota's small towns more attractive, and he's starting in the place he knows best: his hometown of Mobridge.  Like many small towns in the state, Mobridge has been on the decline for...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, South Dakota State University, Education, Arts and Culture, Students

< Previous1 2  3  4Next >
Original site for University of Utah topic gallery.
Advertisement