Lesson 01 - One Minute Romanian
In lesson 1 of One Minute Romanian you will learn how to say 'hello' and 'goodbye' in Romanian. Remember - even a few phrases of a language can help you make friends and enjoy travel more. Find out more about One Minute Romanian at our website - http://www.oneminutelanguages.com.Author(s):
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
Cardboard bicycle can change the world, says Israeli inventor
Oct. 16 - Israeli entrepreneurs say they're about to take the cycling world by storm with their new bicycle - made of recycled cardboard. Each bike costs less than $US10 to produce which, the developers say, will make it an accessible, environmentally-friendly form of transportation all over the world. Jim Drury has more.
Lesson 10 - One Minute Romanian
In lesson 10 of One Minute Romanian you will learn a few useful phrases which all learners want to learn. Remember - even a few phrases of a language can help you make friends and enjoy travel more. Find out more about One Minute Romanian at our website - http://www.oneminutelanguages.com. One Minute Romanian is brought to you by the Radio Lingua Network and is ©Copyright 2008.Author(s):
Council for the Arts at MIT For 40 years, a catalyst for the Arts at MIT.
umichstories: Understanding Race Theme Semester
University of Michigan associate professor Martha Jones explains the Understanding Race Theme Semester and why it's important for the university community.
Faculty of Law: Emeritus Professor Ben Boer - Climate Change, Biodiversity and Protected Areas: The
The New Zealand Law Foundation and the University of Otago Faculty of Law present the New Zealand Law Foundation 2011 Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Emeritus Professor Ben Boer. Professor Boer is Emeritus Professor in Environmental Law at the University of Sydney. Here he delivers a public lecture on the topic of "Climate Change, Biodiversity and Protected Areas: The need for an integrated approach". 19 April 2011.
A Lunchtime Poetry Reading – Cilla McQueen
The Department of English presents a lunchtime poetry reading featuring the poet Cilla McQueen. Cilla was the Burns fellow at the University of Otago in 1985 and 1986, and the New Zealand Poet Laureate from 2009 until 2011. 11 September 2012.
Open House: Intro (Nader)
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Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc [The Bastiat Collection (2011). This piece was written in December 1846.] 2012 Mongolian Update - Part 4 Meanings of the Election Results (Podcast) 4.3.2 Competing processes Let's look graphically at the way the rate of a thermally activated process changes with temperature. Figure 16 shows two rates with different activation energies of 1.0 and 0.5 eV – which curve is which? 3.3.1 Ethylene, propylene and butadiene Nowadays ethylene is the most important building block for the chemical industry, particularly as a monomer in its own right, as a co-monomer with other vinyls, and as a source of vinyl monomers. It is the prime source for ethylene oxide, which is another major source of polymers, glycols and ethers. They can also be used to build up more complex C4 molecules and aromatics. Some of the ways in which the ethylene molecule is modified to create other chemicals and polymers are 3.5 Systems concepts: dynamic behaviour: input-transformation-output Utilitarian systems, as previously discussed, are the means we use to transform resource inputs into useful goods and services. Any system can be divided into a set of input-transformation-output blocks. These are usually represented as in Figure 31. This way of looking at systems can be use 2.1 Light sources and detectors The basic building blocks of an optical-fibre link are the light source, the fibre and the detector (Figure 1). 5.7 Being ethical As outlined in Table 2, ethics within systemic practice are perceived as operating on multiple levels. Like the systems concept of hierarchy, what we perceive to be good at one level might be bad at another. Because an epistemological position must be chosen, rather than taken as a given, the choi 8.3.6 Deep silicon etching MEMS structures often require etching to a much greater depth than is needed for microelectronics. A rate of 1–2 μm min−1 may be quite sufficient for making transistors less than 1 mm deep, but to etch through 600 mm of silicon to form an accelerometer would take all day. The advent of MEMS and wafer-level packaging applications, therefore, brought a need for yet faster anisotropic etches, requiring advances both in the process and in the etching equipment. Capacitive co 8.3.1 Fluorine-based etching of silicon Given the noxious chemistry needed to etch silicon with a liquid, it is perhaps surprising that a gas can do the job at all. However, both xenon fluoride (XeF2) and chlorine trifluoride (ClF3) gases have been used successfully for just this purpose. Each acts as a source of fluorine atoms, which are just barely bound together into molecules and are easily rearranged around silicon atoms with which they form strong bonds, turning them into inert SiF4 gas. These
On 13 November 2012, the newly established Mongolia Institute at The Australian National University hosted the inaugural Mongolia Update in Canberra. The event, hosted by ANU and supported by the Embassy of Mongolia, was aimed at informing Australian government, business and academic specialists, as well as the general public, of recent developments and trends in Mongolia's politics, economics, society, culture and environment.
Part 4 features an introduction by Associate Professor Kuntala Lahi
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