Chantal Akerman: Moving through Time and Space
This exploration/homage arrives in the form of a lecture/conversation, breaking some conventions, not unlike the object/subject of the event, Chantal Akerman, filmmaker and video artist. Two Akerman experts discuss her work in the kick-off event to an exhibition at MIT’s List Visual Arts Center.
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The Stationary Steam Engine
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Vernacular Building in Eaglesham
Vernacular Building in Eaglesham
Anatomy of the Fed I am pleased to announce that I will be teaching a new Mises Academy online class: Anatomy of the Fed. This class will cater to both the undergraduate student and the seasoned Wall Street executive. We expect this to be a popular class that will be offered annually. We have already enrolled dozens of students for the
Kloklezen De leerlingen oefenen de digitale en wijzerklok tot 5 minuten nauwkeurig

Do you suck at PowerPoint? If you are a teacher or student for that matter then I am sure you have had to face death by PowerPoint at some point sitting through hours of utter drivel both verbally and visually. Fortunately if you do suck at PowerPoint then here is help. I'd start with this little sideshow below that clearly does not suck. LBR412 Fall 2010 Session 13 Managing Cultural Differences: A Tribal Internationalist A bad weekend Ramkrishan (Remi) Hinduja, chairman of HTMT Global Solutions, together with Sashi P. Reddi, CEO of Coello - St Catherine of Alexandria N100421 APSLEY HOUSE, London. "St Catherine of Alexandria" by Claudio COELLO (1642-93). WM 1578-1948. After treatment. 1.018J Fundamentals of Ecology (MIT) "Roundtable: On the Usefulness of the Concept of the Modern" "Temporality and Difference in Pakistani Modernism" Bioéthique et clonage - Michel Fontès (video)
Une conférence de l'UTLS au Lycée
avec Michel Fontès (Professeur de médecine à la faculté de la Timone)
Lycée Pasquet (Arles)
FedEx gears up for busiest day Chinese firms lure top talent Ghana becomes an oil state RES.21W-01 Angles (MIT)
LBR412 Labor Law Session Thirteen 12/11/10 David Sackman
Thunderbird School of Global Management Professor Robert Moran, Ph.D., talks Dec. 9, 2010, about having a global mindset without losing one's national identity. The concept is covered in the new edition of his book, "Managing Cultural Differences." http://www.thunderbird.edu
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During the recent 2007 Wharton Economic Summit, Knowledge@Wharton recorded nine podcasts with speakers and panelists at the event, whose theme was "Next Moves in a Global Economy." This interview is with Ramkrishan (Remi) Hinduja, chairman of HTMT Global Solutions, together with Sashi P. Reddi, CEO of Applabs Technologies.

This is a basic subject in ecology that seeks to improve the understanding of the flow of energy and materials through ecosystems and the regulation of the distribution and abundance of organisms. The course covers productivity and biogeochemical cycles in ecosystems, trophic dynamics, community structure and stability, competition and predation, evolution and natural selection, population growth and physiological ecology. There is particular emphasis placed on aquatic systems.
A round-table panel discussion at the Sixth South Asia Graduate Student Conference with Steven Collins (Chester D. Tripp Professor in the Humanities, University of Chicago), Wendy Doniger (Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions in the Divinity School, University of Chicago), and Sanjay Subrahmanyam (Navin and Pratima Doshi Chair of Indian History, UCLA).
A talk by Sean Pue, Assistant Professor of Hindi Language and South Asian Language and Culture, Michigan State University.
FedEx expects Monday to be the busiest shipping day in company history. An analyst weighs in on the holiday season for shippers and what it means for the economy.
A great outlook for Chinese firms, competitive pay and good career potential are helping to lure executives from multinationals.
Ghana will become a new oil producer on December 15 - Tullow Oil has spent three years developing an undersea field which could prove a rich resource for the West African country.
Angles is an annual online magazine of exemplary writing by students in four foundational writing courses at MIT: 21W.730: Writing on Contemporary Issues; 21W.731: Writing and Experience; 21W.732: Science Writing and New Media; and 21W.734J: Writing About Literature. In these classes, students learn to read more critically, to address specific audiences for particular purposes, to construct effective arguments and narratives, and to use and cite source material properly. Students in these course















