Internet Safety; Part 1 of 2
NYIT Roundtable host Tania Carvalho speaks with Nassau County Assistant District Attorney Brian Heid and Rory Forrestal of the Suffolk County Computer Crimes Bureau about internet safety. New York Institute of Technology (NYIT). Part 1 of 2
Byrne Administration: Interview with Allen Handler (April 4, 2006 Part 1)
Please find the second part of the interview at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ju3HTbFFBJU
This interview is a part of the Eagleton Institute for Politics's Program on the Governor. For more information please visit their website: http://governors.rutgers.edu/
Byrne Administration: Interview with Allen Handler (April 4, 2006 Part 2)
This interview is a part of the Eagleton Institute for Politics's Program on the Governor. For more information please visit their website: http://governors.rutgers.edu/
Byrne Administration: Interview with Albert Burstein (May 15, 2006 Part 1)
Please find the second part of this interview at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQzqzi7-bK8
This interview is a part of the Eagleton Institute for Politics's Program on the Governor. For more information please visit their website: http://governors.rutgers.edu/
Cal Performances' Fall Free for All
http://calperformances.org
Cal Performances kicked off its 2010/11 season on Sunday, September 26, with its first Fall Free for All, a full day of free performances on the University of California, Berkeley campus. More than a dozen performances were given by a diverse line-up of artists, including the Kronos Quartet, Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir, Mark Morris Dance Group, San Francisco Opera Adler Fellows, the Cal Band and John Santos Sextet, among others.
University Chamber Ensembles: Quintet in B-flat Major
Presented on November 29, 2010 as part of the University Chamber Ensembles concert. The Quintet in B-flat Major by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov was performed by MaryGrace Apostoli on flute, Mike Goldberg on clarinet, Ryan Smout on French horn, Henry Marsh on bassoon, and Walter Beers on piano.
Jon Kukla on Patrick Henry's Revolution
Richmond resident, author and historian Jon Kukla discusses "Mr. Henry's Revolution? Can the Founding Make Sense Without John Adams" during The John Marshall International Center for the Study of Statesmanship lecture series at The Jepson School of Leadership Studies. December 3, 2010
Thunderbird Regional Night 2010
Students celebrate African and Middle Eastern culture Dec. 4, 2010, at Thunderbird School of Global Management in Glendale, Arizona.
Executive MBA Students Learn From Expert Classmates
Darden School of Business EMBA student and IBM sales executive Brad Hernandez talks about the unique expert community he finds in the Darden Executive MBA program.
Antoinette Schoar - Valuation Tools
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Kristian Kloeckl - "The Senseable City" - 2010 MIT SDM Conference on Systems Thinking for Contempora
"The Senseable City" is a presentation given by Kristian Kloeckl, Research Scientist, in the MIT SENSEable City Laboratory at the MIT System Design and Management's 2010 Systems Thinking for Contemporary Challenges Conference on October 22, 2010.
Please reference the link below for Kristian Kloeckl's presentation http://sdm.mit.edu/systems_thinking_conference_2010/presentations/kloeckl.pdf
3.3 Uranium production and economics
The transformation of radioactive uranium and, in some instances, thorium isotopes provides vastly more energy per unit mass of fuel than any other energy source, except nuclear fusion, and therein lies its greatest attraction. The unit considers the advantages and limitations of generating this power and the environmental and security issues that the process raises.
2.2.1 The recordings Click 'play' to listen to the interview with Sorley MacLean (Part 1, 7 minutes). 2.2 Background and recordings Sorley MacLean, 1911–98, is now regarded as one of the greatest Scottish poets of the twentieth century. Until the 1970s, his verse was known by very few people. In that decade, publication of English translations and the impact of his public readings established him in the eyes of poetry lovers in Scotland, Ireland and England, as well as further afield, as a major poet. Yet, curiously, this impact depended on work that mostly derived from a very specific conjunction of personal and 2.1.1 Aims The aims of these recordings, in which Sorley MacLean is interviewed by Iain Crichton-Smith, are to: (a) help you to sense the power of MacLean's poetry in its original Gaelic; (b) assist your understanding of the English texts of the poems, translated by MacLean himself. Except for third party materials and otherwise stated (see Author(s): 2.1 Before the recording Now you have the opportunity to listen to the recordings of Sorley MacLean. I hope you will find that it brings to life the poetry that you have looked at on the page, and that it helps you to grasp some of the differences between Gaelic and English that affect MacLean's translation of his own work, as well as elucidating particular references that may have puzzled you. Perhaps the best plan, if you have time, will be to listen to each section once, and then go through them again, stopping an 1.2 Grasping Gaelic Please read the following poems by Sorley MacLean (linked below): ‘The Turmoil’, ‘Kinloch Ainort’, ‘Heroes’, ‘Death Valley’, ‘A Spring’, and ‘She to Whom I Gave 1.1 British poetry and language To begin this unit, look at the sheet of references linked below. You will see that the list includes books by Sorley Maclean and by two other important Scottish poets, Tom Leonard and Edwin Morgan. Not one title was published in London. None of these writers has ever published a collection of poems in London. Yet the prizewinning work of Edwin Morgan is widely used in Scottish schools, and Sorley MacLean's work has been translated into several foreign languages. By the 1980s, a shift of the Conclusion 4 Taking sides
Activity 1
From Catholic rebellion to Civil War, what happened during the latter years of the reign of Charles I that caused people to take up arms against their fellow citizens? This unit looks at the background of the wars between England, Scotland and Ireland and how the king’s actions led to the rift between royalists and parliamentarians.
From Catholic rebellion to Civil War, what happened during the latter years of the reign of Charles I that caused people to take up arms against their fellow citizens? This unit looks at the background of the wars between England, Scotland and Ireland and how the king’s actions led to the rift between royalists and parliamentarians.













