Culinary Ampitheatre Dedication
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Silent Stone Houses
Matt Cashore shoots the beauty of Inishark, an abandoned island off the coast of Ireland where University of Notre Dame anthropology Professor Ian Kuijt and his team of students and locals have been digging for six years. The island was last inhabited in 1960 when the remaining 25 inhabitants left their homes and history on the island. Today the Cultural Landscapes of the Irish Coast (CLIC) project strives to provide a voice to the islanders long gone and to a disappearing culture that may soon
MSU Faculty Conversations: Sue Carter
Sue Carter, professor in Michigan State University's School of Journalism, talks about her 21 years as a faculty member and her passion for teaching.
The Innovative Classroom: Using Technology to Insp World History eBook Intro Protractor angles 1-11 Morning Meeting: One-Minute Greeting ScienceCasts: The Sound of Earthsong ScienceCasts: Did Earth Have Two Moons? ScienceCasts: Don't Judge a Moon by its Cover ScienceCasts: Amateur Scientists Discover Galactic Bubbles ISS Update - Sept. 27, 2012 ISS Update: Logistics Reduction and Repurposing (Part 1) China protests take toll on Japanese carmakers Market Pulse: A sigh of relief in Rome after bond auction Euro crisis to hit jobs in powerhouse Germany Reuters Breakingviews: The hybrid bond gamble Asia Week Ahead: China leadership, Indonesia data in focus Van Gogh - The Starry Night (new version)
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The Innovative Classroom: Using Technology to Inspire
The Innovative Classroom is a multimedia eBook for the iPad, aimed at teachers, trainee
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World History eBook Intro
This video introduces some of the features of the eBook on your iPad.
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Protractor angles
Protractor angles
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1-11
1-11
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In this video, Carolyn Bush prepares her fourth grade students to start their Morning Meeting with a successful, safe, fun "One-Minute Greeting." Students engage with other students and develop their oral language skills. (02:40)
A NASA spacecraft has recorded eerie-sounding radio emissions coming from our own planet. These beautiful "songs of Earth" could, ironically, be responsible for the proliferation of deadly electrons in the Van Allen Belts. (04:09)
Did our planet once have two moons? Some researchers say so. Moreover, the missing satellite might still be up there--splattered across the far side of the Moon. NASA's GRAIL mission could help confirm or refute the "two moon" hypothesis. (03:00)
Superficially, Saturn's moon Phoebe doesn't look much like a planet, but on the inside, the little gray moon has a lot in common with worlds like Earth. (03:49)
.Amateur scientists have made a effervescent discovery: The Milky Way Galaxy is bubbling like a glass of champagne. (03:26)
The International Space Station video update for Sept. 27, 2012.
Public Affairs Officer Brandi Dean interviews Sarah Shull, Deputy Project Manager Logistics Reduction and Repurposing. Shull, who is with the Advanced Exploration Systems, discusses the Logistics to Living tests from the Deep Space Habitat mockup at Johnson Space Center. Watch Part 2 of the interview... http://youtu.be/kYRKf_JBe3k
Sept. 27 - Anti-Japanese protests in China have dented Japanese carmakers' sales, even prompting to some to cut back production, but the fallout could be short-lived.
Sept. 27 - Italy's bond auction is a relative success - the amount sold is more than planned, and yields fall. But BofA Merrill Lynch's John Wraith urges caution on Italy, and Spain
Sept. 27 - The job market in Europe's biggest economy shows little sign of suffering from the euro zone crisis so far. But that could change as Chancellor Merkel heads for an election year.
Sept. 27 - As Asian investors develop a taste for hybrid debt, Reuters Breakingviews columnist Wei Gu warns that higher returns are far from guaranteed.
Sept. 28 - A possible announcement on the 18th Party Congress in China and Indonesian economic data are on the mind of Breakingviews Asia Editor Peter Thal Larsen as he discusses the week ahead in Asia.
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