Congratulations class of 2016!
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Showing Solidarity with Japan: Global Roundup with the Airport Economist
In the wake of the tsunami, two significant women highlighted how economies worldwide can support the country as it rebuilds after the disaster. From the Global Roundup series by Airport Economist Tim Harcourt, JW Neville professor at UNSW's Australian School of Business.
MSU Staff profiles: Brian Kirschensteiner
Brian Kirschensteiner talks about his position as preparator at the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at MSU.
To read more, go to http://news.msu.edu/story/staff-profiles-brian-kirschensteiner
Toyota's Global Mindset Blunder in China
Thunderbird School of Global Management alumnus Donny Huang talks March 15, 2012, at the Developing Leaders for Global Roles Summit. http://www.thunderbird.edu/globalmindset
Los misterios de la Luna (The History Channel) - parte 2 de 3
Durante miles de años, la humanidad ha encontrado consuelo con su presencia. Ha sido un faro para los viajeros nocturnos, un reloj para los agricultores y una guía para los marineros en el mar. Para algunas culturas, ha sido incluso un dios. Es el único cuerpo cósmico que ha sido visitado por seres humanos. A distancia, la luminosidad de la Luna nos ha fascinado desde el principio de los tiempos. Además, un examen más cercano a este faro en la oscuridad
BOTTICELLI: The Birth of Venus - ArtSleuth - S01 E03
Liberating the body and beauty of the female nude or surrendering to a new cliché?
More on http://www.artsleuth.net
Breakingviews: Do as I say, not as I do -- German wages
April 4 - Germany calls for euro zone austerity while raising its own wages; Who'll fill JPMorgan banker Ian Hannam's shoes?
2012 Accepted Student Weekend at the College of Charleston -- Admissions CofC
More than 3,000 accepted students and family members arrived at the College of Charleston on Friday, March 24, for Accepted Student Weekend 2012. This two-day event assists students who have been accepted to the College of Charleston make their final decision about enrolling at the College.
Families were able to attend a variety of panels on topics such as student life, Greek life, pre-law advising, pre-professional health advising, financial aid and more. Buses were available for exploring off
SMU's Jodi Cooley discusses the XIA Alpha Particle Counter and SuperCDMS
The XIA Alpha Particle Counter sounds like it belongs in a science fiction movie. In reality it's housed in a clean room operated by SMU's Department of Physics, where SMU physicist Jodi Cooley and her students rely on it as part of their search for dark matter.
Cooley is a member of the global scientific consortium called SuperCryogenic Dark Matter Search (SuperCDMS). SuperCDMS is searching for elusive dark matter — the "glue" that represents 90 percent of the matter in our universe but whic
Match My Clock
This is a song about matching the clocks to the correct hour and learning how to read a clock. (02:51)
PSY101 Session 8 Spring 2012
Understanding Human Behavior with Nancy Melucci 04/02/12
Advance Care Planning: Crossroads
It's important for everyone to talk with their families and health care professionals about their medical preferences. This is called advance care planning. This video is part of a series produced by Duke Medicine related to advance care planning.
Alessandro Minelli: Darwin in the 21st Century: Nature, Humanity, and God
Alessandro Minelli:Mathematical, Physical, and Natural Sciences faculty member at the University of Padua.
Panel: Darwin in the 21st Century: Nature, Humanity, and God
Panel Discussion
Banking and the Business Cycle This rare study by C.A. Phillips, together with T.F. McManus and R.W. Nelson, appeared in 1937 as an Austrian-style analysis of the stock market crash and the great depression that followed.
It explores the many theories tossed about at the time, and concludes that the theory "here developed may be called a 'central banking' explanation of the depression. The depth and duration of the depression are held to be the ineluctable consequences of the preceding boom. That boom could never have
Snow Cover by Latitude
Using data sets from MYNASADATA students will create graphs comparing the amount (percentage) of snow cover along selected latitudes by date.
If the Public Would be Outraged by Their Rulings, Should Judges Care?
A Report and Analysis of the 2007 Annual Lecture in Law and Society delivered by Professor Cass Sunstein, organised by the Foundation for Law, Justice and Society in association with the Law Faculty, Oxford. It is clear that judicial rulings can, and sometimes do, provoke public outrage. A significant body of literature in political science seeks to demonstrate the extent to which courts sometimes work to reduce the likelihood and intensity of such outrage. The normative question of whether judg
Marv Caruthers
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Solar System Lesson for Kids (Interactive Game)
This Interactive game introduces a lesson on the solar system to the students. It explains each planet and what and where it is. This interactive and educational lesson plan is designed to teach kids all about the solar system. Voice is computerized, but usable information (4:02)
Good Friday Tenebrae Service- 4/6/2012- Sam Wells
A service of Good Friday worship in Duke University Chapel. The Reverend Dr Samuel Wells delivers a sermon entitled "Finished"
Opening Excerpt from the Service: (19:59)
"Why are we here? Why are we gathered in a grand, gothic building to remember a man who died a criminal's death 2000 years ago on the other side of the world? What on earth has that got to do with us? I had a colleague who had an unfortunate habit of starting meetings by saying, "Why are we here?" It would always lead to an awk













