Mapping the Human Genome: Ten Years After
On February 15, 2001, the first draft sequence and analysis of the human genome—the blue print for a human being—was published in the journal Nature. On the tenth anniversary of that transformative moment, Harvard hosted an interdisciplinary, multi-institutional forum on the genome project's origins, promise, and significance to society.
62. The First New Deal: Dollar Nationalism President Bruininks testifies at the House Higher Education Committee GoNU.TV Pregame Interview with Matt Janning - February 25, 2011 2011 MSU TV spot: Spartans Will Hurricane Structure and Rotation Pattern Big Screen Keys Tutorial Disaster Relief Volunteering Guitar Building Diagnosing Problems - Raw Materials China inflation high but levels off Quadratic Functions OERC Symposium 2010: At the coal face of energy action - Blueskin Power Beyond OER: Shifting Focus to Open Educational Practices. OPAL Report 2011 4.3 Asymmetry between labour and capital Finally, stepping back to get a broader picture, I would like to point to the asymmetry built into the emerging institutional framework governing international economic relations, of which the WTO is one important pillar. The various WTO agreements encourage free movement of goods and certain kinds of services. Possible agreements on cross-border investment and competition policy may allow for freer international movement of capital, already encouraged by the IMF. Yet there is no move towards How To Take Good Notes in Class A Perfect Copy A Dangerous Man Interview with Radmilla Cody on Talkingfeather Radio
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University of Minnesota President Robert Bruininks spoke to the Minnesota House of Representatives Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee on Feb. 22, 2011, testifying on the impact of proposed budget cuts on the university and its students.
Learn more at supporttheu.umn.edu.
To read Bruininks' remarks (PDF), visit: http://z.umn.edu/bruininksremarks . View his full testimony here: http://youtu.be/vbQuvIiRV0I
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They've been called leaders, lifesavers, and world changers. They're also called Spartans. Spartans Will.
An average hurricane lasts more than a week and has an average diameter of over 300 kilometers. (01:09)
Author(s):
Dr Debbie Haski-Leventhal, NAB Research Fellow at the Centre for Social Impact, talks about volunteering in disaster situations.
In this class, students learn about physics principles by examining the physics responsible for producing music with electronic stringed instruments, while building, testing, and playing their own electric guitar. Students will design their own Guitar bodies, construct their own pick-ups, assemble their own guitars, tune them using a chromatic tuner, and use them to play a simple song. While the instructions here give enough detail that an independent learner could construct their own guitar, pl
The raw materials which make up the Diagnosing Problems learning activity which introduces the concept of problem diagnosis and offers techniques and tools to find problem causes.
China's February inflation levels off at 4.9 percent, while factory output rises; suggesting some success in taming price pressures and not hurting growth.
Scott Starks
This collection presents an overview of quadratic functions intended for students enrolled in MATH 1508 at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Author(s):
Scott Willis speaks at the the 2010 Otago Energy Research Centre Symposium.
Held November 24, 2010.
Beyond OER: Shifting Focus to Open Educational Practices. OPAL Report 2011
A 1:40 minute video that goes through tips on what notes to take in class. It includes understanding what the teacher wants, using personal notetaking, and rewriting the notes. Good for all ages, but moves too rapidly and so the teacher may want to review it twice.
By 1820, the original Declaration was showing signs of wear. John Quincy Adams commissioned a now-famous facsimile. Librarian Doug Mayo describes Colonial Williamsburg's copy.Author(s):
The man with the tamest job in town is an outlaw in a time of slave law. Listen to the story of Gowan Pamphlet, the first ordained slave preacher in America.
Recently Radmilla Cody spent some time talking with Penny Gamble-Williams and her husband Thunder on their show Talking Feather Radio on BlogTalkRadio.com. Listen to this wonderful interview where she talks about her experiences as being a biracial girl growing up on the Navajo Reservation and later being chosen as the first biracial Miss Navajo Nation. She was selected as one of NPR's Great Voices and will be performing at the Eiteljorg Museum on March 19. In addition, the museum will screen a













