Molière II:"L'Étourdi" (Inhalt, Quellen)
(6. Vorlesung vom 26.05.1997)
Pierre Corneille, "Horace"; Vergleich "Le Cid" - "Horace"
(3. Vorlesung vom 28.04.1997)
Le libertinage érudit III: P. Gassendi, naturwissenschaftliche Entdeckungen im Mikro- und Makrokosm
(12. Vorlesung vom 27.01.1997)
Palestine and Recognition
Russian President Medvedev endorses a Palestinian state on his first visit to the Israeli-occupied West Bank as a Russian head of state. Deborah Lutterbeck reports.
Knowledge and Environmental Policy Sustainability Seminar delivered on January 19, 2011 by Claremont McKenna Professor William Ascher, "Knowledge and Environmental Policy." Environmental policymakers rely on a prodigious amount of knowledge from a wide variety of sources. Sometimes available knowledge is technically appropriate and covers the broad range of considerations that policymakers ought to take into account, yet it is easy to identify serious limitations in the generation, transmission, and use of relevant kno
Jackson doctor: not guilty
Michael Jackson's doctor pleaded "not guilty" to a charge of involuntary manslaughter in the popstar's death. Deborah Gembara reports.
Semester 1, 2011 begins Monday February 28 The Economics of Southern Sudan's Referendum: Oil, Water and Agriculture in North and South 2.2 Classical conditioning Ivan Pavlov (1849–1936) was a Russian neurophysiologist who studied the physiology of digestion. During this research he noticed that hungry dogs would salivate at the mere sight of the attendant who brought the food. He used this seemingly minor observation to develop his theory of classical conditioning (see Box 2). Classical conditioning is the learning of an association between a reflex behaviour and a previously unrelated environmental stimulus. 3.1 History of the spectrum concept Many individuals have autistic-like symptoms that do not meet the requisite number or profile of features for a diagnosis of classic autism. In Section 3 we will consider the background to the spectrum concept and some different interpretations of the variations that it includes. The section concludes by setting these ideas in a developmental context: different patterns of symptoms in infancy may result in qualitatively different outcomes for individuals later. An intriguing fact in the Active living for rural children: community perspectives using PhotoVOICE Byrne Administration: Interview with Don Linky (July 31, 2006) EMBA/GEMBA: How Darden Teaches Quantitative Skills Through the Case Method "Transportation Systems Analysis: Demand and Economics, Fall 2008" "Transport Processes in the Environment, Fall 2008" "Project Management, Spring 2009" Reading, vocabulary: The mobile phone Absolutely Addition "We Sang Rock of Ages": Frances Willard Battles Alcohol in the late 19th century
Part 3 of the 2011 Sudan in Transition? Southern Independence, Conflict and Reconciliation Symposium. This podcast is part 3 of The Political, Social and Economic Consequences of the Referendum
Active living for rural children: community perspectives using PhotoVOICE
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/
Professor Robert Harris discusses how the University of Virginia Darden School of Business executive-format MBA programs teach quantitative skills through the case method.
" The main objective of this course is to give broad insight into the different facets of transportation systems, while providing a solid introduction to transportation demand and cost analyses. As part of the core in the Master of Science in Transportation program, the course will not focus on a specific transportation mode but will use the various modes to apply the theoretical and analytical concepts presented in the lectures and readings. Introduces transportation systems analysis, stressing
" This class serves as an introduction to mass transport in environmental flows, with emphasis given to river and lake systems. The class will cover the derivation and solutions to the differential form of mass conservation equations. Class topics to be covered will include: molecular and turbulent diffusion, boundary layers, dissolution, bed-water exchange, air-water exchange and particle transport."
"1.040 Project Management focuses on the management and implementation of construction projects, primarily infrastructure projects. A project refers to a temporary piece of work undertaken to create a unique product or service. Whereas operations are continuous and repeating, projects are finite and have an end date. Projects bring form or function to ideas or need. Some notable projects include the Manhattan Project (developing the first nuclear weapon); the Human Genome Project (mapping the hu
You practice reading comprehension and vocabulary by means of a text about using a mobile phone and recycling.
Here are some fun games and activities to help with understanding and using addition.
Among the social movements joined and led by women in the late 19th century, including unionization and women's suffrage, none had either the widespread fervor or success enjoyed by the temperance movement. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), founded in 1873, drew widespread support from labor movements such as the Knights of Labor by linking the fight against liquor with the desire to protect home and family against the ravages of the new industrial order. Frances Willard was one of














