Minimum Measured Ozone Level in 1991
Stratospheric Ozone level for October 5, 1991.
Episode 143: Radiation for the rest of us: The alpha, beta and gamma of atomic interaction Brain: The Inside Story's "Your Thinking Brain" Schrijfoefening: Les services d'urgence A letter to a voluntary organization Robert R. Dockson Interview "The Society of Mind, Spring 2007" Student leaders make impact in tornado affected area Northeastern University Street Smarts: Apocalypse Edition OSU Yoga b-roll SFU Track and Field Drum Roll Please Activity Reducing Poverty Food Vocabulary (Irish) Quiz 1 Preparation and Presentation of Biology Laboratory Class Materials Through WebCT Smoker's lung Population Structures and Cohorts Hurricane Gert from TRMM: September 16, 1999 Hercules and the 12 Labors (3:55) Welke taal spraken de Oude Belgen?
If there is one thing that makes you different from other animals, it is your extraordinary ability to think. Like other thinking species, humans don't just react to the world as it is: We reflect on the past, imagine what could be, and then plan ways to make our thoughts become reality. Our brain's advanced outer layer, or cortex, enables us to remember past events and predict the future consequences of our actions before we make decisions. We can think about thinking, and use language to excha
Je kunt informatie en instructies over de werking van de urgentiediensten in een vlotte tekst gieten.
After this chapter you will be able to write a business letter. whilst carrying out this task you apply the typographical conventions and BIN standards and you also structure the information appropriately.
Robert R. Dockson, dean emeritus of the USC Marshall School of Business, reflects on his career at the University of Southern California.
Dockson, who served as dean of the university's business school from 1959 to1969, is a respected administrator and businessman whose vision of academic and professional excellence and global worldview continue to inform the USC Marshall School of Business.
Dockson was interviewed by Edward H. Barker on March 26, 1998, as part of the USC Emeriti Center's H.
" This course is an introduction to a theory that tries to explain how minds are made from collections of simpler processes. The subject treats such aspects of thinking as vision, language, learning, reasoning, memory, consciousness, ideals, emotions, and personality. Ideas incorporate psychology, artificial intelligence, and computer science to resolve theoretical issues such as whole vs. parts, structural vs. functional descriptions, declarative vs. procedural representations, symbolic vs. con
A group of 60 Auburn students recently took part in the LeaderShape Institute at the 4-H Center in Columbiana. As a part of the experience, the students visited Pratt City, a Birmingham suburb and one of the areas hit hardest by the April 27 tornadoes. A number of the students who participated in the program are from the Birmingham area and were deeply moved by the devastation they witnessed.
Our Street Smarts reporter asked Huskies how they would spend their last day if the world was ending tomorrow.
Stuart Sarbacker teaches a yoga course that combines theory with practice, emphasizing the historical and cultural background of yoga as well as actually teaching yoga to the students.
Brit Townsend, Adam Reid and Helen Crofts express their excitement on being accepted into the NCAA.
This activity develops the real-world connections and relationships between the rock properties found in Lesson 5 and the important engineering properties for designing and building caverns (or tunnels, mines, building foundations, etc.). The student teams will use importance factors called "desirability points" to mathematically determine the overall best rocks to build caverns within.
The causes of income inequality and the role of social welfare policy are examined. Updated 2003. (28:29)
Questioning based on things associated with food.
An introduction to optimizing materials for web presentation: postscripting to PDF, animated graphics, still graphics, font type and size. These materials, among others, are used to demonstrate the creation of a WebCT course site. WebCT is a server-based course management software application. Through a very specific (and thoroughly, yet simply explained) set of steps, faculty place html, text files, graphics files, etc. into what is essentially an on-line course. That 'course' allows you to pla
Physicians can easily tell if you are a smoker by how your lungs look. Normal lungs are red or pink and fluid-looking. Smokers have blackened lungs that are drier than normal lungs. Tumors may develop from continued tobacco use-these appear as white masses.
This module provides a gentle introduction to the use of WebCHIP software and census data to investigate basic population issues. In the first part of this module, you will use data from the 1990 U.S. census to create population pyramids for several racial and ethnic groups. These population pyramids provide the ability to view the age and sex structure of a population.
A fly-in to Hurricane Gert on September 16, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM. In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface. The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.
The tale of the mighty Hercules, son of Zeus, atoning for the murder of his family by undertaking 12 impossible tasks. These labors of Hercules should hold the attention of students. However, there is a great deal of death involved in the challenges. Many lessons are possible with this video from the importance of not giving up to the world's first super hero.
At the end of this unit: You can understand an interview on the language of the Ancient Belgians. When performing this task, You have to follow the line of reasoning in the interview. You have to listen carefully for more specific information













