Dr. Mary E. Keyes Certificate of Leadership Development
What is a leader you may ask and how can you be one?
Happy Holidays From The Barkers!
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The U.S. Healthcare Law Rollout: Where Do We Stand? | The Forum at HSPH
Health plan enrollment failures in the federal insurance marketplace have resulted in mounting fallout for policymakers. Some Americans have reported receiving cancellation notices and subsequently having difficulties signing up for new plans due to poorly functioning enrollment websites. Others have reported dismay at increased premiums. Yet the vision for the historic healthcare law perseveres — providing affordable, quality coverage. Supporters have pointed out the vast complexities of impl
THE POET'S VOICE: Katie Peterson & Louise Glück | Woodberry Poetry Room
The final 2013 Poet's Voice reading featured Louise Glück, reading from her forthcoming collection Faithful and Virtuous Night, and Katie Peterson, reading from her two new collections, The Accounts and Permission.
Date: December 4, 2013, at the Edison Newman Room, Houghton Library.
For more information, visit hcl.harvard.edu/poetryroom.
Spark: A Poem Reading by Barbara Saunier
Spark is poem that was written by Barbara Saunier. Barb is a retired from the GRCC English Department. Watch as she reads her poem at various locations across campus and Grand Rapids.
The Rotwood Forest
Claymation from Julia Zolkiewska from UNSW Australia's School of Arts and Media. UNSW runs a strong animation strand.
In 2014 our You Tube channel will be running a dedicated animation program. To subscribe click here: http://www.youtube.com/unsw
To find out more about studying at UNSW's Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences: http:// https://sam.arts.unsw.edu.au/
2.4.1 Phosphorus (P) Like calcium, phosphorus is important in the structure of bones and teeth. It is vital in the body as part of the molecules ATP and DNA, and is also a component of phospholipids, lipoproteins and many other proteins too. Phosphorus can occur, combined with oxygen, in phosphate ions and in this form it plays an important role in switching on and off metabolic pathways in cells. Phosphorus is widely available in the diet, from both plant and animal sources, such as meat, fish, eggs and dairy pr
Misheard lyrics: Star-Spangled Banner
In this interactive series of four videos, Professor Andrew Nevins (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences) explains how almost every song lyric can be misunderstood. This video examines 'The Star-Spangled Banner'. There are three examples following this video that you can click on:
Hall & Oates - 'Everytime You Go Away': http://youtu.be/abWW0BzCg10
Jimi Hendrix - 'Purple Haze': http://youtu.be/k8gJL3Or_OY
Intro video: http://youtu.be/dBnhkwRmYuQ
While slips of the tongue are well-known, slips of t
Brain disease research - keeping you you
Granny Marsh is 90 years old and living a wonderful life, but many her age suffer from degenerative brain diseases.
Whilst the EU spends approximately £108 billion a year supporting those with dementias, currently less than one hundredth of that is spent on research. As yet there are no cures.
That's why the Wellcome Trust and MRC are funding an international team of scientists to investigate Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Motor Neuron Disease. To learn more about the work going on, visit the
Osterley Park and House: The East India Company at Home, 1757-1857
The East India Company at Home, 1757--1857 is a three-year (2011--2014) research project based in the Department of History at University College London and funded by the Leverhulme Trust. The project examines the British country house in an imperial and global context.
27 July--3 November, 2013: The Trappings of Trade is a new display at Osterley exploring how the East India Company shaped Osterley and the country houses of Britain in the 18th century. Robert Adam may have remodelled the house
Can you guess who won a music competition? (psychology experiment)
You have three options on which to guess the winner of a classical music competition: audio only, silent video or video with sound. Can you guess who won a music competition based on short clips?
About UCL:
UCL is consistently ranked as one of the world's top universities. Across all disciplines our faculties are known for their research-intensive approaches, academic excellence and engagement with global challenges. This is the basis of our world-renowned degree programmes. Visit us at http://
UCL-Lancet Lecture 2013: Dr Agnes Binagwaho - Charity does not rhyme with development
UCL- LANCET LECTURE 2013: Dr Agnes Binagwaho, Minister of Health for the Republic of Rwanda, 'Charity does not rhyme with development'
Dr Binagwaho shares her country's experiences mobilising partnerships on the long road to universal health coverage, with a social entrepreneurship mind to do business. Since its 1994 genocide, Rwanda's life expectancy has increased from 27 to 60 years, and the country is now on track to achieve each of the health Millennium Development Goals. Dr. Binagwaho will
Imagining the Future City: London 2062 - editors' introduction
Is London turning into a city where football clubs such as Arsenal and Chelsea run schools, Londoners commonly convert their roofs into "micro-farms" and people are subject to separate migration laws to the rest of the UK?
A new UCL book enables academics to imagine how current trends in energy use, transport, education, governance and health might have played out by 2062.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1113/181113-London2062
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/london-2062/book
In Imagining the Fu
2013 Jack Beale Lecture: Dr David Suzuki
Dr David Suzuki presents the 2013 Jack Beale Lecture on the Global Environment, on the topic of Imagining a sustainable future: foresight over hindsight. In a wide-ranging talk the Canadian scientist and broadcaster discusses the environmental movement's successes and failures, explores human evolution and the threats to our future, outlines the problems of a globalised economy, criticises the Australian government's climate change policies, and points to a sustainable way forward.
www.science.
Teamwork and Timber at Notre Dame
Teamwork and Timber is an initiative started by the Michigan Farm Preservation Network brought to Notre Dame by architecture professor Aimee Buccellato. Bucellato's architecture students worked with students from Madison Elementary School in South Bend to learn about geometry and timber framing.
The Cervical Vertebrae as a Factor in the Etiology of Cleft Palate
Original source: ; ; ; ; This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has been done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automa ted process using the recommendations for Level 2 of the TEI in Libraries Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file.
Virtual Maths - Basic Structures, shear force point of load
Interactive simulation demonstrating shear force at point of load
35. What Does The Newspaper Say? (5 Min. A Day)
Learn Italian with LearnItalianPod.com – Reading the Italian newspaper is an excellent way to practice your reading skills and improve your knowledge of the Italian language and culture. What’s nice about it is that you don’t need the actual paper; in fact, you can browse many Italian newspapers directly on the Internet. — So, let’s [...]
4.2 Fractions Instead of putting the two left over biscuits back in the tin, you might instead decide to break them into halves and then give one of the resulting four halves to each person so that everyone receives a total of one and a half biscuits. In this case, the answer has to be expressed as a fraction or the equivalent decimal number: A fraction is really just another way of expressing a division because ½ means