Working with Fractions
This is a quick video with example on how to add, subtract, mutiply and divide fractions.
001 - 005 Corderius anglice-latine
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The Elegant Universe pt 1
This is the first of three part series on string theory. This part discusses Einstein's relativity. Run time 56:00.
The Elegant Universe pt 2
This is the second part of the discussion on String Theory. This part discusses the history of Quantum Mechanics and how it applies. Run time 52:48.
Catullus 001 Quoi Dono
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039 - BELLUM HELVETICUM - LOWE BUTLER WALKER
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096 - BELLUM HELVETICUM - LOWE BUTLER WALKER
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Epistolae Ciceronis 001
Cicero Attico Sal.
Any - "Si el norte fuera el sur"-Ricardo Arjona Today we're listening to Ricardo Arjona, a very well-known singer hailing from Guatemala who is known for his powerful lyrics. In this lesson we'll be talking about one of his big
Cell Division and the Cell Cycle
BIOS095-10222010 - Fall 2007 Lectures - Cell Division and the Cell Cycle - Lehigh University > Public Courses > Bio Science in the 21st Century > Fall 2007 Lectures > Cell Division and the Cell Cycle
05 - Ball & String
ASTRO001:005 - Podcasts - 05 - Ball & String - Pennsylvania State University > Courses on iTunes U > Available Courses > Public Courses > ASTRO 001.005 SP2008: UP > Podcasts > 05 - Ball & String
Fine Structure
relativistic and spin orbit corrections
I Can Still Cry: Emotions on the Page, on Stage and in Life (Ossie Davis)
Host Al Page speaks with Ossie Davis, actor, writer and Guest Lecturer at the University of Washington. Mr. Davis explores the differences in writing and acting emotions, the need for discipline, training and appropriate response. He discusses the expression of Black American culture, Harlem and a need for cultural institutions.
Putting It Down on Paper (Mortimer Zuckerman, Donald Graham)
Host Al Page speaks with Mortimer Zuckerman, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of U.S. News and World Report, and Donald Graham, publisher of The Washington Post. Zuckerman contrasts visual news with printed news, explains the clash between writers and photographers, and describes the importance of presenting the facts to the audience and letting them form their own individual opinion. Graham discusses his duties as a publisher, the role of his newspaper and its relation to government interests. They
When Attitudes Are Cultivated (Peter Gay)
Host Marcia Alvar speaks with Peter Gay, Sterling Professor of History, Yale University, and author of The Cultivation of Hatred. Violence is a pervasive force in today's world, but violence is not a new development. Professor Gay examines the debate in the 19th Century over the proper role of violence and aggression in society. He shows how attitudes in both Europe and the United States were reshaped so that aggression became ritualized in sports, public service and business. While he refuses t
Ultrasound: From Diagnosis to Therapy Their original discovery has since been followed by decades of rapid developments in ultrasound, magnetic resonance and computed tomography imaging. By now, truly non-invasive, image-guided ultrasound therapy has become a clinical reality.
In the early 1950’s, Frank and William Fry discovered that high-frequency sound waves could be used to produce localized tissue damage.
Better Atheletes All Around (Ron Smith/Frank Smoll)
Who are the biggest sports fans at the University of Washington? Ron Smith and Frank Smoll, sports psychologists, showcase their work on appropriate coaching behavior at all levels of sports. In this 1994 Upon Reflection interview with Marcia Alvar, learn about the effects of sports on children and rediscover what it means to have good sportsmanship.
Digital Inequality - December 7, 2009
Lunch 'n Learn presentation: In the Internet's early years, some observers believed that the new technology would reduce social inequality in at least two ways. First, by reducing the price of information, it would make information more available, and therefore level the playing field. Second, because young people appeared to have the inside track in mastering and using the new technologies (and because youth is negatively associated with wealth and uncorrelated with other indicators of socioeco
Brian Kernighan: The Changing Face of Programming PDF
The rapid evolution of languages, tools, environments, and expectations presents major challenges and opportunities for programmers and for software engineering education. This is true across all kinds of programming, but is especially so for Web systems, which are now routinely written in untyped scripting languages and include Ajax, mashups, toolkits, frameworks like Rails and Django, and a profusion of interfaces, all operating asynchronously on distributed systems.
For the past 7 or 8 years
Robert Vanderbei: Digitizing the Universe From Your Backyard
Lunch 'n Learn presentation: Learn how the modern digital world in makes it possible, even almost easy, for amateurs to take astrophotos in their own backyards that are better than those taken at professional observatories only a generation ago. The key enablers are computer controlled mounts for very precise pointing control, CCD cameras, and modern image processing tools.
More at http://blogs.princeton.edu/itsacademic/2008/02/digitizing_the_universe_from_your_backyard.html