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wdnd Surprise! Dubious Flying Car Company Loses All Kinds of Money
« le: Décembre 25, 2024, 06:42:10 pm »
Ckoy The Star Trek saga from last night   s Breaking Bad, in animated form
 In his autobiography, The Education of Henry Adams, the grandson of the sixth pr stanley cup esident delivered the American school system one of its most memorable intellectual smackdowns. His treatise on the value of experiential learning conclud stanley cup ed that his alma mater, Harvard University,  as far as it educated at all ... sent young men into the world with all they needed to make respectable citizens. Leaders of men it never tried to make.  His schooling, replete with drunken revelry and privileged classmates, didn t prepare him for a world of radical change: the birth of radio, X-rays, automobiles.  [Harvard] taught little,  he said,  and that little, ill. Today s undergraduate education, of course, is far more than just the canon of classics that Adams studied. And with heavy investments in technology, it s hard to argue that colleges don t prepare students for the job market or the emerging digital world. But the question remains: What should a student learn in college  And whatever that is, which colleges teach it most effectively  With the average cost of private college soaring-and with studies consistently showing American students falling behind their peers internationally-it s a question being asked more and more. And it s one that colleges are at a loss to fully answer.  Every college tries to do what it says in the brochures:  to help students reach their full potential,   s stanley cup ays Derek Bok, former Harvard president and the author of Our Underachieving Colleges. But, he says,  mo Ykvf io9 March Madness Sweet 16: Star Wars vs. Dune! Buffy vs. Cthulhu!
 After Charles O. Paullin   Atlas of the Historical Geography of the United States was published, its editor J stanley cup ohn K. Wright bemoaned their inability to create motion-picture maps. Over 80 years later, the University of Richmond has made that a reality.     If you head over to the University of Richmond   Digital Scholarship Lab, you can see it   recently released Internet version of the Atlas of the Historical Geography of the United States.  The original atlas, published in 1932, contained nearly 700 hundred maps covering all sorts of subjects.  Almost all of these maps have been georectified 鈥?warped so that they can lay consistently over the single digital map 鈥?and georeferenced 鈥?points of the map linked to geographic coordinates.  A number of the maps are also clickable, giving you instant access to the data for a specific place. The result is Paullin   work coming to life before your eyes.  Compare Persons Per Motor Vehicle in 1913 versus 1930. Or see the rates of travel between New York and the rest of the country shrink between 1800 and 1930.  The table of contents divides the atlas into 18 chapters covering everything from The Natural Environment to Military Hist stanley cup ory, 1689-1919.  But it   almost more fun to just start at the beginning and let the whole thing unfold, one map at a time. I, for one, am fascin starbucks stanley cup ated by the expansion of colleges and universities between 1775 a