Thứ Tư, 1 tháng 8, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Aug 1 2018

hi I'm Kerri and I'm here today to tell you my clearing story being 23 and

coming back to university wasn't always on the cards however I took the jump

last year came back I finished my first year and I've loved it so far so today

I'm just going to tell you a little bit more about it and how I got to where I

am so my experience of school and college were not great I had glandular

fever and became quite ill so did part time didn't always receive the right

support and didn't have the right networks around me to help so when I

finished school I went straight into work and got loads of experience with

different roles loads of training and even some qualifications out of it which

were great however they did make me realize that that's not what I wanted to

do and what I wanted to do was work with children which meant I needed to either

go back to college or go to university and university was the better option

because you get stronger qualification so that was my biggest move of the year

my biggest worry with starting university was that I was leaving a

full-time job and growing into full-time studies I

earning while studying was big priority of mine from September when I started I

joined the outreach team and I now work alongside different schools in the area

and working with children so it all works towards my degree and it means

that I'm earning while I'm here I also have been able to get loads of support

from them while studying because they put your studies first so they

understand and then I've also been able to receive support from other support

services within the university looking back on the last year I can't quite

believe how far I've come from being a 16 year old at school not doing very

well and being really poorly so now where I've just finished my first year

of University and I'm going into my second year I'm really excited for what

my future holds and I can't wait to continue

For more infomation >> Kerrie's Clearing Story - Canterbury Christ Church University - Duration: 2:03.

-------------------------------------------

A day in my life | Nelson Mandela University student | Andile Simelane - Duration: 5:36.

(Arrow plane) Zulu pronunciation

For more infomation >> A day in my life | Nelson Mandela University student | Andile Simelane - Duration: 5:36.

-------------------------------------------

Professional's MBA at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:24.

Our Professional's MBA program is designed for the part-time student, typically a student

who is working a full-time job and they are taking courses that fit into their lives.

The pMBA program deals with professionals when they're in their careers in real time.

It allows for a type of a la carte approach to achieving your academic objective.

I was a full-time employee at Johns Hopkins University so I really needed something that

I could do part-time, after 5PM.

We teach courses at night, in hybrid and online formats.

And all of these give the students the flexibility to manage their work, their personal, and

their professional.

I found myself in a position where I wanted to grow my career into leadership and management

and knew that an MBA would help facilitate that.

The MBA program, and the professors in particular, were very much aware that we were striking

a balance between our professional life, our family life, and our work.

An MBA degree is a broadening degree and management and leadership - that's every aspect of your

life.

It's not just your work performance.

We understand that the students have very, very important work experiences that are relevant

and useful to bring to the classroom.

Loyola creates a good opportunity to bring so many different people together, who can

share different experiences and we can all just learn from each other.

I think our MBAs appreciate the fact that they can carry something that they're learning

in the program into the workplace where it's going to make them more effective and it's

going to increase the value of their capital within the organization.

The statement you make to your peers and your employer that you're willing to invest time

to improve yourself is a true statement about how serious you are about your development

and what you can do for their organization.

There is no doubt that what I learned during that program helped me achieve that promotion

because I was able to demonstrate throughout the program that I had the education and the

knowledge to also take on sales, sales strategy, and marketing strategy.

I'm really glad I decided to enroll in Loyola's MBA program.

It's gonna open up a lot more doors for me in the future.

Companies like to hire Sellinger.

They tell us that Sellinger students are smart, ethical, hard-working, and articulate.

I think Sellinger's MBA is Baltimore's program.

For more infomation >> Professional's MBA at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:24.

-------------------------------------------

Emerging Leaders MBA at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:04.

Emerging Leaders MBA program is a full-time program done in a cohort format, students

complete the program in one year.

The ELMBA program is a one-year, deep-dive, into these principles.

Individuals can make a hard pivot from one career to another.

Or for those students who want to get a solid running head-start right out of undergrad.

In the ELMBA program, it's a cohort program, so everybody takes the same classes together.

The cohort programs are ideal if you can take a year of your life and spend it, just immersed

in education and you're doing that with 20 or 30 other people, as well, so you develop

really tight relationships.

Loyola is unique for an MBA program in the total immersion for their students into the

business realm.

We learn so much more than just the textbook material.

Discussions that we have with our professors, real-world applications that we get through

case studies, through site-visits - it's second to none.

This one-year, full-time program has a domestic field study where students interact with business

leaders in the States and it also considers and international field study component, where

students are able to interact on a geopolitical context.

The opportunity to see another culture, to experience it and immerse themselves in it,

is a big part of why we do the international immersions.

Through the ELMBA program, you learn a topic Monday through Thursday and then that Friday

we get to go see it in action.

We'll go to a local business and we'll get to see how their firm operates, how they manage

their employees, we get to ask them questions.

We get to learn the fundamental aspects of the curriculum and then get to see it applied.

My education through my MBA program has prepared me very well for my future at Oxenham Financial.

What stands out to me about Loyola graduates is that not only are they technically trained

well, but they come with some of those intangibles around teamwork and communication.

We have a great track record of Loyola graduates here taking and expanding their leadership...easy

choice for us.

For more infomation >> Emerging Leaders MBA at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:04.

-------------------------------------------

University of Pretoria 'amicably' part ways with coach Shaun Bartlett - Duration: 1:33.

University of Pretoria 'amicably' part ways with coach Shaun Bartlett

University of Pretoria 'amicably' part ways with coach Shaun Bartlett.

  University of Pretoria have parted ways with head coach Shaun Bartlett.

AmaTuks made the announcement on their official social media sites on Tuesday just days before the start of 2018-19 lower tier season.

The National First Division side confirmed that Evangelos Vellios‚ a former coach of the university's team in Varsity Football‚ would take charge of the professional side's hot seat for the new season.

"We have amicably parted ways with Shaun Bartlett and have in the meantime appointed Evangelos Vellios as the interim head coach ahead of the 2018-2019 season‚" the club said.

The Pretoria outfit finished 10th in the NFD last season after managing only nine wins and 36 points from 30 games played.

For more infomation >> University of Pretoria 'amicably' part ways with coach Shaun Bartlett - Duration: 1:33.

-------------------------------------------

Briar Cliff University Announces New President - Duration: 1:48.

For more infomation >> Briar Cliff University Announces New President - Duration: 1:48.

-------------------------------------------

Masters of Accounting at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:36.

Our Masters of Accounting program is designed for students who are intending

to take the CPA. It is a full-time program that is typically completed in

one year and students take their classes during the day. We ask professionals what

do you want to see our graduates have more of. One is the exam itself. The

second thing is the education. All 50 states now require you to get 150 hours

of education. One of the great things about the Masters of Accounting is that

it blows those requirements out of the water. We knock out every different

state's requirements. When I shared Loyola's curriculum with my professor he

looked at it compared to some other universities that he was suggesting to

me he said that Loyola would do a lot better job preparing me. With the changes

to the CPA exam, the exams ask higher level questions. In other words

previously it was mostly memorization now it's a lot more about application

and analysis. You've got to be able to apply things. You've got to know what

information is relevant and what's irrelevant. You've got to be able to

prioritize to order things and you've got to do it in a pretty quick scenario.

Loyola does a really good job. If you look at our pass rates our accounting

students pass at a very high rate within the state. So they get very well prepped

for the CPA. There are several things that we want to have our students walk

away with when they come out of the MACc. program. One of them is actually written

communication. If I'm an accountant my job now is to communicate results to

other people. We have built the curriculum specifically to address

writing skills and verbal communication skills and in making reasoned arguments.

A lot of the faculty here they actually worked they have experiences. So as things are

happening in the world in the real business world they can bring that to

our classrooms. So it's a very different feel from the undergraduate kind of you

know learn the stuff, take an exam move on. This is more how can we apply these

kind of items. For our grad students the relationship doesn't end when the class

does and you know the business issues confronting today but you don't know the

business issues you're going to be confronting two or three years from now.

So you're developing a skill set within the student population, but you're also

developing a relationship that lasts well after they graduate from our

programs. You're going to walk out of here as a Masters of Accountancy

graduate, with a bachelor's degree, a graduate degree, internship experience,

and hopefully all parts of your CPA exam passed and you'll be a turnkey package for

any employer. Choosing this road to complete your hundred and fifty hours

worth of education has the clearest path to being hired at the very largest

organizations in the United States if not the world.

For more infomation >> Masters of Accounting at Loyola University Maryland - Duration: 2:36.

-------------------------------------------

John's Clearing Story - Canterbury Christ Church University - Duration: 1:49.

hi I'm John Harrison I study sports and exercise science and this is my

clearing story after I left college I went to China had the opportunity to go

out there to teach English. I found it a great experience and would love to

do it again but the only problem was without a degree its a tall order to get work

out there. I wanted to find a solution of how to get jobs out in another country and my

friend recommended me to go to university for clearing. The reason

why I chose Christ Church University was because my friend went to this

University the year before and he let me stay round a few times

and I had the opportunity to come over and have a feel of university life

I'll just thoroughly enjoyed it and I was just like this is where I have to go really!

Once I went through clearing I got approved to go to the University and

the only thing I struggled with was student finance. I was able to get my

student finance application sorted whilst at the Clearing event. At the Clearing Event

I met lectures and staff in the sports and exercise science program.

I found talking to the lecturers really reassuring and a lot of pressure was

lifted. Their help was very much needed on the day for me to actually be here

now telling you this story. I've learned I'm capable of doing many things that I

wasn't able to do before I used to just hold myself back and now I'll just

go through challenges especially like this. University has told me to go out

there and do it and not be that shy, timid person that I used to be.

For more infomation >> John's Clearing Story - Canterbury Christ Church University - Duration: 1:49.

-------------------------------------------

University of Colorado: Budget Explained - Duration: 4:31.

Most people know that the University of Colorado transforms the lives of our students and enriches

the state through teaching, research, the arts and health care.

What is less well known is that CU is a major economic driver for Colorado, generating

billions in economic activity.

It's the third largest employer in the state, educates more than 65,000 students each year,

and has an annual budget of $4.5 billion.

So with all of this, how does CU's budget work?

CU's revenue comes from several sources: State Funding, Tuition and fees, Research,

Gifts and Fundraising, and Auxiliary Enterprises

These revenues are then grouped into three categories that dictate how they can be used:

Operating, Restricted and Auxiliary.

Operating funding, or Education & General, is the money most people think of when they

talk about running the university.

These dollars are made up of state funding and tuition and fees.

This money pays for things like faculty, student advising, technology, administration and scholarships.

Restricted funds include money received from gifts and research.

It's called Restricted because donors designate what their money supports.

Research grants must be spent according to the terms of the grant.

For example, cancer research grants can only be used to fund cancer research, faculty and

labs.

Auxiliary revenue includes business operations such as dormitories, book stores, parking,

athletics, medical clinics and dining halls.

Auxiliary revenue is limited to specific purposes.

For example, student housing fees are generally used to maintain and operate student housing.

Across CU's campuses, the Operating budget is about 34% of the total.

Over the past two decades, funding for Colorado's higher education system has shifted from the

state to students.

In 2001, state support covered two thirds of the cost at CU, with students picking up

the other third.

Today, that has flipped.

State support per resident CU student has been cut by more than 54 percent.

In fact, Colorado ranks 48th nationally in state support.

We know the state budget is tight, but the good news is the state's economy is healthy.

Over the past few years, Colorado's governor and legislature have reinvested in higher

education, which helps CU Keep tuition in check, Hire and retain quality faculty, Improve

student services, and maintain modern facilities.

The level of state funding in each campus' budget varies.

We can see each of these differences when we look at the operating budget of each of

the four campuses.

Remember, the operating budget is made up of state funding combined with tuition and

fees.

CU Boulder's operating budget is the largest, but only 9% of it comes from the state.

Anschutz is a lot different because 30% of its operating budget comes from the state.

Tuition revenue from resident students is the biggest contributor to budgets at Denver

and Colorado Springs, yet it's the smallest at Anschutz.

Non-resident tuition accounts for the majority of operating funding at Boulder, but less

so at the other three campuses.

Not only is the makeup of operating funding different for each campus, but revenue from

state funding and tuition fluctuates each year.

This means we have to be smart with our money.

How has CU responded to budget challenges?

We've become one of the most efficient, cost-effective university systems in the country.

In the past few years we have found over $112 million in efficiencies.

We have increased fundraising efforts and research awards to record levels.

And we've continued to improve quality, all while keeping resident tuition and fees in

check.

One thing is certain moving forward, CU will remain committed to keeping a strong and balanced

budget so we can meet the needs of our students and our state for generations to come.

For more details visit: www.cu.edu/budget

For more infomation >> University of Colorado: Budget Explained - Duration: 4:31.

-------------------------------------------

Nevada Weekly, University of Nevada, Reno, December 15, 1980 - Duration: 28:50.

Good morning, and welcome to Nevada Weekly. I'm Terrie Nault. My co-host, John

Marcshall, is a little under the weather today, wasn't able to join us, but I'm

glad that you could join us for what will be a very informative show. First up,

we'd like to tell you about a new Women's Center that opened here in the

UNR campus. Our reporter, Rick Oxybie, talked with co-founder, Anne Howard, about

the purpose of the center and about some of the programs that are offered. Rick Oxybie; A few

years ago there was a Women's Resource Center on the UNR campus. It was a

meeting place for women and had a library of women's books and

publications, but because of remodeling of the campus the center disappeared.

Since then, the Director of Women's Studies, Dr. Anne Howard and the Dean of

Student Services, Dr. Roberta Barnes, have been looking for a meeting place for the

older women's students of UNR. Finally, on September 5th, a university owned

house across the street from the campus became the Women's Center and the older

women students had a place to go. Anne Howard; Our purpose is to have a kind of gathering

place for women where small women's group, the women's groups. I don't mean

groups for small women. Small group meetings of women can take place where

there can be counseling for women who want to come back to school, where that

library could be, where someone could go in casually and read in special women's

topics, where we could refer people to groups who might be helpful to them. This

is the general purpose for it. Rick Oxybie; Okay, what kind of women would come to the Women's

Center? Are you looking mainly for women that may be divorced or married or

widowed that want to start again, want to get any new education? Anne Howard; Well, of course

these are among the people we're most concerned with. There are what are called

by the government displaced homemakers or, again, another term they like to use,

is reentry women. This always makes me think that these people are coming

through the atmosphere, but these are the people we're particularly concerned with.

Since we're a university group, any woman on campuses, of course, welcome over there

and our volunteers, for example, range in age from about seventeen to ages which women

don't tell their age. We are particularly concerned with these older women who

come back to school because we have to accept the fact that the university

isn't generally geared toward people in their late adolescence and early twenties,

even though now a majority of our students are over twenty-five. Now, women,

particularly, who may have been divorced and find themselves without any skills

for a job, women who may have been widowed and find children that they must

support and find themselves unable to deal with these requirements, are welcome

at the Women's Center. We try to help them. We have academic counseling

available. We try to direct women to occupy to the correct institution. The

Women's Center, as a matter of fact, is a joint venture, in many ways, with Truckee

Meadows Community College, where we have gotten a great deal of help out with,

from Pat Miltenberger, the Dean of Students up there, and our efforts have

been primarily to try to appeal to these women, who find sometimes the terribly

youthful atmosphere on the campus a little shocking, yet as a shock to them

that is, yet we don't like to suggest that there is an age limit. Many of these

women are just very well to returning to school. Some of them go back to school

with their daughters. Others, on the other hand, feel, as many have told me, "well I'm

the oldest person in my class. I don't think I can move as quickly as these

young people", when actually in the long run it seems to me that the more mature

student is, most frequently a very reliable, very responsible, very

productive student, so we're looking to help these people, particularly, those who

feel a little insecure coming back into a world some of them have never

been in before and we tried to meet their needs. Rick Oxybie; Where are some of the

programs of the Women's Center will be offering? What kind of activities when

you have there to help the older women adjust? Anne Howard; Well, right now we are the place

for the student services departments, has sponsored a series of noon time workshops

for returning students, that have covered such topics as budgeting, academic

requirements, study skills, how to respond to stress. These have been held Wednesday

noon for well, that's open to women and men. Last time, we had a couple of men and

a few women. People bring their lunches and various people on campus speak to

these groups. We have, starting next week or the week after, a group of a series of

programs on the discipline for displaced homemakers, again, that strange term, which

are being co-sponsored by well, primarily sponsored by Truckee Meadows Community

College and alternate programs will meet at the Women's Center and at Truckee

Meadows Community College and, again, these are geared to helping people adapt

to the change in their status, which they acquire when they go back to school. Rick Oxybie; Do

you see any problems? Do you foresee any problems in getting a lot of women to

go there and making this a success? Anne Howard; Well, most of all, people have to know that

it's there and that there are people participating. We don't have any money to

speak of. This is funded on a good deal of optimism and charity. We've had a lot

of cooperation from the University, but not very much money. This is, of course, an

old story. We do work with volunteers and, I think, there are always problems with a

volunteer group. It's great if you immediately have a public response, but

very few things get started immediately with a public response. We feel that we

need to let people know that it's there, especially those women who may be helped.

Now, some women's groups are already interested in us. The Committee to Aid

Abused Women, for example, is having its training sessions at the Women's Center,

and so, we hope that women's groups will spread the word and we hope, soon, to

have a gathering of them what's known nowm as

the Women's Network in townm which is very informal group of mostly

professional and business women, who meet for lunch once a month, and we hope that

in November, we will have this group meet at the center and, perhaps, after that so

that more people will know about it. We like to think that we're going to work

on the matter of individual referral, anyone who has a question is certainly

welcome to call our center. Our hours are limited and we just got a

phone about three days ago. So, a good many people don't know about us yet. Rick Oxybie; Although

the Women's Center was without a telephone during its first month of

operation, Dr. Howard says the response has been encouraging. Women's groups have

been attending the programs at the center and some twenty volunteers are

helping to plan more programs. The center welcome suggestions from groups that

would like to help women build their own programs. Some older women returning to

school are confident and successful at UNR, while others have a difficult time

adjusting to the new environment. Dr. Howard sees the Woman's Center as a

place where the successful woman's student can talk to the insecure one and

show her that she can do it too. For Nevada Weekly, this is Rick Oxybie, reporting.

Terrie Nault; The center is open from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and

Wednesday evenings from 7:00 to 10:00. It's located across the campus at 1201

North Virginia Street and if you'd like more information, do call the center at

seven eight four four six one one and men, Dr. Howard said, you are most welcome

too. On our next story, we'd like to introduce you, once again, to Art Johnson,

who is Director of our Atmospherium Planetarium. Art attended a meeting of

planetarium directors in Los Angeles. He's president of that organization and

while he was there, he was able to obtain first-hand information and photographs

of the recent Saturn flyby. He talked with Jock Scocroft about this exciting

event. Jock Scocroft; Art, you and your fellow planetarium people gathered at Griffith

Observatory in Los Angeles, I understand, to and see what unveiled at the Saturn

Saturn flyby, the Voyager 2. What did you learn? What

surprised you? Was it lot of excitement? Art Johnson; Well, indeed it was. The meeting I went to,

incidentally, was the Pacific Planetarium Association's Fall Conference, so we did

more than just look at Saturn pictures, but I don't think any of us there would

have would have missed the Saturn portion of the program. Of course, there

were lots of surprises. Its it was almost literally like discovering a new world

because we had never been to Saturn before with equipment this good that

could give use this clear. We had a hint about a year ago when the Pioneer went

by Saturn. You may remember we did go near Saturn once before with a

spacecraft, but the quality of the TV cameras on board the Voyager, having been

manufactured many years after the Pioneer ones, just gave us such superior

pictures that in a very real sense we were seeing the planet for the first

time. Jock Scocroft; The things that seemed surprised people were the rings and the moon's, not

Saturn, itself. Art Johnson; Well, that's right the rings and moons probably were surprising

because we can see their surfaces and their nature much better than we can

that of the clouded, banded, shrouded, ball of the planet Saturn. When you and I were

in school, we learned that Saturn had, I think, nine moons if I recall rightly and

Jupiter had twelve. Well, now, of course, we say Jupiter has fourteen and as far as I

know Saturn is believed now to have at least fifteen moons, which makes it the

most moon-y. Excuse me, that's not the right choice of words, but that's the

most moon endowed planet in the solar system, as far as one can tell. It turned

out when we were kids we thought Saturn might have three rings, like the circus.

Now, we think it may have as many as a thousand of, which three, aren't on center.

Their shifted. Their their middles don't coincide with the middle of the planet,

but the other nine hundred and ninety seven rings do. Jock Scocroft; Then, this comes into

conflict with some considered laws of physics, does it not? Art Johnson; Yes, it seemed to. It

was said by one of the researchers, I guess, before a press conference at the

time, "Gee the laws of physics as we understand them don't seem to work here".

It's tempting to say, of course, in a big banner headline that Saturn breaks

natural laws. Well, I'm sure it doesn't. It's just that, perhaps, we didn't

understand the laws well enough or there may be new laws we didn't know

about before. I tend to think the former is true. I was just talking with Jordan

Marche, who's on our staff, and has a degree in astronomy so we assume he's

the most knowledgeable astronomer on the premises and he is of the opinion,

perhaps, these rings, the ones that are offset here, are very recently formed. Now,

the theories about how Saturn's rings got there are several, but essentially

they all kind of boil down to the idea that some other object came too close to

Saturn to survive. The mathematician Roche, about a hundred and fifty years

ago, showed that if you get a moon larger than about two or three hundred miles

and it gets too close to the parent body, the gravity of that planet will pull the

moon to pieces and if you'll think about that, here's the parent body over here

and here's the moon and what you've got is a differential gravitation, that is

because this side of the moon is closer to the planet than that side is, they get

different amounts of pull and eventually you get a stress buildup in the moon

fractures and fragments and we think this may be how the rings of Saturn form.

So, these three eccentric rings, as we call them, may be newly formed. We don't

know. Why there should be a thousand of them? Why they don't all blend into a

nice homogeneous ring? We don't quite understand yet, nor do we understand that

outermost ring, the F ring, which seemed to have knots and kinks and braids in it,

again, things that that oughtn't to be there but are. Jock Scocroft; There's some talk of a

shepherd the satellite or a shepherd moon. Art Johnson; Yes, there are satellites as it

turns out, just outside and just inside, where the F ring is and it is currently

being discussed and speculated that, perhaps, their gravitational forces kind

of work as shepherds to keep that funny little kinky, and that's the right word

for the F ring, in place. We'll have a picture of the F ring for our viewers on

the monitor, I think, in just a second. Jock Scocroft; The Voyager, this is Voyager 1. Now, Voyager 2

is coming along soon. Art Johnson; It's already on its way. Both were launched within a few

weeks of one another, but because they took somewhat different paths to get

there, going by Jupiter, Voyager 2 won't arrive until next August, I believe,

but Voyager 2, if it survives, will really be a bonus spacecraft bonus because a

we've already been decided once so anything we get is kind of gravy out of

the second one, but also a bonus because it may be targeted to go out to the

planets Uranus and Neptune, so we may get three, four planets for the price

of a six-pack per person. That's how it worked out, as it turns out. Somebody who

likes to talk statistics figured out that for every taxpayer, this entire

mission cost the equivalent of a six-pack of beer. Jock Scocroft; Alright. Yeah, I know

what I get with a six-pack of beer. What do you suppose I can expect to get apart

from better understanding of the universe? Do you see any practical

applications to anything that's been learned on this mission?

Art Johnson; Well, almost certainly. One point that everybody likes to make, but it's a good

one, is that not one dollar of the cost of the mission was spent out in space at where

Saturn is. It was all spent here, presumably, giving good people jobs. Then, one can

speak about simply the altruistic motives of that humans have about

wanting to learn about their environment. One can talk about the, so called,

spin-off technologies because a lot of the research that went into designing

the television cameras, the electronic components, and other things have had

applications here on our home planet, making our life quality better. One could

go on. Some people believe that it is the fact that we humans are curious about

our environments that has allowed us to survive. Without Columbus's voyage, or

without curiosity on the part of Louis Pasteur, or without curiosity on the part

of a hundred other scientists. Our quality of life wouldn't be what it is,

certainly, and some don't think we would even have survived as a species on the

planet without this peculiar desire to explore and find out more about the

universe. Jock Scocroft: Of course, there are these wonderful pictures that came out from

the Voyager 2. There were other tests run as well. Did we get any surprises, well

first of all, with the nature of some of these tests, and did we get any surprises

there? Art Johnson; I think so. Some of those data, incidentally, have still not been

released. Of course, what happened was, we swooped past the planet in about two

days, that real close encounter part of the mission and far more data were being

gathered than could be analyzed and understood so quickly, so a lot of it was

computer tapes and is even now being subjected to its first scrutiny, but yes,

some things were found other than picture data that were surprising. We

found out that Titan seems to have a lot of nitrogen in its atmosphere. We used to

think differently, incidentally, we found also that Titan has a very smoggy opaque

kind of an atmosphere. It had been very greatly anticipated that Titan would

give us all kinds of beautiful picture surprises. It didn't. It was very cloudy,

very hazy. Jock Scocroft; You seemed to be disappointed in Titan. Art Johnson; Yes, but just the fact that it's

different from what we thought, is interesting, and we did find out what its

atmosphere is made of. I mentioned that several new moons were discovered. We

found out things about the magnetic field of Saturn, which weren't known

before, information about the internal makeup of the planet, some things have

been learned, although that's sort of a tough nut to crack, if you don't actually

go into the planet deeply, you can't really know for sure what's down there.

We do know that Saturn is the only planet of the solar system with a

density less than that of water, which means it has to be made up of

lightweight stuff, mostly just gases or liquids because when you compress a gas

greatly, it becomes a liquid or even a solid. Jock Scocroft; Now, some of these new moons that

we discovered, for instance, the there was one that was horribly pockmarked. Someone

said that uh... Art Johnson; Right, Nemis is the moon, I believe. It has a crater on it, about one-fourth

the diameter of the moon itself. Now, that's a little surprising that it could

have survived that crater formations. It's, we believe these craters happen

when space rocks crash into something and make a hole just like a bomb crater

on Earth, when you throw a pebble into some gooey mud, you make a crater.

Well, this crater is so big that it's a wonder that its impact, the meteoroids

impact, didn't actually fragment the moon. It's a wonder that the moon survived at

all, but there it is and you can see that great big eye blinking out at you. It

looks like an eye, a big crater on that moon. Jock Scocroft; And, that that moon apparently had

been undisturbed. All the craters that, apparently, had been made had been

preserved, that there'd been no erosion and no corrosion. Art Johnson; Right, that's what one

expects when you have a moon such as this where there isn't any atmosphere.

If a moon is too small, it's gravity is weak and so weak that it won't hold an

atmosphere, and atmospheres allow us to have erosion.

Without an atmosphere on Earth, we'd have no storms, no dust blowing around, no

running water, and so even as on our own moon, of course, a little moon that has no

atmosphere won't erode very much, and so craters that formed four billion

years ago will be visible right along with some that might have happened this

week. Jock Scocroft; Did you, what what aspect of this whole thing thrilled you the most? What uh...

Art Johnson; Oh, personally, I guess, it would have had to have been the rings. There's one

beautiful picture and, I think we'll be seeing it on our screens, that shows not

a thousand perhaps but hundreds and hundreds of individual moons and just

just the breathtaking clarity of this picture astounds me because I can

remember so well when I was in the seventh grade and got my first telescope

and we looked at Saturn, my gosh you could just about tell that, yeah there

was a ring there, and that was was neat. Galileo was the first person to see the

rings of Saturn but his telescope was of such indifferent quality, being first in

the world, you know, and made from old spectacles and things. All he could see

was kind of a hazy blur at either side of the globe of the planet, so he wrote "I

wonder why it is that Saturn has ears?" He thought he could see ears on

the planet Saturn well. Then, a few years later, we were in such a

position the earth was, that we saw the rings edge-on and they're so thin that

seen edge-on they almost disappear. In fact, to Galileo they did, and so he

wondered what had become of the ears of the planet Saturn. So, to me the the rings

and the discoveries about them, the clearer views of them, were the most

exciting aspect of the mission. Jock Scocroft; Now, there's not much money in the in the

till for long-range space research, deep research. Hypothetically, if we had the

money, if we had a program that was going out, another program to follow Voyager,

what would it be and where would it go and what would it find? Art Johnson; We do have one

more program, Jock, that is likely to be funded, at least certain aspects of it

are, and I think it's going to fly, literally, that is the so-called Galileo

probe to Jupiter and the name of it, of course, honors the man who first really

got a good look at Jupiter. That will go in a few years and, I believe, we'll send

some sort of a vehicle into the Jovian atmosphere, if I understand the plans

correctly. That's very good because Jupiter is

prototypical of all the outer planets. It's the first and largest of the gas

giants. All the planets from Jupiter, all the way out through Neptune, are kind of

alike. They're all very gaseous worlds, whereas all the ones closer than Jupiter

are more like the earth. They have solid rocky surfaces, most of which, we can see.

So, to explore Jupiter more is going to give us a kind of a a model or a

detailed picture of one of the gas giant planets and that should kind of help us

to know what the others are all the way up through Neptune. Pluto is the one that

we really got to go see because Pluto is different.

Pluto's another rocky planet. It's also been found recently to be at the

very tiniest. We used to think that mercury was the smallest, but recent

discoveries with Earth-based telescopes told us that Pluto is even smaller and

it's got a moon called Chiron. It's very very strange little world at the very

edge of the solar system, so far away that it's light takes five-and-a-half

hours to get back to the earth. Why is there a weird little rock like planet

out there after all these big gas giants? Nobody's quite sure. Some say a captured

asteroid. Others have different ideas, but Pluto would be a fun world to go to with

a spacecraft. Jock Scocroft; We're doing some research to the course the space shuttle is is

near space, not not far space. The Russians have been doing a great deal of

manned manned space probing in the in the near near space. What are they

getting out of this? Are they getting ahead of us, so they scooping us on a lot

of technical things that we should be up on? Art Johnson; Sure, it is a highly judgmental word, I

don't know, we all have our opinions. I suppose they're doing an awful lot of

discovery about humans in space. They certainly have far more hours of space

experience than we have. What their long-range views are are not totally clear.

One talks about the idea of eventual space colonization, manufacturing in

space, some ideas which, incidentally, we'll be exploring in one of our

planetarium shows this coming spring, pardon me.

So, there are ample things for humans to explore out there. Jock Scocroft; Are they sharing this

knowledge with us, what they're what they're gleaning out there? Art Johnson; Some,

certainly, but even a couple of cooperations are going to maintain

proprietary information and I'm quite certain they're not telling us

everything that they're discovering. Jock Scocroft; You sort of precluded one of my questions.

What can we expect to see at the Atmospherium Planetarium, in regard to

the jubilee, the flyby the Saturn flyby? Art Johnson; We'll have some pictures on display

there and probably a show next fall. My voice is starting to to go on me here,

Jock. This has never happened before on television, excuse me. Jock Scocroft; The Atmospherium

Planetarium, of course, on the University of Nevada-Reno campus, is a fascinating

place that suggests that you get up there and check out the the program. "The

Star of Wonder", which would be playing through Christmas time, right.

Thank You. Terrie Nault; The University of Nevada-Reno is very proud of its new marching band,

the first marching band the universitie's had in a long long time. It was a success

and our reporter, Rick Oxybie, takes you behind the scenes to tell you

a little bit more about the band. Rick Oxybie; The scene is the 1980 University of Nevada-

Reno homecoming parade and for the first time in nearly a decade, it is being led

by a UNR marching band. After such a long absence,

the band's revival was the direct result of the renaissance of the UNR football

program.

Because of the renewed interest in UNR football,

many enthusiastic supporters pushed for and helped fund the band.

Besides the homecoming parade, the band has performed at halftime of every home

Wolfpack football game, and it led this year's Nevada Day Parade in Carson City.

In January of this year, the development and direction of the band was handed to

UNR music professor, A.G. McGranahan the Third, known by his

students and others as Mac. He had to order new uniforms and equipment and

hire graduate assistants before September 6th, but the toughest obstacle,

was recruiting members. Mac McGranahan; Going around the high schools, trying to talk up a program

that has never existed, that's, you know, it's kind of difficult to do, so mainly

in area high schools here. We did a lot of recruiting by mail, by phone, trying to

get interested seniors to make their decision to come to UNR and be in our

band program. Rick Oxybie; After organizing and recruiting the band, McGranahan was faced

with the task of taking a hundred and sixteen students, forty-five of which had never marched before, and

preparing them for the first performance which was only three weeks away. Mac McGranahan; We

started before school was in session. It was about an eight-hour day for eight or

nine days and then we began our regular schedule, which now, is we rehearse as a

band from 4 o'clock to 6 o'clock in the evenings Tuesday through Friday. Monday

we're off. Rick Oxybie; Getting the routines down for halftime shows was often very

frustrating for McGranahan and his band, but it was often fun at the same

time. Mac McGranahan; Scott, hey hold it. Sing your parts this time. Just sing em'. Ready.

Here we go.

[Miscellaneous]

Rick Oxybie; Directing the band on the field is drum major, Dan [inaudible],

a music major, who hopes to teach music in the future. He enjoys his role

with a band and doesn't really mind the practice time doesn't fit into schedule well.

Dan; It does take a lot of my time, so I have to take a light load in the fall, but I

enjoy it and I don't regret taking it at all. Rick Oxybie; McGranahan says the public's response

to the marching band has been terrific. He thanks the tremendous support of

enthusiastic boosters and especially his graduate assistants, Larry Machado, Shelly

Smithwick, and John Whacker, for the appreciation the band has received.

Things have gone relatively smoothly for McGranahan and the band in their

first year together. They had no real problems until the middle of the season,

anyway, when they were caught in an embarrassing predicament at the

homecoming game. Mac McGranahan; Problems, actually, we didn't encounter any problems into our

homecoming game and we were out on the field past one o'clock and we cost our

team fifteen-yard penalty. That's the only major problem I know of at this point.

Rick Oxybie; The 1980 football season is over and the new band has done its last UNR halftime

show, but if McGranahan gets his wish, the marching band will have another

performance to prepare for before the end of the school year. He hopes to have

the band represent Nevada at the inaugural parade in Washington, DC. Nearly

ten years ago, the UNR marching band died because of a lack of interest and

funding. Will the new bands suffer the same fate as its predecessor? McGranahan

doesn't think so. Mac McGranahan; I think it's a tradition. I think it's here to stay for,

probably last forever.

Rick Oxybie; For Nevada Weekly, this is Rick Oxybie, reporting.

Terrie Nault; Thank you for joining us this morning, hope you enjoyed the show and be sure to

tune in on Sunday December 21st and that's at 6:30 p.m. for Nevada Weekly's

Christmas Special. John will be back. We'll be looking for you then. Have a

good day.

[Music]

For more infomation >> Nevada Weekly, University of Nevada, Reno, December 15, 1980 - Duration: 28:50.

-------------------------------------------

Amber's Clearing Story - Canterbury Christ Church University - Duration: 2:37.

7:00 a.m. I wake from a sleep that hadn't been slept as a feeling of dread

rose into my throat with my heart and my head was a whirlpool of emotions. I look

at the screen which seems brighter than the future ahead as the words replay in

my head, "These results will affect the rest of your life"

your children your job your husband or wife your whole career path and as far

as my thoughts the screen loads how my results read: A C D C

I'm on the highway to hell and as my heart fell into the pit of my stomach I knew

what I was to expect next was rejection. Your application has been unsuccessful

and we wish you well for the future and as I stare at the computer it's hard

for me to be proud of myself. What now? where do I go from here?

The fear of the unknown as I pick up the phone and ring and ring and ring!

But one seems to understand how hard I tried the tears I cried the, "I'm Fines'' I lie

through my teeth to get the results that I did and even though I got that a grade

in the subject that I wanted to pursue the D grade kept pushing its way through

into the unwanted limelight to cast me into the darkness.

I call her University in a little city called Canterbury hoping and praying but

expecting rejection again. They pick up the phone. "Can I ask for your grades?"

I feel a lump in my throat and I choked as I say C,D,C and an A. I winced as I waited

to hear that I would not be at uni for the next three years but instead she

said, "Well done on your a you must be so proud" and a wash of relief tumbled over

my body just to hear somebody acknowledge my achievements and they

offered me a place. And just like that my view of things changed

because I took control of my future and wouldn't let my results stop me from

reaching my potential in a place that wasn't judgmental

and look at me now, the fear of not being proud of myself has been washed

away when I now hear them say you're a graduate BE PROUD.

For more infomation >> Amber's Clearing Story - Canterbury Christ Church University - Duration: 2:37.

-------------------------------------------

How To Apply For Dhaka University Admission Test - Duration: 8:34.

SonaleTk

So Friends How are you ?

Which Topic I will discus with you toady

That is how to apply dhaka university for admission test

At first i am going to chorom browser

In this address bar you type

Admission.eis.du.ac.bd

You will go this link

After this link you will find like this web site

This is dhaka university official web site

Look here importants dates

Which unit's exam when will be start all dates are here

Beside have notice page here is all unit details

I am clicking all unit notice

After clicking see

If you want to apply cha unit click cha nidreshika.pdf

You can download this for more details

I am now downloading this notice

see this is cha unit nidresikha

Here is all details about your admission

you will see this

Or if you want to apply another unit then you can see all notice

Now I am going to home page

If you want to lode bengali just click bangla sonskoron

For apply I am clicking login

Looks here

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét