Chinese and UK scientists awarded for SDG work shanghaiist.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from shanghaiist.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
On the latest episode of Bankadelic, host Lou Carlozo gathers five financial services guests in a “Bank to School” special that raises the GPA to new heights.…
Gin Blossoms Live in Concert!! cherryfm.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cherryfm.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Humanities Research Institute at the University of Illinois has a new podcast,
Off the Shelf: Revolutionary Readings in the Time of Crises, hosted by Augustus Wood. The podcast will feature conversations with Black scholars on campus. The first episode launched last week, and features Professor Lou Turner. From the podcast description: Professor Lou Turner (Planning at Illinois) makes the case for why we should all know the life and work of Hal Baron, a sometimes hidden but deeply influential figure in the struggles against institutional racism and economic inequality. Spanning decades and multiple movements, the conversation uncovers Baron s prescient insights into the rise of white nationalism.
water can rush through it sort of like a pier on the beach, and have the more solid information higher up. this, of course, works only as long as the tsunami is not bigger that you expected. if it s bigger, of course, your building is eventually going to collapse. what about the power of the water as it rushes in? that has to have a huge impact and determines whether or not your structure can withstand the force. that s dedefein dependent on water depths as it rushes in. as you ve seen in the videos, the white waters on the horizon approaching, and debris-laden water rushing in, typically the water is moving at the speed of the wave is moving, which is digit to what you witness when you go swimming on the beach because there the water is moving slower than the wave is moving. this is important. i ve had tweets about this. professor lou, help us understand this.