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Take a break from whatever you re doing and immerse yourself in San Francisco history and the travels of James J. Siegel in The God of San Francisco, a revelatory and uplifting title for a city that has known many gods. Here s the God of us LGBTQ people whether longtime San Franciscans still centered in the axis of gay culture, or those new who ve recently come to the country s capital of continual reinvention. In either case, these poems sense that there is something about the city now gone, forever lost, but here in the poems, moments enduring. Siegel dives to a central location, an unofficial landmark, sites we still meet for sidewalk coffee, or once met to slither through and to cackle at the night, from Daddy s to Moby Dick and the forty-five-year-old Badlands, which permanently closed its doors this past summer. In December 1, we re called to remember, or to first learn, one of countless moments of elegy with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence: ....
GoodsHomeDesign Posted December 24, 2020 12:24am UTC by designer The ancient Babylonian tablet, known as Plimpton 322 was discovered by Edgar K. Banks, who later became the inspiration for the Indiana Jones movie series. The tablet discovered in Iraq almost 100 years ago, is made of clay and thought to be 3,700-year-old. Banks sold it to George Plimpton for $10 but now the significance of the tablet and its importance to mathematics is started to become more clear. Two professors from the University of New South Wales, have worked on cracking the code and learned that trigonometry was discovered not by Greeks, but by ancient Babylonians and the numbers of the Plimpton 322 are part of a trigonometric table. It is believed to be the foundation of trigonometry that uses ratios and not angles or circles. It is the work of pure genius and sheds a light on other ancient Babylonian tablets discovered by archaeologists. ....
Take a break from whatever you re doing and immerse yourself in San Francisco history and the travels of James J. Siegel in The God of San Francisco, a revelatory and uplifting title for a city that has known many gods. Here s the God of us LGBTQ people whether longtime San Franciscans still centered in the axis of gay culture, or those new who ve recently come to the country s capital of continual reinvention. In either case, these poems sense that there is something about the city now gone, forever lost, but here in the poems, moments enduring. Siegel dives to a central location, an unofficial landmark, sites we still meet for sidewalk coffee, or once met to slither through and to cackle at the night, from Daddy s to Moby Dick and the forty-five-year-old Badlands, which permanently closed its doors this past summer. In December 1, we re called to remember, or to first learn, one of countless moments of elegy with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence: ....
Four Princeton faculty members awarded NEH grants Jamie Saxon, Office of Communications Dec. 21, 2020 9:24 a.m. Four Princeton faculty members have received research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Alison Isenberg, professor of history, received a $30,000 grant for research and writing “Uprisings: The Impact of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Assassination and the Case of Trenton, New Jersey, a book on unrest in Trenton, New Jersey, in the aftermath of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Beth Lew-Williams, associate professor of history, received a $60,000 grant for research and writing “Race and Law in the American West, 1850–1924,” a book on Chinese immigrants and the law in the American West, 1850–1924. ....