[MARINE_BIOLOGY_INTERNATIONAL] Aquarium undergoes massive expansion

 

Aquarium undergoes massive expansion

Monday, 31 Jan 2011, 6:21 PM EST

Steve Nichols
FOX 13 Pinellas reporter

CLEARWATER - The Clearwater Marine Aquarium plans a $12 million expansion, hopefully to be largely completed before the September release of "Winter: A Dolphin's Tale."

The motion picture features Winter, the Aquarium's star attraction. She lost her tail when it became entangled a crab trap line, but was later fitted with a prosthesis and has been featured in broadcast and print articles around the world.

The expansion will essentially create a new Clearwater Marine Aquarium: new lobby and gift shop area, new restrooms, and much larger facilities for treating rescued dolphin and sea turtles.

"We'll go from about 400,000 gallons now to about 2 million gallons," said director David Yates.

Instead of gathering around a railing for dolphin shows, the public will sit in a 1,000 seat outdoor auditorium. There will also be a new parking garage and additional surface parking.

Yates and Pinellas tourism officials expect a big impact from the big screen production, much of which was filmed in the Clearwater area and at the Aquarium. Asked about attendance, Yates said "Right now we do about 200,000 a year. We could easily be at a half million, easily next year, if not more than that."

Pinellas tourism advertising features the newly-opened Dali Museum right now, but that will switch to Winter later this year.

One visitor from Canada endorses the strategy. Eight-year old Jordan Aslip said she waited "her whole life" to see Winter, ever since her grandmother sent her a news clip about the dolphin with a prosthetic tail.

After finally getting her wish, Jordan said "I think more kids will want to come see Winter and see, 'can she actually swim like that?' Because they'll want to know, 'can she do that?'"

Jordan thinks the reality sets Winter apart from other motion picture characters.

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
.

__,_._,___

[forensic-science] Diabetes and livor mortis.

 

Hi, this is my first post here.

I was wondering if diabetes can affect the rate at which livor mortis is fixed. There is a cold case I have been looking into, and I'm trying to figure out the time of death for one of the victims. I would appreciate any information on this. Thanks

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
To subscribe send a blank e-mail to:  forensic-science-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
To unsubscribe send a blank e-mail to:  forensic-science-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

Group home page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/forensic-science
From the home page you can search the list archives.  It also includes links to forensic science sites and allows you to modify your account settings.
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Find useful articles and helpful tips on living with Fibromyalgia. Visit the Fibromyalgia Zone today!

.

__,_._,___

e-NASS EUROCLIO January Newsletter 2011!

 

Dear friend,
 
We are pleased to present you with the first EUROCLIO Newsletter for 2011!  
 
Get informed about the EUROCLIO Board & Secretariat, Member & Partner Activities
and the developments within the EUROCLIO Projects in Europe and beyond.

 
Please follow the link to download the Newsletter:
http://www.euroclio.eu/site/index.php/news-mainmenu-730/euroclio-newsletters-mainmenu-408/doc_download/889-newsletter-2011-01

 
If you have difficulties opening the file, please feel free to contact us!
 
Keep the EUROCLIO wider network up-to-date sending information about interesting
developments in the field of History Education in your Organisation and country
to Maria Kazamiaki at maria@euroclio.nl

 
 
If you don���t want to receive the EUROCLIO Newsletter anymore, please send us an
e-mail to Maria Kazamiaki at maria@euroclio.nl
 
 
We are looking forward to hearing from you!
 
 
Kind regards,
 
 
Maria Kazamiaki
 
EUROCLIO, European Association of History Educators
Communications Manager
 
Laan van Meerdervoort 70
2517 AN The Hague
The Netherlands
 
+31 (0)70 3817836 (phone)
+31 (0)70 3853669 (fax)
maria@euroclio.nl
www.euroclio.eu

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
e-Network of Academia in Social Sciences (e-NASS)

Scientia est potentia (Francis Bacon)
Ilim ilim bilmektir/Ilim kendin bilmektir (Yunus Emre)

The e-NASS, outnumbering 5300 subscribers, aims to deepen interaction for further inter/intra/trans/multi-disciplinary communication within the academic community of scholars, professionals and students from all branches of social sciences. The language of communication at e-NASS is English; however, contributions in other languages are highly welcomed should they include an abstract in English. This e-network enthusiastically encourages its members to disseminate and share announcements of Call for Papers, Fellowships/Scholarships, Conferences, Graduate Programs, Websites, Publications, Summer Schools, Jobs, Internships and etc. If you have any scholarly announcement concerning social sciences, please do not hesitate to share it within this e-community. The e-NASS is essentially generalist to revive renaissance wo/men with global and historical perspectives covering from the mist-shrouded steppes of Asia to the sun-drenched African, American and European shores without neglecting the exotic Oceania. In order to protect its subscribers vis-�-vis the virus-spreading, hoax and spam e-mails, the e-NASS is strictly moderated while e-mails containing attachments are automatically removed. This e-network discourages commercial advertisements as well as it is essentially irrelevant to any form of activism or advocacy of any particular perspective. Thus, messages of discussions, demonstrations and calls to action are not permitted. When forwarding e-NASS announcements to your friends and other e-groups, signifying e-NASS as the source will be highly appreciated as extent of your courtesy.
Murat Cemrek, PhD

Subscription: e-NASS-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Daily Digest: e-NASS-digest@yahoogroups.com
Website     : http://www.e-nass.net/ (under construction)
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Get great advice about dogs and cats. Visit the Dog & Cat Answers Center.

.

__,_._,___

e-NASS This program will have the opportunity

 


<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html>

This program will have the opportunity
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html>

The legal assistant usually works under the supervision of an attorney
and assumes part of the attorney's workload, freeing the attorney
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html> for tasks
that only attorneys are qualified to perform. The students in this
program will have the opportunity to select from a range of legal
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html>
specializations, which will more fully prepare
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html> the student
for employment in an area that is of interest to the student. This
program is designed to be an extension of the Associate
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html> in Science
Degree Program with a Major. This is not a pre-law program.

<<<<<More detail>>>>>
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/legal-studies.html>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
e-Network of Academia in Social Sciences (e-NASS)

Scientia est potentia (Francis Bacon)
Ilim ilim bilmektir/Ilim kendin bilmektir (Yunus Emre)

The e-NASS, outnumbering 5300 subscribers, aims to deepen interaction for further inter/intra/trans/multi-disciplinary communication within the academic community of scholars, professionals and students from all branches of social sciences. The language of communication at e-NASS is English; however, contributions in other languages are highly welcomed should they include an abstract in English. This e-network enthusiastically encourages its members to disseminate and share announcements of Call for Papers, Fellowships/Scholarships, Conferences, Graduate Programs, Websites, Publications, Summer Schools, Jobs, Internships and etc. If you have any scholarly announcement concerning social sciences, please do not hesitate to share it within this e-community. The e-NASS is essentially generalist to revive renaissance wo/men with global and historical perspectives covering from the mist-shrouded steppes of Asia to the sun-drenched African, American and European shores without neglecting the exotic Oceania. In order to protect its subscribers vis-�-vis the virus-spreading, hoax and spam e-mails, the e-NASS is strictly moderated while e-mails containing attachments are automatically removed. This e-network discourages commercial advertisements as well as it is essentially irrelevant to any form of activism or advocacy of any particular perspective. Thus, messages of discussions, demonstrations and calls to action are not permitted. When forwarding e-NASS announcements to your friends and other e-groups, signifying e-NASS as the source will be highly appreciated as extent of your courtesy.
Murat Cemrek, PhD

Subscription: e-NASS-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Daily Digest: e-NASS-digest@yahoogroups.com
Website     : http://www.e-nass.net/ (under construction)
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Get great advice about dogs and cats. Visit the Dog & Cat Answers Center.

.

__,_._,___

[MARINE_BIOLOGY_INTERNATIONAL] Whales return to seas off New York City

 


Whales return to New
York City: Massive
mammals appearing
again in seas near city;
draws sightseers

BY Barbara Ross
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Sunday, January 30th 2011, 9:06 AM

Whales, dolphins and seals have made a triumphant
return to the waters just outside New York Harbor -
and the comeback has even sparked whale and seal-
watching tours.

Tom Paladino, captain of two ferry boats from the
Rockaways, says pods of aquatic mammals off the
city's coast have "increased tenfold."

"We used to see 10 whales a year - now we see 100,"
he said. "We saw dolphins almost on a daily basis
between June and September."

There are so many more seals in New York Harbor
that earlier this month he started weekend tours on
his ferry, American Princess.

On one trip last weekend, he counted 14 lolling on
a small island off Staten Island.

Cornell UniversityProf. Chris Clark estimates that as
many as 30 to 50 fin whales now live full-time in the
waters just past the Verrazano Bridge.

Acoustical monitors installed by Cornell in and near
the harbor discovered six species of whales touring
the New York-New Jersey bite - "a real menagerie of
giants," he said.

Blue whales are also among those showing up off
NYC shores (Fleetham/Visuals Unlimited, Inc.)

Experts say anti-hunting laws and cleaner waters
may have brought back whales and their cousins
after being largely absent for a century.

The numbers are "far, far more than expected, even
for me," Clark said. "I've been surprised elsewhere in
the world, but off New York - yikes!"

Much of the data was collected by a federally funded
study by Cornell and the state Department of
Environmental Conservation.

When acoustical traps were laid in New York waters
in 2008, researchers were surprised to hear not
only the 20-minute serenades of humpbacks, but a
cacophony of other fish making a racket, Clark said.

"Black drum fish lit up the night with their choruses.
Males were out there singing their hearts out: 'Hey
Baby! Hey Baby! Hey Baby!' There's a cornucopia of
life 10 miles off the Verrazano Bridge. It's mind-
boggling!" he said.

Officials said the study was supposed to last three
years but was abandoned when a DEC official
overseeing the project quit to get her doctorate.
Budget cuts made it impossible to hire a
replacement.

Clark said the whale study needs to be revived
because no one knows the extent of whale activity
around New York Harbor - or how best to protect
them.

Environmentalists are especially worried about
endangered species like the Right Whale, spotted
locally along with Humpback, Fin, Sei, Minke and
Blue whales.

The Right Whale is the slowest-moving local
species, traveling at no more than 10 knots, and is
the most prone to being killed by ships.

Clark is hoping to raise $1 million to revive the
whale study and install a sophisticated monitoring
system like one in Boston that notified boats to slow
down.

"We don't know what's off our coastline," said
Maureen Murphy of the Citizens Campaign for the
Environment. "I know more from 19th century books
than I do from anything printed in the last century."

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Find useful articles and helpful tips on living with Fibromyalgia. Visit the Fibromyalgia Zone today!

.

__,_._,___

e-NASS CfP: 7th CEU Conference in Social Sciences, May 27-29, 2011

 

7TH CEU Conference in Social Sciences
�&#65533;&#65533;What Follows after the Crisis? Approaches to Global Transformations�&#65533;&#65533;
Central European University
May 27-29, 2011
http://ceuconf2011.wordpress.com/panels/

The 7th Conference in Social Sciences is structured on 10 different panels. We
encourage young faculty and graduate students to propose papers for the panels
that still have available seats. The chairs are in charge of the selection for
their panels and interested applicants should contact them directly. The
standard application procedure requires an abstract of the paper (max. 250
words) and a short CV (max. 3 pages). Early applications are encouraged as panel
chairs can decide to close the selection before the dead-line.

Dead-line for paper applications: March 1, 2011.

Panel 1: Representation in Comparative Perspective
Panel 2: Post-conflict democratization: What role for local actors?
Panel 3: (Neo-)Populism(s) in the Era of Crises
Panel 4: The Oscillant Paths of Extremist Parties in Post-Communist Europe
Panel 5: Before and after: The impact of the Lisbon Treaty on the policy-making
process and political dynamics of the EU
Panel 6: Challenges of the global financial crisis for migrant workers
Panel 7: Crisis and emergence: radicalization, institutionalization, and
generation of social movements
Panel 8: The Normative Significance of the Crisis
Panel 9: Crisis and Its Management in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Times
Panel 10: Cross Border Management and Development in Eurasia: lessons learned
from the EU experience

Details are available at: http://ceuconf2011.wordpress.com/panels/

The Editorial Board
CEU Political Science Journal
www.ceu.hu/poliscijournal
Nador ut. 9, 1051 Budapest,
Hungary

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
e-Network of Academia in Social Sciences (e-NASS)

Scientia est potentia (Francis Bacon)
Ilim ilim bilmektir/Ilim kendin bilmektir (Yunus Emre)

The e-NASS, outnumbering 5300 subscribers, aims to deepen interaction for further inter/intra/trans/multi-disciplinary communication within the academic community of scholars, professionals and students from all branches of social sciences. The language of communication at e-NASS is English; however, contributions in other languages are highly welcomed should they include an abstract in English. This e-network enthusiastically encourages its members to disseminate and share announcements of Call for Papers, Fellowships/Scholarships, Conferences, Graduate Programs, Websites, Publications, Summer Schools, Jobs, Internships and etc. If you have any scholarly announcement concerning social sciences, please do not hesitate to share it within this e-community. The e-NASS is essentially generalist to revive renaissance wo/men with global and historical perspectives covering from the mist-shrouded steppes of Asia to the sun-drenched African, American and European shores without neglecting the exotic Oceania. In order to protect its subscribers vis-�-vis the virus-spreading, hoax and spam e-mails, the e-NASS is strictly moderated while e-mails containing attachments are automatically removed. This e-network discourages commercial advertisements as well as it is essentially irrelevant to any form of activism or advocacy of any particular perspective. Thus, messages of discussions, demonstrations and calls to action are not permitted. When forwarding e-NASS announcements to your friends and other e-groups, signifying e-NASS as the source will be highly appreciated as extent of your courtesy.
Murat Cemrek, PhD

Subscription: e-NASS-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Daily Digest: e-NASS-digest@yahoogroups.com
Website     : http://www.e-nass.net/ (under construction)
.

__,_._,___

[MARINE_BIOLOGY_INTERNATIONAL] Killer whales return to cache of food days after kill

 

Killer whales return to cache of food days after kill



The Canadian Press

Date: Friday Jan. 21, 2011 7:12 PM ET

VANCOUVER — Who knew squirrels and killers whales had so much in common?

New research by a team of experts reveals that orcas in Alaskan waters leave a cache of their kill and return later to feed, like the furry forest dwellers.

The team also found that transient killer whales congregate for the annual northern migration of grey whales and cull up to one-third, or about 300, of the calves born annually to the Eastern Pacific grey whales.

The four-year research project has also established the role the orca plays in controlling the grey population, and the support their kills give to scavenging Pacific sleeper sharks and brown bears.

"This is the first time that any whales have been documented to cache prey, to store it up for the future," Barrett-Lennard said in a telephone interview Friday from Perth, Australia.

Barrett-Lennard, an adjunct professor in zoology at the University of B.C., said he was especially pleased with the findings because he earlier wrote a paper noting killer whales have a problem with larger kills in the ocean because the carcasses sinks and they aren't deep swimmers, leaving much of the kill to go to waste.

The study, by Lance Barrett-Lennard and a team of researchers, was published this week in the journal Marine Ecology Progress Series.

In it, researchers detail the behaviour of a newly-discovered transient population of killer whales on the edges of the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea. Normally transient killer whales are loners or travel a few to a pod, so finding 150 transients together off Alaska's coast was "mind-boggling" for Barrett-Lennard and his fellow researchers.

The whales gathered in a cove off Unimak Island, Alaska, which is the largest and most eastern of the Aleutian Islands.

They are there for the return of thousands of grey whales heading to their Bering Sea feeding grounds from the winter breeding grounds around Baja, Mexico.

Transient killer whales are one of three different populations of orcas, the others being resident and offshore populations. Most studies have been done on the resident killer whales in the waters off British Columbia and the states of Washington, Oregon and Alaska.

While resident whales eat mainly fish, transients dine exclusively on marine mammals.

Barrett-Lennard said Unimak Island seemed to be a perfection location for the killers to prey on the greys and the ocean isn't deep there, so they gorge on their catch over several days.

"For a month or more, the killer whales hunt and feed exclusively on grey whale calves and yearlings," the report said.

The grey whale's only defence is to move to very shallow water, where the killers are reluctant to press the attack.

The orcas also seem to give up if mothers aggressively defend their calves.

Researchers watched as the orcas hunted the grey whales, using stealth and specialized techniques with highly developed group co-ordination. But it's what the whales did with their kill afterwards that was especially interesting to them.

"After an initial feeding period, killer whales leave the site for 24 hours or more before returning to feed again -- the first time such food storing behaviour has been reported in whales," said the report summary.

A fully grown grey whale can be up to 15 metres long and weight 33,000 kilograms, while a baby is an average of 4.5 metres long and weights from 500 to 680 kilograms.

The stored carcasses leave a distinctive oil sheen on the water above and what's left of the carcass is often scavenged by sleeper sharks in the water and then Alaskan Brown bears when the remains wash ashore.

While researchers have only known about these hunting grounds for a few years, Barrett-Lennard said it's clear this has been going on for a long time.

The island is covered with a healthy population of brown bears, he said, and every time the killer whales near the shore the bears run down as if they're being called for dinner.

"It's perfect timing for the brown bears, they're just out of their dens, the hibernation is over, they're famished," he said. "We've seen up to 19 brown bears on a single (grey whale) carcass."

Barrett-Lennard has been working since 2002 with Alaskan biologist Craig Matkin on the killer whale research project along the Alaskan Peninsula.

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Get great advice about dogs and cats. Visit the Dog & Cat Answers Center.

.

__,_._,___

[MARINE_BIOLOGY_INTERNATIONAL] Groups approve Ohio plan to attack lake's algae

 

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio's plan for stopping toxic algae on its largest inland lake drew mostly praise Friday from groups who have long urged increased efforts to improve the lake's water quality.

Toxic algae in Grand Lake St. Mary's in western Ohio has led to water warnings and has hurt tourism. The lake is one of the state's most polluted due to run-off manure and fertilizer from nearby farms. The runoff contains phosphorous and nitrates that can hasten the growth of blue-green algae.

Gov. John Kasich on Thursday announced a plan that includes stepping up water treatment and lake sediment dredging at the 12,700-acre lake.

"The state exceeded what we were asking for at this point in time," said Thomas Knapke, who heads the Grand Lake St. Mary's Restoration Commission that earlier submitted a 10-year action plan to the state. "These are all steps in the right direction.

The state's plan includes treating part of the lake with the algae-starving aluminum sulfate and removing less desirable species of fish that are believed to stir up and release phosphorous in lake sediment.

The plan signals that the administration is committed to continuing efforts to improve the water quality, said Joe Logan, the Ohio Environmental Council's director of agricultural programs.

An official with Friends for the Preservation of Ohio State Parks is grateful for any attention to the problem, but would like to see more of the money being used to attack the "root cause rather than just the symptoms."

"We like the plan, but we don't think it goes far enough," said Bill Ringo, the group's vice president. "Putting alum in the lake is more of a temporary fix."

Ringo believes more of the money should be used to improve land management practices and reduce the amount of phosphorous and nitrates coming off the watershed into the lake.

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
.

__,_._,___

[MARINE_BIOLOGY_INTERNATIONAL] Sedatives used to free whales from fishing lines

 

Atlanta, GA – Researchers have a new tactic to save endangered whales tangled in fishing line: Get them to calm down with sedatives shot from a dart gun so they can pull closer and cut the potentially fatal gear away.

The method was used Jan. 15 off the Florida coast to free a young North Atlantic right whale from about 50 feet of line wrapped through its mouth and around its flippers. A satellite monitor attached to the whale during the rescue attempt this month shows it survived.

"It's a big step for us," said Michael Moore, a senior research specialist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts who was on the rescue team. The same team has tried the technique during one other rescue of a free-swimming whale.

Wildlife authorities for years have tried different ways to save whales tangled in gear that cuts their flesh, restricts feeding and causes infection and starvation.

It's a major threat to the 300 to 400 critically endangered North Atlantic right whales that remain. They generally migrate seasonally from the Lower Bay of Fundy in Canada during the summer to calving grounds off the Florida coast in the fall and winter.

At least two North Atlantic right whales are known to have died from entanglement between 2005 to 2009, although 28 were observed tangled in that same period. Experts say those numbers only include dead or tangled whales that have been spotted, meaning other whales may die unseen.

"It's a very slow, painful death," said Michael Walsh, associate director of the Aquatic Animal Health Program at the University of Florida. The former SeaWorld veterinarian helped develop the sedative mixture.

Once tangled whales are found, rescue teams generally tie boats and buoys to lines trailing from the animal to slow it down and restrict its movement. Crews then use pole-mounted knives to cut off entangling gear.

The techniques are imperfect. Staying behind a whale is safe for humans, but it's difficult to reach gear wrapped around the front of the animal. Success rates, which vary by species and tangle, are low for right whales, especially those with lines caught around their flippers and jaws. When boats get close, right whales tend to flee or dive underwater.

"They're likely in a lot of discomfort," said Jamison Smith, who oversees the freeing of large, tangled whales in the Atlantic for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "They don't want to be ... harassed by a small boat."

The idea of sedating whales goes back to 1999 when NOAA asked other scientists for help freeing a badly tangled right whale swimming off New England and in the Canadian Bay of Fundy. NOAA officials asked researchers whether it was possible to give the animal antibiotics.

In response, they devised a syringe mounted on a pole roughly 30 feet long. Dropped from the front of a boat, the needle was meant to strike the whale and inject antibiotics or sedatives.

Jamison said rescuers tried using the system in 2001 to sedate a badly tangled whale southeast of Nantucket, Mass. It didn't work. Any movement from the animal or the boat would bend the needle, restricting the flow of sedatives. And without much research to draw on, scientists didn't use the best mix of drugs, Jamison said.

Brainstorming sessions followed. Paxarms, a New Zealand-based company with experience taking tissue samples from whales and remotely drugging sheep, built the team an airgun capable of hurling a 2-foot dart at a whale. The system comes with a distance finder, so the force of the shot can be adjusted depending on range. Once a dart strikes, the pressurized drugs are injected within seconds. Each dart is attached to a buoy that creates drag. As the whale swims, the buoy gradually pries the needle free.

There is a risk that too much medication could cause a whale to become disoriented and possibly drown. But scientists say that right whales are more buoyant than some other species and they started experimenting with low doses of drugs that can be reversed.

After testing on carcasses and beached whales, researchers first used the dart gun on a whale initially spotted off the Georgia coast in January 2009. The first two attempts failed. On a third try, boat crews said the whale was less hostile, allowing boats to get close and cut line.

A second test began on Christmas Day when a 2-year-old right whale was spotted tangled off Florida. Trained responders from Georgia and Florida's wildlife agencies cut away 150 feet of rope from the whale using traditional techniques. But they still could not free the whale from a severe tangle wrapping around its mouth and its flippers. Scientists decided to try sedation.

Leaving by boat from Port Canaveral, Fla., they reached the whale in about an hour, attached a satellite tag to its skin and shot the whale with sedatives.

"There was a noticeable decrease in speed," Jamison said of the whale. "There was a noticeable decrease in boat evasiveness."

The boat crew cut away line from both sides of the mouth. While a small piece was left in the whale's mouth, the animal will hopefully spit it out as it feeds. Satellite data show the whale is heading north and they hope it will reach the nutrient-rich waters of New England.

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
.

__,_._,___

e-NASS Bachelors Degree in General Studies

 


<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html>

Bachelors Degree in General Studies
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html>

In the Bachelor of General Studies program, an academic advisor and
student work together to combine
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html> various
disciplines resulting in an individualized plan of study based on past
education, career goals, intellectual interests, or preparation for
graduate education.
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html> Elective
courses in the program include Scientific Inquiry, Communication, Global
and Cultural Perspectives,
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html> Personal and
Social Environments, Computer Literacy Elective, Composition I and II,
Introduction to Algebra, Intermediate Algebra and others.

More info…………………….
<http://www.courses-library.com/undgrad/liberal-arts.html>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
e-Network of Academia in Social Sciences (e-NASS)

Scientia est potentia (Francis Bacon)
Ilim ilim bilmektir/Ilim kendin bilmektir (Yunus Emre)

The e-NASS, outnumbering 5300 subscribers, aims to deepen interaction for further inter/intra/trans/multi-disciplinary communication within the academic community of scholars, professionals and students from all branches of social sciences. The language of communication at e-NASS is English; however, contributions in other languages are highly welcomed should they include an abstract in English. This e-network enthusiastically encourages its members to disseminate and share announcements of Call for Papers, Fellowships/Scholarships, Conferences, Graduate Programs, Websites, Publications, Summer Schools, Jobs, Internships and etc. If you have any scholarly announcement concerning social sciences, please do not hesitate to share it within this e-community. The e-NASS is essentially generalist to revive renaissance wo/men with global and historical perspectives covering from the mist-shrouded steppes of Asia to the sun-drenched African, American and European shores without neglecting the exotic Oceania. In order to protect its subscribers vis-à-vis the virus-spreading, hoax and spam e-mails, the e-NASS is strictly moderated while e-mails containing attachments are automatically removed. This e-network discourages commercial advertisements as well as it is essentially irrelevant to any form of activism or advocacy of any particular perspective. Thus, messages of discussions, demonstrations and calls to action are not permitted. When forwarding e-NASS announcements to your friends and other e-groups, signifying e-NASS as the source will be highly appreciated as extent of your courtesy.
Murat Cemrek, PhD

Subscription: e-NASS-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Daily Digest: e-NASS-digest@yahoogroups.com
Website     : http://www.e-nass.net/ (under construction)
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Get great advice about dogs and cats. Visit the Dog & Cat Answers Center.

.

__,_._,___