It goes without saying that chemistry is very important. It covers all areas of our lives. The food we eat, medicine we take, and materials we use every day. It helps us to understand how the world around us works. Getting a chemistry degree is a great investment for your future. There are great options […]
read more Biology is a very interesting and constantly developing area of study.
For decades, Steve Schapiro’s iconic photographs have been witty visual documents of American cultural and social movements. He’s captured significant moments like Robert Kennedy’s presidential campaign and Martin Luther King, Jr.’s march to Selma as well as intimate portraits of Hollywood celebrities such as Marlon Brando in The Godfather and Robert De Niro in Taxi Driver.
To this day, the American photojournalist and documentarian still gives his audience compelling testimonies of the social and cultural flaws that society has survived, capturing an intriguing side of a multifaceted complexity.
Profession: Short Story Writer and Poet
Biography: Dorothy Parker was an American writer, known for her wit. She early on wrote for Vanity Fair, where he career started with writing in place of P. G. Wodehouse while he was on vacation. It was at the Vanity Fair that Parker would meet Robert Benchley and Robert E. Sherwood, with the three coming to be known as the 'Algonquin Round Table' for their habit of dining daily for lunch at the Algonquin Hotel.
Profession: Actor
Biography: Emil Jannings was a German actor known for his powerful performances in both silent and sound films. His dynamic acting style and ability to embody complex characters made him one of the most sought-after talents of his era, drawing international acclaim.
In Hollywood, Jannings made history by becoming the first recipient of the Academy Award for Best Actor for his roles in The Last Command (1928) and The Way of All Flesh (1927).
Best Ever Channels and The Stand Group announced Tuesday the launch of a new FAST (free ad-supported streaming TV) comedy channel Witz. Featuring stand-up comedy specials, talk shows and curated library programming, the channel is set to launch later this year.
Our PhD student Suada Djukaj awarded by the 2024 Martina Roeselová Memorial Fellowship grant Suada Djukaj, originally from Kosovo, works in the Chemical Robotics Laboratory. She focuses on developing artificial mu… read more ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pMbEnJ%2BuppmrsrO%2FyK2gnqtemLyue8Kaq5qkn5zCpnnOn2SuppmrsrO%2FyK2gnqtfqruqwsSrqqKsqWK8p3nCoZymoaOpv7p5wKebZqyVmLWvu8uonrJnlpawtrjTsmSonl2Ytaa5yJyYpWWVo7SqusSeqaKmlw%3D%3D
During their conversation in the lounge, after the housemates completed their Aquafina task, Neo shared his thoughts about the dilemma he has with his cousin Venita with Pere. According to him, " I couldn't really give my ex a chance because on the last day, we spoke this was nine months after we broke up she was still referring to getting into a fight with my cousin and I'm like you can't break up with me after nine months and you're trying to come back and you are still telling me that you have a grudge with my family"
July 23 Calendar 945 Richarius, bishop of Luik (922-45), dies 1227 Qiu Chuji, Chinese Taoist (b. 1148) 1373 Birgitta van Sweden, Swedish saint, dies 1403 Thomas Percy, 1st Earl of Worcester, English rebel (executed) (b. 1343) 1531 Louis de Brézé, seigneur d'Anet, Marshal of Normandy and husband of Diane de Poitiers 1581 Georges Lalaing, viceroy of Friesland, dies 1584 John Day, English protestant printer (Book of Martyrs) (b. 1522) 1645 Michael I, first Russian Tsar of the House of Romanov (1613-45), dies at 49 1685 Pietro Reggio, Italian composer, singer, and lutenist, dies at 53 1690 Richard Gibson, English painter of portrait miniatures and a court dwarf, dies at around 75 1692 Gilles Ménage, French scholar, dies at 78 1727 Simon Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain 1757 Domenico Scarlatti, Italian composer and harpsichordist (La Silvia), dies at 71 1764 Gilbert Tennent, Irish-born religious leader (b.
Brady's Retirement Still Comes as a Surprise Tom Brady thought he would throw touchdown passes, basically forever. “I really think I can play as long as I want,” Brady, 44, said in October. “I could literally play until I’m 50 or 55... By Sean Gregory January 29, 2022 ncG1vNJzZmismaKyb6%2FOpmatmZdks7C705uYpaRf
The studio photograph of Theodore Roosevelt in a buckskin hunting costume, rifle at the ready, remains one of the most iconic images of the American conservation movement. That he looks ready to kill something is no affectation; Roosevelt was a gung-ho hunter all his life. Yet his legacy is so much larger, as was the principled example he lived, of the compatibility of hunting wildlife and the protection of wildlife and wilderness.