Words In Action: GERMAN Sommerm.dchenküssetauschel.chelbeichte by Hanns Von Gumppenberg Drei Limericks by Cesar Keiser Gretchen am Spinnrad 2.1 by Johann Wolfang Von Goethe Gretchen am Spinnrad X.0 by Johann Wolfang Von Goethe Pampelmusensalat by Hans Adolf Halbey
eCHEM 1A: Online General Chemistry
College of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley
http://chemistry.berkeley.edu/echem1a
Curriculum and ChemQuizzes developed by Dr. Mark Kubinec and Professor Alexander Pines
Chemical Demonstrations by Lonnie Martin
Video Production by Jon Schainker and Scott Vento
Developed with the support of The Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation
Building a Multilateral International Order
Stewart Patrick
Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations
Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes Stewart Patrick, Director of the Program on International Institutions and Global Governance at the Council on Foreign Relations. Focusing on Patrick's new book, The Best Laid Plans, The Origins of American Multilateralism and the Dawn of the Cold War, topics discussed include: the causes of America's commitment to multilateralism in the period 1940-1950, the implications of this history for analyzing and understanding the global response to the present economic crisis and, looking to the future, the likely evolution of multilateral institutions in a multipolar world under stress.
Recorded April 3, 2009
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/iis/Kreisler.html
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/
"American Foreign Policy from the End of the Cold War to 9/11"
Derek Chollet, Center for New American Security, and James Goldgeier, Council on Foreign Relations
Host Harry Kreisler welcomes Derek Chollet and James Goldgeier for a discussion of U.S.foreign from the Fall of the Berlin Wall until the attack on 9/11. They discuss the search for a grand strategy in the
Clinton administration. They outline the debates among liberals and among conservatives about the U.S. role as the sole superpower, especially the relative importance of economic power versus military power in shaping world order. Chollet and Goldgeier also focus on the new security challenges facing the United States-- global warming, terrorism, and the spread of infectious disease. The conversation also highlights the continuity and discontinuity in world views of the the presidencies of William Jefferson Clinton and George W. Bush.
Recorded September 25, 2008
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/iis/Kreisler.html
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/