James Murdoch Austin (May 25, 1915 – November 26, 2000) was a New Zealand-American meteorologist. He was notable for his pioneering modeling of the meteorology of air pollution, especially that of smokestack particulates. He is also notable as the doctoral advisor of the pioneer of chaos theory and early practitioner of numerical weather prediction, Edward Norton Lorenz. (Wikipedia).
James Galway Plays Syrinx by Debussy
James Galway performing Syrinx by Debussy.
From playlist experimental classical
POLITICAL THEORY - William Morris
William Morris wanted to change the way workers approach their jobs and how consumers decide what they want to buy. Please subscribe here: http://tinyurl.com/o28mut7 If you like our films take a look at our shop (we ship worldwide): http://www.theschooloflife.com/shop/all/ Brought to you
From playlist GREAT IDEAS
Lord Walter Thomas Layton - This I Believe (1950s) - Radio broadcast
Walter Thomas Layton, 1st Baron Layton. A British economist and Liberal Party politician. 1922 - 1938 Editor of The Economist. 1930 - 1940 Editorial director of the News Chronicle.
From playlist Voices of History
Everything Matters | Iron | James Austin
Earth’s most common element by mass, iron has been employed since antiquity to create tools, weapons, and works of art. Join master blacksmith James Austin to explore iron’s historical importance and amazing metallurgical properties—as well as the air of mystery surrounding the blacksmithi
From playlist Tales from the Periodic Table
The Nightingale and the Rose by Oscar Wilde - Audiobook read by John Gielgud
The Nightingale and the Rose by Oscar Wilde read by Sir John Gielgud
From playlist Old Audiobooks
Best of James: https://goo.gl/iiEtLz Subscribe here: https://goo.gl/jkJg9u Music video by James performing Sometimes. (C) 1993 Mercury Records Limited
From playlist If only Jerm had played the forum
The life of Robert James Phillips in pictures (the slideshow shown at his memorial).
From playlist Family
Inside the Titanic's FATAL Mistake | History's Greatest Mysteries (Season 1) | History
Watch all new episodes of History's Greatest Mysteries, Saturdays at 9/8c, and stay up to date on all of your favorite History Channel shows at http://history.com/schedule. The sinking of the Titanic was one of history's most tragic disasters - but could it have been avoided? New evidence
From playlist History's Greatest Mysteries | Official Series Playlist | History
Alex Murdaugh Shouldn't Have Testified
The 5th Amendment exists for a reason. ☕️ Sign up for Morning Brew now! https://legaleagle.link/morningbrew Welcome back to LegalEagle. The most avian legal analysis on the internets. 🚀 Watch my next video early & ad-free on Nebula! https://legaleagle.link/watchnebula 👔 Suits by Indoch
From playlist Law Review News!
Brady joins Keith in the archives at The Royal Society to learn about some of Edmond Halley's work in nautical science. Follow us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ObjectivityVideos And Twitter at https://twitter.com/objectivity_vid Royal Society: http://bit.ly/Royal_Society Films
From playlist Objectivity
Philosophy & Literature - Iris Murdoch & Bryan Magee (1978)
In this program, Iris Murdoch discusses philosophy and literature with Bryan Magee. This is from a 1978 series on Modern Philosophy called Men of Ideas. #Philosophy #BryanMagee #Literature
From playlist Bryan Magee Interviews - Modern Philosophy: Men of Ideas (1977-1978)
The Servant Girl Annihilator: America's First Serial Killer.
In December 1884, the future looked bright in Austin, Texas. Then, the Servant Girl Annihilator, also called the "Intangible Nemesis," began to prey on the servant women of the city. His reign of terror ended and a few years later, when Jack the Ripper started terrorizing London, newspaper
From playlist Texas
14. Backward induction: commitment, spies, and first-mover advantages
Game Theory (ECON 159) We first apply our big idea--backward induction--to analyze quantity competition between firms when play is sequential, the Stackelberg model. We do this twice: first using intuition and then using calculus. We learn that this game has a first-mover advantage, and t
From playlist Game Theory with Ben Polak
SAT Math Part 35 - Simple interest and Compound Interest
This SAT Math video tutorial contains word problems with simple interest and compound interest. Here are some other useful links: SAT Math Part 36: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2tlRdI_sIqc SAT Chemistry Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-clMX2poLY Chemistry Final Exam Review:
From playlist SAT Math
New CGI of How Titanic Sank | Titanic 100
Titanic: The Final Word With James Cameron: James Cameron and his team pull together a new CGI of how they believe the TItanic sank and reached the ocean floor. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe ➡ Access our digital archive by becoming a member of National Geographic: https://on.n
From playlist Trending Videos | National Geographic
Legend Of The Broken Spoke: Saving Honky Tonk Heaven (Saving Landmark Documentary) | Real Stories
This documentary film tells the story of the legendary Broken Spoke, a dancehall located in Austin, Texas. Owners James and Anetta White have kept the Texas dance tradition alive for 50 years despite major changes taking place all around them. Seen through the eyes of the White family, mus
From playlist Global Documentaries
The History Guy Podcast: Mystery Murders: The Saxtown Axe Murders and the "Servant Girl Annihilator"
Joshua Geiger, The History Guy's son, chats with THG about the creation of episodes of forgotten history and trivia in a behind-the-scenes look at The History Guy channel. Find the podcast on your favorite podcast app with RSS feed: https://feeds.captivate.fm/thehistoryguy/ The History Gu
From playlist Podcast
William Pitt The Younger: Britain's "Best" Prime Minister
William Pitt The Younger is probably not a name you've heard a lot. He's an extraordinary guy, he dealt with crazy George III and the American War of Independence, he led Britain through the French Revolution, the French Revolutionary Wales and the rise of Napoleon, and his Napoleonic Wars
From playlist My Best Stuff
Journalism is dead, long live... what?!! (OSCON Ignite 2010)
A 5 minute presentation by James Turner: Anyone who has seen a graph of newspaper sales over the past decade knows that it resembles nothing so much as a giant slalom ski course, hurtling the print news industry toward a pain financial crash. Magazines aren't doing much better, many going
From playlist Ignite OSCON 2010