Grand River - Cambridge, Ontario, Canada
The lovely City of Cambridge is graced by Grand River, beautiful architecture, great restaurants, friendly people, interesting shopping and Canada's largest antiques mall. Visit this interesting city and discover for yourself. To find more info check
The Museum, the City, and the University || Radcliffe Institute
The Museum, the City, and the University
Boston Art Museum Directors in Discussion
This panel brings together five distinguished museum directors to discuss their leadership of major cultural institutions in urban and university settings and to share personal perspectives on their work.
The directors and the moderator address questions about the role of museums in debates about public and private support for the humanities and arts; in research and learning endeavors, including creative efforts by living artists; and in conversations about citizenship, identity, and diversity.
Featuring:
Peggy Fogelman, Norma Jean Calderwood Director, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Paul C. Ha, director, MIT List Visual Arts Center
Jill Medvedow, Ellen Matilda Poss Director, Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston
Martha Tedeschi, Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director, Harvard Art Museums
Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Moderated by Yukio Lippit, Johnson-Kulukundis Family Director of the Arts, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, and professor of history of art and architecture, Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Introduced by Lizabeth Cohen, dean, Radcliffe Institute, and Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies, Department of History, Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Medicine Hat's Firehall theater presents: Into The Woods (Nov 18-27)
Medicine Hat's local web-based broadcaster!
Lecture—The “Peculiar Problems” of Preservation with Sanchita Balachandran
“The ‘Peculiar Problems’ of Preservation: Life, Death, and the Afterlife in the Museum.”
In 1933, Rutherford John Gettens, conservation scientist at the Fogg Art Museum, wrote a letter to his colleague Dr. S. Paramasivan to ask about the “peculiar problems” he faced in the conservation of archaeological objects at the Madras Government Museum, in India. Who, he wondered, has the right to preserve museum collections, and why? Whose histories are preserved and whose are erased or omitted through the preservation process?
Though nearly 90 years have passed since this correspondence, some of these same issues continue to trouble museums around the world. In this lecture, Sanchita Balachandran, associate director of the Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum, considers what role the scientific, physical, and cultural practices of preservation play in what (and who) lives, dies, or is brought back to life in the museum.
Support for the lecture is provided by the M. Victor Leventritt Fund, which was established through the generosity of the wife, children, and friends of the late M. Victor Leventritt, Harvard Class of 1935. The purpose of the fund is to present outstanding scholars of the history and theory of art to the Harvard and Greater Boston communities.
Tuesday, April 30, 2019, Menschel Hall, Harvard Art Museums.
Radical Commitments | Session 1: Revolution || Radcliffe Institute
Radical Commitments: The Life and Legacy of Angela Davis
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2019
A cross-generational group of leading scholars, activists, musicians, and incarcerated women lead discussions on the rich tradition of activism and social theory in the late 20th century using the life and work of the political activist and pioneering philosopher Angela Davis.
WELCOMING REMARKS
Tomiko Brown-Nagin, dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School; and professor of history in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
(6:02) Jane Kamensky, Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Pforzheimer Foundation Director of the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University
FRAMING REMARKS (11:09)
Elizabeth Hinton, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences, Departments of History and of African and African American Studies, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
SESSION 1: REVOLUTION (25:37)
(33:46) Trevor G. Fowler, visiting adjunct professor, Wits School of Governance, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (South Africa)
(48:00) Robyn C. Spencer, associate professor of history, Lehman College
(54:40) Robin D. G. Kelley, distinguished professor and Gary B. Nash Endowed Chair in United States History, UCLA
(1:08:04) Ericka Huggins, activist and educator
Moderator: Brandon M. Terry, assistant professor of African and African American studies and of social studies, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
PANEL DISCUSSION (1:24:27)
AUDIENCE Q&A (1:42:57)
For information about the Radcliffe Institute and its many public programs, visit
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Embodied Souls — Lessons from Neurology V.S. Ramachandran
There are two questions pertaining to the self – the metaphysical and empirical - that are often confounded. The latter is best approached through neurology as V.S. Ramachandran, Director of the Center for Brain and Cognition at UC San Diego, illustrates in this fascinating lecture at UC Berkeley.
Recorded on 03/01/2016. [5/2016] [Show ID: 30558]
More from: UC Berkeley Graduate Lectures
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Strange & unusual traditions of the United Kingdom
Whether you are travelling to the UK or simply studying English from home, it is fun to immerse yourself in the local culture of the region. Today, I will explore with you some of the strange and unusual traditions of the United Kingdom. I will teach you about Morris dancing, Guy Fawkes Night, toe wrestling, and much more, including a very strange museum. Where do people swim in mud? In England! Watch this video to learn more about British culture, then watch my other video about WEIRD FOODS OF THE UK (do you want to eat some jellied eels?):
Take a quiz on this lesson:
TRANSCRIPT
Welcome back to engVid with me, Benjamin. Today I'm going to be telling you, sharing with you a few of our more outlandish traditions here in the UK. For a very small island we've got lots of weird and wacky things going on. So, I'm going to be trying to explain what some of these are. What's this video good for? This is understanding the sort of culture, getting underneath the skin of it, and really exploring the culture and traditions of the UK. Okay, let's go.
The Last Night of the Proms. Not everyone is a fan of this. The Proms is a long line of concerts that go on in the Royal Albert Hall in London just near Hyde Park every summer. The last night is obviously the last of those concerts. And lots of people wave their Union Jacks and sing along to slightly jingoist-... Jingoistic, which means a funny sense of pride in one's nation. Patriotic songs, like: Rule Britannia, etc.
The Monster Raving Loony Party. So whereas this is very traditional and very straight down the line, this is pretty left side, pretty... pretty out there. Monster Raving Loony Party was started by a member at the aristocracy called The Screaming Lord Sutch, he was some sort of Earl of Harrow or something like this. Some of his manifestos: Vote for insanity. Now, whereas the main political parties orientate themselves in terms of left, right, or center according to their political beliefs, Screaming Lord Sutch said that his political position was: Sitting, facing forward. Okay? I used short hand in my annotation at the board, here: Pol short for Political. But he has achieved some success. These are three policies that they came up with that have all been adopted in the UK. First of all, we have a vote for anyone aged 18 or above. Before that I believe it was 21. Pet passports, we now have pass... Dogs can have a passport and travel abroad. And we do have all-day pubs. So, it was probably a bit of a joke to start with: Let's have all-day pubs, because they're only open in the evening 30 years ago, and now you can go in from 11 o'clock. Not to be endorsed whole-heartedly, though, all-day drinking. Right.
Baked Beans Museum, yes, we do have a museum for baked beans. It's in Port Talbot, number... Port Talbot in Wales, and it's ranked number 4 out of 15 attractions in Port Talbot.
The Ugly Face Competition, yes, we have an annual competition for gurning, going... Pulling weird faces. It happens in September in Cumbria which is in the northwest of the United Kingdom.
Morris dancing, this looks a little bit like this. Okay? I wave handkerchiefs, and I would have bells down here on my feet. So waving your handkerchief, okay? This has been a tradition in the UK since 1448, that's the first recorded date of Morris dancing. I witnessed it more recently. In Suffolk there's a village there called Middleton, every Boxing Day they have a precession of the wren. It's quite strange. Basically they put sort of... They black themselves out and there is a sort of march of a dead wren to celebrate some sort of mid-winter pagan festival.
The boat race, this is an annual event that happens in the middle of April. It's the... Is it 8-man team or 8-lady team? From Oxford and Cambridge. It goes from I believe Hammersmith Bridge to Putney Bridge, and the winner of the team, they get to throw the person who's been steering, the cox, into the river. Okay? So that happens every year. If you're watching this from Holland, I believe you're quite adept, you're quite good at doing similar activities yourselves.
Now, I know Britain are doing quite well in Olympics these days, but back in the 1970s, we struggled, and there was a couple of people who were sat outside a pub in Derbyshire, which in the middle of the country, it's in the Midlands and they were like: Aw, we're not winning anything at the Olympics. We've got, you know... All our teams are doing terribly. Let's invent a sport we can actually win at. So they invented toe wrestling. […]
Rethinking Pei: A Centenary Symposium, Panel 1: Technology
Panel 1 Participants:
Eric Höweler, moderator
Janet Adams Strong: “Continuity and Change: Fine-face Concrete in Physical Manifestation of I. M. Pei’s Approach to Architecture”
Annette Fierro: “Effective Depths: Transparent Domains”
Brett Schneider: “Early Tall Structures in Context”
Leslie Robertson: “Bank of China, Miho Museum and Bridge, and Other Projects”
A two-part symposium examining the work and life of I. M. Pei from multiple vantage points. Organized by the Harvard GSD with M+, Hong Kong, and the Faculty of Architecture, The University of Hong Kong.
Ieoh Ming Pei is one of the most celebrated yet under-theorized architects of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Although Pei’s six-decade career is mostly identified with his unwavering interest in cultural synthesis and the power of pure geometrical form, his modes of practice demand further investigation of their intertwinement with the multiple historical and discursive moments of modern architecture. The two-day symposium will include panel discussions and scholarly presentations that showcase new research on Pei’s manifold contributions to the built environment. Notable alumni from Pei’s office will discuss the emergence of a new kind of architectural practice in the postwar era. Among the topics to be addressed in the paper sessions are technological innovations with concrete, the glass curtain wall, and structural designs; Pei’s longstanding affinities for China’s landscape and vernacular traditions; his legacy on major urban spaces in Boston and other cities around the world; and the increasingly global and transnational conditions of architectural production that Pei successfully navigated. Organized with M+, the new museum for visual culture being built in Hong Kong, this symposium is part of a yearlong celebration of the 100th birthday of Ieoh Ming (I. M.) Pei MArch ’46. Both I. M. and his wife, Eileen Pei GSD ’44, studied at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, as did their sons Chien Chung (Didi) Pei, AB ’68, MArch ’72, and Li Chung (Sandi) Pei, AB ’72, MArch ’76. Pei was also an assistant professor of architecture at the GSD. In March the GSD held a panel discussion, led by Harry Cobb AB ’47, MArch ’49, which focused on the formative years of I. M. Pei’s career as well as some of his special friendships, influences, and projects.
A second symposium, co-organized by M+ and the Department of Architecture at the University of Hong Kong, will be held in Hong Kong on December 14-15.
These two symposia are made possible with the generous support of the C Foundation.
London Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Catch a glimpse of the famous London town! Or more than a glimpse – we’ll show you through the whole city.
When ready, browse vacation packages to London:
A trip to #London might as well be a trip through history. This city is full of modern construction mixed with ancient buildings.
Your London #vacation must include St. Paul’s Cathedral, one of its most well-known churches. You’ll also want to see the Tower of London, the Palace of Westminster, and Westminster Abbey for exquisite examples of the city’s famous architectural landmarks. Walk or jog through numerous green spaces, among them Hyde Park and Green Park, in the center of London.
Continue your London #sightseeing in the West End, where you’ll find ancient buildings converted into modern shops, restaurants, bars, and shows. You’ll find one of the largest theatre districts in the world here, and can take in a different play almost every night of the week.
Climb aboard the London Eye and see the old and new parts of the city all at once.
For now, we hope you enjoy watching this #travel #guide as much as we enjoyed making it.
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Toni Morrison Stories: Goodness and Mercy and Mexico (2019 Convocation)
Professor Davíd Carrasco, Neil L. Rudenstine Professor for the Study of Latin America delivered the 2019 Convocation address Toni Morrison Stories: Goodness and Mercy and Mexico, on September 5, 2019.
Wampanoag elder Ramona Peters welcomed students to the location on the ancestral lands of the Massachuset, Nipmuc, and Wampanoag people. Actress, poet, songwriter, and educator Alexandria Danielle King performed and HDS Professor Cornel West provided a blessing. Jazz pianist Danilo Pérez performed an original tribute to Morrison.
Learn more about Harvard Divinity School and its mission to illuminate, engage, and serve at
National Remembrance Day Ceremony 2019
CBC’s Rosemary Barton hosts special coverage of the national Remembrance Day service in Ottawa.
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For more than 75 years, CBC News has been the source Canadians turn to, to keep them informed about their communities, their country and their world. Through regional and national programming on multiple platforms, including CBC Television, CBC News Network, CBC Radio, CBCNews.ca, mobile and on-demand, CBC News and its internationally recognized team of award-winning journalists deliver the breaking stories, the issues, the analyses and the personalities that matter to Canadians.
Yelawolf - Daddy's Lambo (Official Music Video)
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MN Hockey: Land of 10,000 Rinks - Full Documentary
Drive through just about any community in northeastern Minnesota during the winter months and you’re likely to find kids playing hockey. Hockey culture runs deep in the Northland, from the mini-mites learning to skate for the first time, to accomplished high school and college players striving to take their game to the highest level.
New Wars and Revolutions - Demobilisation I THE GREAT WAR January 1919
In our first new episode, our host Jesse takes a look at the German Revolution of 1918/1919 and how the Spartacists under Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg tried to take power. We also take a look at the new conflicts that emerge right after the supposed war to end all wars and explain how the massive armies of the great powers were demobilized.
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Mark Jones, Founding Weimar. Violence and the German Revolution of 1918-19 (Cambridge University Press, 2016)
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Robert Gerwarth, The Vanquished. Why the First World War Failed to End, 1917-1923 (Penguin, 2017)
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Audoin-Rouzeau, Stéphane and Annette Becker. 14-18, retrouver la guerre (Npp : Gallimard, 2000).
Bessel, Richard. “Post War Societies,” in 1914-1918 online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
Cabanes, Bruno. “Démobilisations et retour des hommes,” in Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau and Jean-Jacques Becker, eds. Encyclopédie de la Grande guerre 1914-1918 (Paris : Bayard, 2013) : 987-1003.
Cook, Tim. Shock Troops. Canadians Fighting the Great War 1917-1918, vol. 2 (Toronto: Penguin, 2008).
Gerwarth, Robert. The Continuum of Violence, in J. Winter (Ed.), The Cambridge History of the First World War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014): 638-662
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Presented by: Jesse Alexander
Written by: Jesse Alexander
Director: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig
Director of Photography: Toni Steller
Sound: Toni Steller
Editing: Toni Steller
Mixing, Mastering & Sound Design:
Motion Design: Christian Graef - GRAEFX
Maps: Daniel Kogosov (
Research by: Jesse Alexander
Fact checking: Florian Wittig
Channel Design: Alexander Clark
Original Logo: David van Stephold
A Mediakraft Networks Original Channel
Contains licenced material by getty images
All rights reserved - RTH - Real Time History GmbH i.Gr. 2019
Surrey, B.C., Mayor, Dianne Watts: Connected Cities: CATA's CEO Leadership Series
Please take one minute to view our video with the Mayor of Surrey, B.C., Dianne Watts, who was interviewed at a recent i-CANADA Summit on the importance of community leadership to creating Canada's competitive innovation nation.
In this video, Mayor Watts talks about how we need to have connectivity with each city in order to support excellence areas such as transportation, healthcare and education.
About Mayor Watts
In 2005 Dianne Watts became the first woman elected Mayor in the City of Surrey.
Over the past three years, 119 new RCMP officers have been put on the streets. In addition, 960 grow-ops have been shut down, and 185 drug and derelict houses have been demolished.
Under the leadership of Mayor Dianne Watts, Surrey became the first city in BC to establish a Homelessness and Housing Foundation to tackle homelessness head-on. Mayor Watts is also a strong supporter of the outreach worker program in Surrey that has seen 512 homeless placed in permanent housing over the past two years.
In one of her first decisions as newly elected Mayor, Dianne Watts re-established the Transportation Committee, disbanded by previous Councils, and charged it with developing the first comprehensive Transportation Plan for Surrey in a decade.
Based on developable land Surrey's density is greater than Burnaby's, yet Surrey is underserved in terms of public transit, receiving only 25% of the level of service per person compared to residents of Vancouver.
Mayor Dianne Watts is committed to working for light rail public transit options as an alternative to the more expensive Sky Train system. Translink has estimated the cost of light rail at $27 million per kilometre versus $127 million per kilometre for the Evergreen Line and $233 million for the UBC / Broadway Line.
Mayor Dianne Watts believes that an important part of Surrey's economic development strategy is the ambitious revitalization of City Centre which involves the relocation of City Hall, a new regional library, a new Performing Arts Centre, and, a new museum.
Committed to ensuring that Surrey is an attractive place for new investment and new businesses, Mayor Dianne Watts has worked hard to keep Surrey's property and business taxes the lowest in the region. She also believes that balancing growth, investment and job creation in our community while protecting the environment is the foundation for sustainable cities. During Dianne Watts' term as Mayor, not a single acre of land was removed from the Agricultural Land Reserve for residential, commercial or industrial development.
Mayor Watts is proud that in recent years, Surrey has invested $316 million to acquire 694 acres of parkland, including the 16-acre Kwomais Point Park. She also initiated Surrey's street landscaping and tree planting projects that resulted in Surrey planting 56,000 new trees in Surrey parks and boulevards over the last 3 years. In 2007, this effort was recognized when Surrey won the Green Streets Award for planting the most boulevard trees in Canada.
During her first term as Mayor, Dianne Watts has made openness and transparency at City Hall a key priority. Under Mayor Dianne Watts: Surrey was the first city in BC to enact a Whistleblower Policy to protect employees who report fraud, waste or abuse of taxpayer dollars at City Hall.
Surrey was the first city in BC to require those who are hired to lobby members of Council and City staff on land use issues and other important decisions of Council to register under the City's Lobbyist Registry and disclose the nature of their activities.
In 2001, Mayor Dianne Watts was honoured as the first elected official in the history of Surrey to become an Honorary Firefighter for her work with the Surrey Fire Service.
Her family has owned and operated a manufacturing facility in Surrey for over 30 years and Mayor Dianne Watts and her husband Brian are raising two daughters in Cloverdale.
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“Global Contemporary”
“Global Contemporary”
Moderator: Jessica Hong
Associate Curator of Global Contemporary Art
Lalla Essaydi
Jeffrey Gibson
Sin-ying Ho
SYMPOSIUM
ART, ARTISTS, AND THE MUSEUM: A CONVERSATION
Friday, May 3, 2019
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth
The Hood’s second major reopening event celebrates numerous artists whose work is featured in the galleries. The artists will speak about their own work and join a panel discussion on one of four broad themes: Global Contemporary Art, New Photographies, Art and Social Justice, and Painting Now. Participants include Morehshin Allahyari, Bahar Behbahani, Markus Brunetti, Lalla Essaydi, Jeffrey Gibson, Jane Hammond, Sin-ying Ho, Cara Romero, Alison Saar, and Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie.
Cambridge Talks IX: Inscriptions of Power; Spaces, Institutions, and Crisis Part 2
Over two days, fostering dialogue between social scientists and spatial thinkers, an interdisciplinary gathering of scholars will explore the relationship between physical and institutional structures. How is institutional power manifested in the built environment? How does space bear the mark of bureaucratic networks, typological assumptions, lived experiences? How are different forms of power—aesthetic, political, economic, even insurgent—made manifest across boundaries and scales? The keynote lecture, at 6:30 on 4/2, is by Reinhold Martin, author of The Organizational Complex (MIT Press, 2001). Cambridge Talks is the annual conference organized by students in the PhD Program at Harvard GSD.
Remembrance Day 2019: Canada Remembers
Dawna Friesen hosts coverage of Remembrance Day ceremonies from the National War Memorial in Ottawa as Canadians pay tribute to our veterans who served and sacrificed for our country.
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#GlobalNews #CanadaRemembers #RemembranceDay #Nov11
Open House Lecture: Faculty Voices: Perspectives on Practice and Pedagogy
11/13/15
Three GSD faculty members will discuss the connection of their practices, work, interests, and teaching. Discussion will be moderated by Ed Eigen, Associate Professor of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Neil Brenner is Professor of Urban Theory at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he teaches classes on critical urban theory, urbanization, urban/territorial governance and sociospatial theory, as well as directs the Urban Theory Lab at the Harvard GSD. Brenner’s most recent book is Implosions/Explosions: Towards a Study of Planetary Urbanization (Jovis, 2013). In 2014, Brenner was selected as a Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher (highlycited.com); his publications were ranked among the top 1% most cited globally in the general social sciences between 2002 and 2012.
Gary Hilderbrand is Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design and principal of Reed Hilderbrand, LLC. He is a recognized author and critic of historic and contemporary landscape architecture practice. His firm was honored this year with three awards from the American Society of Landscape Architects, for Long Dock Park in Beacon, New York, the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, MA, and a research project on measured performance of urban manufactured soils.
Elizabeth Whittaker is Assistant Professor in Practice of Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. She is also the founding principal of MERGE Architects, an architectural practice that innovates through making. MERGE Architects has won multiple awards including Architectural Record’s 2014 Design Vanguard, recognizing the top ten emerging practices in the world, and sixteen American Institute of Architects (AIA) / Boston Society of Architects (BSA) Design awards, among various others. She has taught design studios in several Architecture programs including the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Northeastern University, and the Boston Architectural College.
European Travel Skills with Rick Steves
Rick Steves European Travel Talk | Rick Steves shares the essential skills for smart European travel: itinerary planning, packing light, getting cash, avoiding crowds (and pickpockets), using mobile devices, getting around by train or rental car, finding hotels and restaurants, and much more. Visit for more European travel information.
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