Rsc T Shirts

100% cotton t-shirt featuring the quote,"Thought is free"The Tempest 100% cotton t-shirt featuring the quote,"Thought is free"The Tempest LAST CHANCE TO BUY 100% cotton t-shirt with the quote"Once more, unto the breach, dear friends, once more"Miss Trunchbull is the newest (and unlikeliest) fashion icon on the block. Ladies fitted quote t shirt Why Live at I-House? Application Process / FAQ Room & Board Rates/Descriptions Alumni Events & Reunions Attend a public program Host your next event at I-House Join us for a meal I-House Store / Merchandise Front has Globe with "TOLERANCE UNDERSTANDING RESPECT FRIENDSHIP PEACE" Back has "'International House" in 20 languages $15.00 - includes shipping within the US $28.00 - includes shipping outside the US To order, please call the RSC Store at (510) 642-9459. V-Neck: (Small, Medium, Large, X-Large) Crew Neck: (Small, Medium, Large, X-Large) More I-House items available at:
I-House Poster by David Goines $40 each or two for $75 Current residents may purchase the poster for a discounted student rate of $25 each All but $15 per poster payment is tax deductible as a charitable contribution to I-House Price does not include tax and shipping The Golden Age of International House 1946 - 53 An Oral History Recollections of the vibrant community which coalesced under the roof of International House in the wake of World War II. Edited by Jeanine Castello-Lin and Tonya Staros Revised Edition - updated 2016 $20 plus tax and $2 shipping. To pre-order a copy: Call (510) 642-4128 with a Visa/MasterCard number, expiration date Email questions to ihalumni@berkeley.edu. Close Encounters of a Cross-Cultural Kind looks at the impact of International House over the last three-quarters of a century through the reflections of residents who lived its purposes. $15 plus tax and $2 shipping. To purchase a copy:
To order, please call the RSC Store at (510) 642-9459 with a Visa/MasterCard number, expiration date, and three digit security code. Mail a check drawn on a U.S. bank payable to International House to I-House Development Office, 2299 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, CA 94720. Ten writers share their stories in A Vision of Hope: Addressing Prejudice and Stereotyping in the Wake of 9/11. Among the writers are two I-House alumni, Sarah Williams (IH 1991) and Vandana Kapur (IH 2004), and two current residents, Caroline LeFeber from Wisconsin and Aurelio Perez, originally from Nicaragua and raised in Ohio. Firoozeh Dumas (IH 1986-87), the book's editor and author of Funny in Farsai: Growing Up Iranian in America, describes the authors: "They are ten individuals, each with a story, each with a vision of hope. They have chosen to share their stories in hopes that we can all somehow learn from one another." In one of the essays, an anonymous Nigerian doctor describes a terrifying attack that left his five companions dead:
I learned that religious intolerance is dangerous and we cannot afford it…. I learned that humans possess both good and bad ideals, and that a terrible fight goes on inside everyone – a fight between two wolves. One is evil and represents hate, anger, arrogance, criticism and intolerance. The other is good and represents peace making, love, tolerance, understanding, humility, empathy and compassion. Which wolf wins is the one you feed. Aurelio Perez, a former I-House resident, writes:French Bulldog Puppies For Sale Near Nj September 11th didn't make me feel like an American, it made me feel like a person, not a citizen of the United States, but a member of humanity. 120 Bamboo BlindsYet for all this consequent solidarity that many of us felt, September 11th helped me to acknowledge the multiplicity of racial, religious, national, cultural heritages that define us, heritages often masqueraded and reduced through the negative rhetoric of difference. Claw Foot Bath Soap Holder
I became aware of many of the challenges in the world today, challenges we must face not in spite of but precisely because of their difficulty. Perez goes on to describe his experiences at I-House: Life is not perfect at International House; we all come here with our prejudices and biases. To leave them behind would be impossible. Still, the challenges we encounter and collectively surmount serve as a testament to both the necessity of cultural exchange and the progress that is possible in the world. Order RSC Alumni shirts! We are excited about the development of our Rose State College Alumni Association and are taking preorders for polo shirts and t-shirts so we can all share in the enthusiasm! Check out these great polo shirts and t-shirts for RSC Alumni! This ‘make payment’ button below will allow you to pay online.  Be sure to send Kelly korr@rose.edu or Debbie dwilliams@rose.edu an email to let us know what size you would like to order!  The shirts are men’s sizes so keep that in mind when requesting your size because a couple of us already ordered shirts a little too large!
If you have already ordered your shirt with Debbie Williams or myself, you can simply use this link to make your payment!  We will be in contact with you when your order comes in! $26 Rose State College Alumni Polo Shirt:Ted S. Warren / AP What It Feels Like to Die Science is just beginning to understand the experience of life’s end. “Do you want to know what will happen as your body starts shutting down?” My mother and I sat across from the hospice nurse in my parents’ Colorado home. It was 2005, and my mother had reached the end of treatments for metastatic breast cancer. A month or two earlier, she’d been able to take the dog for daily walks in the mountains and travel to Australia with my father. Now, she was weak, exhausted from the disease and chemotherapy and pain medication. My mother had been the one to decide, with her doctor’s blessing, to stop pursuing the dwindling chemo options, and she had been the one to ask her doctor to call hospice.
Still,  we weren’t prepared for the nurse’s question. My mother and I exchanged glances, a little shocked. But what we felt most was a sense of relief. Mladen Antonov / Getty Flat-Earthers Have a Wild New Theory About Forests What it means to believe that “real” trees no longer exist. Something tremendous is happening; over the last few weeks, without too many of its globe-headed detractors noticing, a surprisingly vast community on the tattered fringes of intellectual orthodoxy is in turmoil. A bizarre new theory has turned the flat earth upside down. The flat earth is still flat, but now it’s dotted with tiny imitations of the truly enormous trees that once covered the continents, and which in our deforested age we can hardly even remember. I’ve always been mildly obsessed with the flat-earth truth movement, the sprawling network of people utterly convinced that the world has been lied to for centuries about its own physical shape. The particulars differ, but here everyone takes it as a given that a conspiracy reaching from your first schoolteacher to NASA to the metaphysical Beyond has deluded humanity, making us believe that we’re nothing more than something that grew on a rock, a layer of biological grease mouldering on the surface of a ball suspended in empty space, when we’re actually living on a flat plane.
Stunning Videos of Evolution in Action The MEGA-plate allows scientists to watch bacteria adapting to antibiotics before their eyes. You’ve undoubtedly seen this plot before: a cast of characters gets slowly whittled down over the course of a quest, in which increasingly difficult challenges compels the protagonists to acquire new skills. A familiar story, but you’ve never seen it play out in a movie quite like this. The cast members are bacteria. Their set is a large acrylic dish, four feet wide and two across. It is filled with a nutritious agar jelly that contains varying amounts of an antibiotic. The outermost sections are free of the drug—a safe zone in which microbes can easily grow. But as they move towards the dish’s centre, the concentration of antibiotic goes up in 10-fold increments, and conditions become increasingly deadly. To survive in these toxic zones, they need to evolve resistance.Alex Wong / Getty Fear of a Female President Hillary Clinton’s candidacy has provoked a wave of misogyny—one that may roil American life for years to come.
Except for her gender, Hillary Clinton is a highly conventional presidential candidate. She’s been in public life for decades. Her rhetoric is carefully calibrated. She tailors her views to reflect the mainstream within her party. The reaction to her candidacy, however, has been unconventional. The percentage of Americans who hold a “strongly unfavorable” view of her substantially exceeds the percentage for any other Democratic nominee since 1980, when pollsters began asking the question. Antipathy to her among white men is even more unprecedented. According to the Public Religion Research Institute, 52 percent of white men hold a “very unfavorable” view of Clinton. That’s a whopping 20 points higher than the percentage who viewed Barack Obama very unfavorably in 2012, 32 points higher than the percentage who viewed Obama very unfavorably in 2008, and 28 points higher than the percentage who viewed John Kerry very unfavorably in 2004. ‘There’s Nothing Better Than a Scared, Rich Candidate’
How political consulting works—or doesn’t This past April, the American Association of Political Consultants gathered for its annual conference, known as the Pollies, in San Juan, Puerto Rico. During breaks between sessions (“Buying Votes in a Presidential Election,” “Staying Out of Jail”), attendees donned swimsuits and mingled in the waves, discussing digital-advertising rates over mango margaritas. These are boom times for political consultants—by one rough estimate, more than $6 billion will go to or through consulting firms during this year’s elections—and the scene at the conference was befitting of an industry awash in cash. Booths showcased the wares of campaign-literature printers, data-acquisition specialists, automated-phone-call vendors, online-fund-raising experts, and social-media-analytics firms. Whole companies exist just to manufacture the throwaway trinkets campaigns hand out, from stress balls with a candidate’s name on them to red-white-and-blue fingernail files.