miércoles, 26 de diciembre de 2012

The World´s 15 Universities, 2012.

               QS rank institutions based on an overall
score calculated following six criteria: academic
reputation, employer reputation, citations per 
faculty, faculty-to-student ratio, international 
proportion of faculty and international proportion 
of students. All scores are out of 100.


                                                                                                                         
2012 Rank
University (links)
Country
Overall Score
2011 Rank
2010 Rank
2009 Rank
2008 
1Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)United States1003599
2University of CambridgeUnited Kingdom99.81123
3Harvard UniversityUnited States99.22211
4UCL (University College London)United Kingdom98.77447
5University of OxfordUnited Kingdom98.65654
6Imperial College LondonUnited Kingdom98.36756
7Yale UniversityUnited States97.54332
8University of ChicagoUnited States96.38878
9Princeton UniversityUnited States95.41310812
10California Institute of Technology (Caltech)United States95.1129105
11Columbia UniversityUnited States94.710111110
12University of PennsylvaniaUnited States94.59121211
13ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)Switzerland92.818182024
14Cornell UniversityUnited States92.115161515
15Stanford UniversityUnited States91.711131617


jueves, 20 de diciembre de 2012

BOXING DAY

             Boxing Day in the United Kingdom is the day after Christmas Day.  It is a day when Post-Christmas sales start, a time to recover from the excesses of Christmas Day and an opportunity to spend time with family, friends and neighbours.
            Some people choose to go for a walk in the countryside, while other flock to the Post-Christmas Sales in large stores. Some people even spend part of the night and early morning queuing to get into the stores when the best bargains are still available. This makes December 26 a very important day for many retailers.
              It is a bank holiday. All schools and many organizations are closed. Some may close for the whole week between Christmas and New Year.
              There are a number of possible stories behind the origin of the term "Boxing Day". One of them is that the Day after Christmas was the traditional Day on which aristocracy distributed presents (boxes) to servants and employees. The servants returned home, opened their boxes and had a second Christmas on what became known as Boxing Day.
             Today´s Boxing Day festivities have very little to do with servants. Instead, they revolve around football, horse races, fox hunt, visits from friends, food and drinking at the pubs.

lunes, 10 de diciembre de 2012

The invention of the marine chronometer


            Latitude was determined by measuring the sun's angle at noon with the aid of a table giving the sun's declination for that day.
           Calculating LONGITUDE required an extensive knowledge of the moon's motion, and the moon was not visible every night, so this presented navigators with a major problem.
            In 1714, the British Parliament established the Longitude Board and huge prizes were offered for a practical solution to find longitude at sea.
           John Harrison—a humble British carpenter—invented an ingenious clock that could keep time accurately on a ship and therefore solve the longitude problem.

John Harrison (1693-1776), inventor of the marine chronometer. John Harrison (1693-1776), inventor of the marine chronometer.

John Harrison's final masterpiece, made around 1760, was a hand held marine chronometer.
John Harrison's final masterpiece, made around 1760, was a hand held marine chronometer.

        John Harrison—like all great inventors—had to battle years of apathy and ignorance before his invention was accepted by the Royal Navy....His invention would have GUARANTEED that BRITANNIA ruled the waves for centuries, yet he received absolutely no funding from the government.
        For over 30 years, with only his son William as his helper, he worked to perfect his masterpiece—the marine chronometer....By that time, the Royal Society, and the top levels of the Royal Navy, were secretly controlled by Jesuits, so the last thing they wanted was an accurate way of guiding British ships at sea.

lunes, 26 de noviembre de 2012

WINDSOR CASTLE


           Windsor Castle  is the world´s oldest and largest inhabited castle. It is one of the official residences of  Her Majesty the Queen, whose personal standard flies from the Round Tower when she is in residence.
          First established by William the Conqueror in the 11th century, it has been successively redecorated, enlarged and rebuilt by monarchs from Henry II, who rebuilt portions of the castle using stone to replace the earlier wood construction, to Queen Elizabeth II. Since then it has been a fortress, a home to medieval chivalry, a prison, a baroque palace and finally a royal residence.
          The castle survived the bombs which fell in the First and Second Wars but the main disaster struck in 1992 when a fire started in the Private Chapel. The fire raged out of control for hours, destroyed many
rooms and the next five years were dedicated to remodeling them.
          Windsor Castle is now reopened to visitors after the restoration and serves as one of the Queen´s private homes. She continues to spend most of her weekends at Windsor Castle, which is regularly used for Ceremonial and State Banquets.
         The Castle contains a significant portion of the Royal Collection of Art and many documents  relating to the Royal Family and British Monarchy over a period of almost 250 years.

martes, 20 de noviembre de 2012

The First Thanksgiving Menu


         The First Thanksgiving was celebrated at Plymouth Colony, Massachussets by the pilgrims in 1621. Many of the pilgrims died during the terrible winter of 1620-1621. By Autumn 1621 the survivors of that year of sickness and scarcity had a successful harvest to celebrate and then 90 Wampanoags (local native Americans) joined the 53 Mayflower Pilgrims. The celebration lasted for several years.
         The menu is said to have included clams, oysters, lobsters, fish, waterfowl, wild turkeys, rabbits, venison, beans, squash, turnips, carrots, salad, wild grapes, hasty pudding, thin cakes of bread and popcorn.
          So if you want to have a real Thanksgiving this year, forget about the mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, pies, cakes and beer. Instead serve venison, dried beans and pumpkin. And no football games on TV, either.

jueves, 8 de noviembre de 2012

POPPY DAY

         Remembrance Day (also known as Poppy Day) is an annual holiday on November 11th commemorating all those who have lost their lives fighting for Britain.
         Everybody who was born or raised in Britain is used to the annual appearance of  Remembrance Day Poppies and their huge significance. During the  fighting in Flandes in the First World War, one flower that still bloomed in those vile conditions was the poppy. A fact which was recorded in one of the most famous poems inspired by the horrors of the war: "In Flanders Fields", written by a Canadian officer and physician called John McCrae in May 1915. It is one of the most popular and most quoted poems about war.

     In Flanders fields the poppies blow
     Between the crosses, row on row,
     That mark our place; and in the sky
     The larks, still bravely singing, fly
     Scarce heard amid the guns below.

     We are the Dead. Short days ago
     We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
     Loved and were loved, and now we lie
     In Flanders fields.

     Take up our quarrel with the foe:
     To you from failing hands we throw
     The torch; be yours to hold it high.
     If ye break faith with us who die
     We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
     In Flanders fields.

        After World War II, Remembrance Day was recognized as a day of tribute to the veterans and dead of that conflict as well.The poem continued on inspiring others and this is how the poem came to the attention of an American proffesor, Moina Michael who worked effortlessly to provide financial support to disable servicemen and their families by selling silk red poppies. By 1921, she began to wear a red poppy to honour the soldiers who died in conflict. The practise quickly spread throughout the British Empire and the poem and the poppy became important Remembrance Day symbols in the Commonwealth of Nations. Now artificial poppies are sold in honour the brave men and women who serve in the military. 
        Remembrance Sunday is held on the second Sunday in November and special services are celebrated at War Memorials and churches all over Britain. A national ceremony takes place at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London.

lunes, 5 de noviembre de 2012

THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY

 
      The Bodleian Library was founded by Sir Thomas Bodley and officially opened on 8 November 1602. It is located at the heart of the historic part of Oxford and it is one of the oldest libraries in Europe and in England is second in size only to the British Library.
   
     With over 100 miles of shelving and holding a copy of every published book in the world, the Bodleian, known to Oxford scholars  as "Bodley" or simply "the Bod", is the research library for the University of Oxford. Under the Legal Deposit Libraries Act 2003, it is one of the six legal deposit libraries (British Library, Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Dublin and Aberystwyth) for works published in the United Kingdom and under the Irish Law, it is entitled to request a copy of each book published in the Republic of Ireland.

     In its reading rooms, generations of famous scholars have studied through the ages, amongst them five monarchs, forty Nobel Prize winners, twenty-six British Prime Ministers and writers including Oscar Wilde, CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien

          Today, the buidings are still used by students and scholars from all over the world and they attract an increasing number of visitors who are welcomed to see its iconic buidings and learn about the Library´s history and its vast collections.

      On November 8th, the Bodleian Library in Oxford will celebrate the 410th anniversary of its opening.

WHAT TO SEE :

 . The old schools Quadrangle with its magnificient buildings and monumental Tower of the Five Orders of  Architecture.            
 
.The Divinity School, the oldest teaching room and the first examination school of the University of Oxford.

 .The 17th-century Convocation House, where Parliament was held during the Civil War, and Chancellor´s Court.

 .The medieval Duke Humfrey´s Library, the oldest reading room.

 .The Radcliffe Camera, the first rotunda library built in Britain.

 .The Gladstone Link, the former underground book stack beneath the Radcliffe Square and the tunnel between the Bodleian Library and the Radcliffe Camera.


jueves, 1 de noviembre de 2012

GUY FAWKES´ NIGHT.



            
              "Remember, remember!
               the fifth of November!
               The Gunpowder treason and plot;
                I know of no reason
               Why the Gunpowder treason
               Should ever be forgot!" (English Folk Verse).

           

              Bonfire Night is also known as Fireworks' Night or Guy Fawkes' Night. It's a British tradition dating back to the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, when Catholic conspirator Guy Fawkes tried to blow up the Houses of Parliament and King James I.

              In 1605 King James I was on the throne. He was very unpopular with Roman Catholics. Some of them planned to blow up the Houses of Parliament on 5th November of that year, when the King was going to open Parliament. Under the House of Lords they had stored 36 barrels of gun powder, which were to be exploded by a man called Guy Fawkes. He was discovered, arrested and later hanged.

             Since that day the British traditionally celebrate 5th November by burning a dummy on a bonfire, whilst at the same time letting off fireworks.This dummy is called a "guy" (like Guy Fawkes) and children can often be seen on the pavements before 5th November saying " Penny for the guy", then they buy some fireworks.