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Curious City - Hmmm … If Only Our Curiosity Had An Anthem
A Chicago transplant asked what — if anything — is unique to Chicago. Answers were slippery, but our songster grabbed the best and wrote a song.
Curious City - Hmmm … If Only Our Curiosity Had An Anthem
A Chicago transplant asked what — if anything — is unique to Chicago. Answers were slippery, but our songster grabbed the best and wrote a song.
Money Girl - 302 MG Should You Contribute to a Non-Deductible IRA?
Rules for contributing to multiple retirement accounts.
Cato Daily Podcast - Dodd-Frank’s Unfurling Errors
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More or Less: Behind the Stats - The end of the Penny
Canada has stopped distributing its smallest coin ?the one cent or the penny. This week Ruth Alexander looks at why some countries get rid of their smallest coins and some just cannot part with them. Also which country has the coin with the smallest monetary value?
Start the Week - Mathematical modelling with Lisa Jardine
On Start the Week Lisa Jardine discusses how complex maths has broken free of the laboratory and now influences every aspect of our lives. James Owen Weatherall applauds the take-over of the financial world by physicists, Marcus du Sautoy revels in the numbers and Kenneth Cukier explores how big data will change everything from disease control to bargain buys. But the cultural commentator Tiffany Jenkins sounds a note of caution about a world where everything is measurable.
Producer: Katy Hickman.
New Books in Native American Studies - Joy Porter, “Native American Freemasonry: Associationalism and Performance in America” (University of Nebraska Press, 2011)
Joy Porter is the author of Native American Freemasonry: Associationalism and Performance in America (University of Nebraska Press, 2011). She has also written several other publications, including, To Be Indian: The Life of Iroquois-Seneca Arthur Caswell Parker (University of Oklahoma Press, 2001) and Land & Spirit in Native America (Praeger Press, 2012), and she co-edited a book with Kenneth M. Roemer, entitled The Cambridge Companion to Native American Literature (Cambridge University Press, 2005). In her latest book, she carefully tells the fascinating story of an elusive subject that sparks many historical debates: the organizational history and inclusion of Native American freemasons in America. She covers the broad chronology of freemasonry in general, from the British origins in the sixteenth-century to freemasonry in America from the eighteenth- to the twentieth-centuries. She explains how freemasonry is one of many institutions that exemplified the process of the transatlantic exchange of ideas from Europe to the Americas. More specifically, she examines the Native American freemasonry from an interdisciplinary approach, such as using theories from performance studies and socio-psychological ideas of associationalism. Furthermore, she examines Native American freemasonry from the lense of understanding the idea of “ornamentalism” (a concept borrowed from Edward Said’s work, Orientalism) to evoke the historical and racial perceptions of Native Americans from the colonial era, and how some of these ideas shifted over time. Listen in.
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The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe - The Skeptics Guide #395 – Feb 9 2013
Motley Fool Money - Motley Fool Money: 02.08.2013
Hedge fund manager David Einhorn sues Apple. LinkedIn connects. And Dell goes private. Our analysts discuss some of the week's big stories and talk about some stocks on their radar.
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