Friday, 25 January 2013

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

The DVD format is now considered, by and large, the dominant recording format for home video. However, animation VHS sales are still booming. Whether you are a parent who wants to entertain your child with classic, fun educational videos or a fan of bygone animated TV series, you can still find plenty of superb quality animation VHS recordings.Classic Disney movies, such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Bambi, and Cinderella, are all available on quality VHS tapes. VHS tapes come in a number of standards, including S-VHS, D-VHS, and compact VHS (otherwise known as VHS-C). Besides standard VHS movies, many animated VHS movies come in collector's editions. For example, the Cinderella Disney Special Platinum Edition, released in 2005, features enhanced picture and sound. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and Bambi have also received the 'Platinum' or 'Limited Edition' treatment.Other animated Disney movies, such as Peter Pan, Robin Hood, Pinocchio and Pocahontas, can also be found on VHS. They can be found either new or used. In fact, many used animation VHS tapes can be found for a dollar or less.While you can fast forward, rewind, and pause VHS tapes, you can't skip chapters like you can with animated DVDs. That being said, animation VHS tapes tend to have long shelf lives, and classic 'hard to find' VHS tapes sell for many times their market value to collectors. 

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs

Disney Vhs 

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

 Janice Kay "Jan" Brewer (born September 26, 1944)[2] is the 22nd Governor of the U.S. state of Arizona, in office since 2009. A member of the Republican Party, Brewer is the fourth woman, and third consecutive woman, to serve as Governor of Arizona. Brewer previously served as Secretary of State of Arizona from January 2003 to January 2009, when Governor Janet Napolitano resigned after being selected as Secretary of Homeland Security. Brewer became Governor of Arizona as part of the line of succession, as determined by the Arizona constitution.
Born in California, Brewer attended Glendale Community College where she received a radiological technologist certificate. She has served as a State Senator and State Representative for Arizona, from 1983 to 1996. Brewer also served as Chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, before running for Arizona Secretary of State in 2002.
Brewer came into the national spotlight when, on April 23, 2010, she signed the Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act. The act makes it a state misdemeanor crime for an immigrant to be in Arizona without carrying registration documents required by federal law, authorizes state and local law enforcement of federal immigration laws, and cracks down on those sheltering, hiring and transporting illegal aliens.[3] Brewer sought a full term as Governor of Arizona in the 2010 Arizona gubernatorial election, and was elected on November 3, 2010, winning with 55% of the vote over Democrat Terry Goddard's 42%.

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Community Colleges In Arizona

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Insulin therapy is the most vital and efficacious treatment for diabetes, yet it remains the most complex. Current issues in insulin therapy include setting appropriate individual glycemic targets, using currently available insulins more effectively and safely, and using insulin in combination with incretin therapies. Recent research has paradoxically clarified some of these issues, but further complicated others. The future of insulin therapy will offer additional opportunities to individualize therapy, as investigations are designed to explore various strategies to deliver insulin in a more perfectly physiologic manner, including new types of insulin analogues, new routes of administration, and new delivery technologies. This activity will discuss recent findings pertaining to both the present and future of insulin therapy.
This activity will include 6 'hot topic' discussions, each consisting of a short written excerpt of relevant, corresponding clinical data and audio clips of the faculty roundtable discussion derived from questions received during the live activity.

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Nursing Continuing Education

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

David Hockney was born in Bradford, England, on July 9, 1937. He loved books and was interested in art from an early age, admiring Picasso, Matisse and Fragonard. His parents encouraged their son’s artistic exploration, and gave him the freedom to doodle and daydream.
Hockney attended the Bradford College of Art from 1953 to 1957. Then, because he was a conscientious objector to military service, he spent two years working in hospitals to fulfill his national service requirement. In 1959, he entered graduate school at the Royal College of Art in London alongside other young artists such as Peter Blake and Allen Jones, and he experimented with different forms, including abstract expressionism. He did well as a student, and his paintings won prizes and were purchased for private collections.

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Collage Pictures

Laverne University

Laverne University

As the first female leader of the University of La Verne, Devorah Lieberman, Ph.D., began her tenure as the University’s 18th President in July 2011. She brings with her a strong research and publication background in intercultural communication and diversity issues in higher education, as well as extensive knowledge and experience in higher education administration.
Her leadership philosophy fully aligns with the mission of the University of La Verne—to provide opportunities for students to achieve their personal goals and to become successful professionals and contributing members of the global community through a student-centered, values-based, and diverse learning environment.
During her tenure at Wagner College she led the strategic development of Civic Innovations, a multi-year effort for which the Corporation for National and Community Service provided significant funding. At La Verne, she is implementing the La Verne Experience which will connect theory to practice among all colleges and campuses, and reach across all curricular, co-curricular and community engagement programs.
In January 2012, she was named to the American Council of Education’s (ACE) Commission on Inclusion and to the Resource Development Committee for the Hispanic Association of Colleges & Universities (HACU). Also in 2012, she joined the Board of Directors for the Los Angeles regional office of the American Jewish Committee. In 2011 Lieberman was appointed to the ACE Network Executive Board as a state liaison for Women in Higher Education and is currently serving a three-year term on the Western Association of Schools & Colleges (WASC) Accrediting Commission for Senior Colleges & Universities. She is also a member of the regional Los Angeles County Fair Association.
She has previously served as the chair of the ACE International Collaborative, worked as an ACE Institute Facilitator, acted as an Institutional Representative chair for the New American Colleges & Universities, and sat on the advisory board for the National Review Board for Civic Engagement.
Throughout her administrative career, Lieberman has brought national recognition to the institutions she has been associated with including the ACE “Bringing the World into the Classroom” award, the Washington Center “Higher Education Civic Engagement Award,” and the TIAA-CREF “Theodore M. Hesburgh Award for Excellence.”

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Laverne University

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

 Bill Barry has been the Director of Labor Studies for CCBC since 1997, and has maintained a program started in the 1970s by the Reverend Everett L. Miller, Sr. to help put the “move” back into the labor movement. The program offers an Associate Degree in Labor Studies, and is one of the very few in the United States which has not either become a research facility or been swallowed up into an “industrial relations” program.
            The program offers all of the basic union training courses, trying to answer the basic question: “How are workers trying to make their lives better?”
  The programs stresses worker self-reliance, and has a motto “Teaching Workers to Teach Themselves.”
Classes are taught throughout the middle-Atlantic states, and on-line, using streaming video.

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Baltimore Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

I was born and raised in the "coalfields" area of southwestern West Virginia. My father, grandfathers, and great-grandfathers were all coal miners. Seeing photos of my grandpa working in the coal mine at age 12 made me really appreciate the priviledges modern Americans enjoy, particularly the ready access we have to quality education. Our educational system truly sets us apart from much of the world.
As I grew up I began to enjoy helping my friends study and learn, especially in mathematics. I have ALWAYS wanted to be a math teacher. I attended Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia (GO HERD!) where I received my Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degrees in mathematics. After leaving Marshall I taught at West Virginia State College and Morehead State University (in Kentucky) before returning to Marshall to pursue my doctoral degree. I received my Doctor of Education degree from Marshall in 2003. 

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College

Manatee Community College