(62) videos
CAS's Thomas Kunz and his team discuss white nose syndrome and the implications for the little brown bat population, which he says could become extinct in the Northeast within 20 years.
Read the story on BU Today:
[...]http://www.bu.edu/today/node/11356
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CAS biologist, Pam Templer, probes the impact of snow-challenged winters.
Read the full story on BU Today: http://www.bu.edu/today/2012/sense-of-snow/
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National boxing champ and BU boxing instructor, John O'Brien, teaches two of FitRec's most popular courses.
Read the full story on BU Today: http://www.bu.edu/today/2012/throwing-punches/
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When Google launched its Facebook competitor, Google+, at the end of June, many predicted the imminent demise of Facebook, especially those critical of its privacy settings. This week’s YouSpeak†asks students which social networking [...]site they prefer.
Read the full story on BU Today: http://www.bu.edu/today/2011/youspeak-facebook-vs-google/
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BU's synchronized swimming team executes complicated routines in the water.
Read the story on BU Today:
http://www.bu.edu/today/node/12568
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Need complete silence in order to study? Or do you do better if there’s white noise—or a police siren—in the background? Prefer to study alone—or surrounded by two dozen of your closest friends? Where do you go to find the [...]perfect feng shui for finals prep?
In this special edition of “YouSpeak†we ask, “What are your favorite places to study?
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BU women's hockey coach Brian Durocher uses his deep knowledge of the game and no-drama, calm demeanor to build and guide his team.
Read the full story on BU Today: http://www.bu.edu/today/2012/sometimes-nice-guys-finish-first/
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BU Today asks students whether they think employers and health insurance companies should be able to deny women coverage for free birth control on religious or moral grounds.
Read the full story on BU Today: [...]http://www.bu.edu/today/2012/youspeak-birth-control/
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For several years, Richard Primack has been prowling Walden Pond in Concord, Mass., chronicling spring’s curtain-riser, the arrival of leaves and buds, the same details Henry David Thoreau carefully recorded a century and a half ago. Primack, [...]a College of Arts & Sciences biology professor, who pioneered the study of the effects of climate change on New England, has used Thoreau’s records to confirm that leaf-out arrives earlier today than it did then—a barometer of global warming.
Read the full story on BU Today: http://www.bu.edu/today/2011/watching-climate-change-from-the-ground-and-the-heavens/
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