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Rather than emerging from the hallowed halls of academia, synchromysticism was born on the Internet, a new, more "upbeat" development in the paranoid community (i.e., among occultists and conspiracy theorists) that attempts to see beyond the darker aspects of society, politics, and popular culture, to a cosmic design.
On leaving academia to work in a non-profit, Spect said, “For much of my scientific career, I felt like the hallowed halls of academia didn’t shine quite as brightly on folks like me who are explicitly motivated to find the ‘low-hanging fruit’ — opportunities for relatively straightforward technology to make a massive impact in the ...
Stewart Cook/CBS The Only Murders in the Building crew temporarily relocated from the hallowed halls of the Arconia to the famed Beverly Hilton for the 82nd Annual Golden Globes. Only Murders in ...
Claiming something is a meme presupposes the existence of a meme, which is a matter of the dispute in the most hallowed halls of academia. Anyone promoting it here is doing so underhandedly, and whatever POV pro-memetic endorsements are written should be removed.
The term is often used now to refer to academia or the college and university systems. [2] [3] The term originated from the Biblical Song of Songs with a different meaning and was later used as an epithet for Mary. [4] An ivory tower, as symbol of Mary, in a "Hunt of the Unicorn Annunciation" (c. 1500) from a Netherlandish book of hours.
Alma Matters: Inside the IIT Dream is an Indian documentary web series that is directed by Pratik Patra and Prashant Raj, produced by Dopamine Media and Entertainment. The series starred Shubham Agarwal, Kevin Banker, Lokesh Deshmukh, Mukul Sankule, Adarsh Upadhyay, Kumar Gaurav and many more.
Members believed "Michigamua" was the name of an actual indigenous tribe of the Great Lakes region and the state's namesake. There was no such tribe, though the state's name is indeed a variant of the Ojibwe word gichigami or michigami, meaning "large water". [5] The founders were inspired by novels featuring senior societies at Eastern colleges.
Dorothy Cowser Yancy (born April 18, 1944) is an American academic, professor, and administrator. Her contributions to academia established her legacy of scholarship among African-American women. Her contributions to academia established her legacy of scholarship among African-American women.