-
6 votes
-
Ramadan: Three Muslims explain how they combine its spirituality with their busy lives
8 votes -
‘Deep Sleep’: How an amateur porno set off a massive Federal witch hunt
13 votes -
Conservatives want Catholic bishops to denounce pope as heretic
22 votes -
Evolution: How the theory is inspiring a new way of understanding language
5 votes -
The powerful group shaping the rise of Hindu nationalism in India
6 votes -
The cultural significance of cyberpunk
7 votes -
Froebel’s Gifts
8 votes -
LA’s elite on edge as prosecutors pursue more parents in admissions scandal
6 votes -
Out of the cradle - a high quality, short, cgi film series about human prehistory
6 votes -
An Election Held Hostage? - 1991
4 votes -
Learning my father’s language: I made a vow to teach myself Irish, the language my mother struggled to learn, so that my daughters may learn it too
6 votes -
Indigenous educators fight for an accurate history of California
7 votes -
Dictionaries recently added more than 1,500 words. Here are some new entries.
7 votes -
No Spanish allowed: Texas school museum revisits history of segregation
8 votes -
United Methodist court upholds Traditional Plan’s ban on LGBTQ clergy, same sex marriage
11 votes -
Ignore the Poway Synagogue shooter’s manifesto: Pay attention to 8chan’s /pol/ board
28 votes -
The birth of cheap communication (and junk mail)
7 votes -
Can you access university libraries in your country w/o an affiliation to the university?
In Turkey, where I live, almost all universities restrict access to staff and students (only their own students if not a graduate student); the only exception I can find is the Koç University...
In Turkey, where I live, almost all universities restrict access to staff and students (only their own students if not a graduate student); the only exception I can find is the Koç University where paid membership is open to public. I've researched in the past and found that major universities around the world---i.e. Italy, France, UK, US; selection factor being the languages I can read---seem to allow the public to access in one way or another (article, in Turkish, with results). But I wonder how accurate my reading is with the reality, and thus I'm asking this question.
So, as a plain citizen w/o any current affiliation to any educational institutions, can you access university libraries where you live? Does it matter if you have certain diplomas or affiliations? How easy it is?
10 votes -
Irving Finkel | The Ark Before Noah: A Great Adventure
7 votes -
Apartheid ended twenty-five years ago. How has South Africa changed?
10 votes -
Guam starts new effort to save dying CHamoru language
7 votes -
How the US military's opium war in Afghanistan was lost
7 votes -
New place names lift Māori culture in New Zealand’s capital
8 votes -
Goodbye, show world: The last days of Times Square’s peep shows
5 votes -
The longest year in human history (46 BCE)
10 votes -
The spoil of mariners
6 votes -
Long-lost shipwreck found off Victorian coast, seventy-seven years after being torpedoed by Japanese submarine in WWII
4 votes -
Cry for Notre-Dame, sure, but why not for treasures beyond the West?
20 votes -
The more names change, the more they sound the same
6 votes -
Increasingly competitive college admissions: much more than you wanted to know
5 votes -
'It's amazing tatau's persisted': How Samoan tattooing withstood colonialism
6 votes -
Pope Francis' homily at Easter Vigil Mass: Full text
5 votes -
Fireworks and pipe bombs: How Greek towns celebrate Easter
6 votes -
The 'debate of the century': What happened when Jordan Peterson debated Slavoj Žižek
8 votes -
The cult of “wrongthink”: How a generation of pundits ruined “debate”
9 votes -
A newly digitized map from 1587 offers a rare glimpse at the way Europeans conceived of the Americas before British colonization
14 votes -
How Southern Baptists Are Grappling With Artificial Intelligence
10 votes -
Linguists found the weirdest languages – and English is one of them
16 votes -
Mahavir Jayanti 2019: Date, history, significance of the Jain Festival
4 votes -
The intellectual we deserve – Jordan Peterson's popularity is the sign of a deeply impoverished political and intellectual landscape
35 votes -
The Station
6 votes -
Caesar in Britannia and Germania
9 votes -
Freedom gained and lost
6 votes -
"Ethics" and ethics
6 votes -
New species of ancient human discovered in Philippines cave
15 votes -
Weekly Language Exchange Thread, Week 2019-W15 (experimental)
It is Wednesday, my dudes! So why not have some good old foreign-language practice? As an experiment, let's try just that. Start a thread in a language you would like to practice or teach, or...
It is Wednesday, my dudes! So why not have some good old foreign-language practice? As an
experiment, let's try just that. Start a thread in a language you would like to practice or teach,
or reply to an existing one. E.g.## German / Deutsch Hier sprechen wir Deutsch! Wie geht es Ihnen?
If you want to fix someone's grammar and also reply to them in the same message, I would recommend
using a horizontal ruler with “* * *”. E.g.:I think “sich” should be “ihm”. * * * Es tut mir Leid, dass es ihm so schlecht geht.
11 votes -
Hindsight 2070: We asked fifteen experts, “What do we do now that will be considered unthinkable in fifty years?” Here’s what they told us
12 votes -
Archivists race to digitize slavery records before the history is lost
9 votes -
East African Federation: A new African superpower?
4 votes