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American Perception Managament … Tallahassee students protest not guilty verdict in Zimmerman trial (Jul. 14, 2013) …item 2.. TED Talks, FSU listens — Being Aware of Being (Jul. 12, 2013) …
best free online dating sites for young people
Image by marsmet472
As Stan Moore has written, "Just because truth has been omitted, does not mean that truth is not true. Just because reality has not been perceived, does not mean that it is not real."

……..*****All images are copyrighted by their respective authors ……..
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…..item 1)…. Tallahassee students protest not guilty verdict in Zimmerman trial …

… FSU News … www.fsunews.com/

March to Capitol draws crowd from community, provides response to court’s decision

Jul. 14, 2013 |
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img code photo … Protestors rally in front of Florida’s historic Capitol building in Tallahassee

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Protestors rally in front of Florida’s historic Capitol building in Tallahassee during the early morning hours of July 14, 2013. The crowd, which gathered at the Leon County Civic Center, marched to the Capitol complex in protest and mourning of the verdict reached in the trial of George Zimmerman, who was deemed not guilty for shooting and killing Trayvon Martin in a Sanford, Fla. neighborhood in March 2012 . / Zachary Goldstein / FSView

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Written by
K. Maxwell Greenwood
Managing Editor @KMaxGreenwood

FILED UNDER
FSU News

www.fsunews.com/article/20130713/FSVIEW/130714001/Tallaha…

Eugene Butler stood at the foot of the steps of the Florida State Capitol Building, loudspeaker clutched in his hand.

“That can’t be right,” Butler said, staring at the crowd of onlookers lining the concrete steps of the Capitol. “That can’t be the America that we grew up in. I can’t believe what I’m seeing, because I know that this is the start of something special.”

Tallahassee college students and community members rallied at the Capitol early Sunday morning after a jury found neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman not guilty in the shooting of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin.

The protest came just a few short hours after Zimmerman, 29, was cleared of all charges in the 2012 death of 17-year-old Martin. The case has sparked nationwide debate over self-defense and racial equality in the United States. Sunday’s protest was organized largely by the Florida State University Dream Defenders, a self-described civil rights organization founded last year in the wake of Martin’s death.

“Young people today are told that they’re growing up in a post-racist country, and judging by Zimmerman’s trial, that doesn’t seem to be the case,” said Brian Marshall, the president of the FSU Dream Defenders. “We’re here tonight to demand justice and to stand up to a system that I, personally, have lost faith in.”

Protesters began congregating at the Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center late Saturday night. The rally-goers then marched to the front steps of the Capitol. Some protesters held signs; others wore hoodie sweatshirts as a symbol of Martin, who was reportedly wearing a hoodie the night he was shot.

Emotions ran high as protesters spoke out about Zimmerman’s trial, Martin’s death and racial injustice. Dream Defender member Kristen Bonner said Zimmerman’s verdict left her in a state of disbelief.

“Had Zimmerman listened to police that night, Trayvon would have still been alive and none of this would have happened,” Bonner said. “It’s unbelievable that we live in a country where a murderer can get off the hook like this. I can’t even think straight right now.”

Student leaders are expected to meet on the Florida A&M University campus Sunday to discuss an organized student reaction to Saturday’s verdict.

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…..item 2)…. TED Talks, FSU listens …

… FSU News … www.fsunews.com/

We compile some of the best ‘ideas worth spreading’

Jul. 12, 2013 |
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img code photo … TED Talks

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TED Talks are presentations and speeches from some of the most brilliant and fascinating minds of our time. Jen Santoro speaks at TEDxFSU, a university-run TED Talk event. / Blair Stokes / FSView

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Written by
Brittany Lyons
Staff Writer @Bhl11Lyons

FILED UNDER
FSU News
FSU News Life

www.fsunews.com/article/20130712/FSVIEW0101/130712007/TED…

Most people wouldn’t feel too compelled to sit through an entire 20-minute speech on the Internet. TED Talks have found a way to change that, however, by offering captivating speeches on some of the most intriguing topics.

TED Talks are presentations and speeches from some of the most brilliant and fascinating minds of our time. TED, the nonprofit behind TED Talks and global conferences, stands for the fields of Technology, Entertainment, and Design, but since it’s inception in 1984, it has expanded to nearly every topic imaginable. Today, thousands of TED Talks are available online for free, and have even recently been added to Netflix online streaming. However, with so many speakers and subjects out there, it can be hard to find the ones that are most lucrative. The FSView & Florida Flambeau has compiled a list of ten TED Talks everyone should watch that push the boundaries and discuss relevant issues concerning gender inequality, social media, public education and more.

— 1. Juan Enriquez: Will our kids be a different species?
Anyone who didn’t freak out at the news of 3D printing technology probably has something wrong with them. Juan Enriquez’s talk makes watchers consider whether humans as a species are changing along with technology, and the changes he describes are mindblowing. Tune in to find out what many Olympic athletes have in common, how you might be able to download your memories, and a few reasons why your kids or grandkids might have a completely different genetic brain makeup from you.

— 2. Dan Buettner: How to live to be 100+
National Geographic writer Dan Buettner studied communities around the globe whose life expectancy was much longer than the average country’s. In Buettner’s informative TED Talk, he reveals nine essential factors that groups like Sardinians, Okinawans and Seventh Day Adventists in a California community use to shape their lifestyles and increase their life expectancy. The good news? Genetics only account for about 10% of how long you will live, so incorporating some of these tips will most likely make a difference in your life expectancy.

— 3. Steve Jobs: How to live before you die
This is the footage of the commencement ceremony speech that Steve Jobs made at Stanford back in 2005, but the message he delivers is an important part of the legacy the iconic prodigy left behind after he passed away in 2011. The man behind Apple and Pixar also dropped out of college, was ousted from his own company that he founded and knew how to use death as a motivating tool. His stories are as encouraging as they are thought provoking.

— 4. Matt Cutts: Try something new for 30 days
2013 is almost halfway over—are you still keeping up with your New Year’s Resolutions? If you’re like most people, you probably forgot about them long ago. But Matt Cutts’s talk may get you motivated once again. He enlightens how to set the right goals in order to try something new or break a bad habit: Want to stop biting your nails or finally learn piano? Just give it thirty days and the right amount of effort.

— 5. Sheryl WuDunn: Our century’s greatest injustice
This is a must-watch presentation about the current situation of women around the world. Sheryl WuDunn, co-author of Half the Sky, takes her audience around the world with stories about real women, what they have suffered and what they have been able to achieve. Her talk is a wake-up call about gender inequality that is still rampant today. More convincing, however, is the way that she puts faces to statistics and suggests ways in which educating and creating better economies can make the changes that need to happen (and how you can and should help out).

— 6. Kevin Allocca: Why videos go viral
This talk, like the YouTube videos it explains, is both shorter and more entertaining than most TED Talk videos. It’ll make you think twice about the success of the latest viral hit, and might even give you enough tips to produce your own internet sensation if you have luck, talent (or complete lack of it) and unexpectedness on your side.

— 7. Ken Robinson: Schools kill creativity
No matter what field you’re majoring in, Ken Robinson offers some profound information about creativity. His talk encourages us all to rethink education and the way that we learn—maybe switching up your routines or picking up a creative activity or minor are just a few of the tasks he highlights to keep your brain working at an optimal level.

— 8. Sheena Iyengar: How to make choosing easier
This talk encourages you to “be choosy about choosing.” Humans are bombarded with literally thousands of decisions each day, so making the right one can often be difficult. Sheena Lyengar has four tips for getting the most out of each choice you make, and they are surprisingly simple revelations.

— 9. JK Rowling: The fringe benefits of failure
It’s pretty remarkable to hear advice from JK Rowling, the woman whose Harry Potter series raised her out of poverty and into a global spotlight—especially when she’s praising the lessons that come from failure. She discusses the power of imagination, though not quite in a fashion that one would expect, and gives enough clever anecdotes to remind watchers why the world fell under her spell in the first place.

— 10. Meg Jay: Why 30 is not the new 20
It’s easy to think that you have all the time in the world to figure out what you want to do after college—who you want to be, the people you want to surround yourself with, the career you hope to attain and so on. But as Meg Jay, a clinical psychologist, has to say, the twenties are not a throwaway decade. Jay has plenty of advice about taking charge of your life and becoming the adult you want to be right now. This talk could not be more relevant for our demographic and circumstances—it’s time for all of us to become who we want to be.

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September 1925 …item 3.. If you want a party at college head to the University of Iowa (5 August 2013) …item 4.. Alanis Morissette – Jagged Little Pill (full album) — “Hand in My Pocket” …
best free online dating sites for young people
Image by marsmet472
I really do think the annual rush is something to be celebrated for FSU. Florida State has a long history of involvement with fraternities and sororities, and it would be wrong to cast them as the villains now when they are so ingrained in the university’s culture and have done quite a lot to improve it.
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………*****All image are copyrighted by their respective authors ……..
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… message header for photo listed above College Humor magazine … September 1925 ..

College Humor was a popular American humor magazine from the 1920s to the 1940s. Published monthly by Collegiate World Publishing, it began in 1920 with reprints from college publications and soon introduced new material, including fiction. Contributors included Robert Benchley, Heywood Broun, Groucho Marx, Ellis Parker Butler, Katherine Brush, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald. Editor H.N. Swanson later became Fitzgerald’s Hollywood agent.
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… marsmet47 photo … Carly Simon … FSU News – Recruits bid rush adieu — “If you have to cry, go outside,” fashion PR personality Kelly Cutrone advises. (Aug. 25, 2013 10:33 PM) …item 2a.. No Secrets ..

www.flickr.com/photos/31473156@N02/3528298781/in/photostream
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… marsmet47 photostream …

www.flickr.com/photos/31473156@N02/page3/?details=1
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…..item 1)…. When Tallahassee rains, it pours …

… FSU News … www.fsunews.com/

Summer rainy season frustrates students, alters moods
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img code photo … Tallahassee’s standard storms

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Students struggle to stay dry on campus during one of Tallahassee’s standard storms. Rainy, inclement weather can take its toll on the already strained student psyche. / Tallahassee Democrat File Photo

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Jul. 24, 2013 |

Written by
Nicole Cornwell
Contributing Writer @NicoleCornwell

FILED UNDER
FSU News
FSU News Campus

www.fsunews.com/article/20130725/FSVIEW1/130724025/When-T…

Soggy, dripping and altogether displeased, freshman Kevin Eddy once again arrives at his class after getting caught in the Tallahassee rain. He’s just made the trek from DeGraff Hall to the Williams building, dodging puddles and ducking under trees just to make it to English class completely soaked. Eddy is not amused by Tallahassee’s signature rain.

“It just sucks,” Eddy said of Tallahassee’s prevalent rain. “I was definitely shocked about how much it rained because I didn’t even think to bring an umbrella. I didn’t think it would keep going for four weeks.”

Investing in rain boots and a sturdy umbrella is recommended because torrential downpours in Tallahassee are the norm, something Florida State students must contend with regularly, especially during the summer. On average, the city sees most of its rain during the months of June, July and August with upwards of seven inches per month.

In 2007, the Florida’s capital ranked 9th on the WeatherBill’s list of rainiest cities and continues to yield higher than rainfall averages than the state of Florida as a whole. Despite the age of the WeatherBill study, Jeffry Evans, local meteorologist for the National Weather Service, said these results consider a 30-year average and rainfall is unlikely to decrease in the near future. He said Tallahassee could potentially even move up in the rankings in a few years.

“We normally receive a lot of rain in Tallahassee, as do all cities along the Gulf Coast for the most part,” Evans said. “However, the upper level pattern this summer has remained conducive to a lot of rainfall since June 1. We simply have not been able to switch away from this somewhat unusual summer pattern which continues to bring rich, tropical moisture into the area.”

While the word “tropical” evokes island getaways and sipping piña coladas beachside, this weather is the adverse, forcing students stay in, maybe even miss class for fear of dealing with a rainy day and all-too-common flash flooding.

Consistently stormy weather isn’t good for the psyches of already stressed college students. In fact, seemingly innocent rainy days can actually cause serious changes in temperament, affecting students’ moods according to Randi Mackintosh, a licensed psychologist at FSU’s University Counseling Center. Mackintosh said the weather is disruptive on several levels.

“I’ve definitely had students come in talking about how the weather has been draining on them,” Mackintosh said. “It has a lot to do with us not being able to do our normal routine.

It’s harder to get around campus, especially for those students who aren’t driving. They’re not able to do daily things that they need to be doing.”

The weather-spawned sadness numerous students may be experiencing as of late could be, according to Mackintosh, similar to Seasonal Affective Disorder, which is a depression typically prevalent in the winter months due to the cold and lack of sunlight. She proposed that “the frequent rain and very consistent bad weather” could be having the very same effect.

According to Mackintosh, students are usually out of sorts during the middle to end of each semester, typically around October and again in February. “Generally that’s a time when stress is increasing,” said Mackintosh, referring to the inevitable financial and academic stress that comes with the end of a semester.

The rain has inhibited outdoor activities which typically serve as natural sources of stress relief or a simple, sunny mood boost. Instead of experiencing a proper Tallahassee summer enjoying Landis Green, the Rez or any number of outdoor spots around the city, students either get stuck inside or caught in the daily deluge.
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…..item 2)…. Another semester, another rush week …

… FSU News … www.fsunews.com/
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img code photo … Another semester, another rush week

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Photo courtesy of FSU Office of Greek Life

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Jul. 31, 2013 |

Written by
Adrian Chamberlin
Senior Staff Writer

FILED UNDER
FSU News
FSU News Adrian Chamberlin

www.fsunews.com/article/20130801/FSVIEW0303/130731018/Ano…

I’m constantly learning that different people enjoy different things, and that lesson is drilled into me every fall when I see incoming freshmen and other students getting ready to rush sororities or fraternities.

For instance, I like not having to take out the thousands in extra loans I would need if I wanted to join a fraternity. Obviously, a lot of FSU students feel differently. From what I have seen, I would guess that around half of all female FSU students belong to some type of sorority. While that number is probably lower in reality, the estimate speaks for itself.

This semester is likely to stay true to those stats by continuing the annual cycle I first witnessed the day I moved in to Smith Hall my freshmen year. There were lines of students outside sororities, and many of the women I saw there were visibly uncomfortable in the heat. They were also very happy, from what I saw. Most were socializing with other applicants or actual sorority members, and their conversation appeared to flow naturally.

But when I say that I am watching ‘the cycle’ repeat itself, I am recognizing my mixed feelings about it. I have seen fraternity members brag about driving while blacked-out drunk, and I have seen other fraternity members participate in regular community service projects. Greek Life is subject to the same laws the rest of us are: the laws of it all being pretty relative.

I would say more than just being relative, the perception of the annual Fall Rush depends on what you are looking at. If I focus on the fraternities who are infamous for being penalized, my view gets skewed towards the negative. Likewise, if I focus on the angels of the Greek community, I might forget the stories I have heard and seen.
I suppose I could also describe it as realizing I shouldn’t judge a person or organization by their worst moments.

I really do think the annual rush is something to be celebrated for FSU. Florida State has a long history of involvement with fraternities and sororities, and it would be wrong to cast them as the villains now when they are so ingrained in the university’s culture and have done quite a lot to improve it.

So when I say the cycle will repeat this year, that’s not entirely true. The difference to me is that this year I will be trying to look for the positives and not settle for those glaring negatives that have owned my views on the entire subject. I just need to start, and keep making the effort to take it all in and see the big picture.
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…..item 3)…. If you want a party at college head to the University of Iowa – ranked the nation’s best party school… but Utah’s Brigham Young University is ‘stone-cold sober’ …

… Mail Online – Daily Mail … www.dailymail.co.uk/news/

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 15:34 EST, 5 August 2013 | UPDATED: 16:10 EST, 5 August 2013

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2385052/University-Iowa-…

College students have ranked the University of Iowa the nation’s best party school, according to a nationwide survey by The Princeton Review.
The list, which was determined by 126,000 students, revealed the top five as: University of California, Santa Barbara; the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; West Virginia University and Syracuse University.
The organization also released its ‘stone-cold sober schools’ list — led again this year by Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah; and followed by Wheaton College in Wheaton, Ill.
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img code photo … University of Iowa student Caryn Vaneck

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/05/article-2385052-1B2974…

University of Iowa student Caryn Vaneck drinks from a beer bong while tailgating before a football game in Iowa City, Iowa

AP

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Officials in Iowa City aren’t celebrating the ranking, which comes after they’ve made recent strides in the battle against binge drinking on campus and downtown.

University of Iowa spokesman Tom Moore said The Princeton Review ‘gets some things right’, by describing Iowa as an affordable Big Ten university with students who are both studious and social.

More…

… Ranking the happiest and saddest U.S. states (by what their residents say on Twitter)

‘That indicates they are balancing their academic responsibilities with their social pursuits,’ he said.

The rankings are based on surveys in which an average of 333 students per campus are asked 80 questions about a range of subjects in the last three school years.
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img code photo … Univeristy of Iowa, in Iowa City

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/05/article-2385052-1B295A…

Univeristy of Iowa, in Iowa City, was voted the top party school in America, according to studentsUniveristy of Iowa

UI

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img code photo … University of California, Santa Barbara

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/05/article-2385052-1B2948…

University of California, Santa Barbara was ranked the second biggest party school in the nationUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

WikiCommons

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Its methodology uses a five-point scale, allowing for school-to-school comparisons.

Universities routinely dismiss the rankings as unscientific and invalid, while praising the free publicity that comes along with positive ones.

For instance, Emerson College is likely to embrace its ranking Monday as the most LGBT-friendly school, and the University of Mississippi will certainly tout its ‘most beautiful campus’ designation.

Packed Iowa City bars blaring dance music, off-campus house parties and tailgating before Hawkeye football games are as much a part of Iowa’s culture as the cornfields that surround the city.

Fraternities and sororities also contribute to the party atmosphere.

But the No. 1 spot seems out of step with national data released this year showing fewer Hawkeyes are drinking and engaging in high-risk drinking.

The percentage of Iowa students who reported drinking in the last 30 days (75 percent) was the lowest in 20 years of studies, even if it was above the national average.

Policy changes have scaled back Iowa City’s bar scene, and a 2010 ordinance requiring customers to be 21 to enter bars — instead of 19 — is credited with reducing drinking and crime.

Once popular watering holes such as Vito’s and One Eyed Jake’s have closed, replaced by an indie movie theater and a nice restaurant.
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img code photo … The Princeton Review

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/05/article-2385052-1B2948…

The Princeton Review on party universities was determined by 126,000 students’ votes in a nationwide survey (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign pictured)

Illinois.Edu

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‘We are continuing to work to change the culture on our campus by educating students to only consume alcohol in a legal, safe and responsible manner, and those efforts are achieving results,’ Moore said.

The No. 3 party school sprawls across parts of two cities — Urbana and Champaign, Ill. — and in both, students younger than 21 can legally enter bars. In Champaign, where most of the bars are located, the minimum age is 19; in Urbana, it’s 18.

The campus’ party reputation is enhanced by a single annual event, Unofficial St. Patrick’s Day— or, simply, Unofficial — when thousands of students and others converge for a day of drinking at parties and in bars.

Local police ticket hundreds every year, and some city leaders have tried to limit Unofficial by restricting bar operating hours and taking other steps, with little or no success.

At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, No. 8 on this year’s list, university officials and the city have worked to address the drinking problem, including passing an ordinance in 2012 designed to crack down on large house parties and trying to provide more entertainment options for students who aren’t of legal drinking age.
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img code photo … Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/05/article-2385052-1B2948…

Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, was voted ‘stone-cold sober school’ of the country

WikiCommons

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Starting this fall, all incoming students will be expected to complete an online education program about alcohol abuse.

‘When I started my freshman year, there was no talk in orientation or any sort of things in the dorm about alcohol, even though we all knew coming in what the reputation was of Madison as a party school,’ said Mark Woulf, a 2010 graduate who now serves as the city’s food and alcohol policy coordinator.

Given that changing the booze-heavy culture is difficult, the school is now teaching students to take responsibility for themselves and their friends, Woulf said.

The Princeton Review senior vice president Robert Franek said its lists are based completely on students’ opinions, and that Iowa’s ranking does not diminish the Review’s ‘great respect’ for the school’s academics or progress it’s made regarding alcohol issues on campus.

The privately held education services company has published ‘The Best 378 Colleges’ book annually since 1992.

It includes 62 lists, such as the best-run college — Claremont McKenna College in California — and best college library — Columbia University in New York City.
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— TOP 20 PARTY SCHOOLS

1. University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa

2. University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, Calif.

3. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Ill.

4. West Virginia University, Morgantown W. Va.

5. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.

6. University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla.

7. Ohio University, Athens, Ohio

8. University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wis.

9. Penn State University, University Park, Pa.

10. Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa.

11. University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.

12. Florida State University, Tallahassee, Fla.

13. DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind.

14. University of Mississippi, University, Miss.

15. University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas

16. Miami University of Ohio, Oxford, Ohio

17. University of Maryland, College Park, Md.

18. Tulane University, New Orleans, La.

19. University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.

20. University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore.

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— TOP 20 SOBER SCHOOLS

1. Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah

2. Wheaton College, Wheaton, Ill.

3. College of the Ozarks, Point Lookout, Mo.

4. Thomas Aquinas College, Santa Paula, Calif.

5. U.S. Military Academy, West Point, N.Y.

6. Grove City College, Grove City, Pa.

7. Wesleyan College, Macon, Ga.

8. U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn.

9. U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.

10. Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Mich.

11. City University of New York-Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, N.Y.

12. City University of New York-City College, New York City

13. City University of New York-Queens College, Flushing, N.Y.

14. Mills College, Oakland, Calif.

15. Agnes Scott College, Atlanta/Decatur, Ga.

16. Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering, Needham, Mass.

17. California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif.

18. Simmons College, Boston

19. Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass.

20. Xavier University of Louisiana, New Orleans

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…..item 4)…. youtube video … Alanis Morissette – Jagged Little Pill (full album) … 58:38 minutes …

www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1WCBPiFosg

redbabylon

Uploaded on Feb 9, 2012

Track List

1. "All I Really Want" …………………………………… timeline 00:01
2. "You Oughta Know" …………………………………. timeline 04:50
3. "Perfect" …………………………………………………timeline 09:04
4. "Hand in My Pocket" …………………………………..timeline 12:14
5. "Right Through You" …………………………………..timeline 16:02

6. "Forgiven" ……………………………………………………………….. timeline 19:07
7. "You Learn" ……………………………………………………………… timeline 22:08
8. "Head over Feet" ……………………………………………………….. timeline 28:13
9. "Mary Jane" ……………………………………………………………… timeline 32:46
10. "Ironic" …………………………………………………………………… timeline 37:32

11. "Not the Doctor" …………………………………………………. timeline 41:27
12. "Wake Up" ………………………………………………………… timeline 45:19
13. "You Oughta Know (Alternate Take)" / "Your House" (hidden track which appears on all CDs & Cassette tapes releases) ….. timeline 50:19 …

Category
Music

License
Standard YouTube License
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Top Comments
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— Michael Gilbert 3 weeks ago

0:00 All I really want 4:50 You oughta know 9:04 Perfect 12:14 Hand in my pocket 16:02 Right through you 19:07 Forgiven 22:08 You learn 28:13 Head over feet 32:46 Mary Jane 37:32 Ironic 41:27 Not the Doctor 45:19 Wake up 50:19 You oughtta Know 55:38 Your house
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