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To celebrate the launch of TIME's new multimedia project – 100 Photographs: The Most Influential Images of All Time – we asked leaders in a number of fields, from technology to the arts to business, to share the single photograph that most influenced their lives.
The Solvay Conference in 1927 brought together the world’s most prominent scientists and physicists, including Albert Einstein, who you can see front and center here. Seventeen of them were or would become Nobel Prize winners. At first glance this may not be the most moving photo, but to me it subtly communicates two very powerful messages. First, that the pursuit of human progress and advances in science are incredible forces to bring people together. And perhaps even more impactful to me is the presence of the one woman in attendance, Marie Curie. As a woman pioneer in a field clearly so dominated at the time by men, Curie remains the only person in history to ever win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences – but perhaps not for long! She paved the way for so many girls who are interested in becoming engineers, scientists and mathematicians, and a similar photo today may look a lot less like Solvay and a lot more like the world around us. Chelsea Clinton is Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation.
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
WTF! Q is the 17th letter of the alphabet and Trump just postponed his Fake News award to the 01/17.
originally posted by: Vasa Croe
Chelsea Clinton chose this as the single most influential photo in her life:
To celebrate the launch of TIME's new multimedia project – 100 Photographs: The Most Influential Images of All Time – we asked leaders in a number of fields, from technology to the arts to business, to share the single photograph that most influenced their lives.
The Solvay Conference in 1927 brought together the world’s most prominent scientists and physicists, including Albert Einstein, who you can see front and center here. Seventeen of them were or would become Nobel Prize winners. At first glance this may not be the most moving photo, but to me it subtly communicates two very powerful messages. First, that the pursuit of human progress and advances in science are incredible forces to bring people together. And perhaps even more impactful to me is the presence of the one woman in attendance, Marie Curie. As a woman pioneer in a field clearly so dominated at the time by men, Curie remains the only person in history to ever win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences – but perhaps not for long! She paved the way for so many girls who are interested in becoming engineers, scientists and mathematicians, and a similar photo today may look a lot less like Solvay and a lot more like the world around us. Chelsea Clinton is Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation.
time.com...
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: MotherMayEye
So you think it's a stalking horse, a massive distraction?
I hope you're right, but the competence of the left lately leaves open the possibility that they've rushed it try to create a new narrative because they know the Russia probe is going nowhere.
I'm undecided at the moment.
Giustra and Bill Clinton met in June 2005 on a "philanthropic trip to Mexico and Colombia organized by the Clinton Foundation".
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
a reply to: Vasa Croe
I'm starting to feel like Dirk Gently. Everything is connected.
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
a reply to: Vasa Croe
I'm starting to feel like Dirk Gently. Everything is connected.
originally posted by: pavil
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
a reply to: Vasa Croe
I'm starting to feel like Dirk Gently. Everything is connected.
It's like that. That show is crazy.
originally posted by: Perfectenemy
I think this week is going to be very interesting. DC Press Corps KNEW For a FULL YEAR Hillary Clinton Was Behind Russia Dossier – HID IT FROM PUBLIC
originally posted by: OveRcuRrEnteD
not altered in epub format from a private torrent site