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From the editor.


We capture a bit of our history each spring in publishing significant papers from AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) An audio compression technology that is part of the MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 standards. AAC, especially MPEG-4 AAC, provides greater compression and better sound quality than MP3, which also came out of the MPEG standard.  & U's Annual Meeting in order that readers who did not attend the meeting may vicariously vi·car·i·ous  
adj.
1. Felt or undergone as if one were taking part in the experience or feelings of another: read about mountain climbing and experienced vicarious thrills.

2.
 participate after the event. In addition, photos from the meeting aim to portray por·tray  
tr.v. por·trayed, por·tray·ing, por·trays
1. To depict or represent pictorially; make a picture of.

2. To depict or describe in words.

3. To represent dramatically, as on the stage.
 graphically the people and the atmosphere.

In 2004, the largest attendance ever at an Annual Meeting brought participants' variety and vitality to the sessions, of which (regrettably) only a few can be represented here. Topics like liberal education and the professions, the university as a public good, producing minority leaders, and spirituality in liberal education are featured here to provide a sampling of the vibrant ideas that were in circulation.

Spring 2004 is doubly memorable for me, since I was the beneficiary beneficiary

Person or entity (e.g., a charity or estate) that receives a benefit from something (e.g., a trust, life-insurance policy, or contract). A primary beneficiary receives proceeds from a trust or insurance policy before any other.
 of an AAC & U policy that gives a one-month professional development leave for long-term employees at the Association. With that opportunity, plans for a month-of-March leave wonderfully coalesced co·a·lesce  
intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es
1. To grow together; fuse.

2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite:
, and I joined the staff at the Library of Congress in the Veterans History Project (VHF (Very High Frequency) The range of electromagnetic frequencies from 30 MHz to 300 MHz. ) to learn the processes and uses of oral history. Besides the pleasure of working with the project's welcoming and dedicated staff, I learned, from interviewing and reviewing interviews already done, something about five twentieth-century wars as experienced by millions of American veterans.

Focus was on World War II because of the VHF's part in the May dedication of the World War II Memorial on the Mall and the 60th anniversary of D-Day in June. These veterans and the civilians who worked in the war effort have reached an age where their reflections have the vividness of recall and the mellowness mel·low  
adj. mel·low·er, mel·low·est
1.
a. Soft, sweet, juicy, and full-flavored because of ripeness: a mellow fruit.

b.
 of recollection in tranquility. Many had been nineteen-year-olds--the age of our students--in a society coming out of the Great Depression. They spoke of the tedium and terror that daily accompanied their pursuit of enemy armies. And they saw war as a sometimes necessary but mostly terrible undertaking.

I came back to my editor's desk with an abundance of stories, reinforcing my conviction of oral history's value as history seen on the democratic and micro level of ordinary people doing the extraordinary things we find in history books. And I set to work to show in this issue another moment in history not so much of events, but of ideas.
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Puzon, Bridget
Publication:Liberal Education
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:378
Previous Article:Liberal education and the professions.(President's Message)(Editorial)
Next Article:Forthcoming meetings 2004.(News and Information)(Brief Article)(Calendar)



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