HSSU View V2, I3.Pmd

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HSSU View V2, I3.Pmd HSSU V I E W The Harris-Stowe State University Student Newsletter April 17, 2006 The Harris-Stowe State University HSSU Student Newsletter V I E W Volume 2, Issue 3 April 17, 2006 medicine!” Concert Chorale puts on Along with the Concert Chorale there were other special guest extraordinary ‘Spring Musicale’ performances as well; you had the By Kevin A. Evans incomparable Loyce Huston & Co., Soloist Austin Layne, Minister Bruce By now I am sure that you may As I sat there in the very last row Roberts, and a host of other talented have heard that our esteemed Dr. in the Bank of America Theater I felt musicians. Among them were Tom Rosalyn England and her renowned as though I had the best seat in the Adams, Charles Williams, and choir, the HSSU Concert Isaac Williams just to name a few. Chorale, was invited to perform What a night it was. There at the legendary Carnegie Hall was something for everyone’s in New York City. The HSSU musical taste. If this is a measure View was the first local of what New York can expect, publication to write about it, and then Carnegie Hall is going to be soon after other local media treated with a magnificent outlets followed up on it. experience. The Concert Chorale The University is indeed did a stirring rendition of Francis proud of Dr. England, or “Dr. Poulencs’ Gloria sung in Latin Roz”as she is affectionately aided by the sweet melodic sound called by some of her colleagues The Concert Chorale under Dr. Rosalyn England. of soprano Chrystal Williams. and former Sumner High School It did not stop there. The classmates who were in attendance house, acoustically speaking that is. crowd was then treated to the sounds on Friday, March 31, 2006, for this Mrs. Ida Woolfolk, consultant for Saint of Victory Gospel Choir under the extravagant event. The crowd was Louis Public Schools, was the mistress direction of Charity Williams. Every teeming with a veritable Who’s Who of ceremonies, and what a wonderful performance was solid. Come Ye among former graduates, community job she did. What a wonderful job she Disconsolate was sung in perfect leaders, politicians, clergy, business did; she was so soothed by the music, people and musicians. at one point she even said “This is like See Spring Musicale, page 9 benefit from the most valuable AMA opens chapter at HSSU resources and great opportunities to By Chasma Smith assist them in finding the right interviews and getting the position they Harris-Stowe State University has to develop skills in marketing and desire. The AMA is a great tool to help created a chapter for the American business. The association will assist fellow members obtain their dream job Marketing Association (AMA). The them in their jobs and career of choice. in this very complex job market. AMA is part of the largest marketing Student members will learn to develop Yaye Astou Thiam, chapter and business professional association professionalism, enhance their president, kindly invites students to join in the world. leadership skills and improve the AMA and take advantage of all it Students participating in the communication abilities. They will also has to offer. “The forty-five members Harris-Stowe chapter have an learn how to run businesses efficiently and I invite all business students to join excellent opportunity to work as a and implement and operate plans. us and to be a part of this organization. team acquiring the experience, The AMA offers major network- We encourage you to take advantage information and exposure they need ing advantages. Its members will of all the AMA has to offer.” Page 1 HSSU V I E W The Harris-Stowe State University Student Newsletter April 17, 2006 Collegiate 100 networking Hornets Softball Ranked 5th in session Region By Kevin A. Evans By Phillip Hunt If one was to ask the question Throughout the presentation the what is the difference between a importance of networking was When the Region V Softball successful business person and outlined for those students who were Rankings for week one were released, someone who was an extraordinary in the annex attending this event. Harris-Stowe (13-6, 2-2 AMC) ranked business person, the answer would According to Mr. Beduh, fifth. Hornets softball team, a second clearly lay in the ability to effectively “Networking is extremely important year program, is off to one of the best network. because the people you meet today starts in school history under first year On Thursday March 30, 2006, a can become your single greatest head coach Tony Moody. few students from the Collegiate 100 resources for success tomorrow.” The Hornets got off to a hot start (namely Mr. David Beduh, Glynn No matter who you are or what your competing against teams from all Crawford, and Michael Carnes) goals may be, there will always be across the country. On their Spring hosted an informative networking somebody somewhere in a position Break trip in Santa Ana, California, the session. to help you achieve your goals. Hornets went 7-3 in that tournament. In the absence of the scheduled Students here at Harris-Stowe Since the trip the Hornets have lost guest speaker, faculty member State University really should learn only two games, with one loss coming Reynaldo Anderson (Instructor, to recognize these networking against William Woods, the second African American Studies and sessions as tremendous opportunities, ranked team in Region V. Methods of Teaching Secondary and before you know it once you Lately the only thing that has been English and Social Studies) stepped in have graduated you’ll find that all able to stop the Hornets is the and gave students some very valuable your dreams are easily within your information as well as a history lesson reach if you can use your networking in the areas of networking. skills. See Softball, page 8 Page 2 HSSU V I E W The Harris-Stowe State University Student Newsletter April 17, 2006 center will be open for operation, Message from the around mid-August of this year. Finally, though not visible to the President naked eye, still another remarkable – and I would add– greatly needed Dear students: and therefore mission of Harris-Stowe, change was the restoration of Harris- How swiftly this school year is from those of four-year college to Stowe’s open-admission policy and coming to an end! Our long-awaited those of a university. And we must practice. In doing so, our University Spring Break has already passed the keep in mind that this was more than now lives up to its long-held scene, and you and your colleagues a mere name change; it is, in fact, a commitment to providing the widest are now beginning to gear-up for the significant potential expansion of the possible access to all Metropolitan St. finals which actually are Institution’s function and Louisans to higher education applied just a few weeks away. services to the com- professional disciplines. And speaking of munity in which it is This commitment is based on the finals, I urge each of you located. Much careful recognized fact that, regardless of to do whatever it takes thought and planning will academic readiness deficits, by far the to be well-prepared for now have to take place majority of people have the potential those exams! But, even regarding both. to achieve high academic more exciting, as well as The second evolu- performance – if given the opportunity, a sure sign that the tionary change that encouragement, motivation, and school year is almost began implementation intervention opportunities that promote over, is the rapidly was the establishment of such. approaching “crowning” a satellite campus for Now, just a reminder of the three event of Harris-Stowe’s Harris-Stowe, in south key initiatives started during this school academic year – the Dr. Henry Givens, Jr., St. Louis, on Wilson year: The Student Pledge, The Great time-honored and President Avenue, and the housing Student Initiatives (clubs), and the eagerly-looked for of our Business Classroom Decorum “must” actions. commencement convocation. This Administration Degree Programs I urge each of you to daily commit awe-inspiring event will take place in there – now, as the Busch School of yourself to living up to each and just a little under six weeks at the Business Administration. Much truly everyone of these actions. If you do, beautiful Powell Symphony Hall, and outstanding work has been done on then, I can assure you that your many comrades, in graduating, will no the new campus, making that facility college days here at Harris-Stowe will longer be on campus. a real contribution both to the be richly rewarding and long- As I think on it, very likely, this University and the Community in remembered throughout your life. seeming swiftness of the passage of which it is located. There is, of course, much more time might well stem from the many, The third change – which is that I would like to share with you and even evolutionary, events and nothing short of an about the new changes that have taken place during evolution for “Harris-Stowe’s open- Harris-Stowe, but this fiscal year. Unfortunately, space Harris-Stowe – is admission policy ... is I shall have to do available in the last 2005-2006 issue the phenomenal based on the recognized so in later issues of of our HSSU View simply will not rise of our new fact that, regardless of the HSSU View. permit an accounting of all of these student residence For now, I academic readiness events, or even a fairly detailed hall and student urge each of you discussion of a few.
Recommended publications
  • Opening a New Chapter in the Martian Chronicles
    California Institute of Technology Volume 2., No.• ~emlMr1"2 B•• ed on d.t. from the 1975 Viking ml ••lon , the Explore". Guide to MoIr • .... pon Arden Albee'. w a ll will be In for . ome updating once Ma ,. Ob.erve r be g in. It ••urv e v of the planet late ne xt vear. Albee ke ep. a replica of the .pacecraft In Caltech'. Office of Graduate Studle., w" .. e In addition to hi. role a. Ob.e rver project .clentl.t, he'. been dean . lnce1984. Opening a new chapter in the Martian Chronicles BV Heidi Aapaturlan Speaking this past August at a many Mars aficionados ever since the working in concert like an interplan­ "It's not cleat what sort of geologic NASA press conference called to herald Viking Lander's soil experimencs came etary one-man band, will monitor and dynamics might have produced this che upcoming launch of Mars Observer, up empty in 1975: has life ever map Mars with a sweep and precision dichotomy," says Albee, alchough he Cal tech Professor of Geology Arden evolved on Mars? Did the planet once that is expected to yield more informa­ suspects that the answer may start to Albee sounded ar rimes like a man who harbor a bacterial Atlantis that van­ tion abour the planer's composition, emerge once ic's determined whether had jusc been commissioned to write ished, along with its water, aeons ago? climate, geology, and evolutionary Mars, like Earth, has a magnetic field. the lyrics for the Marcian version of Although no one expects the Mars history than all previous miss ions co Currenc theory holds that a planet'S "America che Beauciful." "We know Observer, launched September 25 from Mars put together.
    [Show full text]
  • Ceramics from Wet-Processing of Martian Soil Simulant Using Slip Casting Or Additive Manufacturing for In-Situ Resource Utilization
    DOI: 10.13009/EUCASS2019-769 Ceramics from wet-processing of Martian soil simulant using slip casting or Additive Manufacturing for in-situ resource utilization on Mars David Karl # *, Franz Kamutzki*, Andrea Zocca**, Pedro Lima**, Oliver Goerke*, Jens Guenster** and Aleksander Gurlo* * Fachgebiet Keramische Werkstoffe / Chair of Advanced Ceramic Materials, TU Berlin, Germany. ** Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und –prüfung (BAM), Berlin, Germany. # Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract For future colonization of Planet Mars, the most realistic approach for the production of parts on site is in situ resource utilization (ISRU). In this study, we demonstrate the feasibility of this concept by producing objects of varying complexity exclusively using resources that can be found on the surface of Mars. The established production routes using slip casting and Additive Manufacturing via wet- processing of Mars simulant material are simple, robust and easily transferable even to the harsh conditions on Mars. After sintering our slip cast parts have mechanical properties comparable to commercially available porcelain, making them suitable for everyday use. 1. Introduction A promising concept for the exploration and subsequent colonization of Moon and Mars is in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) - collecting, processing and storing of native materials that are encountered during human or robotic space exploration [1]. Early colonization scenarios suggest the direct use of rock-covering loose granular surface media (including dust, soil and rubble) consisting of various oxide minerals called lunar and Mars regoliths. The chemical composition of lunar and Mars regolith makes the extraction of metals and ceramics conceivable. The availability of ceramic tools is an important prerequisite for melting regolith in blast furnaces and bloomeries for the production of base metals.
    [Show full text]
  • Scientific Acivities 2013 – 2018
    Bilder über Kopf- und Fußzei Scientific Acivities 2013 – 2018 1 Scientific Activities 2013-2018 (as of 19.03.2019) This report covers scientific activities of DFD and University of Würzburg staff in the time period between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2018. Teaching and Education ............................................................................................................................................. 3 Lectures at Universities ............................................................................................................................................ 3 Invited Guest Lectures at Universities ....................................................................................................................... 9 Non-University Courses and Tutorials ..................................................................................................................... 12 Internal Seminar Series .......................................................................................................................................... 17 Contributions ........................................................................................................................................................ 17 In-House Interns and Trainees ................................................................................................................................ 17 Academic Degrees ...................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • An Edition of Guta Saga with Introduction, Translation
    An Edition ofGuta Saga with Introduction, Translation, Commentary and Glossary edited by Christine Ingegerd Peel UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON Degree of MPhil 1998 ProQuest Number: U642093 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest U642093 Published by ProQuest LLC(2015). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Guta Saga 2 Abstract The following thesis is an edition of the text of Guta saga found in the fourteenth-century manuscript of G uta la g It is held in Kungliga Biblioteket, Stockholm and designated B64. In the manuscript the text covers the last eight leaves. It represents the only complete version of the text in Gutnish, the medieval language of Gotland. The Introduction contains a section on the historical background to the text and a discussion of the following: preservation, content, sources (both written and oral), date and place of composition, authorship, historical value, language and previous editions of the text. The principles of the current edition are described. The text of the manuscript is normalized and contains a number of emendations, which are signalled in footnotes.
    [Show full text]
  • Security Sector Reform: a Nordic – Baltic Agenda
    Security Sector Reform: A Nordic – Baltic agenda KARLIS NERETNIEks FOI RIINA KALJURAND RKK/ICDS FOI Toom-Rüütli 12-6, Tallinn 10130, Estonia Swedish Defence Research Agency Phone: +372 6949 340 Division of Defence Analysis Fax: +372 6949 342 SE-164 90 Stockholm, Sweden info[@]icds.ee Phone: +46 8 555 030 00 www.icds.ee Fax: +48 8 555 031 00 www.foi.se FOI-R--2346--SE User report Defence Analysis ISSN 1650-1942 October 2007 Karlis Neretnieks FOI Riina Kaljurand RKK/ICDS Security Sector Reform: A Nordic – Baltic agenda FOI-R--2346--SE Titel Säkerhetssektorreformer, en nordisk-baltisk dagordning Title Security Sector Reform: A Nordic – Baltic agenda Rapportnr/Report no FOI-R--2346--SE Rapporttyp Användarrapport Report Type User report Utgivningsår/Year 2007 Antal sidor/Pages 76 p ISSN ISSN 1650-1942 Kund/Customer Försvarsdepartementet Forskningsområde 1. Analys av säkerhet och sårbarhet Programme area 1. Security, safety and vulnerability analysis Delområde 11 Forskning för regeringens behov Subcategory 11 Policy Support to the Government. Projektnr/Project no A 12002 Godkänd av/Approved by Kadri Liik, ICDS and Jan Erik Rendahl, FOI Totalförsvarets Forskningsinstitut FOI Avdelningen för Försvarsanalys 164 90 Stockholm FOI-R--2346--SE Contents List of Abbreviations..................................................................................... 6 Sammanfattning .......................................................................................... 11 Executive Summary ...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Features Named After 07/15/2015) and the 2018 IAU GA (Features Named Before 01/24/2018)
    The following is a list of names of features that were approved between the 2015 Report to the IAU GA (features named after 07/15/2015) and the 2018 IAU GA (features named before 01/24/2018). Mercury (31) Craters (20) Akutagawa Ryunosuke; Japanese writer (1892-1927). Anguissola SofonisBa; Italian painter (1532-1625) Anyte Anyte of Tegea, Greek poet (early 3rd centrury BC). Bagryana Elisaveta; Bulgarian poet (1893-1991). Baranauskas Antanas; Lithuanian poet (1835-1902). Boznańska Olga; Polish painter (1865-1940). Brooks Gwendolyn; American poet and novelist (1917-2000). Burke Mary William EthelBert Appleton “Billieâ€; American performing artist (1884- 1970). Castiglione Giuseppe; Italian painter in the court of the Emperor of China (1688-1766). Driscoll Clara; American stained glass artist (1861-1944). Du Fu Tu Fu; Chinese poet (712-770). Heaney Seamus Justin; Irish poet and playwright (1939 - 2013). JoBim Antonio Carlos; Brazilian composer and musician (1927-1994). Kerouac Jack, American poet and author (1922-1969). Namatjira Albert; Australian Aboriginal artist, pioneer of contemporary Indigenous Australian art (1902-1959). Plath Sylvia; American poet (1932-1963). Sapkota Mahananda; Nepalese poet (1896-1977). Villa-LoBos Heitor; Brazilian composer (1887-1959). Vonnegut Kurt; American writer (1922-2007). Yamada Kosaku; Japanese composer and conductor (1886-1965). Planitiae (9) Apārangi Planitia Māori word for the planet Mercury. Lugus Planitia Gaulish equivalent of the Roman god Mercury. Mearcair Planitia Irish word for the planet Mercury. Otaared Planitia Arabic word for the planet Mercury. Papsukkal Planitia Akkadian messenger god. Sihtu Planitia Babylonian word for the planet Mercury. StilBon Planitia Ancient Greek word for the planet Mercury.
    [Show full text]
  • An Access-Dictionary of Internationalist High Tech Latinate English
    An Access-Dictionary of Internationalist High Tech Latinate English Excerpted from Word Power, Public Speaking Confidence, and Dictionary-Based Learning, Copyright © 2007 by Robert Oliphant, columnist, Education News Author of The Latin-Old English Glossary in British Museum MS 3376 (Mouton, 1966) and A Piano for Mrs. Cimino (Prentice Hall, 1980) INTRODUCTION Strictly speaking, this is simply a list of technical terms: 30,680 of them presented in an alphabetical sequence of 52 professional subject fields ranging from Aeronautics to Zoology. Practically considered, though, every item on the list can be quickly accessed in the Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (RHU), updated second edition of 2007, or in its CD – ROM WordGenius® version. So what’s here is actually an in-depth learning tool for mastering the basic vocabularies of what today can fairly be called American-Pronunciation Internationalist High Tech Latinate English. Dictionary authority. This list, by virtue of its dictionary link, has far more authority than a conventional professional-subject glossary, even the one offered online by the University of Maryland Medical Center. American dictionaries, after all, have always assigned their technical terms to professional experts in specific fields, identified those experts in print, and in effect held them responsible for the accuracy and comprehensiveness of each entry. Even more important, the entries themselves offer learners a complete sketch of each target word (headword). Memorization. For professionals, memorization is a basic career requirement. Any physician will tell you how much of it is called for in medical school and how hard it is, thanks to thousands of strange, exotic shapes like <myocardium> that have to be taken apart in the mind and reassembled like pieces of an unpronounceable jigsaw puzzle.
    [Show full text]
  • Scientific Record 2013 – 2019
    Bilder über Kopf- und Fußzei Scientific Record 2013 – 2019 1 Scientific Record 2013-2019 (as of 30.04.2020) This report covers scientific activities of DFD and University of Würzburg staff in the time period between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2019. Teaching and Education ............................................................................................................................................. 3 Lectures at Universities ............................................................................................................................................ 3 Invited Guest Lectures at Universities ..................................................................................................................... 10 Non-University Courses and Tutorials ..................................................................................................................... 14 Internal Seminar Series .......................................................................................................................................... 19 Contributions ........................................................................................................................................................ 19 In-House Interns and Trainees ................................................................................................................................ 19 Academic Degrees ...................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Radiolovefest
    BAM 2015 Winter/Spring Season #RadioLoveFest Brooklyn Academy of Music New York Public Radio Alan H. Fishman, Chairman of the Board Cynthia King Vance, Chair, Board of Trustees William I. Campbell, Vice Chairman of the Board John S. Rose, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Adam E. Max, Vice Chairman of the Board Susan Rebell Solomon, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Karen Brooks Hopkins, President Mayo Stuntz, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Joseph V. Melillo, Executive Producer Laura R. Walker, President & CEO BAM and WNYC present RadioLoveFest Produced by BAM and WNYC May 5—10 LIVE PERFORMANCES Radiolab Live, May 5, 7:30pm, OH Death, Sex & Money, May 8, 7:30pm, HT Terry Gross in conversation with Marc Maron, May 6, Bullseye Comedy Night—Hosted by Jesse Thorn, 7:30pm, OH May 9, 7:30pm, OH Don’t Look Back: Stories From the Teenage Years— Selected Shorts: Uncharted Territories—A 30th The Moth & Radio Diaries, May 6, 8:30pm, HT Anniversary Event, May 9, 7:30pm, HT Eine Kleine Trivia Nacht—WQXR Classical Music Quiz WQXR Beethoven Piano Sonata Marathon, Show, May 6, 8pm, BC May 9, 10am—11:15pm, HS Wait Wait... Don’t Tell Me!®—NPR®, May 7, 7:30pm, OH Mexrrissey: Mexico Loves Morrissey, Islamophobia: A Conversation—Moderated by Razia May 10, 7:30pm, OH Iqbal, May 7, 7:30pm, HT It’s All About Richard Rodgers with Jonathan Speed Dating for Mom Friends with The Longest Schwartz, May 10, 3pm, HT Shortest Time, May 7, 7pm, BC Leonard Lopate & Locavores: Brooklyn as a Brand, Snap Judgment LIVE!, May 8, 7:30pm, OH May 10, 3pm, BC SCREENINGS—7:30pm, BRC BAMCAFÉ
    [Show full text]
  • PACE NSC 2013 Round 11 Tossups 1
    PACE NSC 2013 Round 11 Tossups 1. This author discussed the fate of the wreckers in a chapter entitled "The History of Our Sewage Disposal System", which follows a chapter in which jurists dump out a child's corpse in order to inspect a coffin. Late in his career, this author was lambasted for anti-Semitism for his history of the Jews in his country, Two Hundred Years Together. He wrote a novel whose title character enjoys the company of the Latvian joker Kilgas and his benevolent (*) overseer Tyurin and earns a share of the care packages of the favorably-treated Caesar. Many of his novels, including Cancer Ward, were circulated through samizdat. For 10 points, name this Russian author of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and The Gulag Archipelago. ANSWER: Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn <Gupta> 2. Tell el-Daba in Egypt and Tel Kabri in Israel contain wall paintings done in the style of this civilization, which produced polychrome pottery often containing floral patterns called Kamares Ware. Luigi Pernier excavated a mysterious multi-symbol disc produced by this civilization. Its cities like Kato Zakros and Phaistos may have been ravaged by the (*) Thera eruption. This civilization is generally organized chronologically into "palatial" divisions, and John Chadwick and Michael Ventris deciphered one of its major scripts. Linear A and B were used by this civilization, whose ruins were excavated by Arthur Evans. The palace at Knossos was part of, for 10 points, what ancient Greek civilization on Crete? ANSWER: Minoan Civilization <Bentley> 3. The Eberswalde Crater on Mars is largely one of these features, which can also be found in the Lunae Palus Quadrangle.
    [Show full text]
  • Planets Solar System Paper Contents
    Planets Solar system paper Contents 1 Jupiter 1 1.1 Structure ............................................... 1 1.1.1 Composition ......................................... 1 1.1.2 Mass and size ......................................... 2 1.1.3 Internal structure ....................................... 2 1.2 Atmosphere .............................................. 3 1.2.1 Cloud layers ......................................... 3 1.2.2 Great Red Spot and other vortices .............................. 4 1.3 Planetary rings ............................................ 4 1.4 Magnetosphere ............................................ 5 1.5 Orbit and rotation ........................................... 5 1.6 Observation .............................................. 6 1.7 Research and exploration ....................................... 6 1.7.1 Pre-telescopic research .................................... 6 1.7.2 Ground-based telescope research ............................... 7 1.7.3 Radiotelescope research ................................... 8 1.7.4 Exploration with space probes ................................ 8 1.8 Moons ................................................. 9 1.8.1 Galilean moons ........................................ 10 1.8.2 Classification of moons .................................... 10 1.9 Interaction with the Solar System ................................... 10 1.9.1 Impacts ............................................ 11 1.10 Possibility of life ........................................... 12 1.11 Mythology .............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Abstract Volume of the IAG RCG-2011
    International Association of Geomorphologists Association Internationale de Géomorphologues IIAAGG//AAIIGG RREEGGIIOONNAALL CCOONNFFEERREENNCCEE 22001111 GEOMORPHOLOGY FOR HUMAN ADAPTATION TO CHANGING TROPICAL ENVIRONMENTS GHION HOTEL ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA FEBRUARY 18‐22, 2011 AABBSSTTRRAACCTT VVOOLLUUMMEE Editors: Asfawossen Asrat, Francesco Dramis, Jan Nyssen, Mohammed Umer I A G ‐ 2 0 1 1 , A D D I S A B A B A , E T H I O P I A , 1 8 ‐ 2 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 1 Cover Photo: Amba Seneyti, Tigray, Northern Ethiopia. Triassic sandstone tor overlying Plaeozoic tillites, which in turn lie over upper Proterozoic metavolcanics-metasediments. [Photo © Asfawossen Asrat, 2010] I A G ‐ 2 0 1 1 , A D D I S A B A B A , E T H I O P I A , 1 8 ‐ 2 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 1 International Association of Geomorphologists Association Internationale de Géomorphologues IIAAGG//AAIIGG RREEGGIIOONNAALL CCOONNFFEERREENNCCEE 22001111 GEOMORPHOLOGY FOR HUMAN ADAPTATION TO CHANGING TROPICAL ENVIRONMENTS GHION HOTEL ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA FEBRUARY 18‐22, 2011 AABBSSTTRRAACCTT VVOOLLUUMMEE Editors: Asfawossen Asrat, Francesco Dramis, Jan Nyssen, Mohammed Umer 1 | I A G ‐ 2 0 1 1 , A D D I S A B A B A , E T H I O P I A , 1 8 ‐ 2 2 F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 1 CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION ORGANIZED BY EAG ‐ ETHIOPIAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOMORPHOLOGISTS WITH THE SUPPORT OF Department of Earth Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia, Paleoanthropology & Paleoenvironment Program, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia Mekelle University, Ethiopia Department of Geological Sciences,
    [Show full text]