Appendix and Index, Pp. 691-740
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Optical Timeline by Tony Oursler
Optical Timeline by Tony Oursler 1 Iris is thought to be derived from the RED Symyaz leads the fallen angels. Archimedes (c. 287212 b.c.) is said to Greek word for speaker or messenger. According to Enoch, they came to earth have used a large magnifying lens or Seth, the Egyptian god most associated of their own free will at Mount Hermon, burning-glass, which focused the suns Fifth century b.c. Chinese philosopher with evil, is depicted in many guises: descending like stars. This description rays, to set fire to Roman ships off Mo Ti, in the first description of the gives rise to the name Lucifer, “giver of Syracuse. camera obscura, refers to the pinhole as a black pig, a tall, double-headed figure light.” “collection place” and “locked treasure with a snout, and a serpent. Sometimes And now there is no longer any “I have seen Satan fall like lightning room.” he is black, a positive color for the difficulty in understanding the images in from heaven.” (Luke 10:1820) Egyptians, symbolic of the deep tones of mirrors and in all smooth and bright Platos Cave depicts the dilemma of fertile river deposits; at other times he is surfaces. The fires from within and from the uneducated in a graphic tableau of red, a negative color reflected by the without communicate about the smooth light and shadow. The shackled masses parched sands that encroach upon the surface, and from one image which is are kept in shadow, unable to move crops. Jeffrey Burton Russell suggests variously refracted. -
A Timeline of Women at Yale Helen Robertson Gage Becomes the first Woman to Graduate with a Master’S Degree in Public Health
1905 Florence Bingham Kinne in the Pathology Department, becomes the first female instructor at Yale. 1910 First Honorary Degree awarded to a woman, Jane Addams, the developer of the settlement house movement in America and head of Chicago’s Hull House. 1916 Women are admitted to the Yale School of Medicine. Four years later, Louise Whitman Farnam receives the first medical degree awarded to a woman: she graduates with honors, wins the prize for the highest rank in examinations, and is selected as YSM commencement speaker. 1919 A Timeline of Women at Yale Helen Robertson Gage becomes the first woman to graduate with a Master’s degree in Public Health. SEPTEMBER 1773 1920 At graduation, Nathan Hale wins the “forensic debate” Women are first hired in the college dining halls. on the subject of “Whether the Education of Daughters be not without any just reason, more neglected than that Catherine Turner Bryce, in Elementary Education, of Sons.” One of his classmates wrote that “Hale was becomes the first woman Assistant Professor. triumphant. He was the champion of the daughters and 1923 most ably advocated their cause.” The Yale School of Nursing is established under Dean DECEMBER 1783 Annie Goodrich, the first female dean at Yale. The School Lucinda Foote, age twelve, is interviewed by Yale of Nursing remains all female until at least 1955, the President Ezra Stiles who writes later in his diary: earliest date at which a man is recorded receiving a degree “Were it not for her sex, she would be considered fit to at the school. -
Annual Report
COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS ANNUAL REPORT July 1,1996-June 30,1997 Main Office Washington Office The Harold Pratt House 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. 58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10021 Washington, DC 20036 Tel. (212) 434-9400; Fax (212) 861-1789 Tel. (202) 518-3400; Fax (202) 986-2984 Website www. foreignrela tions. org e-mail publicaffairs@email. cfr. org OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS, 1997-98 Officers Directors Charlayne Hunter-Gault Peter G. Peterson Term Expiring 1998 Frank Savage* Chairman of the Board Peggy Dulany Laura D'Andrea Tyson Maurice R. Greenberg Robert F Erburu Leslie H. Gelb Vice Chairman Karen Elliott House ex officio Leslie H. Gelb Joshua Lederberg President Vincent A. Mai Honorary Officers Michael P Peters Garrick Utley and Directors Emeriti Senior Vice President Term Expiring 1999 Douglas Dillon and Chief Operating Officer Carla A. Hills Caryl R Haskins Alton Frye Robert D. Hormats Grayson Kirk Senior Vice President William J. McDonough Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. Paula J. Dobriansky Theodore C. Sorensen James A. Perkins Vice President, Washington Program George Soros David Rockefeller Gary C. Hufbauer Paul A. Volcker Honorary Chairman Vice President, Director of Studies Robert A. Scalapino Term Expiring 2000 David Kellogg Cyrus R. Vance Jessica R Einhorn Vice President, Communications Glenn E. Watts and Corporate Affairs Louis V Gerstner, Jr. Abraham F. Lowenthal Hanna Holborn Gray Vice President and Maurice R. Greenberg Deputy National Director George J. Mitchell Janice L. Murray Warren B. Rudman Vice President and Treasurer Term Expiring 2001 Karen M. Sughrue Lee Cullum Vice President, Programs Mario L. Baeza and Media Projects Thomas R. -
Expressions of Climate Perturbations in Western Ugandan Crater Table 3
EGU Journal Logos (RGB) Open Access Open Access Open Access Advances in Annales Nonlinear Processes Geosciences Geophysicae in Geophysics Open Access Open Access Natural Hazards Natural Hazards and Earth System and Earth System Sciences Sciences Discussions Open Access Open Access Atmospheric Atmospheric Chemistry Chemistry and Physics and Physics Discussions Open Access Open Access Atmospheric Atmospheric Measurement Measurement Techniques Techniques Discussions Open Access Open Access Biogeosciences Biogeosciences Discussions Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Open Access Open Access Clim. Past Discuss., 9, 5183–5226, 2013 Climate www.clim-past-discuss.net/9/5183/2013/ Climate CPD doi:10.5194/cpd-9-5183-2013 of the Past of the Past © Author(s) 2013. CC Attribution 3.0 License. Discussions 9, 5183–5226, 2013 Open Access Open Access This discussion paper is/has been under review for the journal ClimateEarth of the System Past (CP). Earth System Expressions of Please refer to the corresponding final paper in CP if available. Dynamics Dynamics climate perturbations Discussions in western Ugandan Open Access ExpressionsGeoscientific of climate perturbationsGeoscientific inOpen Access crater Instrumentation Instrumentation K. Mills et al. western UgandanMethods and crater lake sedimentMethods and Data Systems Data Systems records during the last 1000 yr Discussions Open Access Open Access Title Page Geoscientific 1,2 1Geoscientific 1 3 4 K. Mills , D. B. Ryves , N. J. Anderson , C. L. BryantModel, and -
American Council of Learned Societies Annual Report, 2012-2013
C H H I S T O R I C A L S T U D I E S S O C I E T Y F O R M I L I T A R Y H I S T O A F R I C A N S T U D I E S A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N A C A D E M Y O F R Y S O C I E T Y F O R M U S I C T H E O R Y S O C I E T Y F O R T H E A D A R T S A N D S C I E N C E S A M E R I C A N A C A D E M Y O F R E L I G I O N V A N C E M E N T O F S C A N D I N A V I A N S T U D Y S O C I E T Y F O R T H E A M E R I C A N A N T H R O P O L O G I C A L A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N A N H I S T O R Y O F T E C H N O L O G Y S O C I E T Y O F A R C H I T E C T U R A L H T I Q U A R I A N S O C I E T Y A M E R I C A N A S S O C I A T I O N F O R T H E H I S T O R I A N S S O C I E T Y O F B I B L I C A L L I T E R A T U R E S O C I E I S T O R Y O F M E D I C I N E A M E R I C A N C O M P A R A T I V E L I T E R A T U T Y O F D A N C E H I S T O R Y S C H O L A R S W O R L D H I S T O R Y A S S O C R E A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N D I A L E C T S O C I E T Y A M E R I C I A T I O N A F R I C A N S T U D I E S A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N A C A N E C O N O M I C A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N F O L K L O R E S O C I E T A D E M Y O F A R T S A N D S C I E N C E S A M E R I C A N A C A D E M Y O F R Y A M E R I C A N H I S T O R I C A L A S S O C I A T I O N A M E R I C A N M U S E L I G I O N A M E R I C A N A N T H R O P O L O G I C A L A S S O C I A T I O N A I C O L O G I C A L S O C I E T Y A M E R I C A N N U M I S M A T I C S O C I E T Y M E R I C A N A N T I Q U A R I A N S O C I E T Y A M E R I C A N A S -
Caribbean Women in Science and Their Careers
CARIBBEAN WOMEN IN SCIENCE AND THEIR CAREERS Author: NIHERST Publisher: NIHERST Editors: Christiane Francois, Joycelyn Lee Young and Trinity Belgrave Researchers/Writers: Stacey-Ann Sarjusingh, Sasha James, Keironne Banfield-Nathaniel and Alana Xavier Design/Layout: Justin Joseph and Phoenix Productions Ltd Print: Scrip J Some of the photographs and material used in this publication were obtained from the Internet, other published documents, featured scientists and their institutions. This publication is NOT FOR SALE. Copyright August 2011 by NIHERST All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means or stored in a database or retrieval system without prior written permission of NIHERST. For further information contact: NIHERST 43-45 Woodford Street, Newtown, Port-of-Spain E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.niherst.gov.tt Telephone: 868-622-7880 Fax: 868-622-1589 ISBN 978-976-95273-6-2 Funding: Ministry of Science, Technology & Tertiary Education, Trinidad and Tobago Foreword Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Camille Wardrop Alleyne Aerospace Engineer 6 Zulaika Ali Neonatologist 48 Frances Chandler Agronomist 8 Nita Barrow Nurse 50 Hilary Ann Robotham Westmeier Analytical Chemist 10 Susan Walker Nutritionist 52 Camille Selvon Abrahams Animator 12 Anesa Ahamad Oncologist 54 Shirin Haque Astronomer 14 Celia Christie-Samuels Paediatrician 56 Dolly Nicholas Chemist 16 Kathleen Coard Pathologist 58 Patricia Carrillo Construction Manager 18 Merle Henry Pharmacist 60 Rosalie -
No. 8 2020 Strategic Coaching Builds More Successful Academic Leaders
TM No. 8 2020 Strategic Coaching Builds More Successful Academic Leaders Anthony Knerr Getting Your Story Right Libby Morse Arts and Strategy: Reflections on Cultural Planning in the Modern University András Szántó Reclaiming the Global in Higher Education Vishakha Desai Interview Timothy L. Killeen President, University of Illinois System Notable Books STRATEGY MATTERS STRATEGY EXCEPTIONAL STRATEGY, REMARKABLE RESULTS Established in 1990, AKA|STRATEGY (AKA) is a strategy consultancy that partners with leading universities and colleges, arts & cultural institutions, and other nonprofit organizations in the United States and around the world. AKA is distinctive in the scope and interrelationships of our consulting services. Each of our services—strategic planning, strategic institutional counsel, and strategic executive coaching—enriches and complements our expertise in the other two. It is a pleasure to share this edition of Strategy Matters and with it our commitment to contribute to the conversations about the evolving and challenging world of higher education, arts & culture, and nonprofit organizations. We welcome comments and reactions to this edition on our website— www.akastrategy.com— where you may also subscribe to our email list to receive future publications and AKA news. Our site also provides considerable information about our services, our consulting team, our clients, case studies of selected assignments, and our approach. We look forward to hearing from you and hope you will enjoy this issue of Strategy Matters. 590 Madison Avenue, 21st Floor New York, NY 10022 212.302.9600 www.akastrategy.com 1 STRATEGY MATTERS No. 8 | 2020 TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTICLES 2 Strategic Coaching Builds More Successful Academic Leaders Anthony Knerr 6 Getting Your Story Right Libby Morse 10 Arts and Strategy: Reflections on Cultural Planning in the Modern University András Szántó 15 Reclaiming the Global in Higher Education Vishakha Desai INTERVIEW 17 Timothy L. -
A Yale Book of Numbers, 1976 – 2000
A Yale Book of Numbers, 1976 – 2000 Update of George Pierson’s original book A Yale Book of Numbers, Historical Statistics of the College and University 1701 – 1976 Prepared by Beverly Waters Office of Institutional Research For the Tercentennial’s Yale Reference Series August, 2001 Table of Contents A Yale Book of Numbers - 1976-2000 Update Section A: Student Enrollments/Degrees Conferred -- Total University 1. Student Enrollment, 1976-1999 2. (figure) Student Enrollment, 1875-1999 3. (figure) Student Enrollment (Headcounts), Fall 1999 4. Student Enrollments in the Ivy League and MIT, 1986-1999 5. Degrees Conferred, 1977-1999 6. Honorary Degree Honorands, 1977-2000 7. Number of Women Enrolled, University-Wide, 1871-1999 8. (figure) Number of Women Enrolled University-Wide, 1871-1999 9. Milestones in the Education of Women at Yale 10. Minority and International Student Enrollment by School, 1984-1999 Section B: International Students at Yale University 1. International Students by Country and World Region of Citizenship, Fall 1999 2. (figure) International Graduate and Professional Students and Yale College Students by World Region, Fall 1999 3. (figure) International Student Enrollment, 1899-1999 4. (figure) International Students by Yale School, Fall 1999 5. International Student Enrollment, 1987-1999 6. Admissions Statistics for International Students, 1981-1999 Section C: Students Residing in Yale University Housing 1. Number of Students in University Housing, 1982-1999 2. Yale College Students Housed in Undergraduate Dormitories, 1950-1999 3. (figure) Percentage of Yale College Students Housed in the Residential Colleges, 1950-1999 Section D: Yale Undergraduate Admissions and Information on Yale College Freshmen 1. -
Inaugural Symposium the Power of the Liberal Arts
INAUGURAL SYMPOSIUM THE POWER OF THE LIBERAL ARTS Friday, October 16, 2015 Pickard Theater Bowdoin College • Brunswick, Maine Welcome Clayton S. Rose, president of the College Keynote Hanna Holborn Gray, Harry Pratt Judson Distinguished Service Professor Emerita of History and president emerita, University of Chicago Panel 1: Yes, It Still Matters: Why and How We Teach the Liberal Arts William D. Adams, chairman, National Endowment for the Humanities, and president emeritus, Colby College Camille Z. Charles, Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Professor in the Social Sciences, University of Pennsylvania Adam S. Weinberg ’87, president, Denison University Mary Lou Zeeman, R. Wells Johnson Professor of Mathematics, Bowdoin College moderator Jennifer R. Scanlon, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of the Humanities and interim dean for academic affairs, Bowdoin College Intermission Panel 2: Making a Living and Making a Life: The Liberal Arts in Commerce and Citizenship Kenneth I. Chenault ’73, H’96, chief executive officer and chairman, American Express Ruthie Davis ’84, president and designer, Ruthie Davis Shelley A. Hearne ’83, visiting professor, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health George J. Mitchell ’54, H’83, former United States senator moderator Andy Serwer ’81, journalist and editor-in-chief, Yahoo Finance Hanna Holborn Gray, Keynote Hanna Holborn Gray is a historian with special interests in the history of humanism, political and historical thought, church history, and politics in the Renaissance and the Reformation. Born in Heidelberg, Germany, Gray earned her bachelor’s degree from Bryn Mawr College in 1950 and, after holding a Fulbright scholarship at Oxford, her Ph.D. -
Academic Faculty Address-2017
A Ressourcement Vision for Graduate Theological Education Academic Faculty Address-2017 Thomas A. Baima Mundelein Seminary August 11, 2017 I want to welcome everyone to the first of our Academic Faculty meetings for the 2017- 2018 school year. I hope all of you had a refreshing summer. This meeting is the result of comments by some of you that the academic department did not have the same opportunity as the formation department for planning and interaction. It is for this reason that I added this morning to the meetings at the opening of the school year. We do need time to work together as a group on the common project of seminary education. Those of you who are more senior will remember that we used to meet for two full days at the opening of the school year and again at the opening of the beginning of the new year. Without those meetings, we have lost much of the time we used to work together. So, I hope this morning will restore some of that, and at the same time not wear everyone out. Here is my plan for the morning. First, I’m going to do some introductions of our new members. Next, I want to offer some remarks about the vision of higher education. I do this because the academic department is entrusted with the responsibility for the intellectual pillars and shares responsibility for the pastoral pillar 1 with Formation. As such, we are part of the larger higher education enterprise both of this country and of the Catholic Church internationally. -
Download The
ii Science as a Superpower: MY LIFELONG FIGHT AGAINST DISEASE AND THE HEROES WHO MADE IT POSSIBLE By William A. Haseltine, PhD YOUNG READERS EDITION iii Copyright © 2021 by William A. Haseltine, PhD All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or by any information storage retrieval system, without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. iv “If I may offer advice to the young laboratory worker, it would be this: never neglect an extraordinary appearance or happening.” ─ Alexander Fleming v CONTENTS Introduction: Science as A Superpower! ............................1 Chapter 1: Penicillin, Polio, And Microbes ......................10 Chapter 2: Parallax Vision and Seeing the World ..........21 Chapter 3: Masters, Mars, And Lasers .............................37 Chapter 4: Activism, Genes, And Late-Night Labs ........58 Chapter 5: More Genes, Jims, And Johns .........................92 Chapter 6: Jobs, Riddles, And Making A (Big) Difference ......................................................................107 Chapter 7: Fighting Aids and Aiding the Fight ............133 Chapter 8: Down to Business ...........................................175 Chapter 9: Health for All, Far and Near.........................208 Chapter 10: The Golden Key ............................................235 Glossary of Terms ..............................................................246 -
Federation Member Society Nobel Laureates
FEDERATION MEMBER SOCIETY NOBEL LAUREATES For achievements in Chemistry, Physiology/Medicine, and PHysics. Award Winners announced annually in October. Awards presented on December 10th, the anniversary of Nobel’s death. (-H represents Honorary member, -R represents Retired member) # YEAR AWARD NAME AND SOCIETY DOB DECEASED 1 1904 PM Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (APS-H) 09/14/1849 02/27/1936 for work on the physiology of digestion, through which knowledge on vital aspects of the subject has been transformed and enlarged. 2 1912 PM Alexis Carrel (APS/ASIP) 06/28/1873 01/05/1944 for work on vascular suture and the transplantation of blood vessels and organs 3 1919 PM Jules Bordet (AAI-H) 06/13/1870 04/06/1961 for discoveries relating to immunity 4 1920 PM August Krogh (APS-H) 11/15/1874 09/13/1949 (Schack August Steenberger Krogh) for discovery of the capillary motor regulating mechanism 5 1922 PM A. V. Hill (APS-H) 09/26/1886 06/03/1977 Sir Archibald Vivial Hill for discovery relating to the production of heat in the muscle 6 1922 PM Otto Meyerhof (ASBMB) 04/12/1884 10/07/1951 (Otto Fritz Meyerhof) for discovery of the fixed relationship between the consumption of oxygen and the metabolism of lactic acid in the muscle 7 1923 PM Frederick Grant Banting (ASPET) 11/14/1891 02/21/1941 for the discovery of insulin 8 1923 PM John J.R. Macleod (APS) 09/08/1876 03/16/1935 (John James Richard Macleod) for the discovery of insulin 9 1926 C Theodor Svedberg (ASBMB-H) 08/30/1884 02/26/1971 for work on disperse systems 10 1930 PM Karl Landsteiner (ASIP/AAI) 06/14/1868 06/26/1943 for discovery of human blood groups 11 1931 PM Otto Heinrich Warburg (ASBMB-H) 10/08/1883 08/03/1970 for discovery of the nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme 12 1932 PM Lord Edgar D.