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Book of Abstracts
The 19th Particles and Nuclei International Conference (PANIC11) Scientific Program Laboratory for Nuclear Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology July 24-29, 2011 Table of Contents Contents Sunday, 24 July 1 Pedagogical Lectures for Students - Kresge Auditorium (09:00-15:45)................. 1 Welcome Reception - Kresge Oval Tent (16:00-19:00) . ................... 1 Monday, 25 July 2 Opening Remarks - Kresge Auditorium (08:30-08:55) . ................... 2 Plenary1 - KresgeAuditorium (08:30-10:05) . ................. 2 Plenary1 - KresgeAuditorium (10:45-12:00) . ................. 2 Parallel 1A - Parity Violating Scattering - W20-307 (MezzanineLounge)(13:30-15:30) . 3 Parallel 1B - Nuclear Effects & Hadronization - W20-306 (20 Chimneys)(13:30-15:30) . 4 Parallel 1C - Recent Baryon Results I - W20-201 (West Lounge) (13:30-15:30). 6 Parallel 1D - Kaonic Atoms and Hypernuclear Physics - 4-149 (13:30-15:30) . 8 Parallel 1E - Neutrino Oscillations I - 4-163 (13:30-15:30) ....................... 10 Parallel 1F - Dark Forces and Dark Matter - 4-153 (13:30-15:30) ................... 12 Parallel 1G - P- and T-violating weak decays - Kresge - RehearsalA(13:30-15:30) . 14 Parallel 1H - Electroweak Cross Sections at the TeV Scale - Kresge - Rehearsal B (13:30-15:30) . 16 Parallel 1I - CKM & CP Violation - Kresge - Little Theatre (13:30-15:30) .............. 17 Parallel 1J - Collider Searches Beyond the Standard Model - Kresge Auditorium (13:30-15:30) . 18 Parallel 1K - Hydrodynamics - W20-407 (13:30-15:30) . ................... 19 Parallel 1L - Heavy Ion Collisions I - W20-491 (13:30-15:30) ...................... 20 Parallel 2A - Generalized Parton Distributions - W20-307 (Mezzanine Lounge) (16:00-17:40). 21 Parallel 2B - Parton Distribution Functions and Fits - W20-306 (20 Chimneys) (16:00-17:40) . -
Indie Mixtape
Indie Mixtape :: View email as a web page :: Arcade Fire apparently is in the midst of working on a new album, with writing having “intensified” during the pandemic. In spite of ourselves, we are interested in hearing this quarantine opus, even though we openly disliked their previous album, 2017’s Everything Now. Arcade Fire is also on our brains lately because the 10th anniversary of their third ( and we would argue greatest) album, The Suburbs, was this past weekend. That album, like all Arcade Fire LPs, is a mix of breathtaking musical moments and grandiose, eyeroll-inducing thematic gestures. And yet we wouldn’t want Arcade Fire to be any other way. Sometimes they miss in embarrassing fashion, and other times they absolutely crush it. But they always swing big. For this list of our 20 favorite Arcade Fire songs, we took stock of the crushes while also attempting to understand how and why they miss. -- Steven Hyden, Uproxx Cultural Critic and author of This Isn't Happening: Radiohead's "Kid A" and the Beginning of the 21st Century PS: Was this email forwarded to you? Join our band here. In case you missed it... The first episode of our new podcast hosted by Steven Hyden and Ian Cohen is available now, wherever you listen to podcasts. Our YouTube channel now has a collection of playlists to satisfy all of your nostalgic needs. http://view.e.indiemixtape.com/...87aedf71565468329f8ac26ca254edfeee4d9b01f2c806081f3940ed3e1e6a08ac7da1357718730d50f8fc139fe23[8/6/20, 11:09:25 AM] Indie Mixtape There is an alternate universe where Phoebe Bridgers sings over trap beats. -
Download Full Journal (PDF)
SAPIR A JOURNAL OF JEWISH CONVERSATIONS THE ISSUE ON POWER ELISA SPUNGEN BILDNER & ROBERT BILDNER RUTH CALDERON · MONA CHAREN MARK DUBOWITZ · DORE GOLD FELICIA HERMAN · BENNY MORRIS MICHAEL OREN · ANSHEL PFEFFER THANE ROSENBAUM · JONATHAN D. SARNA MEIR SOLOVEICHIK · BRET STEPHENS JEFF SWARTZ · RUTH R. WISSE Volume Two Summer 2021 And they saw the God of Israel: Under His feet there was the likeness of a pavement of sapphire, like the very sky for purity. — Exodus 24: 10 SAPIR Bret Stephens EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Mark Charendoff PUBLISHER Ariella Saperstein ASSO CIATE PUBLISHER Felicia Herman MANAGING EDITOR Katherine Messenger DESIGNER & ILLUSTRATOR Sapir, a Journal of Jewish Conversations. ISSN 2767-1712. 2021, Volume 2. Published by Maimonides Fund. Copyright ©2021 by Maimonides Fund. No part of this journal may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of Maimonides Fund. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. WWW.SAPIRJOURNAL.ORG WWW.MAIMONIDESFUND.ORG CONTENTS 6 Publisher’s Note | Mark Charendoff 90 MICHAEL OREN Trial and Triage in Washington 8 BRET STEPHENS The Necessity of Jewish Power 98 MONA CHAREN Between Hostile and Crazy: Jews and the Two Parties Power in Jewish Text & History 106 MARK DUBOWITZ How to Use Antisemitism Against Antisemites 20 RUTH R. WISSE The Allure of Powerlessness Power in Culture & Philanthropy 34 RUTH CALDERON King David and the Messiness of Power 116 JEFF SWARTZ Philanthropy Is Not Enough 46 RABBI MEIR Y. SOLOVEICHIK The Power of the Mob in an Unforgiving Age 124 ELISA SPUNGEN BILDNER & ROBERT BILDNER Power and Ethics in Jewish Philanthropy 56 ANSHEL PFEFFER The Use and Abuse of Jewish Power 134 JONATHAN D. -
Qisar-Alexander-Ollongren-Astrolinguistics.Pdf
Astrolinguistics Alexander Ollongren Astrolinguistics Design of a Linguistic System for Interstellar Communication Based on Logic Alexander Ollongren Advanced Computer Science Leiden University Leiden The Netherlands ISBN 978-1-4614-5467-0 ISBN 978-1-4614-5468-7 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-4614-5468-7 Springer New York Heidelberg Dordrecht London Library of Congress Control Number: 2012945935 © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, speci fi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on micro fi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied speci fi cally for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer. Permissions for use may be obtained through RightsLink at the Copyright Clearance Center. Violations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a speci fi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. -
1: for Me, It Was Personal Names with Too Many of the Letter "Q"
1: For me, it was personal names with too many of the letter "q", "z", or "x". With apostrophes. Big indicator of "call a rabbit a smeerp"; and generally, a given name turns up on page 1... 2: Large scale conspiracies over large time scales that remain secret and don't fall apart. (This is not *explicitly* limited to SF, but appears more often in branded-cyberpunk than one would hope for a subgenre borne out of Bruce Sterling being politically realistic in a zine.) Pretty much *any* form of large-scale space travel. Low earth orbit, not so much; but, human beings in tin cans going to other planets within the solar system is an expensive multi-year endevour that is unlikely to be done on a more regular basis than people went back and forth between Europe and the americas prior to steam ships. Forget about interstellar travel. Any variation on the old chestnut of "robots/ais can't be emotional/creative". On the one hand, this is realistic because human beings have a tendency for othering other races with beliefs and assumptions that don't hold up to any kind of scrutiny (see, for instance, the relatively common belief in pre-1850 US that black people literally couldn't feel pain). On the other hand, we're nowhere near AGI right now and it's already obvious to everyone with even limited experience that AI can be creative (nothing is more creative than a PRNG) and emotional (since emotions are the least complex and most mechanical part of human experience and thus are easy to simulate). -
So Now I²ll Count from Ìve to One and Bring You out of This
Media. Memory. Meme. Colin Bennett. Prime Time. ! !" #" $" #" %" &" '" ( =5#'5/# ">00# .56')# !"#$%#&'#$#($)*+(# ,+-+(+#.(&,&,#/&)*# )*+#$0&+',1#"#/&00# 8(5%# 2+#)$03&'4#)5#)*+%# )5'&4*)#$256)#%7# 86)6(+#$'9#/*$)# ?-+#)5# )*+7#/&00#5(#/&00# '5)#95#)5#%+1: 5'+# ;$-&9#<$.52, $'9# 2(&'4# 756# 56)#58# )*&,1 ")*("+,-(#."+/ 0!!#"1++-2 !"#$$%&'()*+ Vol. 24 No. 1 Issue # 154 !"#"$%&'()*+(,-./01** UFO Volume 24 • Number 1 columnists 6 Publisher’s Note: William J. Birnes 7 Saucers, Slips & Cigarettes: Dierdre O’Lavery 8 Rocket Scientist: Stanton T. Friedman 10 Outside the Box: Mike Good 12 Opinionated Oregonian: George W. Earley 14 Alien in the Attic: Farah Yurdözü 16 Coast to Coast AM: George Noory 17 An Alien View: Alfred Lehmberg 18 The Randle Report: Kevin D. Randle 20 21st Century News: Dr. Bob & Zohara Hieronimus 22 Truthseeking: Dennis Balthaser 24 Inner Space: Sri Ram Kaa and Kira Raa 26 View From A Brit: Nick Redfern 27 Bryant’s UFO View: Larry W. Bryant 28 The Orange Orb: Regan Lee 29 Beyond the Dial: Lesley Gunter 30 Mirror Images: Micah A. Hanks bits & bobs 32 Arlan’s Arcanae: Arlan Andrews, Sr. Say hello to Dierdre! She is a 74 Rick’s UFO Picks: Rick Troppman new columnist, she is on page 7, and she is sassy. To Alfred Lehmberg: A belated thank you for the great cover artwork of Richard toon Dolan in Issue #153. Thanks also must go to our 63 Bradley Peterson very very very patient readers. This issue has been a long time coming. Next one should be just a bit more prompt. UFO Issue 154 features 34 Aliens vs. -
JOURNAL of HUMANOID STUDIES 10DEC2013, Edited by PEARSCH, Iaesr
JOURNAL OF HUMANOID STUDIES 10DEC2013, edited by PEARSCH, IAeSR. Comments welcome. I am hoping to make this the first of many upcoming issues. Any comments or relevant information please feel free to contact me at the following emails: [email protected] , [email protected] JHS v1n1 MAY2010 Summaries of reported cases for 2010: Phear Park, Exmouth England; Cheatham County, Tennessee; Iquique, Chile; Chula Vista California; Budleigh Salterton in Devon; Arizona; Bullsbrook, Perth, Western Australia; Shalimar, Florida; Senzaskie Kichi in the Kemerovo region of Siberia, Russia; Vinnitsa region of the Ukraine; Monclova, Coahuila Mexico; village of Alamo; Ejido Curva Coahuila; JHS v1n2 JUN2010: Case Log: McHenry, Illinois; Lawrenceville section of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania; Lawndale Illinois; a Cheyenne Indian reservation perhaps in the area of Standing Rock; Beniarda near Alicante, Spain; Alsotold, Nograd County, Hungary. Pre-Arnold Corner: “Pre-Arnold” case or incident, etc, which connotes an event said to have occurred before the infamous Arnold June 24 1947 encounter above Mount Rainer. Ingermanland, (or Ingria, Finnish Ingerinta, historic region, NW European Russia); St. Didier sur Rochefort, Loire region, France. Beyond the Fringe: Petrozavodsk, Karelia region, Russia; Tonnarella, Messina Province, Italy. Missing case files (further research required): Orne, France May 4 1988; Pollockshields, Glasgow, England November 28 1975; Andrespol, Poland autumn 1977; Olstyn, Poland August 1982; Forsheda, Sweden September 30 1979; Tiller, Oregon January 1961; Dawes, Alabama October 1973; Dollard-des-Ormeaux, Quebec, Canada February 17 1978. JHS v1n3 JUL2010: Current Case files: Kalamare Botswana; Lodi, California; Staten Island, New York. Strangers in our bedrooms: Gomez Palacio, state of Durango, Mexico; Moscow, Russia; North Miami, Florida; Rodia, Messina region, Sicily, Italy; New South Wales. -
ALL Code Sheets
Name: _________________________ Code Name: _________________________ Alien Nation® Cursive Alphabet In the science fiction movie “Alien Nation” the Tenctonese people have an alphabet that corresponds to our alphabet. They even have print and cursive versions of their language. The cursive letters should be connected when spelling a word. Use the alphabet to spell 10 of your spelling words. The word “SPELLING” is done for you as an example. LIST WORD WRITTEN IN CODE EX. S P E L L I N G 1. ___________________ __________________________________________ 2. ___________________ __________________________________________ 3. ___________________ __________________________________________ 4. ___________________ __________________________________________ 5. ___________________ __________________________________________ 6. ___________________ __________________________________________ 7. ___________________ __________________________________________ 8. ___________________ __________________________________________ 9. ___________________ __________________________________________ 10. __________________ __________________________________________ Created by K. S. Spencer Name: _________________________ Code Name: _________________________ Alien Nation® Print Alphabet In the science fiction movie “Alien Nation” the Tenctonese people have an alphabet that corresponds to our alphabet. They even have print and cursive versions of their language. Use the alphabet to spell 10 of your spelling words. The word “SPELLING” is done for you as an example. LIST WORD -
Table of Contents
Table of Contents PART I. Introduction 5 A. Overview 5 B. Historical Background 6 PART II. The Study 16 A. Background 16 B. Independence 18 C. The Scope of the Monitoring 19 D. Methodology 23 1. Rationale and Definitions of Violence 23 2. The Monitoring Process 25 3. The Weekly Meetings 26 4. Criteria 27 E. Operating Premises and Stipulations 32 PART III. Findings in Broadcast Network Television 39 A. Prime Time Series 40 1. Programs with Frequent Issues 41 2. Programs with Occasional Issues 49 3. Interesting Violence Issues in Prime Time Series 54 4. Programs that Deal with Violence Well 58 B. Made for Television Movies and Mini-Series 61 1. Leading Examples of MOWs and Mini-Series that Raised Concerns 62 2. Other Titles Raising Concerns about Violence 67 3. Issues Raised by Made-for-Television Movies and Mini-Series 68 C. Theatrical Motion Pictures on Broadcast Network Television 71 1. Theatrical Films that Raise Concerns 74 2. Additional Theatrical Films that Raise Concerns 80 3. Issues Arising out of Theatrical Films on Television 81 D. On-Air Promotions, Previews, Recaps, Teasers and Advertisements 84 E. Children’s Television on the Broadcast Networks 94 PART IV. Findings in Other Television Media 102 A. Local Independent Television Programming and Syndication 104 B. Public Television 111 C. Cable Television 114 1. Home Box Office (HBO) 116 2. Showtime 119 3. The Disney Channel 123 4. Nickelodeon 124 5. Music Television (MTV) 125 6. TBS (The Atlanta Superstation) 126 7. The USA Network 129 8. Turner Network Television (TNT) 130 D. -
Untorsity Mcrofilnis ]Hteniatioiial
UnTOrsity Mcrofilnis ]hteniatioiial 1.0 I f B II* ■s. mil 2.2 Ü: 1^ 2.0 l.l 1.8 1.25 1.4 1.6 MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST CHART NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS STANDARD REFERENCE MATERIAL 1010a (ANSI and ISO TEST CHART No. 2) University Microfilms Inc. 300 N. Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 INFORMATION TO USERS This reproduction was made from a copy of a manuscript sent to us for publication and microfilming. While the most advanced technology has been used to pho tograph and reproduce this manuscript, the quality of the reproduction is heavily dependent upon the quality of the material submitted. Pages in any manuscript may have indistinct print. In all cases the best available copy has been filmed. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help clarify notations which may appear on this reproduction. 1. Manuscripts may not always be complete. When it is not possible to obtain missing pages, a note appears to indicate this. 2. When copyrighted materials are removed from the manuscript, a note ap pears to indicate this. 3. Oversize materials (maps, drawings, and charts) are photographed by sec tioning the original, beginning at the upper left hand comer and continu ing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each oversize page is also filmed as one exposure and is available, for an additional charge, as a standard 35mm slide or in black and white paper format.* 4. Most photographs reproduce acceptably on positive microfilm or micro fiche but lack clarify on xerographic copies made from the microfilm. -
How America Lost Its Mind the Nation’S Current Post-Truth Moment Is the Ultimate Expression of Mind-Sets That Have Made America Exceptional Throughout Its History
1 How America Lost Its Mind The nation’s current post-truth moment is the ultimate expression of mind-sets that have made America exceptional throughout its history. KURT ANDERSEN SEPTEMBER 2017 ISSUE THE ATLANTIC “You are entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts.” — Daniel Patrick Moynihan “We risk being the first people in history to have been able to make their illusions so vivid, so persuasive, so ‘realistic’ that they can live in them.” — Daniel J. Boorstin, The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America (1961) 1) WHEN DID AMERICA become untethered from reality? I first noticed our national lurch toward fantasy in 2004, after President George W. Bush’s political mastermind, Karl Rove, came up with the remarkable phrase reality-based community. People in “the reality-based community,” he told a reporter, “believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality … That’s not the way the world really works anymore.” A year later, The Colbert Report went on the air. In the first few minutes of the first episode, Stephen Colbert, playing his right-wing-populist commentator character, performed a feature called “The Word.” His first selection: truthiness. “Now, I’m sure some of the ‘word police,’ the ‘wordinistas’ over at Webster’s, are gonna say, ‘Hey, that’s not a word!’ Well, anybody who knows me knows that I’m no fan of dictionaries or reference books. They’re elitist. Constantly telling us what is or isn’t true. Or what did or didn’t happen. -
Future Emerging Technology Trends
Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport DDPS armasuisse Science and Technology Emerging Technology Trends 2015 Thun 2015 Credits Editor Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport DDPS armasuisse Science and Technology Research Management and Operations Research www.armasuisse.ch/wt www.deftech.ch Author Dr. Quentin Ladetto Research Director - Technology Foresight [email protected] Release 1.3 Compiled on Tuesday 21st June, 2016 at 16:43 Front page: Emerging sun - view of the Earth from space Foreword As the rate of development in technology is accelerating and civil investments are pushing boundaries always closer to what was considered science-fiction until recently, the exploitation of dual-use technologies is growing in the defence & security ecosystem. If technology is not the only driver in the evolution of warfare, it is the enabler, not to say the trigger, of most of the changes that occurred at the turning point between generations. For a country like Switzerland, Technology Foresight is paramount to identify the opportuni- ties and threats a technology can represent for the different military capabilities building our national armed forces. Rather than picking winners, the Technology Foresight program must provide a comprehensive overview to ensure an early warning about novel relevant technological advances. Identifying potentialities provides the time to build the necessary competences, skills and expertise, in the various fields. In that sense, Technology Foresight must be an integrated element of the doctrine, planing and procurement processes of the armed forces. Only with this strategic futuristic vision, the Swiss armed forces are able to handle, economi- cally and operatively, the evolutions and challenges to come.