Series 1 Secondary (7–12)
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Curriculum Vitae
CURRICULUM VITAE OLE KROGH ANDERSEN, DIRECTOR 1942 Born in Copenhagen 1966 Masters Degree in Electronic Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Department of Electrophysics (Prof.s W. Frank and A. Nielsen) 1969 Technical Licentiate in Solid State Physics; Technical University of Denmark, Department of Electrophysics (Prof. A.R. Mackintosh) 1969-70 Research Associate; University of Pennsylvania, Physics Department (Prof. J.R. Schrieffer) 1970-72 Universitetsadjunkt (Assistant Professor); University of Copenhagen, Ørsted Laboratory, Department of Solid State Physics 1972-78 Lektor (Associate Professor); Technical University of Denmark, Department of Electrophysics 1978- Director at the Max-Planck-Institut f¨ur Festk¨orperforschung in Stuttgart Managing Director 1983-1985, 1997-1999 HONORS AND MEMBERSHIPS 1978 Brinch Prize; Danish Physical Society 1980 Hewlett-Packard Europhysics Prize; European Physical Society 1978- Scientific Member of the Max-Planck-Society 1982- Honorary Professor; University of Stuttgart, Physics Faculty 1982- Foreign Member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences 1992- Foreign Member of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences 1993- Fellow of the American Physical Society 2002 Ernst Mach Medal of the Chech Academy of Sciences 2008 Honorary Doctorate, University of Uppsala 2008 M. N..Saha Memorial Lecture, Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Calcutta 2010 Honorary Member of the Materials Research Society of India Ph.D. STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF STUTTGART 1986 Franz Beeler Calculation of deep impurity -
Curriculum Professionale
CURRICULUM PROFESSIONALE Società PRO SYSTEM S.R.L. EDILIZIA - AMBIENTE - TRASPORTI - ENERGIA SEDE: SEDE LEGALE Corso Trieste n. 61 00198 Roma Tel. 06 85305488 Fax. 06 8549703 e-mail: [email protected] SEDE UFFICIO TECNICO ROMA Corso Trieste n. 61 00198 Roma Tel. 06 85305488 Fax. 06 8549703 e-mail: [email protected] SEDE UFFICIO TECNICO L’AQUILA Via dell’Industria n. 2, Nucleo Industriale di Bazzano 67100 L’Aquila Tel. 0862 561064 e-mail: [email protected] Pro.System S.r.l. – Corso Trieste n. 61, 00198 Roma – Tel. 06/85305488 – email: [email protected] EDILIZIA - AMBIENTE - TRASPORTI - ENERGIA ISCRIZIONI E REGISTRAZIONI: RAPPRESENTANTE LEGALE: Amministratore Unico Pamela FANASCA; DIRETTORE TECNICO: dott. Ing. Franco VERZASCHI iscritto all’Ordine degli Ingegneri di Roma e Provincia al n. 12979 dal giorno 19 settembre 1983; CODICE FISCALE: (partita iva) 07480671002 ESTREMI DELL’ATTO COSTITUTIVO: Notaio dott. Italo GISOLFI, del 02/04/2003 repertorio n. 54659 SCADENZA: 31 dicembre 2100 NUMERO REA: RM – 1034760 (COD. ATTIVITA’ 74.20.1 ATECORI-STUDI DI ARCHITETTURA E DI INGEGNERIA) ISCRIZIONE PRESSO IL REGISTRO DELLE IMPRESE: in data 08/04/2003 (Sezione Ordinaria) ASSOCIATA OICE: dal 2006 Pro.System S.r.l. – Corso Trieste n. 61, 00198 Roma – Tel. 06/85305488 – email: [email protected] EDILIZIA - AMBIENTE - TRASPORTI - ENERGIA PRESENTAZIONE: La Società opera nel campo dei servizi per l’Ingegneria e per l’Architettura ed è in grado di eseguire tutte le fasi progettuali, dall’individuazione del progetto alla sua realizzazione. La Società è nata dall’aggregazione di un gruppo di professionisti con esperienze specifiche nei settori tecnici, scientifici e progettuali. -
City of Punta Gorda
Burnt Store Isles Perimeter Channel Dredge Project The City of Punta Gorda contractor, Brance Diversified, has begun the maintenance dredging of the perimeter channel in the Burnt Store Isles subdivision (work will occur seven days a week as weather and equipment operation permit). The dredge is adjacent to Palermo Drive and will progress north along the perimeter channel to the completion point at Terin Court. Boaters should expect navigational delays and need to exercise caution in the vicinity of the work and may contact the company workers through channel 78 on the VHF radio. The dredge will be located in the perimeter channel and will have up to 4,000 feet of 12 inch discharge pipe leading to the spoil locations. The spoil will be discharged directly into the canal system as required by the State/Federal permits. The first spoil location will be the southernmost basin between Monaco Drive and Palermo Drive which will be blocked by turbidity screens. Homeowners in this basin will need to contact Joost Derijk (952-999-3122), Chris Hays (727-580-2481), or Seth Mayhall (337-793- 6740) to schedule their exit and reentry from the work area. The affected addresses are 800-842 Monaco Drive, 363-375 Portofino Drive, and 5018-5052 Palermo Drive. Short Range Schedule of dredge areas: June 17 through June 25, 2017; 5007-5025 Palermo Drive, 300-355 Trieste Drive, and 300-307 Portofino Drive. June 26 through July 3, 2017; 5016-5068 San Massimo Drive. July 4 through July 26, 2017; 513-739 Macedonia Drive. For additional information on this project, please contact City Project Manager, Gary Disher, Punta Gorda Public Works Department at (941) 575-5021 between the business hours of 7:00 a.m. -
Pantheon Piazza Della Rotonda, 00186 Near Piazza Novanametro: 9 AM – 7:30 PM (Mon – Sat)
Pantheon Piazza della Rotonda, 00186 Near Piazza NovanaMetro: 9 AM – 7:30 PM (Mon – Sat) 9 AM – 6 PM (Sunday) The Roman Pantheon is the most preserved and influential building of ancient Rome. It is a Roman temple dedicated to all the gods of pagan Rome. As the brick stamps on the side of the building reveal it was built and dedicated between A.D 118 and 125. The emperor Hadrian (A.D 117-138) built the Pantheon to replace Augustus’ friend and Commander Marcus Agrippa’s Pantheon of 27 B.C. which burnt to the ground in 80 A.D. When approaching the front of the Pantheon one can see the inscription above still reads in Latin the original dedication by Marcus Agrippa. The inscription reads: "M. AGRIPPA.L.F.COSTERTIUM.FECIT” “Marcus Agrippa son of Lucius, having been consul three times made it”. Despite all the marvelous building projects that the emperor Hadrian produced during his reign, he never inscribed his name to any, but one, the temple of his father Trajan. That is why the Roman Pantheon bears the inscription of Marcus Agrippa, and not the emperor Hadrian. The pediment (the triangle section above the inscription) is blank today, but there would have been sculpture that acted out the battle of the Titans. Great bronze doors guard the entrance to the cella and would have been covered in gold, but it has long since disappeared. The original use of the Pantheon is somewhat unknown, except that is was classified as a temple. However, it is unknown as to how the people worshipped in the building, because the structure of the temple is so different from other traditional Roman temples such as in the Roman Forum. -
And Rome's Legacies
Christianity AND ROME’S LEGACIES Old Religions New Testament MARK MAKES HIS MARK NOT SO SIMPLE TEMPLES IN PARTNERSHIP WITH christianity_FC.indd 1 3/6/17 3:32 PM 2 Religions in Rome The earliest Romans saw their gods as spirits or powerful forces of nature. These gods did not have personalities or emotions or act in any other way like human beings. However, as Rome began to build an empire, the Romans were exposed to new ideas. Through contact with the Greeks, the Romans’ idea of gods and goddesses changed. The Greeks believed in gods and god- desses who behaved very much like human beings. Their gods could be jeal- ous, angry, passionate, kind, foolish, or petty. The Romans borrowed this idea u THE ROMANS People did not go to and honey, burned honored their gods a temple to worship sweet-smelling from the Greeks. They even borrowed by building temples. the god. Rather, a incense, and sac- some of the Greek gods and goddesses. Inside each temple temple was where rificed animals to No longer were the Roman gods spir- was a statue of a priests made honor the god. god or goddess. offerings of cakes its or forces of nature. They were now divine and human at the same time. u UNTIL THE in private people 300s CE, the Roman were free to think u THE ROMANS wisdom. During festival day, priests ticular, no legal religion was a and say what they honored their gods Cerealia, Romans performed rituals work was allowed. state religion. wanted to. Over with more than 100 honored the god- and sacrifices Celebrations includ- The emperor was time, the emperor festivals every year. -
Between the Local and the National: the Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports 2014 Between the Local and the National: The Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty Fabio Capano Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Capano, Fabio, "Between the Local and the National: The Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty" (2014). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 5312. https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/5312 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by the The Research Repository @ WVU with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you must obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in WVU Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports collection by an authorized administrator of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Between the Local and the National: the Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianità," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty Fabio Capano Dissertation submitted to the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Modern Europe Joshua Arthurs, Ph.D., Co-Chair Robert Blobaum, Ph.D., Co-Chair Katherine Aaslestad, Ph.D. -
Dott. Arch. GUIDO ZULIANI
Dott. Arch. GUIDO ZULIANI CURRICULUM VITAE Dott. Arch. GUIDO ZULIANI AZstudio (Owner - Principal) 235 west 108th street #52 New York City, N.Y. 10025 - USA Tel. (1) 347-570 3489 [email protected] via Gemona 78 33100 Udine - Italy Tel. (39) 329-548 9158 Tel./ Fax +39- 0432-506 254 EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS 1998 ACCADEMIA DELLE SCIENZE, LETTERE ED ARTI “GLI SVENTATI” - Udine, Italy Elected Member 1982 ORDINE DEGLI ARCHITETTI DELLA PROVINCIA DI UDINE Register architect 1980 ISTITUTO UNIVERSITARIO D'ARCHITETTURA DI VENEZIA (IUAV) today UNIVERSITÀ IUAV DI VENEZIA Dottore in Architettura (Master equivalent) - Summa cum Laude ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE 1985 - Present THE COOPER UNION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE AND ART IRWIN S. CHANIN SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE New York, NY 2009 - Present Professor of Architectural History 2005 - Present Professor of Architecture / Professor of Modern Architectural Concept Responsible for teaching Architectural Design II, Architectural Design IV, Thesis classes, the seminars in Modern Architectural Concepts, Analysis of Architectural Texts, Advanced Topics in Architecture 1991 - 2005 Associate Professor of Architecture 1986 - 1991 Visiting Professor of Architecture 2001 - Present Member of the Curriculum Committee Responsible for review and recommendations regarding the structure and the content of the school curriculum, currently designing the curriculum of the future post-professional Master Degree in Architecture of the Cooper Union. 2008 - Present SCHOOL OF DOCTORATE STUDIES - UNIVERSITÀ IUAV -
Youth Forum 11-12 July, Trieste, ITALY
The following is the list of signatories of the present DECLARATION : 1 Agricultural University of Tirana Albania 2 University of Elbasan Albania 3 Graz University of Technology Austria 4 University of Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 University ‘D zˇemal Bijedi c´’ Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina 6 University of Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina 7 University of Split Croatia 8 University of Zadar Croatia 9 Juraj Dobrila University of Pula Croatia 10 Technological Educational Institute of Epirus Greece 11 University of Ioannina Greece 12 Ionian University Greece 13 University of Patras Greece 14 University of Bologna Italy 15 University of Camerino Italy 16 Technical University of Marche Italy TRIESTE 17 University of Trieste Italy 18 University of Udine Italy 19 University of Urbino Italy 20 University of Campania Italy 21 University of Genua Italy 22 University of Foggia Italy DECLARATION 23 University of Insubria Italy 24 University of Modena and Reggio Emilia Italy 25 University of Naples Italy 26 University of Piemonte Orientale Italy 27 University of Teramo Italy 28 University of Palermo Italy 29 University of Milano-Bicocca Italy 30 University of Tuscia Italy 31 University of Venice Ca’Foscari Italy 32 International School for Advanced Studies Italy 33 L’Orientale University of Naples Italy 34 IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca Italy 35 University of Montenegro Montenegro 36 University of Oradea Romania 37 University Politehnica of Bucharest Romania 38 West University of Timisoara Romania 39 University of Arts in Belgrade Serbia -
A Study of the Pantheon Through Time Caitlin Williams
Union College Union | Digital Works Honors Theses Student Work 6-2018 A Study of the Pantheon Through Time Caitlin Williams Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses Part of the Ancient History, Greek and Roman through Late Antiquity Commons, and the Classical Archaeology and Art History Commons Recommended Citation Williams, Caitlin, "A Study of the Pantheon Through Time" (2018). Honors Theses. 1689. https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses/1689 This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Work at Union | Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Union | Digital Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Study of the Pantheon Through Time By Caitlin Williams * * * * * * * Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in the Department of Classics UNION COLLEGE June, 2018 ABSTRACT WILLIAMS, CAITLIN A Study of the Pantheon Through Time. Department of Classics, June, 2018. ADVISOR: Hans-Friedrich Mueller. I analyze the Pantheon, one of the most well-preserVed buildings from antiquity, through time. I start with Agrippa's Pantheon, the original Pantheon that is no longer standing, which was built in 27 or 25 BC. What did it look like originally under Augustus? Why was it built? We then shift to the Pantheon that stands today, Hadrian-Trajan's Pantheon, which was completed around AD 125-128, and represents an example of an architectural reVolution. Was it eVen a temple? We also look at the Pantheon's conversion to a church, which helps explain why it is so well preserVed. -
ROMAN ARCHITEXTURE: the IDEA of the MONUMENT in the ROMAN IMAGINATION of the AUGUSTAN AGE by Nicholas James Geller a Dissertatio
ROMAN ARCHITEXTURE: THE IDEA OF THE MONUMENT IN THE ROMAN IMAGINATION OF THE AUGUSTAN AGE by Nicholas James Geller A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Classical Studies) in the University of Michigan 2015 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Basil J. Dufallo, Chair Associate Professor Ruth Rothaus Caston Professor Bruce W. Frier Associate Professor Achim Timmermann ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This dissertation would not have been possible without the support and encouragement of many people both within and outside of academia. I would first of all like to thank all those on my committee for reading drafts of my work and providing constructive feedback, especially Basil Dufallo and Ruth R. Caston, both of who read my chapters at early stages and pushed me to find what I wanted to say – and say it well. I also cannot thank enough all the graduate students in the Department of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan for their support and friendship over the years, without either of which I would have never made it this far. Marin Turk in Slavic Languages and Literature deserves my gratitude, as well, for reading over drafts of my chapters and providing insightful commentary from a non-classicist perspective. And I of course must thank the Department of Classical Studies and Rackham Graduate School for all the financial support that I have received over the years which gave me time and the peace of mind to develop my ideas and write the dissertation that follows. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS………………………………………………………………………ii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS……………………………………………………………………iv ABSTRACT……………………………………………………………………………………....v CHAPTER I. -
The Pantheon (Temple of All the Gods)
The Pantheon (temple of all the gods) is a former Roman temple and since the year 609 a Catholic church in Rome, Italy, on the site of an earlier temple commissioned by Marcus Agrippa during the reign of Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD). It was rebuilt by the emperor Hadrian and probably dedicated 126 AD. Its date of construction is uncertain, because Hadrian chose not to inscribe the new temple but rather to retain the inscription of Agrippa's older temple, which had burned down. The building is cylindrical with a portico of large granite Corinthian columns (eight in the first rank and two groups of four behind) under a pediment. A rectangular vestibule links the porch to the rotunda, which is under a coffered concrete dome, with a central opening (oculus) to the sky. Almost two thousand years after it was built, the Pantheon's dome is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same, 142 feet. It is one of the best-preserved of all Ancient Roman buildings, in large part because it has been in continuous use throughout its history and, since the 7th century, the Pantheon has been in use as a church dedicated to "St. Mary and the Martyrs" but informally known as "Santa Maria Rotonda". The square in front of the Pantheon is called Piazza della Rotonda. The Pantheon is a state property, managed by Italy's Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism. In 2013, it was visited by over 6 million people. -
Growing Old in Cities. Council Housing Estates in Trieste As Laboratories for New Perspectives in Urban Planning
EUROPEAN SPATIAL RESEARCH AND POLICY Volume 19 2012 Number 1 https://doi.org/10.2478/v10105-012-0005-8 Massimo BRICOCOLI*, Elena MARCHIGIANI** GROWING OLD IN CITIES. COUNCIL HOUSING ESTATES IN TRIESTE AS LABORATORIES FOR NEW PERSPECTIVES IN URBAN PLANNING Abstract: Significant ageingageing processesprocesses areare affectingaffecting manymany regionsregions acrossacross eEuropeurope and are changing the social social and and spatial spatial profile profile of ofcities cities.� in Trieste, In Trieste, italy, Italy, a joint a initiative joint initiative by the public by the h publicealth a Healthgency Agencyand the Social and the h ousingSocial aHousinggency has Agency developed has adeveloped programme a tar programmegeting conditions targeting that conditions allow people that allowto age at people home to� The age outcomes at home. of The the programme outcomes of stress the programmethe need to redesign stress the and need reorganise to redesign the living and reorganiseenvironment the as living a way environment to oppose toas thea way institutionalisation to oppose to the of institutionalisation older people in specialised of older people nursing in specialisedhomes� Based nursing on intensive homes. Based field onwork, intensive this contribution field work, thispresents contribution and discusses presents the and original discusses and theinnovative original inputs and innovative that the case inputs study that is theoffering case studyto the is italian offering and to e theuropean Italian debate and European� debate. Key words