Final List of Delegations, 107Th Session (2018)
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Of the American Mathematical Society August 2017 Volume 64, Number 7
ISSN 0002-9920 (print) ISSN 1088-9477 (online) of the American Mathematical Society August 2017 Volume 64, Number 7 The Mathematics of Gravitational Waves: A Two-Part Feature page 684 The Travel Ban: Affected Mathematicians Tell Their Stories page 678 The Global Math Project: Uplifting Mathematics for All page 712 2015–2016 Doctoral Degrees Conferred page 727 Gravitational waves are produced by black holes spiraling inward (see page 674). American Mathematical Society LEARNING ® MEDIA MATHSCINET ONLINE RESOURCES MATHEMATICS WASHINGTON, DC CONFERENCES MATHEMATICAL INCLUSION REVIEWS STUDENTS MENTORING PROFESSION GRAD PUBLISHING STUDENTS OUTREACH TOOLS EMPLOYMENT MATH VISUALIZATIONS EXCLUSION TEACHING CAREERS MATH STEM ART REVIEWS MEETINGS FUNDING WORKSHOPS BOOKS EDUCATION MATH ADVOCACY NETWORKING DIVERSITY blogs.ams.org Notices of the American Mathematical Society August 2017 FEATURED 684684 718 26 678 Gravitational Waves The Graduate Student The Travel Ban: Affected Introduction Section Mathematicians Tell Their by Christina Sormani Karen E. Smith Interview Stories How the Green Light was Given for by Laure Flapan Gravitational Wave Research by Alexander Diaz-Lopez, Allyn by C. Denson Hill and Paweł Nurowski WHAT IS...a CR Submanifold? Jackson, and Stephen Kennedy by Phillip S. Harrington and Andrew Gravitational Waves and Their Raich Mathematics by Lydia Bieri, David Garfinkle, and Nicolás Yunes This season of the Perseid meteor shower August 12 and the third sighting in June make our cover feature on the discovery of gravitational waves -
COA Endowment Report FY2012 Table of Contents
COA Endowment Report FY2012 Table of Contents The Rachel Carson Chair in Human Ecology 3 The William H. Drury, Jr. Chair in Evolution, Ecology and Natural History 4 The Charles Eliot Chair in Ecological Planning, Policy and Design 5 The Steven K. Katona Chair in Marine Studies 6 The Elizabeth Battles Newlin Chair in Botany 7 The Partridge Chair in Food and Sustainable Agriculture Systems 8 The David Rockefeller Family Chair in Ecosystem Management and Protection 9 The Tom A. Cox Fund in Ecosystem Management and Protection The Sharpe-McNally Chair of Green and Socially Responsible Business 10 The Allan Stone Chair in the Visual Arts 11 The James Russell Wiggins Chair in Government and Polity 12 The Philip Geyelin Fund for Government and Polity Endowed Scholarships 13 The Beinecke Student Travel and Living Assistance Fund 16 The Shelby Cullom Davis Faculty International Studies Fund 17 The Shelby Cullom Davis Student International Studies Fund 18 The William H. Drury Research Fund 19 The Faculty/Staff Enrichment Fund 20 The Elizabeth A. and Henry B. Guthrie Chemistry Enhancement Fund 21 The Barbarina M. and Aaron J. Heyerdahl Beech Hill Farm Endowment Fund The Robert P. and Arlene Kogod Visiting Artist Fund 22 The McCormick Library Director Fund 23 The Rabineau Student Senior Project and Professional Development Fund The Peggy Rockefeller Farms Endowment 24 The Doug Rose GIS Enhancement Fund 25 The Maurine and Robert Rothschild Student-Faculty Collaborative Research Fund The Elizabeth Thorndike Senior Class Book Fund 26 COA’s Physical Plant Funds 27 General Unrestricted Endowment 28 New Endowment Funds Letter from the President Dear Friends of the College of the Atlantic: Before returning to COA as president, I spent a significant amount of time working in the wilds of the Peruvian Amazon. -
Josemaría Escrivá De Balaguer En Santiago De Chile (1974) María Eugenia Ossandón Widow
STUDIA ET DOCUMENTA RIvista DEll’Istituto Storico San JosemaríA Escrivá VOL. 11 - 2017 ISTITUTO STORICO SAN JOSEMARíA ESCRIvá - ROMA Sommario Mons. Javier Echevarría (1932-2016): In memoriam José Luis Illanes . 7 San Josemaría Escrivá in America Latina, 1974-1975 Presentación María Isabel Montero Casado de Amezúa . 15 América Latina en el siglo XX: religión y política Carmen-José Alejos Grau . 19 I viaggi di catechesi in America Latina di Josemaría Escrivá. Uno sguardo d’insieme (1974-1975) Carlo Pioppi . 49 Com os braços abertos a todos. A visita de São Josemaria Escrivá ao Brasil Alexandre Antosz Filho . 65 Josemaría Escrivá de Balaguer en Santiago de Chile (1974) María Eugenia Ossandón Widow . 101 Studi e note Orígenes y primera historia de Villa Tevere. Los edificios de la sede central del Opus Dei en Roma (1947-1960) Alfredo Méndiz . 153 La editorial Minerva (1943-1946). Un ensayo de cultura popular y cristiana de las primeras mujeres del Opus Dei Mercedes Montero . 227 ISSN 1970-4879 SetD 11 (2017) 3 Documenti Los primeros pasos del Opus Dei en Italia. Epistolario entre Roma y Madrid (noviembre 1942 – febrero 1943) Fernando Crovetto . 267 Notiziario Conferencias sobre el Opus Dei en el ámbito académico ........... .317 Sezione bibliografica Nota bibliografica Raimon Panikkar: a propósito de una biografía Josep-Ignasi Saranyana . 323 Recensioni Pilar Río, Los fieles laicos, Iglesia en la entraña del mundo . Reflexión teológica sobre la identidad eclesial de los laicos en un tiempo de nueva evangelización (María Eugenia Ossandón W .) . 349 Jesús Sevilla Lozano, Miguel Fisac . ¿Arquitecto de Dios o del ‘Diablo’? (Santiago Martínez Sánchez) . -
Meeting of States Parties Distr.: General 14 June 2017 English Original: English/French/Spanish
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea SPLOS /INF/31 Meeting of States Parties Distr.: General 14 June 2017 English Original: English/French/Spanish my anam r Twenty-seventh Meeting New York, 12 to 16 June 2017 List of Delegations Liste de Délégations Lista de Delegaciones SPLOS/INF/31 Albania Representatives H.E. Mrs. Besiana Kadare, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative to the United Nations ( Chair of the delegation ) Mr. Arben Idrizi, Minister Counsellor, Permanent Mission Mrs. Ingrid Prizreni, First Secretary, Permanent Mission Algeria Representatives H.E. Mr. Sabri Boukadoum, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative to the United Nations ( Chair of the delegation ) H.E. Mr. Mohammed Bessedik, Ambassador, Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations Mr. Mehdi Remaoun, First Secretary, Permanent Mission Angola Representatives H.E. Mr. Ismael Gaspar Martins, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative to the United Nations ( Chair of the delegation ) Vice-Admiral Martinho Francisco António, Technical Coordinator, Inter-Ministerial Commission of Delimitation and Maritime Demarcation of Angola Mrs. Anisabel Verissimo da Costa, Director of the International Exchange Directorate, Ministry of Justice and Human Rights Mrs. Claudete de Sousa, Director, Legal Office of the Ministry of Fisheries Mr. Marió Von Haff, Head, United Nations Department, Multilateral Affairs Directorate, Ministry of External Relations Col. Mário Simão, Military Counsellor, Permanent Mission Mr. Miguel Dialamicua, Counsellor, Permanent Mission Mrs. Vezua Paiva, Second Secretary, Permanent Mission Eng. José Januário da Conceição, Expert, Geographic and Cartographic Institute of Angola Eng. Lúmen Sebastião, Sonangol Expert Eng. Domingos de Carvalho Viana Moreira, Expert, Inter-Ministerial Commission of Delimitation and Maritime Demarcation Mr. -
Libro ING CAC1-36:Maquetación 1.Qxd
© Enrique Montesinos, 2013 © Sobre la presente edición: Organización Deportiva Centroamericana y del Caribe (Odecabe) Edición y diseño general: Enrique Montesinos Diseño de cubierta: Jorge Reyes Reyes Composición y diseño computadorizado: Gerardo Daumont y Yoel A. Tejeda Pérez Textos en inglés: Servicios Especializados de Traducción e Interpretación del Deporte (Setidep), INDER, Cuba Fotos: Reproducidas de las fuentes bibliográficas, Periódico Granma, Fernando Neris. Los elementos que componen este volumen pueden ser reproducidos de forma parcial siem- pre que se haga mención de su fuente de origen. Se agradece cualquier contribución encaminada a completar los datos aquí recogidos, o a la rectificación de alguno de ellos. Diríjala al correo [email protected] ÍNDICE / INDEX PRESENTACIÓN/ 1978: Medellín, Colombia / 77 FEATURING/ VII 1982: La Habana, Cuba / 83 1986: Santiago de los Caballeros, A MANERA DE PRÓLOGO / República Dominicana / 89 AS A PROLOGUE / IX 1990: Ciudad México, México / 95 1993: Ponce, Puerto Rico / 101 INTRODUCCIÓN / 1998: Maracaibo, Venezuela / 107 INTRODUCTION / XI 2002: San Salvador, El Salvador / 113 2006: Cartagena de Indias, I PARTE: ANTECEDENTES Colombia / 119 Y DESARROLLO / 2010: Mayagüez, Puerto Rico / 125 I PART: BACKGROUNG AND DEVELOPMENT / 1 II PARTE: LOS GANADORES DE MEDALLAS / Pasos iniciales / Initial steps / 1 II PART: THE MEDALS WINNERS 1926: La primera cita / / 131 1926: The first rendezvous / 5 1930: La Habana, Cuba / 11 Por deportes y pruebas / 132 1935: San Salvador, Atletismo / Athletics -
Chairman Mansfield Called for Any Conflicts of Interest by the Board and Asked That All Cell Phones Be Turned Off
COUNTY OF CARTERET BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS REGULAR SESSION — 6: 00 P. M. COMMISSIONERS' BOARDROOM MAY 21, 2018 The Honorable Carteret County Board of Commissioners sat in regular session on Monday, May 21, 2018, at 6: 00 p. m. Present were: Chairman Mark Mansfield, Commissioners Robin Comer, Jimmy Farrington, Jonathan Robinson, Bill Smith, and Ed Wheatly. Commissioner Cavanaugh was absent. I. MEETING CALLED TO ORDER Chairman Mansfield called the meeting to order. All present recited the Pledge of Allegiance. Pastor Brian Recker of One Harbor Church in Beaufort provided the invocation. II. CONFLICT OF INTEREST/CELL PHONE STATEMENT Chairman Mansfield called for any conflicts of interest by the Board and asked that all cell phones be turned off. There were no conflicts of interest. III. ADOPTION OF AGENDA Motion: Commissioner Comer made a motion to add an item to the agenda, " Request for Additional Funding for the Western Carteret Library as Item Villa-,"Susan Simpson will be presenting; seconded by Commissioner Smith. Motion carried unanimously. Motion: Commissioner Smith made a motion to adopt the amended agenda; seconded by Commissioner Comer. Motion carried unanimously. The agenda was as follows: CARTERET COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS REGULAR SESSION COMMISSIONERS' BOARDROOM MAY 21, 2018 6: 00 P. M. Meeting Called to Order/Pledge of Allegiance/ Invocation Chairman Mansfield II. Conflict of Interest/ Cell Phone Statement Chairman Mansfield III. Adoption of Agenda Board IV. Consent Agenda Board 1. Approval of Minutes March 19, 2018 April 16, 2018 2. Tax Releases and Refunds a. Tax Releases Under $ 100 b. Tax Releases Over $ 100 C. Tax Refunds Under $ 100 d. -
Mathematics in African History and Cultures
Paulus Gerdes & Ahmed Djebbar MATHEMATICS IN AFRICAN HISTORY AND CULTURES: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY African Mathematical Union Commission on the History of Mathematics in Africa (AMUCHMA) Mathematics in African History and Cultures Second edition, 2007 First edition: African Mathematical Union, Cape Town, South Africa, 2004 ISBN: 978-1-4303-1537-7 Published by Lulu. Copyright © 2007 by Paulus Gerdes & Ahmed Djebbar Authors Paulus Gerdes Research Centre for Mathematics, Culture and Education, C.P. 915, Maputo, Mozambique E-mail: [email protected] Ahmed Djebbar Département de mathématiques, Bt. M 2, Université de Lille 1, 59655 Villeneuve D’Asq Cedex, France E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Cover design inspired by a pattern on a mat woven in the 19th century by a Yombe woman from the Lower Congo area (Cf. GER-04b, p. 96). 2 Table of contents page Preface by the President of the African 7 Mathematical Union (Prof. Jan Persens) Introduction 9 Introduction to the new edition 14 Bibliography A 15 B 43 C 65 D 77 E 105 F 115 G 121 H 162 I 173 J 179 K 182 L 194 M 207 N 223 O 228 P 234 R 241 S 252 T 274 U 281 V 283 3 Mathematics in African History and Cultures page W 290 Y 296 Z 298 Appendices 1 On mathematicians of African descent / 307 Diaspora 2 Publications by Africans on the History of 313 Mathematics outside Africa (including reviews of these publications) 3 On Time-reckoning and Astronomy in 317 African History and Cultures 4 String figures in Africa 338 5 Examples of other Mathematical Books and 343 -
Childbirth Rhythms and Childbirth Ritual in Early Modern Spain, Together with Some Comments on the Virtues of Midwives 1
Hipogrifo. Revista de literatura y cultura del Siglo de Oro ISSN: 2328-1308 [email protected] Instituto de Estudios Auriseculares España Childbirth Rhythms and Childbirth Ritual in Early Modern Spain, together with some Comments on the Virtues of Midwives 1 Aichinger, Wolfram Childbirth Rhythms and Childbirth Ritual in Early Modern Spain, together with some Comments on the Virtues of 1 Midwives Hipogrifo. Revista de literatura y cultura del Siglo de Oro, vol. 6, no. 1, 2018 Instituto de Estudios Auriseculares, España Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=517558792028 DOI: https://doi.org/10.13035/H.2018.06.01.29 Esta obra está bajo una Licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivar 3.0 Internacional. PDF generated from XML JATS4R by Redalyc Project academic non-profit, developed under the open access initiative Childbirth in Early Modern Spain: New Perspectives Childbirth Rhythms and Childbirth Ritual in Early Modern Spain, together with some Comments on the Virtues of Midwives 1 Ritmos y ritual del parto en el Siglo de Oro, junto con algunos comentarios sobre la virtud de las comadronas Wolfram Aichinger [email protected] Universität Wien, Austria Abstract: Childbirth in Early Modern Spain can be viewed as an area where ignorant midwives and cruel doctors ruled over terrified women who, deprived of all choices, were condemned to passively endure the ordeal of parturition. Medical and judicial sources seem to strengthen this vision. Hipogrifo. Revista de literatura y cultura del Siglo de Oro, vol. 6, no. 1, 2018 Yet, when we apply Mary Douglas’s theory of ritual, another picture emerges which might be just as valid for wide sections of social experience. -
1492 Reconsidered: Religious and Social Change in Fifteenth Century Ávila
1492 RECONSIDERED: RELIGIOUS AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN FIFTEENTH CENTURY ÁVILA by Carolyn Salomons A dissertation submitted to Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Baltimore, Maryland May 2014 © 2014 Carolyn Salomons All Rights Reserved Abstract This dissertation is an assessment of the impact of the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492 on the city of Ávila, in northwestern Castile. The expulsion was the culmination of a series of policies set forth by Isabel I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon regarding Jewish-Christian relations. The monarchs invoked these policies in order to bolster the faith and religious praxis of Catholics in the kingdoms, especially those Catholics newly converted from Judaism. My work shows how the implementation of these strategies began to fracture the heretofore relatively convivial relations between the confessional groups residing in Ávila. A key component of the Crown’s policies was the creation of a Jewish quarter in the city, where previously, Jews had lived wherever they chose. This transformation of a previously shared civic place to one demarcated clearly by religious affiliation, i.e. the creation of both Jewish and Christian space, had a visceral impact on how Christians related to their former neighbors, and hostilities between the two communities increased in the closing decades of the fifteenth century. Yet at the same time, Jewish appeals to the Crown for assistance in the face of harassment and persecution were almost always answered positively, with the Crown intervening several times on behalf of their Jewish subjects. This seemingly incongruous attitude reveals a key component in the relationship between the Crown and Jews: the “royal alliance.” My work also details how invoking that alliance came at the expense of the horizontal alliances between Abulense Jews and Christians, and only fostered antagonism between the confessional groups. -
Ecaade 2021 Towards a New, Configurable Architecture, Volume 2
eCAADe 2021 Towards a New, Configurable Architecture Volume 2 Editors Vesna Stojaković, Bojan Tepavčević, University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Technical Sciences 1st Edition, September 2021 Towards a New, Configurable Architecture - Proceedings of the 39th International Hybrid Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe, Novi Sad, Serbia, 8-10th September 2021, Volume 2. Edited by Vesna Stojaković and Bojan Tepavčević. Brussels: Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe, Belgium / Novi Sad: Digital Design Center, University of Novi Sad. Legal Depot D/2021/14982/02 ISBN 978-94-91207-23-5 (volume 2), Publisher eCAADe (Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe) ISBN 978-86-6022-359-5 (volume 2), Publisher FTN (Faculty of Technical Sciences, University of Novi Sad, Serbia) ISSN 2684-1843 Cover Design Vesna Stojaković Printed by: GRID, Faculty of Technical Sciences All rights reserved. Nothing from this publication may be produced, stored in computerised system or published in any form or in any manner, including electronic, mechanical, reprographic or photographic, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authors are responsible for all pictures, contents and copyright-related issues in their own paper(s). ii | eCAADe 39 - Volume 2 eCAADe 2021 Towards a New, Configurable Architecture Volume 2 Proceedings The 39th Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe Hybrid Conference 8th-10th September -
BOSNIA and HERZEGOVINA MINISTRY of FOREIGN AFFAIRS Department of Diplomatic Protocol
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS Department of Diplomatic Protocol DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR CORPS AND INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA December, 2015 1 2 C O N T E N T S Order of Precedence among the Heads of Diplomatic Missions and dates of presentation of credentials 8 Heads of Diplomatic Representation Offices 10 Diplomatic Missions accredited to Bosnia and Herzegovina * - Non Resident ALBANIA* 13 ALGERIA * 15 ANGOLA * 19 ARGENTINA * 21 ARMENIA* 23 AUSTRALIA * 25 AUSTRIA 27 AZERBAIJAN* 31 BANGLADESH * 33 BELARUS * 35 BELGIUM * 37 BRAZIL 41 BULGARIA 43 BURKINA FASO * 45 CANADA* 47 CHILE * 49 CHINA 51 COSTA RICA* 53 CROATIA 55 CUBA * 57 CYPRUS* 59 CZECH REPUBLIC 61 DENMARK* 63 ECUADOR* 65 EGYPT 67 ESTONIA * 69 3 FINLAND * 71 FRANCE 73 GEORGIA* 77 GERMANY 79 GREECE 83 HOLY SEE 85 HUNGARY 87 ICELAND * 89 INDIA * 91 INDONESIA 93 IRAN 95 IRAQ* 97 IRELAND * 99 ISRAEL * 101 ITALY 103 JAPAN 107 JORDAN * 109 KAZAKHSTAN* 111 KOREA (Democratic People's Republic) * 113 KOREA (Republic of Korea) * 115 KUWAIT 117 LATVIA * 119 LITHUANIA* 121 LIBYA 123 LUXEMBOURG* 127 MACEDONIA 129 MALAYSIA 131 MALI * 133 MALTA * 135 MAURITANIA* 137 MEXICO * 139 MOLDOVA * 141 MONGOLIA* 143 MONTENEGRO 145 4 MOROCCO * 147 THE NETHERLANDS 149 NEW ZEALAND * 151 NIGERIA * 153 NORWAY 155 OMAN * 157 PAKISTAN 159 PALESTINE 161 PERU * 163 PHILIPPINES * 165 POLAND 167 PORTUGAL* 169 QATAR 171 ROMANIA 173 RUSSIA 175 SAN MARINO 177 SAUDI ARABIA 181 SERBIA 185 SYRIA * 187 SLOVAKIA 189 SLOVENIA 191 SOUTH AFRICA * 193 THE SOVEREIGN MILITARY ORDER -
Sweet Briar College Magazine – Spring 2019
Dear Sweet Briar alumnae and friends, Friendship and family have been on my mind lately, and so I want to tell you about some new friends I’ve been making this semester. One of them is Ray, who is tall and smart and also known as Love Z, and the other is Blues, who is very personable and a wonderful teacher. My friendship with Ray has grown over time; frankly, I didn’t seem to make much of an impression on him at first. My friendship with Blues blossomed immediately; we seem to be simpatico. As I joked with Merrilee “Mimi” Wroten, the director of Sweet Briar’s acclaimed riding program, maybe I bonded faster with Blues because he’s rather short, and so am I. And if you haven’t already figured it out, Ray, a chestnut warmblood, and Blues, a gray quarter horse, are members of the College’s equine family, and along with Mimi, they’ve been teaching me how to ride. As Sweet Briar’s president, it’s vital for me to learn as much as I can about the Col- lege, its programs and its people. That’s why I taught a course in our inaugural three- week session in the fall of 2018; that’s why I have just instituted collegial gatherings of faculty and staff every Monday evening (called Sweet Briar Hour); and that’s why I’m taking riding lessons, so that I can better understand our equestrian program, its ac- complishments and its needs. Riding also gives me a connection with many members of our Sweet Briar family; a full third of our students identify as riders, whether for competition or recreation.