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If
you have questions or need further information, please contact Gabriela Carrera,
U.S.-Mexico Lecture Series Coordinator. Computerized
Animation: a Mathematical Perspective Dr. Thomas Linehan has a background in both corporate management and educational administration. He has served as a college president, a corporate vice president, an associate dean, a research laboratory director, a professor and a public school teacher. Most recently, he served as the president of The Ringling School of Art and Design in Sarasota, Florida. There he directed successful ventures in: selective enrollment increases, consensus-based strategic planning, faculty governance reform, housing and instructional facilities construction, increased corporate collaboration, improved faculty/staff/student morale and the directed the best financial performance in the collegeês history. As senior vice president of CRSS Architects, a world-wide design firm (400 architects and 15 offices), he managed a number of major corporate units and implemented CRSSê early entrance into advanced computer-based design and computer visualization. Dr. Linehan has experience in research and educational planning with the arts and technology. He has developed several premiere degree programs in media arts technology. (Ohio State Universityês Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design, Texas A&M Universityês Visualization Laboratory and The Ringling School of Art and Designês Computer Animation Program.) Each of these programs provides an advanced computing environment in support of an industry-relevant education. Dr. Linehan has served as a consultant in the development of similar programs in The Netherlands, Germany, New Zealand and Canada. Pablo
Trinidad holds a B.S. in Computer Science and an M.A. in Arts and Technology from
The University of Texas at Dallas. Pablo has collaborated at the Center for U.S.-Mexico
Studies as a research assistant for four years while has created, designed, implemented
and maintained the Center's website. In addition Pablo has assisted the Director
of the Center in the logistics of the UTD-Mexico agenda, including hosting guests
and technical support for events. Since the summer 2005, Pablo collaborates in
the design of the Center for Translation Studies´ web page. Pablo's current
interest is in the efficient development of visual design, and is currently working
on his Ph.D. in Arts and Technology under the supervision of Dr. Tomas Linehan,
Director of the Institute of Interactive Arts and Engineering (IIAE). Professionalizing
the Public Administration: The Case of Bureaucracy Larry D. Terry is Executive Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and Professor of Public Administration at The University of Texas at Dallas. Dr. Terry received his graduate degrees from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Ph.D.) and University of Missouri-Columbia (M.S.). He is widely known for his book, The Leadership of Public Bureaucracies: The Administrator As Conservator 2nd ed. (M.E. Sharpe, 2002). This book is currently used in graduate and executive development programs throughout the world. Leadership of Public Bureaucracies is recognized by many as an emerging classic in the field public administration and public affairs. Dr. Terry is Editor in Chief of Public Administration Review. In 1999, he was elected a fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. Dr. Terry is the recipient of the American Society for Public Administration's 1996-1997, William E. Mosher and Frederick C. Mosher Award. This prestigious and highly competitive award recognizes the best article by an academician published in the Public Administration Review. Professor Terry was given the "Alumni Outstanding Professional Accomplishment Award" by the College of Architecture at Virginia Tech. He also received the American Society for Public Administration, 2000 Presidential Citation of Merit Award, for his leadership of Public Administration Review and the Conference of Minority Public Administrators Citation of Merit Award for scholarly achievements. Dr. Terry is currently writing a book entitled, Administrative Interpretation of Law: How Public Administrators Create Meaning (Under contract with Georgetown University Press). In addition to his academic career, Professor Terry has held a variety of administrative and staff positions at the federal, state, and local government levels. He has also served as a consultant and trainer to several diverse organizations such as the U.S. Department of the Army, the U.S. Forest Service and the Communications Workers of America (AFL-CIO) National Headquarters. Stephanie
Newbold is doctoral candidate at the Center for Public Administration and Policy
at Virginia Tech. Her research interests include public sector ethics, administrative
history, political theory, and public management. She has worked for the Office
of the White House Chief of Staff in the Clinton Administration and for the International
Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello. Currently, she is completing her dissertation
on Thomas Jefferson's contributions to the development of the American Administrative
State and working for the Institute for Policy Outreach at Virginia Tech on coordinating
statewide work incentives for disabled individuals. Adolfo
Sánchez Valenzuela Lie
Superalgebras, and Natural Super-Spacetimes Adolfo Sanchez Valenzuela is a mathematician from CIMAT (Centro de Investigación en Matemáticas A.C.); a center for research in mathematics in Guanajuato, México. He has worked there since December 1987, after being a Junior Research Fellow at IIMAS-UNAM (Instituto de Investigaciones en Matemáticas Aplicadas y en Sistemas) from September 1986 to December 1987. His PhD is from Harvard University obtained in June 1986, while his undergraduate studies are from the School of Sciences of the National University of Mexico, where he obtained the B.Sc. Degree in Physics in 1979, and the M.Sc. Degree in Physics in 1981. He is currently Dean of the Graduate School at CIMAT and Director of the School of Mathematics of the University of Guanajuato. He has been a member of several distinguished scientific committees at the Mexican Academy of Sciences, and at the Mexican Bureau of Science and Technology (CONACyT), including a two-year presidency (2001-2002) of the Mathematics and Physics Committee of the National System of Research (SNI). He has been an SNI-fellow since 1987, and obtained the SNI highest rank in 2002. He has been a member of the Mexican Academy of Sciences since 1993, and he is currently the chairman of the Mathematics Section of this Academy. His
mathematical interests have always been inspired by his background in physics.
His major contributions occur in the field of supermanifold theory and supersymmetry.
He has published more than 30 scientific papers. He is also the author of 6 contributions
for math students, and the author of several articles on science and mathematics
for the general audience. Douglas
Watson
Chern
and I Dr. Paul C. W. Chu is currently serving as Professor of Physics, T. L. L. Temple Chair of Science, and Executive Director of the Texas Center for Superconductivity at the University of Houston, and as President of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He was born in Hunan, China, and received the B.S. degree from Cheng-Kung University in Taiwan. After service with the Nationalist Chinese Air Force, he earned the M.S. degree from Fordham University, Bronx NY, and completed the Ph.D. degree at the University of California at San Diego, all three degrees being in Physics. He has been working on Superconductivity, Magnetism, and Dielectrics. After doing industrial research with Bell Laboratories at Murray Hill, New Jersey, Dr. Chu held an academic appointment at Cleveland State University. He assumed his appointment at the University of Houston in 1979. He was Director of the Texas Center for Superconductivity at the University of Houston between 1987 and 2001. He had also served as consultant and visiting staff member at Bell Labs, Los Alamos National Lab, the Marshall Space Flight Center, Argonne National Lab, and DuPont at various times. He has been working on superconductivity since his days with Bernd T. Matthias at the University of California at San Diego. In January 1987, Dr. Chu and his colleagues achieved stable superconductivity at 93 K (-180 °C), above the critical temperature of liquid nitrogen (196 °C). They continue to find new compounds with high transition temperatures. Recently, they again obtained stable superconductivity at a new record high temperature of 164 K (-109 °C) in another compound when compressed. Presently, he is actively engaged in the basic and applied research of high temperature superconductivity. His research activities extend beyond superconductivity to magnetism and dielectrics. His work has resulted in the publication of more than 510 papers in refereed journals. He has been elected as a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Beijing), the Academia Sinica (Taipei), the Third World Academy of Sciences, and the Electromagnetic Academy, and is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the Texas Academy of Sciences. He has received honorary doctorates from Northwestern University, Fordham University, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Florida International University, The State University of New York at Farmingdale, Hong Kong Baptist University, and Whittier College. In 1990 he was selected the Best Researcher in the U.S. by US News and World Report. He
has received numerous awards, including the National Medal of Science,
the International Prize for New Materials, the Comstock Award, Texas
Instruments' Founders' Prize, the Leroy Randal Grumman Medal, the World
Cultural Council Medal of Scientific Merit, the New York Academy of
Sciences' Physical and Mathematical Science Award, the Bernd Matthias
Prize (M2S-HTSC), the Award of Excellence in Scientific Accomplishments
(World Congress on Superconductivity), the St. Martin de Porres Award,
the Esther Farfel Award (University of Houston), and the John Fritz
Medal (American Association of Engineering Societies). He serves on
the editorial boards of various professional journals and is a member
of the board of directors of the Coalition for the Commercial Application
of Superconductors. Russell
Hulse
Science, from Nobel to Neighborhoods
Russell Hulse was born and grew up in New York City, graduating from the Bronx High School of Science in 1966 and receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in Physics from The Cooper Union in 1970. For graduate work, he attended the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he received his Ph.D. in Physics in 1975, having carried out thesis research in radio astronomy involving a successful high sensitivity search for pulsars based on novel computational processing of the radio signals. After a post-doctoral appointment at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Virginia, Russell switched fields to controlled thermonuclear fusion research, joining Princeton University's Plasma Physics Laboratory in 1977. At PPPL, he worked on computer modeling of atomic processes and transport in high-temperature plasmas, working closely with experimentalists on various controlled fusion devices at PPPL and elsewhere in the United States and internationally. In 1993, Russell received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of the first binary pulsar in 1974 during the course of the pulsar search that formed the basis for his Ph.D. thesis. Russell shared the Prize with Joe Taylor, his former thesis advisor at UMass. Subsequent long-term observations of the binary pulsar by Joe Taylor and colleagues have led to important tests and verifications of Einstein's General Theory of Relativity. In recent years, Russell has devoted his time to science education, various advisory committees, and a range of research interests. He is a Visiting Professor of Physics and of Science and Mathematics Education at the University of Texas at Dallas, and a Principal Research Physicist and Distinguished Research Fellow at Princeton University's Plasma Physics Laboratory. Juan
Carlos Romero Hicks Decentralization
and Democracy in Mexico: The Case of Guanajuato Juan
Carlos Romero Hicks was born in the city of Guanajuato, Gto., As Governor of the
State of Guanajuato, he took office on September 26, 2000, after being elected
on july 2. He obtained a B.S. in Industrial Relations in 1977 from the University
of Guanajuato; a Masters in Social Science in 1979 from Southern Oregon State
College; and a M.B.A. in 1981 also from Southern Oregon State College. Additionally,
he has taken professional training courses in the fields of psychology, personnel
training and development, didactis, industrial safety, adminsitrative auditing,
educational technology, political sciences, sociology and human resource management.
Juan Carlos Romero Hicks has had an intense academic life as a member of the full-time
faculty of the University of Guanajuato. Since 1977, he has taught courses in
the high school, undergraduate and graduate levels. Subjects taught include business
administration, management, industrial relations, personnel selection, organization
development, and educational planning, among others. For many years, education
has been the main professional concern that has guided Juan Carlos Romero Hicks
public activity due to his personal belief that education constitues the backbone
of social and human development for the guanajuatenses.
Murmurs
and Celebration & Medieval, Renascent, Sefardic and Early Colonial
Music
Highly versatile, "Los Tiempos Pasados" has played with a number of important artists including Munir Bashir (Iraq), Hamza el Din (Egypt), Dante Andreo (Argentina), Donald Joice (USA), Ars Nova (Mexico), Scott C. Schwartz (USA), Gerard Edery (Morocco), Camerata Hungarica (Hungary), Groupe Vocal Gregor (Spain), Enric Madriguera (USA), Pilar Rioja (Mexico), Nati Mistral (Spain) and the Terra Nova Consort (Oregon, USA). Also worthy of mention is the ensemble's collaboration with important theater director and playwright Juan Ibáñez, performing original music for the plays: Siempre es Hoy, Divinas Palabras, Mezcla and Espectáculos de Poesía Contemporánea y Música Antigua. The group has also performed in the White House, at the 1981 Cancun Summit, in Mexico's Presidential mansion Los Pinos, and for an assortment of foreign ministers, presidents, kings and other important world figures. Los Tiempos Pasados has recorded six albums, testimony to a thirty-two year musical adventure and to the more than three generations of musicians who have contributed their talent and imagination along the way. Musicians:
Archive, Lecture Series 2006-2007 Archive,
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