459 research outputs found

    Daily Reflections (Meditations) on the Scriptures from the Roman Catholic Lectionary.

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    When I began meditating on today's passage from Matthew, I got depressed thinking about dreadful photos from Iraq, scandals in the Church, etc. If such things are the "fruit" by which we will be judged, we are in sad shape. What could I offer besides an additional, unnecessary dose of depression?|The answer came on my morning walk: Bob Reilly, my recently deceased friend and role model. Bob was an Omaha public relations professional and professor, the author of more than a dozen books, a World War II veteran, a proud Catholic with 10 children, and an expert on Ireland. His lifetime of kindness culminated in caring for his beloved wife, Jean, a victim of Alzheimer's Disease. While few of us are blessed with Bob's talents, we can all emulate his concern for others.|Bob's legacy is less in his wonderful writing than in the numerous people he touched. I marveled at the way this nationally distinguished author donated precious time to local writers who might never publish a word. He helped numerous struggling authors including me through the difficult process of publishing a first book. He always seemed to have all the time in the world for whoever was intruding on his overbooked life. |When I became a professor, I consciously tried to emulate Bob. Numerous students frequently spoke with something akin to reverence of the impact of his attention and advice. He was a teacher who modeled what he taught. He exemplified the service to others that we see in the best Christians _ not people who make headlines but those who teach first graders to read, empty bedpans with a smile, wipe noses, do tax returns for the elderly, serve dinner at soup kitchens etc.|I read one time that the answer to choking on bad news is to become "good news" to others. This is how we can counteract the headlines that make us ashamed. We can all try to produce "good fruit" as Bob did

    REMIND: Music – Movement – Mind. Ein Programm und Übungsmanual zur Gesundheitsförderung im Alter und Vorbeugung von Demenz

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    Tanzen in Verbindung mit anderen und kreativen Bewegungen führt zu einer einzigartigen Verknüpfung körperlicher, geistiger und sozialer Aktivitäten und kann bis ins hohe Alter viel Freude bereiten! Es ist zu vermuten, dass die Bewegung zur Musik, weil diese so vielfältig anregend ist, uns vor frühzeitigem Altern und Demenz schützen kann. Tanzen schafft einen direkten Zugang zum Gehirn mit all seiner Komplexität. Das REMIND-Programm nutzt diesen Zugang für ein neuartiges Übungsprogramm, das uns dabei unterstützen soll, Reserven für ein langes Leben in geistiger Gesundheit aufzubauen und zu erhalten. REMIND wurde speziell von Wissenschaftlerinnen der Forschungsgruppe "Gehirn und Resilienz", geleitet von Dr. Miranka Wirth (Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen e.V.), in enger Zusammenarbeit mit der Tanz- und Bewegungstherapeutin Angela Nicotra (Nicadanza, Berlin) entwickelt. Das Trainingskonzept basiert auf aktuellen neurowissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen und nutzt Elemente der Bewegungslehre nach Laban/Bartenieff und des Tangos nach Sistema Dinzel. Dieses Manual ist der Leitfaden für das ganzheitliche Programm. Es veranschaulicht das Konzept, vermittelt die Übungsinhalte und gibt didaktische Empfehlungen für die Durchführung von REMIND. Unser Programm dient der aktiven Gesundheitsförderung und der Prävention von Demenz bis ins hohe Alter

    Blue Window: Poems

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    By Ann Fisher-Wirth Archer Books (Paperback, $14.00, ISBN: 1931122156, 8/2003) “In that shadowy time before sorrow…” the title poem of Ann Fisher-Wirth’s Blue Window begins, invoking a young girl’s world of befores: before sexual and political awareness; before loss, grief, and guilt; before deaths in the neighborhood and the family. Fisher-Wirth continues tracing a series of journeys begun at that time. An Army brat and lifelong traveler who grew up in California and now lives in Mississippi; daughter, lover, wife, and mother; environmentalist, literature professor, and student of yoga and Reiki, Ann Fisher-Wirth writes out of the full range of her experience. Grounded in the body and the earth, Blue Window mourns and celebrates what it is to be alive. “Many American poets have written what gets called ‘the autobiographical lyric.’ Very few poets have written it with such fierce and stinging accuracy. [Ann Fisher-Wirth] is, stylistically, a realist and a modernist. Like William Carlos Williams … she can be a little headlong, perhaps a little ruthless, and that quality gives this book, which also has the virtues of tenderness and attentiveness, its steel and its nerve.” —Robert Hass, former U.S. poet laureate, author, most recently, of the collection Sun Under Wood “Sweet, rank, precise, unafraid of either deep pain or deep joy, these poems remind me of horses in a pasture, always aware of their power and grace, even in repose, and always, completely natural. It is not just the poet who is acutely alive, in this work, but, somehow, the poems themselves.” —Rick Bass, Author, The Hermit’s Story: Stories, The Roadless Yaak, and others. Ann Fisher-Wirth lives in Oxford, Mississippi, where she teaches poetry and environmental literature at the University of Mississippi. She is the author of William Carlos Williams and Autobiography: The Woods of His Own Nature and of numerous essays on American literature, and a Fulbright Scholar who in 2002-2003 held the Chair of American Studies at Uppsala University, Sweden. She and her husband Peter Wirth have five children.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1048/thumbnail.jp

    Matlab codes for "Convex relaxation of discrete vector-valued optimization problems"

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    vectormultibang =============== This repository contains Matlab codes accompanying the paper [Convex relaxation of discrete vector-valued optimization problems](https://doi.org/10.1137/21M1426237) ([arXiv preprint](http://arxiv.org/abs/2108.10077)) by [Christian Clason](https://homepage.uni-graz.at/c.clason), Carla Tameling, and [Benedikt Wirth](https://www.uni-muenster.de/AMM/num/wirth/people/Wirth/index.html). Contents -------- ##### directory `bloch` contains the test scripts for the example concerning optimal control of the Bloch equation using discrete control vectors (run `test_bloch.m`) ##### directory `elasticity` contains the test scripts for the example concerning optimal control of the equations of linearized elasticity (run `test_elasticity.m`) ##### directory `mbtransport` contains the test scripts for the example concerning multimaterial branched transport (run `test_branchedTransport.m`) If you find this approach useful, you can cite the paper as @article{vectormultibang, author = {Clason, Christian and Tameling, Carla and Wirth, Benedikt}, title = {Convex relaxation of discrete vector-valued optimization problems}, journal = {SIAM Review}, volume = {63}, number = {4}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1137/21M1426237

    Daily Reflections (Meditations) on the Scriptures from the Roman Catholic Lectionary.

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    "For a thousand years in your sight are as yesterday, now that it is past, or as a watch of the night."||Last spring my husband and I spent several days marveling at the ruins of ancient Greece. From our Athens hotel room, we had a perfect view of the Parthenon lighted up at night just like the shots during the Olympics. Awesome!||Today's readings, especially the psalm, speak to this experience. They remind us of how small and transitory even the most astonishing works of man are compared with the work of God and eternity.||Before going to Greece, I read up on its history, geography and mythology because I had only dim memories from high school history, especially about Delphi, once the region's spiritual center. Today its impressive piles of stones and fragments of buildings are reminders of long-gone power and influence. Tourists listen to lectures to understand Delphi's significance. Then they head back to the souvenir shops and the street life of Athens.||In God's eyes, what happened in ancient Greece is "as yesterday" just like the achievements of our own time will soon be. Human power and glory are as mythical in the long term as the advice the Oracle at Delphi dispensed!||So what's important? What kind of legacy counts? I think of my friend, the late Bob Reilly , an outstanding author of many books, but an even more outstanding teacher and human being. At his packed wake, people spoke of his books but that wasn't why they came. Bob had touched every one of us with his kindness, mentoring and warmth. He patiently guided me through writing my first book. His wisdom and encouragement were invaluable.||I'll take a legacy of kindness like Bob's over a pile of stones any day. So, I think, will the Lord

    Das pulsierende Herz der Theologie. Festveranstaltung an der Theologischen Fakultät der Universität Bern

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    Am 6. November 2023 fand an der Universität Bern anlässlich der Umwandlung der Assistenzprofessuren von Georgiana Huian (Institut für Christkatholische Theologie) und Mathias Wirth (Institut für Systematische Theologie) in ausserordentliche Professuren eine akademische Festveranstaltung statt

    REL22 Reinventing Energy Landscapes

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    REL22 was an international summer school program launched by the Institute of Landscape Architecture of RWTH Aachen University (Prof. Frank Lohrberg, Silvia Beretta) together with the Master’s Programme in „Landscape Architecture and Landscape Heritage“ of Politecnico di Milano (Prof. Antonio Longo) andthe Master’s Programme in “Landscape Architecture” of TU Delft (Prof. Laura Cipriani). The aim was to formulate visions for the landscape transformation of the Rhenish Lignite District, the largest open-cast lignite mining area in Europe, located in the German region of North Rhine Westphalia

    Villard de Honnecourt, architecte du XIIIe siècle

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    The only document we have by a 13th-century architect, the Album of Villard de Honnecourt has been the subject of writings by art and architectural historians since the 19th century and has been considered the work of an amateur since the 1970s. Jean Wirth sheds new light on the question, based on a philological study of the manuscript, and proves that Villard himself is the author of the technical drawings relating to construction. He goes on to provide convincing analyses of the art of drawing and its numerous applications, from drawing from nature to architectural plans. Drawings relating to engineering, geometry and stereotomy are treated individually, in order to convey as clearly as possible the technical processes they illustrate. An examination of the architect’s travels, the monuments he saw and his stylistic evolution allows for an accurate, corrected chronology of this work, previously considered outdated. This intelligent and detailed study will be a landmark in the rehabilitation of Villard de Honnecourt’s reputation
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