1,722,640 research outputs found

    Citizen piece by University of Maine law school professor Orlando E. Delogu on

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    Citizen piece by University of Maine law school professor Orlando E. Delogu on the need to change the current system of state funding for local education

    Citizen piece by University of Maine School of Law professor Orlando E. Delogu

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    Citizen piece by University of Maine School of Law professor Orlando E. Delogu on the controversy involving Pharos House and the city of Portland\u27s zoning laws

    Other Voices piece by Orlando E. Delogu, a professor at the University of Main

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    Other Voices piece by Orlando E. Delogu, a professor at the University of Maine School of Law, on subsidies to Bath Iron Works. Delogu writes that the subsidies are morally wrong and legally questionable

    Citizen piece by Orlando E. Delogu, Portland city councilor and a professor at

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    Citizen piece by Orlando E. Delogu, Portland city councilor and a professor at the University of Maine School of Law, on some of the problems of the state\u27s new automobile emissions testing program, with suggested remedies

    Citizen piece by Orlando E. Delogu, professor of law at the University of Main

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    Citizen piece by Orlando E. Delogu, professor of law at the University of Maine School of Law and a Portland city councilor, on the proposal to apply pollution credits gained through the state\u27s automobile emissions testing program towards the expansion of polluting industries

    Essay piece by Orlando E. Delogu, professor of law at the University of Maine

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    Essay piece by Orlando E. Delogu, professor of law at the University of Maine School of Law and a former Portland city councilo, on Bath Iron Works and its request for a tax break to help it modernize and expand. Delogu writes that it is wrong to give one of the wealthiest corporations in the country a combined total of 194millionfora194 million for a 307 million renovation

    The Third World evangelical missiology of Orlando E. Costas

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    This thesis examines the missiological writings of Orlando E. Costas (1943-1987), particularly The Church and Its Mission: A Shattering Critique from the Third World (1974); Theology of the Crossroads in Contemporary Latin America (1976); Christ Outside the Gate (1982); and Liberating News: A Theology of Contextual Evangelization (1989). From the early 1970s until his death in 1987 he wrote over 130 articles and 12 books in both Spanish and English that addressed key missiological concerns. A careful reading of a selection of Costas’s texts oriented around a hymn, a gospel song, a psalm, and a poem provides the shape of this thesis.This thesis argues that Costas formulated a Third World evangelical missiology. Chapter one investigates what Costas’s autobiographical material expressed about his positions on conversion, Protestant evangelicalism, missiology, and those living on the ‘periphery’ of life. Chapter two recognises his commitment to the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean in particular and the Third World in general. Chapter three explores Costas’s analysis of the Latin American Protestant Church in a revolutionary situation in the continent and chapter four examines his survey and critical appraisal of Latin American liberation theology. Chapter five recognizes the pastoral shape of Costas's missiology. Chapter six explores his critical interaction with two more conservative evangelical missiological positions, the Church Growth Movement and Peter Beyerhaus and the Frankfurt Declaration, and chapter seven surveys the discussion within the international evangelical community regarding the relationship between evangelism and social responsibility. Chapter eight examines Costas’s Liberating News as an expression of Third World evangelical missiology. Chapter nine considers the theological issue of penal substitutionary atonement and his missiology. The thesis concludes with an appraisal of the issues and contributions of Costas’s Third World evangelical missiology to current missiological discussion

    High-energy and very-high-energy gamma-ray observations of the Milky Way

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    Observations of the gamma-ray emission from the Milky Way have significantly improved in recent years thanks to the current space instruments such as Fermi LAT and AGILE, and to the ground-based telescopes at higher energies such as for example H.E.S.S., VERITAS, MAGIC, and HAWC. While these high-quality data are providing crucial information on Galactic sources, interstellar emissions, and high-energy particles, they are challenging our understanding. I will discuss the state of the art, recent results, and prospects for future instruments

    Local gamma-ray sources

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    The quiet Sun, the Moon, the Earth and other Solar System objects are sources of high-energy gamma rays. The emission is produced by interactions of Galactic cosmic rays: by nucleons in the surface and atmosphere of the sources via hadronic interactions, and by electrons on solar photons in the heliosphere via inverse Compton scattering. Both emissions depend on the solar activity and hence on the modulation of cosmic rays in the heliosphere. At the minimum of the solar activity, Galactic cosmic rays have their maximum flux, and hence the brightest gamma-ray emission is expected. For this reason, solar and lunar emission provides a unique probe of cosmic-ray propagation in the inner heliosphere. Here I give a review of the gamma-ray emission mechanisms from the local sources, and present the status of the observations
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