Friday, July 9, 2010

ABOUT AMERICANS & THE WORLD


ABOUT AMERICANS & THE WORLD
The Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) offers this website, Americans and the World . This website will report on US public opinion on a broad range of international policy issues, integrating all publicly available polling data. It will be continually updated as new data become available, so that users are assured of getting a ‘state of the art’ analysis.

Americans and the World will provide comprehensive reports on a wide range of topics—each report integrating and explaining as much as a decade of polling data.
Our hope and expectation is that this will provide a valuable resource for policymakers, journalists, researchers, non-governmental organizations, students, and all individuals who would like to know more about American public opinion.
Americans and the World is made possible by generous grants from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Tides Foundation, and the Compton Foundation. 

AMERICAN DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF MAN


AMERICAN DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS
AND DUTIES OF MAN
(Adopted by the Ninth International Conference of American States,
Bogotá, Colombia, 1948)
WHEREAS:
The American peoples have acknowledged the dignity of the individual, and
their national constitutions recognize that juridical and political institutions, which
regulate life in human society, have as their principal aim the protection of the essential
rights of man and the creation of circumstances that will permit him to achieve spiritual
and material progress and attain happiness;
The American States have on repeated occasions recognized that the essential
rights of man are not derived from the fact that he is a national of a certain state, but
are based upon attributes of his human personality;
The international protection of the rights of man should be the principal guide
of an evolving American law;
The affirmation of essential human rights by the American States together with
the guarantees given by the internal regimes of the states establish the initial system of
protection considered by the American States as being suited to the present social and
juridical conditions, not without a recognition on their part that they should increasingly
strengthen that system in the international field as conditions become more favorable,
The Ninth International Conference of American States
AGREES:
To adopt the following
AMERICAN DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS
AND DUTIES OF MAN
Preamble
All men are born free and equal, in dignity and in rights, and, being endowed
by nature with reason and conscience, they should conduct themselves as brothers one
to another.
The fulfillment of duty by each individual is a prerequisite to the rights of all.
Rights and duties are interrelated in every social and political activity of man. While
rights exalt individual liberty, duties express the dignity of that liberty.
Duties of a juridical nature presuppose others of a moral nature which support
them in principle and constitute their basis.
Inasmuch as spiritual development is the supreme end of human existence and
the highest expression thereof, it is the duty of man to serve that end with all his
strength and resources.
Since culture is the highest social and historical expression of that spiritual
development, it is the duty of man to preserve, practice and foster culture by every
means within his power.
And, since moral conduct constitutes the noblest flowering of culture, it is the
duty of every man always to hold it in high respect.
CHAPTER ONE
Rights
Article I. Every human being has the right
to life, liberty and the security of his person.
Right to life, liberty and personal security.
Article II. All persons are equal before the
law and have the rights and duties established
in this Declaration, without distinction as to
race, sex, language, creed or any other factor.
Right to equality before law.
Article III. Every person has the right
freely to profess a religious faith, and to
manifest and practice it both in public and in
private.
Right to religious freedom and worship.
Article IV. Every person has the right to
freedom of investigation, of opinion, and of the
expression and dissemination of ideas, by any
medium whatsoever.
Right to freedom of investigation, opinion,
expression and dissemination.
Article V. Every person has the right to
the protection of the law against abusive
attacks upon his honor, his reputation, and his
private and family life.
Right to protection of honor, personal
reputation, and private and family life.
Article VI. Every person has the right to
establish a family, the basic element of society,
and to receive protection therefore.
Right to a family and to protection thereof.
Article VII. All women, during pregnancy
and the nursing period, and all children have
the right to special protection, care and aid.
Right to protection for mothers and children.
Article VIII. Every person has the right to
fix his residence within the territory of the
state of which he is a national, to move about
freely within such territory, and not to leave it
except by his own will.
Right to residence and movement.
Article IX. Every person has the right to
the inviolability of his home.
Right to inviolability of the home.
Article X. Every person has the right to
the inviolability and transmission of his
correspondence.
Right to the inviolability and transmission of
correspondence.
Article XI. Every person has the right to
the preservation of his health through sanitary
and social measures relating to food, clothing,
housing and medical care, to the extent
permitted by public and community resources.
Right to the preservation of health and to wellbeing.
Article XII. Every person has the right to
an education, which should be based on the
principles of liberty, morality and human
solidarity.
Likewise every person has the right to an
education that will prepare him to attain a
decent life, to raise his standard of living, and
to be a useful member of society.
The right to an education includes the
right to equality of opportunity in every case,
in accordance with natural talents, merit and
the desire to utilize the resources that the
state or the community is in a position to
provide.
Every person has the right to receive,
free, at least a primary education.
Right to education.
Article XIII. Every person has the right to
take part in the cultural life of the community,
to enjoy the arts, and to participate in the
benefits that result from intellectual progress,
especially scientific discoveries.
He likewise has the right to the protection
of his moral and material interests as regards
his inventions or any literary, scientific or
artistic works of which he is the author.
Right to the benefits of culture.
Article XIV. Every person has the right to
work, under proper conditions, and to follow
his vocation freely, insofar as existing
conditions of employment permit.
Right to work and to fair
remuneration.
Every person who works has the right to
receive such remuneration as will, in
proportion to his capacity and skill, assure him
a standard of living suitable for himself and for
his family.
Article XV. Every person has the right to
leisure time, to wholesome recreation, and to
the opportunity for advantageous use of his
free time to his spiritual, cultural and physical
benefit.
Right to leisure time and to the use thereof.
Article XVI. Every person has the right to
social security which will protect him from the
consequences of unemployment, old age, and
any disabilities arising from causes beyond his
control that make it physically or mentally
impossible for him to earn a living.
Right to social security.
Article XVII. Every person has the right to
be recognized everywhere as a person having
rights and obligations, and to enjoy the basic
civil rights.
Right to recognition of juridical personality and
civil rights.
Article XVIII. Every person may resort to
the courts to ensure respect for his legal
rights. There should likewise be available to
him a simple, brief procedure whereby the
courts will protect him from acts of authority
that, to his prejudice, violate any fundamental
constitutional rights.
Right to a fair trial.
Article XIX. Every person has the right to
the nationality to which he is entitled by law
and to change it, if he so wishes, for the
nationality of any other country that is willing
to grant it to him.
Right to nationality.
Article XX. Every person having legal
capacity is entitled to participate in the
government of his country, directly or through
his representatives, and to take part in popular
elections, which shall be by secret ballot, and
shall be honest, periodic and free.
Right to vote and to participate in government.
Article XXI. Every person has the right to
assemble peaceably with others in a formal
public meeting or an informal gathering, in
connection with matters of common interest of
any nature.
Right of assembly.
Article XXII. Every person has the right to
associate with others to promote, exercise and
protect his legitimate interests of a political,
economic, religious, social, cultural,
professional, labor union or other nature.
Right of association.
Article XXIII. Every person has a right to
own such private property as meets the
essential needs of decent living and helps to
maintain the dignity of the individual and of
the home.
Right to property.
Article XXIV. Every person has the right
to submit respectful petitions to any competent
authority, for reasons of either general or
private interest, and the right to obtain a
prompt decision thereon.
Right of petition.
Article XXV. No person may be deprived
of his liberty except in the cases and according
to the procedures established by pre-existing
law.
No person may be deprived of liberty for
nonfulfillment of obligations of a purely civil
character.
Every individual who has been deprived of
his liberty has the right to have the legality of
his detention ascertained without delay by a
court, and the right to be tried without undue
delay or, otherwise, to be released. He also
has the right to humane treatment during the
time he is in custody.
Right of protection from arbitrary arrest.
Article XXVI. Every accused person is
presumed to be innocent until proved guilty.
Every person accused of an offense has
the right to be given an impartial and public
hearing, and to be tried by courts previously
established in accordance with pre-existing
laws, and not to receive cruel, infamous or
unusual punishment.
Right to due process of law.
Article XXVII. Every person has the right,
in case of pursuit not resulting from ordinary
crimes, to seek and receive asylum in foreign
territory, in accordance with the laws of each
country and with international agreements.
Right of asylum.
Article XXVIII. The rights of man are
limited by the rights of others, by the security
of all, and by the just demands of the general
welfare and the advancement of democracy.
Scope of the rights of man.
CHAPTER TWO
Duties
Article XXIX. It is the duty of the
individual so to conduct himself in relation to
others that each and every one may fully form
and develop his personality.
Duties to society.
Article XXX. It is the duty of every person
to aid, support, educate and protect his minor
children, and it is the duty of children to honor
their parents always and to aid, support and
protect them when they need it.
Duties toward children and parents.
Article XXXI. It is the duty of every
person to acquire at least an elementary
education.
Duty to receive instruction.
Article XXXII. It is the duty of every
person to vote in the popular elections of the
country of which he is a national, when he is
legally capable of doing so.
Duty to vote.
Article XXXIII. It is the duty of every
person to obey the law and other legitimate
commands of the authorities of his country and
those of the country in which he may be.
Duty to obey the law.
Article XXXIV. It is the duty of every
able-bodied person to render whatever civil and
military service his country may require for its
defense and preservation, and, in case of public
disaster, to render such services as may be in
his power.
It is likewise his duty to hold any public
office to which he may be elected by popular
vote in the state of which he is a national.
Duty to serve the community and the nation.
Article XXXV. It is the duty of every
person to cooperate with the state and the
community with respect to social security and
welfare, in accordance with his ability and with
existing circumstances.
Duties with respect to social security and
welfare.
Article XXXVI. It is the duty of every
person to pay the taxes established by law for
the support of public services.
Duty to pay taxes.
Article XXXVII. It is the duty of every
person to work, as far as his capacity and
possibilities permit, in order to obtain the
means of livelihood or to benefit his
community.
Duty to work.
Article XXXVIII. It is the duty of every
person to refrain from taking part in political
activities that, according to law, are reserved
exclusively to the citizens of the state in which
he is an alien.
Duty to refrain from political activities in a
foreign country.

American beauties get ugly


It hasn’t quite escalated to Nancy-Tonya, but the feud between American alpine skiers Lindsey Vonn and Julia Mancuso has clearly divided the nation for which they each won two medals in Vancouver.

Are you for Team Lindsey or Team Julia?

Mancuso’s reported comments about downhill champion Vonn and a “popularity contest” within the U.S. team, sparked media speculation of a rift between the two. Truth is, there’s been a rift since they were teenagers. Even though they travel together for most of the year, both said they would never hang out together on a Saturday night.

“We are both very different and we both got to these Games and got our medals in completely opposite ways,” Mancuso said. “I am sure that is what fuels the fire even more, but of course it is always good to see a fellow American on the podium.”

The rivalry had never been classified as friendly and reached a boiling point Wednesday. That’s when Mancuso left the giant slalom in tears after a Vonn wipeout forced her to restart her first run. She ended up finishing eighth after Thursday’s second run, ending her shot at a gold medal in Vancouver.

“The way that it came across that it was a media attention fight or something like that — that is just ridiculous,” Mancuso said.

“Alpine skiing isn’t a team sport,” Vonn said before the Games. “There’s always going to be that competition.”

Friday, July 2, 2010

CIVIL TECHNOLOGY IN AMERICA




 Integrated Water and Resource Management for Increased Urban
Sustainability: Cities of the Future
Glen T. Daigger, Ph.D., PE, BCEE, NAE
Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer,
CH2M HILL
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
4:30 p.m. 

129 DeBartolo Hall
Important Design Considerations for a Modern Office Tower
Robert McNamara, Founding Principal
McNamara/Salvia Inc. Consulting Engineers, Boston
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
4:30 p.m.
129 DeBartolo Hall
Design and Construction of Earth Retaining Structures
Dennis Murphy, Retired President
Kiewit Engineering Company
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
4:30 p.m
129 DeBartolo Hall
Battling the Bad Vibes: Fluid-Structure Interaction Phenomena in the Offshore Oil and Gas Industry
Michael Tognarelli, Ph.D.
Floating Systems and Risers Engineer
Deepwater Facilities Technology, BP America, Inc.
Wednesday, Febfruary 24, 2010
4:30 p.m.
129 DeBartolo Hall
Small Scale Structures in Coastal Flows: Observations and Modeling
Philippe Fraunie
University of Toulon, France
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
12:00-1:00 p.m.
258 Fitzpatrick Hall
The Outfall Sewer Story
Edward B. Fitzpatrick Jr., PE, Retired, President
Fitzpatrick Construction
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
4:30 p.m.
129 DeBartolo Hall
Global Climate Change, Sea Level Rise and the Sustainability of our
Nation's Beaches
Robert G. Dean, ScD, NAE
Graduate Research Emeritus
Civl and Coastal Engineering Department
University of Florida
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
4:30 p.m. 

Philosophy of Structural Engineering for the Burj Dubai - The World's Tallest Structure
Lawrence Novak, SE, SECB, Leed AP
Director, Engineered Buildings
Portland Cement Association, Skokie, IL
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
4:30 p.m.
129 DeBartolo Hall

Thursday, July 1, 2010

MECHANICAL TECHNOLOGY

Mechanical Technology Of North Carolina Inc is a private company categorized under Mechanical Contractors and located in Reidsville, NC. Current estimates show this company has an annual revenue of 1,000,000 and employs a staff of approximately 2. 

Mechanical Technology Of North Carolina Inc Business Information

Location Type Single Location
Annual Sales (Estimated) 1,000,000
Employees (Estimated) 2
SIC Code 1711, Plumbing, Heating, and Air-Conditioning
NAICS Code 238220, Plumbing, Heating, and Air-Conditioning Contractors
Products, Services and Brands Information not found
State of Incorporation Information not found
Years in Business 25

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

"Invariant Drinfeld twists on group algebras", International Workshop/Special Session of CMS Summer Meeting 2009 "Groups and Hopf Algebras", St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada (5 June 2009)
Abstract: Drinfeld twists were introduced by Drinfeld in his work on quasi-Hopf algebras; they have been used to classify certain classes of (co)semisimple Hopf algebras. In joint work with Pierre Guillot (arXiv:0903.2807), after observing that the invariant Drinfeld twists on a Hopf algebra form a group, we determine this group when the Hopf algebra is the algebra of a finite group G. The answer involves the group of class-preserving outer automorphisms of G as well as all abelian normal subgroups of G of central type. In my lecture I shall also present several examples for which the group of invariant twists has been completely computed by us. 
"Hopf Galois extensions up to homotopy", Second joint meeting of AMS, DMV, ÖMG, Mainz, Germany (16-19 June 2005)
Abstract: (Joint work with Hans-Jürgen Schneider) Hopf Galois extensions are noncommutative analogues of principal fibre bundles with structural group replaced by a Hopf algebra. I discuss a concept of homotopy for Hopf Galois extensions and show how it allows a certain classification of such extensions. In particular, we determine all Hopf Galois extensions up to homotopy in the case when the Hopf algebra is a Drinfeld-Jimbo quantum enveloping algebra.

SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGY



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