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Ms. Judith Mirschberger, Director of Goethe-Institut and Mr. Christian Zürpel, Third Secretary of the Cultural Section of the German Embassy Dhaka
Beer blogger Thomas Cizauskas moderates a panel discussion on real ale*, during...
8th annual Chesapeake Real Ale Festival, at...
Baltimore (downtown), Maryland, USA.
15 October 2011.
▶ Listening is Jeff Hancock, owner/brewer of DC Brau (a brewery in Washington, D.C.)
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* Real Ale:
"Beer brewed from traditional ingredients, matured by secondary fermentation in the container from which it is dispensed, and served without the use of extraneous carbon dioxide."
▶ The seminar and festival were co-organized by the Chesapeake branch of the SPBW (Society for the Preservation of Beer from the Wood) and the Pratt Street Alehouse. Since 2009, the festival has also been a part of Baltimore Beer Week.
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▶ More photos from the Real Ale Seminar: here.
▶ More photos from the Real Ale Festival: here.
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▶ Photo courtesy Lisa Lawson and Dominic Cantalupo. All rights reserved.
▶ Uploaded (with story) by: Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
— Follow on Twitter @Cizauskas.
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Rebecca moderates “Big Data” panel at the European Foundation Centre General Assembly
Somewhere between 65 and 80 people attended TSG’s break out session at the May 30-June 1 European Foundation Centre General Assembly and Conference in Copenhagen. Rebecca moderated, and the speakers were Marko Rakar (Croat activist), Victoria Vrana from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Jeremy Millard of the Danish Technological Institute. The three debated the role of big data in social change and took questions from the audience for 1.5 hours.
Texas Tribune reporter Terri Langford moderates “The State of the Death Penalty" panel featuring Matt Powell, David R. Dow, Jim Willett, Rodney Ellis, and Kathryn Kase at The Texas Tribune Festival on Sept. 20, 2014.
Joshua Rozenberg moderates a lively Question and Answer session involving the audience and the expert panel.
Read about the launch on UCL News: bit.ly/xYGxZP
Find out more information about the UCL Judicial Institute at: www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/judicial-institute
Moderated High-Level Policy Session 13
Digital economy and trade
Speaking: Mr. Sasha Iatsenia, Head of Product, Kiwicampus
©ITU/I.Wood
MODERATED GROUP PERFORMANCE AND TALK
Sadly, due to illness, our friend Fausto Gracia was not able to travel from Mexico to Berlin. We wish him a speedy recovery, and hope that he’ll join us for one of the next two Stammtisch events we are preparing this month.
Don’t fret, tho, we have come up with an amazing replacement program. We invite you to witness a moderated group performance that addresses issues like how performers learn from one another in a non-hierarchical process, how to integrate chance and random elements in performance work, and how to cooperate. Frank Homeyer will guide and moderate a performance by Anja Ibsch, Ilya Noé, Joy Harder, Lan Hungh, Florian Feigl and Jörn J. Burmester. Each performer will bring one object/material, and there will be a fixed time of 50 minutes for the event. We are grateful to Frank for suggesting the project, and to the performers who join us in this outrageously cool line up on such short notice. Afterwards, as we do at Stammtisch, we’ll talk about it.
ARTISTS:
Frank Homeyer, Anja Ibsch, Ilya Noé, Joy Harder, Lan Hungh, Florian Feigl and Jörn J. Burmester
Moderated conversation following Center Frame screening of Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq.
April 4, 2014
(credit: Charlotte Claypoole)
I couldn't capture the flames in this wood. The wood is actually quite similar to the wood in this Testore:
Moderated conversation following the screening of Ivory Tower.
April 5, 2014
(credit: Kallyn Boerner)
Moderate amount of white on coverts and axillaries. Just a few spots of white showing on the secondaries.
Harmony Headlands, SLO County
Organized and moderated by University of Chicago undergraduates, two former Chairmen of the Council of Economic Advisers, Martin Feldstein and Martin Baily, spoke to a crowd of students and community members at a Becker Friedman Institute special event on March 1, 2014. Student moderator Chris Denning led the pair through a discussion of the role of government in our lives ranging from corporate tax reform and healthcare to human capital development and income inequality.
More: bfi.uchicago.edu/events/views-white-house-economists#stha...
Mr. Matthias Naß, International Correspondent of the German weekly newspaper DIE ZEIT, and Ms. Tahmina Shafique, expert on human rights issues
Moderated by:
Michael J. Green
Senior Vice President for Asia and Japan Chair, CSIS
Associate Professor, Georgetown University
Panelists:
Ernest Z. Bower
Senior Adviser and Sumitro Chair for Southeast Asia Studies, CSIS
Victor Cha
Senior Adviser and Korea Chair, CSIS
Director of Asian Studies and D.S. Song-KF Chair, Georgetown University
Bonnie S. Glaser
Senior Adviser for Asia, Freeman Chair in China Studies, CSIS and Senior Associate,
Pacific Forum
Matthew P. Goodman
William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy and Senior Adviser for Asian
Economics, CSIS
Murray Hiebert
Deputy Director and Senior Fellow, Sumitro Chair for Southeast Asia Studies, CSIS
Christopher K. Johnson
Senior Adviser and Freeman Chair in China Studies, CSIS
Richard M. Rossow
Senior Fellow and Wadhwani Chair in U.S. -India Policy Studies, CSIS
Bread and Cheese Creek beginning to flood out North Point Road again on 8/27/11 at 5 PM. This has occurred during moderate rain and Hurricane Irene hasn't even arrived yet and it won't be long until this road is impassable again. This is a dangerous situation which must be fixed to allow access to the North Point Battlefield and Monument before the War of 1812 Bicentennial Celebration. Imagine if a bus tour is headed to see the North Point Monument and Battlefield and told they can't because the road is flooded out.
Merritt Boulevard, North Point Road, all of the Berkshire Community, the Gray Manor Community and the North Point Community as well as all the shopping center parking lots along the stream are designed to drain directly into Bread and Cheese Creek carrying with it all the trash, debris and chemicals from these areas. All these toxins and pollution drain into Back River and into the Chesapeake Bay. This causes the stream to carry a much greater volume than it can handle creates lots of erosion and sediment to be carried along with the flow as well.
The stormwater management techniques in Dundalk need to be upgraded to modern standards and "grandfather" wavers stop being handed out. These upgrades need to be made not only for the health of the Bread and Cheese Creek, but for the health of all the community residents and the Chesapeake Bay as well.
Moderated conversation following Center Frame screening of Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq.
April 4, 2014
(credit: Charlotte Claypoole)
The Development of Comics Form panel moderated by Bill Kartalopoulos featuring Kate Moody (CCS '12), Peter Sattler and Jennifer Miyuki Babcock.
International Comic Arts Forum
September 29th-October 1st, 2011
EPITHELIAL CELL ABNORMALITIES
SQUAMOUS CELL ABNORMALITY
High grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL)
A number of discussions took place in library locations with prominent leaders in the community in discussion about diversity and having one's voice heard. Actors from Steppenwolf performed scenes from The Crucible that called to mind this theme, followed by a "town hall" gathering moderated by Sylvia Ewing.
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this true-color image of a large open water lead traversing the ice of the northern Arctic Ocean on May 13, 2013. Located north of Canada, the long, wide crack extends hundreds of kilometers across the ice to end north of the Arctic Circle.
Although the Arctic’s ice cap often appears as a solid sheet of stationary ice, it is actually made up of many smaller pieces. Through the winter, the ice is in constant motion as the pieces shift, crack and grind against each other as they are buffeted by winds and pushed by currents. Strong motion of wind and water often results in cracks (leads) appearing between pieces of ice.
Although the appearance of leads in the winter or spring is common, the frigid temperatures and shifting ice will usually cause a lead to narrow and close in short order. As temperatures rise, and the summer melt season begins, many leads remain open. By summer’s peak, hundreds of thousands of square miles of Arctic sea will have melted, only to refreeze again in the winter. While the summer melt is extensive, ice covers much of the Arctic Ocean year-round. But the extent of the summer sea ice – as well as the maximum extent of winter sea ice – has been diminishing.
According to an article published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in April, 2013 “for scientists studying summer sea ice in the Arctic, it’s not a question of ‘if’ there will be nearly ice-free summers, but ‘when’”. Current best estimates, based on several models, predict that nearly ice-free summers are likely by 2050 – and possibly within the next ten to twenty years.
Credit: NASA/GSFC/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS Land Rapid Response Team
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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Secretary Walker moderated an engaging panel discussion on the Future of STEM in Health Care during the STEM Council’s STEM Symposium on May 2 at Delaware State University in Dover. “I see STEM everywhere and in everything,” Dr. Marsha Horton, dean for DSU’s College of Education, Health and Public Policy, told the more than 150 students in the audience. Across the country, there are more than 4.5 million unfilled STEM positions in all fields.
“Most people think of health care in a hospital as doctors or nurses … however, there is a support mechanism that cares for your family and friends,” said Michael Maksmow, vice president and chief information officer for Beebe Healthcare. And information technology is behind much of that support – from keeping the lights and HVAC systems working, to analyzing clinical data, to biomedical engineering.
Secretary Walker, who is a board-certified family physician, told the students that she and Regina Sims Wright, associate dean for diversity at UD’s College of Health Sciences, both participated in FAME, a Delaware nonprofit that prepares and motivates students, especially minorities and girls, to pursue college degrees and careers in STEM. Because of FAME, Secretary Walker said she got a full scholarship to UD to study chemical engineering and spent summers working at Merck. “Chemical engineering is not the easiest way to get to med school,” the Secretary said.
Dean Wright said her PhD is in psychology and she has used that degree to pursue research, including cardiovascular health and cognitive function in older adults. She urged the students to consider STEM-related research and teaching as potential careers. “Diversity is really important,” Secretary Walker added. She said there weren’t enough minority professors for her to look up when she was in college, medical school and graduate school.
Dean Horton said the look and the process of health and allied sciences are changing, and a different skill set will be needed in the next generation. As an example, she asked Dr. Chris Mason to tell the students about research he is doing with Dr. Von Homer on biomechanics and motion analysis and applying it to professional athletes to help reduce injuries. The researchers demonstrated how they are collecting data using sensors that connect to a subject’s legs and feet and that mirror the person’s movements onto a nearby computer.
To read more about DSU’s Kinesiology program:
cehpp.desu.edu/departments/public-allied-health-sciences/...
To read more about FAME:
To read more about the Delaware STEM Council:
SIG MPX from BAR (airgunbuyer.com), silencer adapter (in place of SIG muzzle break) from BestFittings.co.uk & Weirauch silencer from CORE94.com.
Red dot sight & telescopic 6"-9" bipod (with Picatinny rail adapter) from Amazon.co.uk.
FYI the moderator helps reduce the noise, but an awful lot comes from the magazine well, so a further improvement might be lining the mag well with insulation, or even a seal; though that might slow-down rapid reloads.
Moderated by Peter "adrastos" Athas, the Politics Panel –always a favorite– included the Times-Picayune's Stephanie Grace, Jacques Morial, American Zombie Jason Berry, Gambit's Clancy Dubos and Rigside Politics' Jeff Crouere.
In observance of Black History Month, Secretary Walker moderated a discussion with Deputy Surgeon General Sylvia Trent-Adams on Feb. 20 at Delaware State University. Trent-Adams told the audience, including many students, to try new opportunities, find great mentors, and embrace continuous improvement. "If you want to be excellent," she said, "it takes more work."
Trent-Adams, who also is a rear admiral in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, said, as a country, we need to look at reducing barriers to people accessing behavioral health care, including treatment for opioid addiction. "The American people want to have problems solved," she said. Here's what Trent-Adams, who is an RN and has worked on improving access to care for uninsured and under-served communities, said on other issues:
•HIV/AIDS: Trent-Adams, who was deputy associate administrator of the HIV/AIDS Bureau of the Health Resources and Services Administration, said we need to get "back to the basics" in terms of prevention and education, but still expects to see an HIV vaccine in our lifetime.
•Veteran suicides: Trent-Adams said one way to intervene on behalf of veterans who may be at risk for suicide is through the significant improvement in real-time care now being provided. "Anyone who needs care, can get care on demand."
•Gun violence: Saying "it's our problem," Trent-Adams said it will take a serious grassroots movement to have real substantive change. "It's a major problem that will take all of us to roll up our sleeves." She said Americans have a responsibility to our children and their future. "I see an opportunity for change." And her advice for students, "Bloom where you are planted."
10 November 2017, EuroPCom 2017 - Ten pitfalls to avoid when moderating debates
8th European Public Communication Conference
[Re]shaping European dialogues
EuroPCom 2017 #europcom @EuroPCom2017 "
Belgium - Brussels - November 2017
© European Union / Fred Guerdin
Marie Le Conte, freelance journalist and moderator, France