Dr. Imad Moustapha has been Syria's Ambassador to the United States since March 2004. Prior to that, he was Dean of the Faculty of Information Technology at the University of Damascus, and Secretary General of the Arab School on Science and Technology. He co-founded the Network of Syrian Scientists, Technologists and Innovators Abroad (NOSSTIA), and was an active consultant to international and regional organizations on science and technology policies in the Middle East. He was also a member of the Syrian team responsible for drafting reform strategies for the ministries of Culture, Education, and Higher Education.
Dr. Moustapha is a versatile writer with a long list of publications in English and Arabic. His writings cover the political scene in Washington, US policies, and book, art and music reviews. He has published extensively in Teshreen, Abiad-wa-Aswad, al-Hayat, al-Ahram al-Douali, Forward, the LA Times, and the Washington Post. His credits include more than 200 published articles, and he has authored, co-authored and edited several books (The Echoes of Orpheus, Creativity out from the Windows of Hell, and Concurrent Engineering). He is co-author of the UN sponsored Human Development Report in the Arab World (2003).
He has appeared in almost all major US, British, Syrian, and Arab TV news programs and shows, and presented a large number of public lectures in various Arab and American cities. He is also a blogger commenting on life, culture and friends in Washington (http://imad_moustapha.blogs.com). Imad Moustapha holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Surrey, UK. He is fluent in both English and French.
About EIP
Executive and International Programs (EIP) offers executive education programs for mid-career government officials and public policy professionals. EIP also coordinates a variety of international events providing students and faculty with the opportunity to interact directly with public policy practitioners from the U.S. and around the world.
Watch in HD1080p: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiNSVkRRtyE&list=PLOyuQaVrp4qqS8yBeQpIeMQ5bDoijOQ9c&index=1
I begin by introducing my three major teachers, and go on to outline the background of the series: early attempts at histories of Chinese painting, photographing and cataloguing projects carried out in the 1960s-70s, changing ideas about how art history should be constructed and written. I introduce Ernst Gombrich as a model for the kind of art-historical narrative I will attempt, but also emphasize the strong tradition of critical and historical writing in China that underlies my account. This first lecture ends with a brief introduction to early pictorial art in China: Neolithic painted pots, hunting-style bronzes, the earliest paintings on silk from Changsha.
CS 61B: Data Structures - Fall 2006
Instructor Jonathan Shewchuk
Fundamental dynamic data structures, including linear lists, queues, trees, and other linked structures; arrays strings, and hash tables. Storage management. Elementary principles of software engineering. Abstract data types. Algorithms for sorting and searching. Introduction to the Java programming language.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/
Miriam Blake is the Director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory Research Library. She has been involved with digital library technology at the LANL for ten years. She was involved in the development and deployment of several generations of the LANL Library's search discovery applications, including implementation of the aDORe repository architecture. Interests include digital library standards and repository interoperability initiatives, including OAI-ORE, scholarly communication and semantic web technologies.