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News from ICTP 116 - Monitor
TRIL at ENEA
A meeting on "Scientific Cooperation Between Italy and Emerging
Countries", sponsored by the Italian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the Italian National Agency for New Technologies,
Energy and the Environment (ENEA), took place in Rome on 14 March.
The objective of the Giornate della Cooperazione was to
examine the impact of ICTP's TRIL (Training and Research in Italian
Laboratories) programme and to discuss strategies for making TRIL
even more effective in the future. Since its inception in 1983,
more than 1000 scientists from 75 developing countries have participated
in TRIL, conducting high level research in physics institutes
across Italy. For additional information about TRIL, see www.ictp.it.
UN Under-Secretary General Visits ICTP
Adama Dieng, UN Under-Secretary General, met ICTP Director
K.R. Sreenivasan on 2 February to discuss a wide range
of issues related to the role of science in the UN System. Following
the meeting, Dieng and Sreenivasan participated in a conference
on human rights organised by the University of Trieste.
Mosibudi Mangena, Minister of Science and Technology
in South Africa, met ICTP Director K.R. Sreenivasan on
24 March to discuss future avenues of cooperation. The Minister
also met other representatives of Trieste's international scientific
community during his brief visit.
The ICTP Cultural Committee, in cooperation with the University
of Rome "La Sapienza", organised a public event
at the Adriatico Guesthouse on 22 February titled "Science
and Art - MOVEment = Thinking of the Present". Writers Giuseppe
O. Longo, Marina Silvestri, and Annio Stasi
took part in a discussion on art, music and science. An exhibition
of paintings by Mery Tortolini, an artist who teaches at
"La Sapienza" University, was inaugurated. The
Trieste-based North Winds Band, which includes ICTP staff members
Suzie Radosic and Joe Niemela, provided a musical interlude.
Dry Life
ICTP/TWAS Public Information Officer Daniel Schaffer is
the co-editor of Dry: Life Without Water, published by
Harvard University Press. The book, which includes more than 80
illustrations, describes how people living in arid environments
across the developing world have learned to cope-indeed thrive-in
water-sparse environments. For additional information, see http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/MASDRY.html.
Book Donations
World Scientific Publishing Co. (WSPC), one of the world's leading
scientific publishers, has donated 21,000 textbooks to ICTP for
distribution to libraries in the developing world. The 1200 titles
range broadly in subject matters from physics to economics and
from mathematics to medicine.
The ICTP Library, which is responsible for the project, has
distributed nearly 13,000 volumes to 58 countries since WSPC's
first shipment in September 2005. All of the books will be distributed
by this summer.
Subodh Shenoy, a member of the ICTP scientific staff
and coordinator of the Centre's Diploma Course in condensed matter
physics since 1994, has returned to his native India, where he
will serve as a professor of physics at the University of Hyderabad.
Shenoy received a bachelor of science degree from Queen Mary College
at the University of London, UK, in the late 1960s and master's
and doctorate degrees in physics from Yale University, USA, in
the early 1970s. After his Ph.D, he worked at the University of
South Florida, USA, Tata Institute, Bombay, the Institute of Physics,
Bhubaneswar, and the University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad. Shenoy
first visited Trieste in the mid 1980s when, as a professor of
physics at the University of Hyderabad, he was appointed an ICTP
Associate. He returned to Trieste on numerous occasions over the
next decade to attend Centre research and training activities
and to conduct his own research before receiving a staff position
with the Condensed Matter Physics group. Shenoy's decade-long
stay at ICTP was marked by a continual flow of research publications
in such scientific journals as Physics Review Letters, Europhysics
Letters and Physical Review. It was also marked by
the emergence of the ICTP Diploma Course as a critical Centre
research and training activity for students from the least developed
countries. Friends and colleagues wish Shenoy the best of luck
in his newest professional endeavours and hope that he will return
often to ICTP where his keen intelligence, warmth, generosity
and kindly manners will be missed.
IN MEMORIAM
Mizanur Rahman, former ICTP Associate, died on 30 January.
He was 72 years old. Mizanur Rahman was professor of mathematics
at the University of Rajshahi in Bangladesh. He visited ICTP on
many occasions to attend Centre training and research activities,
especially in his primary field of interest, theoretical nuclear
physics.