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Articles by this Author
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(E) Run for Croatia
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Run for Croatia EILEEN and Andy Dixon, from Barnstaple, are spending part of their holiday driving aid across Europe to Croatia. They are taking part in the Relief Run Rally organized by charity Give Youth a Hand.
They will join about 30 other owners who will drive 1,200 miles across Europe in their motor homes, carry tools, clothing, toys and other items to help refugees and destititute families.
Eileen and And are doing the run in May entirely at their own expense and have been collecting items and raising money for various projects. To find out more about the charity, log on towww.giveyouthahand.co.uk
http://www.northdevongazette.co.uk/archived/2004/wk12/news/12news3.asp
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(E) Stuttgart's Zvonimir Soldo from Croatia celebrates
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Stuttgart's Zvonimir Soldo from Croatia celebrates with Swiss Marco Streller, left, and Kevin Kuranyi, right, after the 1-0, while Munich's Rodrigo Costa sits on the ground, during the German first league soccer match between VfB Stuttgart and TSV 1860 Munich at the Gottlieb Daimler stadium in Stuttgart, Germany, on Sunday, March 14, 2004. Stuttgart won by 2-0. (AP Photo/Daniel Maurer)
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(E) Foreign Minister of Croatia Visits Israel
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Foreign Minister of Croatia Visits Israel Jerusalem, March 4, 2004 Foreign Minister of Croatia Visits Israel (Communicated by the Foreign Ministry Spokesman)
The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Croatia, Mr. Miomir Zulzul, is arriving in Israel today (14 March 2004) for an official visit as the guest of Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Silvan Shalom.
The Croatian foreign minister will be accompanied by Science Minister Dragan Primorac and Minister of Agriculture Petar Cabankovic.
The visiting ministers will meet with the Israeli president, the prime minister, the foreign minister, and will also visit Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority. In addition, they will tour some research institutions and look into options for economic cooperation between Israel and Croatia.
Ties between the two countries, which established diplomatic relations in 1997, are excellent, and this visit to Israel by the Croatian foreign minister is expected to contribute to the deepening of those ties.
http://www.mfa.gov.il/mfa/go.asp?MFAH0ogi0
Foreign Minister of Croatia Visits Israel 02:48 Mar 15, '04 / 22 Adar 5764
(IsraelNN.com) The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Croatia, Mr. Miomir Zulzul arrived in Israel on Sunday for an official visit as the guest of Minister of Foreign Affairs Silvan Shalom. The Croatian foreign minister will be accompanied by Science Minister Dragan Primorac and Minister of Agriculture Petar Cabankovic. The visiting ministers will meet with the president and the prime minister, and will also visit Yad Vashem Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Museum. In addition, they will tour some research institutions and look into options for economic cooperation between Israel and Croatia. Ties between the two countries, which established diplomatic relations in 1997, are excellent, and this visit to Israel by the Croatian foreign minister is expected to contribute to the deepening of those ties.
http://www.israelnn.com/news.php3?id=59432
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(H,E) McAdams: Croatia: Myth & Reality, Mit i Realnost
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Hrvatska: Mit i Realnost Croatia: Myth & Reality, by Michael McAdams
Objavljen je nelektoriran, nesluzben prijevod 5 prvih poglavlja knjige prof. McAdamsa (ukljucujuci uvod) za sve posjetitelje stranica http://voiceofcroatia.net koji se sluze samo hrvatskim - iskljucivo za svrhe istrazivanja:
http://voiceofcroatia.net/Croatia-Myth-and-Reality_hr.htm (Hrvatski) http://voiceofcroatia.net/Croatia-Myth-and-Reality.htm (English) Hrvatska: Mit i realnost Michael McAdams
(Znanstvenik specijaliziran za Hrvatske studije i ravnatelj podrucnog centra sveucilista University of San Francisco - glavni grad Sacramento - drzava California) Prijevod dijelova knjige uglednog povjesnicara je pisan dragovoljno u sijecnju 2003 i nije pregledan ili lektoritan, no nadam se da ce ipak pomoci 'hrvatofonima' (smiley!) koji su zainteresirani za ovu temu. Sad je i na webu.
S postovanjem, Ivana Arapovic webmaster@voiceofcroatia.net CROATIAAND THE CROATIANSCroatia emerged as a unified nation state in 925 A.D., and, through a personal union under a single king, joined what would become the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the twelfth century. Throughout the history of the Empire, Croatia maintained varying degrees of autonomy with its Ban or Viceroy and Sabor or Parliament which first met in 679 A.D. Following World War I, Croatia was absorbed into the new artificial state that would become Yugoslavia. The first Yugoslavia, from 1918-1941 was little more than an extension of Serbia with a Serbian king, ruling from the Serbian capital of Belgrade with Serbian laws. This marked the first time in history that the Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Montenegrins and Macedonians had lived together in a single state. The history of royalist Yugoslavia was marked by the brutal suppression of Croatian political, human and civil rights. The Croatian nation rallied around the Croatian Peasant Party and Stjepan Radic, its elderly, nearly blind, pacifist leader. Radic, along with four other Croatian leaders, was gunned down by a Serbian Deputy on the floor of Parliament in 1928. King Alexander Karageorgevic followed this blow by declaring himself dictator and banning all political parties. Croatian Parliamentary Deputy Ante Pavelic then formed the Ustase or "Insurgent" Croatian Liberation Movement to gain Croatian independence by force. Alexander was assassinated in 1934 and was succeeded by his cousin Prince Regent Paul, an Oxford educated half-Russian who cared little about politics or Yugoslavia. World War II Between 1934 and 1941 Yugoslavia moved closer and closer to Hitler under the leadership of Milan Stojadinovic who formed his own storm troops and adopted the title Vodja or Fuhrer. Later Premier Dragisa Cvetkovic would lead Yugoslavia into the Axis fold with Mussolini and Hitler on March 24, 1941. Almost immediately a military coup was staged by two Serbian air force generals assisted by the British Special Operations Executive. Finding instability on his southern flank unacceptable on the eve of the invasion of the Soviet Union, Hitler ordered the immediate conquest of Yugoslavia. The Serbian-dominated army surrendered without a fight. The Government and Serbian royal family fled to Britain with millions in gold and established the Yugoslav Government-in-Exile which laid the entire blame for the war and defeat on the Croatians. Pavelic's Ustase immediately took control of Croatia including Bosnia and Hercegovina. The new Croatian state was divided into German and Italian occupation zones while Italy annexed large parts of Dalmatian Croatia outright. Croatia joined the Axis, sent troops to the Eastern front and enacted anti- Semitic and anti-Serbian legislation. Serbia became a Nazi puppet state under General Milan Nedic who intensified the persecution of Jews, Gypsies and Croatians that had begun under the royalist regime before the War. Tens of thousands perished in the multi-faceted war among Communist Partisans, German, Italian, Croatian, Serbian and even Russian Cossack forces. In the end, it would be the Communist-backed Partisan army led by a Croatian, Marshal Josip Broz Tito, with the backing of the Red Army which would emerge victorious. The Second Yugoslavia After World War II, Yugoslavia was reconstituted as a Communist federal republic with the promise of equality for all its nations and peoples. As in most Communist states, promises were not fulfilled. A ruthless secret police compounded by the economic and political exploitation of Croatia led hundreds of thousands of young Croatians to seek freedom and prosperity abroad. After the purge of secret police chief Aleksandar Rankovic in 1966, a new air of freedom developed in Croatia known as "The Croatian Spring". Less known in the West than the "Prague Spring", this great liberalization was crushed by the Communists in late 1971. One target of the new round of repression was a dissident former Partisan hero and Yugoslav Army general, Franjo Tudjman. The events of 1971 put into motion events twenty years later that would result in Croatian independence. The death of Tito in 1980 led to increased demands for democracy and a market-based economy as well as for greater autonomy by Croatia and Slovenia from the Serbian-controlled central government. As Western-oriented Slovenia and Croatia moved quickly toward democratic reform, Eastern-oriented Serbia struggled to maintain Communist authoritarianism and a centralized government. In 1990, Dr. Franjo Tudjman became the first freely elected President of Croatia in over half a century. Free and democratic elections in Croatia and Slovenia demonstrated a commitment to the democratic process, the protection of human rights, and the development of a free market economy in those Republics. Croatia immediately began negotiations in mid-1990 toward the formation of a loose confederation of nations that would have granted national autonomy while preserving Yugoslavia in some form. The Republic of Serbia refused all attempts at negotiation and engaged in massive human rights violations against the Albanian majority in the province of Kosovo, dismantling its Parliament and purging its government, media, and educational system of Muslims and non-Communists. The Serbian leader, Slobodan Milosevic, remained committed to a single party, totalitarian regime in Serbia and throughout Yugoslavia. Spurred on by Milosevic, Serbs in Croatia launched a well- planned armed insurrection on August 17, 1990, attacking police stations and blockading the main highway south of the Croatian capital of Zagreb. When Croatian police attempted to stop the violence, the central government dispatched the Serbian-controlled air force and army to "restore order". In 1991, after months of fruitless negotiations and increased violence by the Serbian minority in Croatia, fueled by the Serbian government and military, the Croatians voted for independence. On June 25, 1991, Croatia and Slovenia declared themselves to be free and independent of Serbia and Yugoslavia. Independence and Aggression Under the pretense of protecting the Serbian minority in Croatia, a full-scale war was launched against Croatia by the Serbian-Yugoslav armed forces and Serbian militias. Croatia abided by over a dozen cease fires only to see the army regroup and attack again. By the end of 1991, over one-third of Croatia's territory had been seized, the city of Vukovar and others totally destroyed and thousands of Croatians had been killed. In December 1991, the Serbian government openly admitted that it aimed to annex territory in Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina in order to form a new "Greater Serbia". On January 14, 1992 the European Community recognized the independence of Croatia and most of the world's major powers followed suit. Notably, the United States government headed by George Bush held back on recognition of Croatia and Slovenia until after the United Nations peace-keeping forces had been moved into Croatia. Bush's Deputy Secretary of State and chief advisor on what was Yugoslavia was Lawrence Eagleburger whom the press dubbed "Lawrence of Serbia". Eagleburger had close personal and financial ties with the Communist leadership of Serbia as well as Yugoslav banks and arms industries. Despite Eagleburger's friendship with Communist Serbia, even the United States was eventually forced to condemn Serbia's expansionist aggression and recognize Croatia in April of 1992. On April 26, 1992, Serbia declared the birth of a new Federal Yugoslavia and became the last nation in Europe to remove the red star from its flag. The history of the three Yugoslavias has been filled with mythology, but no myth was greater than the myth that Yugoslavia ever really existed.
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(H) Poziv na glazbeni forum
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Glazbeni Forum www.glazbeni-forum.com
Pozdrav gosp. Bach!
Ja sam mladi hrvatski ljubitelj glazbe koji aktivno vjezba i uci gitaru vec nekoliko godina. Javljam vam se s pozivom da posjetite i ako vam se svidja postanete clan Glazbenog Foruma, koji je prvi takav na hrvatskom internetu. Nalazi se na adresi: www.glazbeni-forum.com Usko je specijaliziran i namijenjen aktivnim muzicarima. Pokrenuli smo ga ja i moj prijatelj Luka (Crazy Horse) prije gotovo godinu dana. Postoje odijeljenja elektricne gitare, bas gitare, bubnjeva... Do danas je vec prilicno narastao i napredovao i cast bi nam bila da nam se pridruzi jedan takav znalac poput vas! Pogledajte ako imate vremena i javite kako vam se svidja... Puno pozdrava i iskrena zahvala!
Dino (mAnimal) manimal@glazbeni-forum.com
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(E) Croatian-American Theologian Miroslav Volf on NPR
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Croatian-American Theologian Miroslav Volf on National Public Radio National Public Radio's show "Speaking of Faith" had a discussion with Croatian-American Theologian Miroslav Volf, originally from Osijek and currently a visiting professor at the Divinity School at Yale University. Below is a summary of the program. You can hear the entire program and look at texts and more information concerning Volf at the following web page address: http://www.speakingoffaith.org/programs/2004/03/11_volf/
John Kraljic *********************************
A long tradition exists asserting that religion is not only intellectually implausible, but socially harmful. This point of view argues that for the sake of peace, religion must be neutralized as a force in civil society. Croatian-American theologian Miroslav Volf makes the counterintuitive proposal that the cure for religious zealotry in our world is not less religion, but more religion - or rather, stronger and more intelligent practices of faith.
Volf knows Christianity's violent potential by experience. He grew up amidst ethnic tensions between Croats and Serbs. Miroslav Volf is the Henry B. Wright Professor of Theology at Yale University Divinity School and Visiting Professor of Systematic Theology at the Evangelical Theological Faculty of Osijek, Croatia, which, in the early 1990s after the breakup of Communist Yugoslavia, escalated into a bloody civil war. In Bosnia and Croatia, nearly a quarter of a million people died and two million were left exiled or displaced.
Host Krista Tippett speaks with Miroslav Volf, a theologian who bridges the divide between conservative and liberal Christians in the United State. The conversation took place in Washington D.C. in front of a live audience at the National Cathedral.
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(E) Bogdan Jovicic - Olympic/College Basketball Coach Dies
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Bogdan Jovicic, 52 The following obituary appeared in today's Poughkeepsie Journal from Poughkeepsie, New York.
John Kraljic
Saturday, March 13, 2004
Longtime official at Marist dies Administrator was an ex-coach By Kathianne Boniello Poughkeepsie Journal
The Marist College athletic community was in mourning Friday after a longtime staff member was found dead in his City of Poughkeepsie home.
Bogdan Jovicic, 52, an assistant athletic director and former basketball coach, had worked at the Poughkeepsie college since at least the mid-1980s. He was described as a kind man who worked with many of the school's students.
''He was really well-liked a great deal by all the members of my department and all the Marist athletes and all the students,'' said Marist Athletic Director Tim Murray, who added Jovicic was overseeing the college's recreational and intramural sports at the time of his death. ''He was a hard-working, caring person.''
City of Poughkeepsie police are investigating the cause of Jovicic's death, Detective Lt. William Siegrist said. An autopsy is scheduled for 9 a.m. today.
Police canvassed the quiet neighborhood on Clark Street Friday afternoon as drivers slowed down to stare at the home, where a crime scene unit van was parked in the driveway. The front yard and home were blocked off from the street by crime scene tape.
Coached in Olympics
Jovicic, a native of Croatia, spoke four languages and was the assistant coach for the 1984 Yugoslavian Olympic basketball team, according to his Marist biography. He worked with the Marist men's basketball team in the mid-1980s and served as an international recruiter.
Jovicic joined the school's administration during the 1989-90 basketball season, Marist officials said.
Marist men's basketball coach Dave Magarity worked with Jovicic and called him ''a terrific person.
''(He was) just a very kind-hearted, caring man,'' Magarity said Friday. ''I just enjoyed being around him. He was a good guy, just a good, good guy.''
Women's basketball coach Brian Giorgis said Jovicic was caring, quiet and reserved.
''He went about his business in a very behind the scenes, quiet manner, but just very, very friendly,'' Giorgis said. ''He will be missed.''
Journal staff writer Roderick Boone contributed to this report.
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(E) More than 200 found in mass grave
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More than 200 Croatians killed by Serbs found in mass grave From correspondents in Zagreb, Croatia 12mar04 AUTHORITIES suspect they have found one of Croatia's largest mass graves, containing the remains of more than 200 Croats killed by Serb rebels in the country's 1991 independence war.
"We have known for years that a mass grave exists in this area," said Ivan Grujic, head of the government office for missing persons, referring to a meadow in the village of Tordinci near the country's eastern border with Serbia-Montenegro.
"Radar investigations show that the surface structure of the earth in the area has been transfigured and that the soil underneath has been dishevelled, indicating that something lies about a metre below," Grujic said.
Croatia has been carrying out extensive searches for thousands of persons missing since Croatia broke away from the former Yugoslavia in 1991.
The Tordinci site has been of particular interest to authorities after they found an empty mass grave in front of the town church. That grave allegedly held 208 bodies before the remains were removed and reburied at an unknown location.
Minority Serbs opposed Croatia's secession and took up arms, killing more than 10,000 people and seizing a third of the country's territory. Government troops recaptured the lands in a blitz offensive in 1995.
About 4000 victims have been unearthed from mass graves around the country. More than 1200 remain unaccounted for, Grujic said.
Some of the fiercest fighting between Croats and ethnic Serbs took place in eastern Croatia, where more than 50 mass graves have been discovered.
Grujic said full-scale digging should begin in the coming days, after geological and forensic experts determine the zone within which they expected bodies to be unearthed
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,8944292%255E1702,00.html
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(E) Peter Herbert & Steve Shehan in Concerts
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Peter Herbert & Steve Shehan in Concerts Editor's Note: This should be in the category Friends, but it doesn't present them, rather announces their performance. I will open another category, something like Friends in Action, or suggest me something else. There are more and more Friends of Croatia and I want to pay attention to these talented people. Steve Shehan is a good friend of mine who played from Abba, Gipsy Kings to Paul Simon. Made hundreds of records. An amazing artist. Svako dobro, Nenad
Dear Friends! It is time for a spring up-date of my concert activities, so please excuse the shameless self-promotion, as my dear colleague Mark Dresser would call it... Thank you anyway for your support and for your attendance at my concerts. All the very best
Peter Herbert
So, here we go, as usual: If you are in Paris tonite:
Thursday March 11th 2004 9 p.m. with Hadouk Trio, Loy Ehrlich (keyboards, hajouj), Steve Shehan (perc), Didier Malherbe (reeds), celebrating the release of their new Double CD " Hadouk Trio Live à FIP" New Morning, Paris
If you are in Qatar: Sunday March 14th 2004 9 p.m. with Marcel Khalife, Rami & Bachar Khalife 'Moudaaba' www.marcelkhalife.com
if you are in Austria: W`day March 17th 2004 9 p.m. with Katharina Klement (prep. piano/toys/electronics), Josef Klammer (drums/electronics), Peter Herbert (b) Stockwerk, Graz, A
Thursday, March 18th 2004 8 p.m. with Katharina Klement (prep. piano/toys), Josef Klammer (drums/electronics), Peter Herbert (b) Alte Schmiede, Wien, A
if you are in Oman: Tuesd. March 23rd &W"day March 24th 2004 9 p.m. with Marcel Khalife, Rami & Bachar Khalife 'Moudaaba' Muskat/Oman www.marcelkhalife.com
if you are in Paris: Friday, April 9th 2004 10 p.m. with Chris Culpo (p), Peter Herbert (b) at 7 lezards, 10 rue des Rosiers, Paris, www.7lezards.com
if you are in the United Arab Emirates: Thursday, April 15th 2004 8 p.m. with Marcel Khalife, Rami & Bachar Khalife 'Moudaaba' Abu Dabi/UAE www.marcelkhalife.com
if you are in London: W'day May 5th 2004 8 p.m. Peter Herbert solo "bassooka" ( 1set), Peter Herbert (b) & Huw Warren (p) (2nd set) Vortex/London/UK
Thursday, May 6th 2004 9:30 p.m. - 1 a.m. Phil Robson (g), Christine Tobin (voc), Peter Herbert (b) and dr TBA 606 Club, 90 Lots Road, London SW10 0QD, +44/20/7352 5953
Friday, May 7th 2004 8:45 p.m. - midnite Phil Robson (g), Peter Herbert (b), Julian Arguelles (sax), Gene Calderazzo (dr) Shino"s Jazzbar, Riverside Buidling, County Hall, Westminster Bridge Rd., London SE1 7PB, +44/20/7401 6514
if you are back in Austria:
W"day May 12th 2004 8 p.m.
'bass instinct': acoustic bass-sextet: Gerhard Muthspiel (b), Ernst Weissensteiner (b), Herbert Meyer (b), Tommaso Huber (b), Georg Breinschmied (b), Peter Herbert (b) playing the music of Reinhard Süss, Charles Mingus arr. by Michael Radanovics, William Byrd (arr. by Gerhard Muthspiel), Peter Herbert Eisenstadt/A
Thursday, May 13th 2004 8 p.m. 'bass instinct' Ried i. Innkreis/A
Friday, May 14th 2004 8 p.m. 'bass instinct' Zell am See/A
Saturday May 15th 2004 8 p.m. 'bass instinct' Schloss Goldeck b. Salzburg/A
Tuesday May 18th 2004 9:30 p.m. Verena Sternbach (voc), Gina Schwarz (b), Peter Herbert (b) Kulturbeisl Feuerstein, Neustiftg. 84, Wien/A
Friday May 21st 2004 7:30 p.m. 'bass instinct': acoustic bass-sextet: Gerhard Muthspiel (b), Ernst Weissensteiner (b), Herbert Meyer (b), Tommaso Huber (b), Georg Breinschmied (b), Peter Herbert
(b) playing the music of Reinhard Süss, Charles Mingus arr. by Michael Radanovics, William Byrd (arr. by Gerhard Muthspiel), Peter Herbert
ORF Radiokulturhaus/Wien/A
if you are in Switzerland: Thursday May 27th 2004 9 p.m. with Ahmad Mansour Trio, Ahmad Mansour (g), Gil Dupuis (dr), Peter Herbert (b) Birds Eye, Basel, CH
Teaching:
From July 10th - 17th (or 12th - 20st) I will be teaching at the Jazz-workshop in Viktring/Austria, as well as from August 2nd - 7th in Salzburg at the 'workshop for Jazz and improvising music', where I am actually also the artistic director. Let me know, if you are interested in attending, so I can forward you the information!
Thank you for reading, listening and travelling!!!
Peter Herbert azizamusic@yahoo.com
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(H) III. SABOR AMAC/AMCA UDRUGA
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PRVA OBAVIJEST III. SABOR AMAC/AMCA UDRUGA SVEUČILIŠTE, ZNANOST I GLOBALIZACIJA Zagreb, 30. lipnja do 3. srpnja 2004. Organizator - domaćin Sveučilište u Zagrebu Trg m. Tita 14 10000 Zagreb Tel.: 385 1 45 64 226 ili 45 64 251 Fax: +385 1 48 30 602 ili 48 30 597 E-mail:amac@unizg.hr www.unizg.hr Organizacijski odbor Prof. dr. sc. Greta Pifat Mrzljak, predsjednica Organizacijskog odbora Prof. dr. sc. Ivica Džeba Prof. dr. sc. Jasmina Havranek Prof. dr. sc. Branko Jeren Dr. sc. Kruno Kovačević Prof. dr. sc. Vlasta Vizek Vidović Predložene teme Sabora -
Sveučilište, znanost i globalizacija – pozvani predavači -
Izvješća pojedinih AMAC/AMCA udruga o radu u periodu od 1998.-2004. godine OPĆE OBAVIJESTI Sabor počinje u srijedu navečer, 30. lipnja, okupljanjem sudionika na domjenku dobrodošlice, a završava u subotu, 3. srpnja, nakon izleta. Mjesto i vrijeme Sabora Radni dio Sabora održat će se u četvrtak i petak (1. i 2. srpnja 2004.) na Fakultetu elektrotehnike i računarstva Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Unska 3. Detaljan program rada dostavit će se u II. obavijesti. Preliminarni raspored 30. lipnja dolazak sudionika 1.-2. srpnja radni dio Sabora 2. srpnja posjet institucijama (ovisno o broju zainteresiranih) 3. srpnja izlet Registracija Molimo sve sudionike da: - prijave svoje sudjelovanje na priloženoj prijavi do 15.travnja 2004. - navedu koji će sudionici izložiti izvješće o radu pojedinih udruga da bi se mogao napraviti radni raspored Molimo da izvješća pojedinih udruga budu usmeno kratko izložena (do 10 minuta), a prethodno Organizatoru Sabora poslana (do 1. lipnja 2004.) pisana izvješća, najviše do 4 stranice, koja će se podijeliti svim sudionicima na Saboru. Tentativna društvena događanja Za sve sudionike Sabora bit će organiziran kulturni i izletnički program: - domjenak dobrodošlice u srijedu, 30 lipnja - koncert u četvrtak navečer, 1. srpnja - zajednička večera u petak, 2. srpnja - cjelodnevni izlet u subotu, 3. srpnja Kotizacija U pokriću troškova Sabora sudjelovat će Ministarstvo znanosti, obrazovanja i športa RH, Sveučilište u Zagrebu i pojedini fakulteti kao pokrovitelji. Kotizacija nije predviđena, ali su dobrovoljni prilozi dobrodošli. Boravak sudionika Troškove boravka i puta snose sudionici. Smještaj u hotelima molimo što hitnije rezervirati zbog moguće zauzetosti hotela u tom vremenskom periodu. Adresa za kontakt: Prof. dr. sc. Greta Pifat-Mrzljak Institut Ruđer Bošković Bijenička c. 54, 10000 Zagreb Tel: +385 1 45 61 127 Fax: +385 1 46 80 239 E-mail:pifat@irb.hr PRIJAVA za sudjelovanje na III. saboru udruga AMAC/AMCA 'SVEUČILIŠTE, ZNANOST I GLOBALIZACIJA' u Zagrebu, od 30. lipnja do 3. srpnja 2004. godine (vratiti ispunjeno do 15. travnja 2004.) Ime i prezime: .............................................................................................................................. Udruga koju predstavljate: ........................................................................................................... Dužnost koju obavljate u udruzi: ................................................................................................. Institucija u kojoj ste zaposleni: ................................................................................................... Adresa institucije: ........................................................................................................................ Grad, zemlja (poštanski kod): ...................................................................................................... Telefon: ....................................................................................................................................... Telefaks: ....................................................................................................................................... E-mail: .......................................................................................................................................... Kućna adresa: .............................................................................................................................. Ime osobe u pratnji: ...................................................................................................................... Naslov eventualnog izlaganja na III. saboru: ............................................................................... ...................................................................................................................................................... Institucija koju želite posjetiti (realizacija moguća ovisno o broju zainteresiranih): .................. ...................................................................................................................................................... Informacija o hotelskom smještaju dostupna je na adresiwww.zagreb-touristinfo.hr (Molimo rezervaciju napraviti pravovremeno zbog moguće zauzetosti hotela u tom vremenskom periodu.) Datum prijave: Potpis: Popunjenu prijavu vratiti do 15. travnja 2004. na adresu: Sveučilište u Zagrebu za III. sabor udruga AMAC/AMCA Trg m. Tita 14, 10000 ZAGREB E-mail:mscuric@unizg.hr Tel: +385 1 45 64 251 ili 45 64 226 Fax: +385 1 48 30 602 ili 48 30 597
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