Thalia Anagnos shares how relationships and a little bit of serendipity transformed her career trajectory.
Thalia Anagnos, San José State University’s vice provost for undergraduate education, was recently named a Tribute to Women Award winner by the YWCA Golden Gate Silicon Valley.
Anagnos is part of a select group of more than 40 emerging and executive women honorees who were celebrated at their 37th annual awards ceremony in May. The recipients, according to the YWCA’s recent press release [pdf], “have excelled in their fields and have made significant contributions to Silicon Valley through their dedication and leadership.”
The Tribute to Women Awards has recognized more than 1,400 women for their remarkable
Print
In the mid-1980s, an earthquake brought a temporary halt to an afternoon meeting of the San Diego City Council. As soon as the chambers occupying the top floors of City Hall stopped shaking, council member Bill Cleator bolted from his seat.
He soon returned, explaining he rushed to a window just outside the room to see if the nearly completed Horton Plaza shopping mall was still standing and, he was was happy to report, it was.
Earthquakes aren’t rare in San Diego, though in modern history major ones tend to happen to the north and east. The San Andreas Fault is known around the world; not so with the Rose Canyon Fault.
Print
It will soon become harder to develop many properties in San Diego due to growing evidence that the Rose Canyon earthquake fault, which runs beneath the city, is larger and more active than scientists once thought.
The California Geological Survey is creating regulatory fault zones where developers of residential, commercial and public buildings may be required to show that their projects do not sit on top of active faults or are located a safe distance away from such systems.
The zones, which are expected to be adopted this summer, are part of the so-called Alquist-Priolo Act, which is meant to minimize the sort of death and destruction that can occur when an earthquake ruptures the Earth’s surface.
Danger posed by earthquake fault will lead to some tighter building restrictions, including in La Jolla
The state is creating new regulatory zones to protect people against the Rose Canyon fault.
It will soon become harder to develop many properties in San Diego, including La Jolla, due to growing evidence that the Rose Canyon earthquake fault, which runs beneath the city, is larger and more active than scientists once thought.
About 7,000 parcels in and around La Jolla, Old Town, San Diego International Airport and downtown San Diego will be placed in new regulatory fault zones.
The California Geological Survey is creating the fault zones where developers of residential, commercial and public buildings may be required to show that their projects do not sit on top of active faults or are located a safe distance from such systems.
(MENAFN - Comserve) Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, Japan, Japan, Feb 19, 2021, 08:15 /Comserve / The report offers overview of leading companies encompassing their successful marketing strategies, market contribution, recent developments in both historic and present contexts.
The global LiDAR market was valued at USD 1326.01 million in 2019 and is expected to reach USD 1620.89 million by 2025, recording a CAGR of 29.55% over the forecast period of 2020-2025 (henceforth, referred to as the forecast period).
Over the years, advancements in LiDAR mapping systems and their enabling technologies penetrated into different verticals, like aerospace and defense, corridor mapping and topographical survey, automotive, mining, oil and gas, and other verticals, which are increasing the market scope of the lidar market.