2017年5月6日土曜日

KimとJager イエズス会とプロテスタント







Her husband, Jiyul Kim, said that his wife did not wish to speak about the book when contacted by DailyMail.com at their home.

Jager, who is of Dutch and Japanese descent, received her Ph.D in anthropology from the University of Chicago, where she was studying in the mid '80's when she met Barack Obama, then a community organizer.

The couple dated for a couple of years and met each other’s families before splitting up.

Yet Jager was almost entirely omitted from Obama's own biography, Dreams of My Father, where she was simply combined with his other white exes into one character.

According to Rising Star she played a huge role in Obama's formative years. So much so that even after Barack met his wife-to-be Michelle, he kept seeing Jager on and off for at least a year, the book claims.

The couple were very much in love in the late-1980s when they were living together in Chicago, according to Jager, who described them as being 'an island unto ourselves.'


Kim, 59, served in the U.S. Army for three decades and was on duty at the Pentagon during 9/11.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4474842/The-college-professor-President-Obama-loved-lost.html#ixzz4gIFFt2as
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Pan-Korean Nationalism, Anti-Great Power-ism and U.S.-South Korean Relations Available in Korean and French Translation
Jiyul Kim

December 12, 2005
Volume 3 | Issue 12

Pan-Korean Nationalism, Anti-Great Power-ism and U.S.-South Korean Relations Available in Korean Translation and French Translation

By Jiyul Kim


The overwhelming attention accorded the North Korean nuclear issue seems to have precluded a close examination of the U.S. – South Korean relationship as it enters a profound transitional period. [1] Current internal trends and dynamics in South Korean politics will require a fundamental reassessment of that relation. A major change in the character of the alliance, especially its military dimensions, is in the offing. However, such a change need not be seen as detrimental to the U.S.

http://apjjf.org/-Jiyul-Kim/1679/article.html


The Asia-Pacific Journal is the recipient of The Ryukyu Shimpo's first Ikemiyagi Syuui Prize. The award recognizes that "Japan Focus has made an outstanding worldwide contribution to proposing solutions to problems confronting Okinawa."
The Editors
Andrew DeWit, Rikkyo University, Tokyo, dewit@rikkyo.ne.jp
Norma Field, University of Chicago, norma.field@gmail.com
Geoffrey Gunn, University of Macau, geoffreycharlesgunn@hotmail.com
Laura Hein, Northwestern University, Chicago, l-hein@northwestern.edu
Jeff Kingston, Temple University, Tokyo, kingston@tuj.temple.edu
Gavan McCormack, Australian National University, Canberra, gavan.mccormack@anu.edu.au
David McNeill, Sophia University, Tokyo, davidaamcneill@hotmail.com
Matthew Penney, Concordia University, Montreal, penneym@hotmail.com
Sonia Ryang, Rice University, Houston, sonia.ryang@rice.edu
Satoko Oka Norimatsu, Peace Philosophy Center, Vancouver, info@peacephilosophy.com
Mark Selden, Cornell University, Ithaca, mark.selden@cornell.edu

Yuki Tanaka, Hiroshima Peace Institute, Hiroshima, yjtanaka68@yahoo.co.jp






Loyola College was a Jesuit college in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It ceased to exist when it was incorporated into Concordia University in 1974. A portion of the original college remains as a separate entity called Loyola High School.

Sir George Williams University is a former university that was located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It merged with Loyola College to create Concordia University on August 24, 1974.


Sir George Williams (11 October 1821 – 6 November 1905) was an English philanthropist and founder of the YMCA. The oldest and largest youth charity in the world, its aim is to support young people to belong, contribute and thrive in their communities.[1]
Williams was born on a farm in Dulverton, Somerset, England.[2] As a young man, he described himself as a "careless, thoughtless, godless, swearing young fellow". After an accident, his family sent him to Bridgwater to be an apprentice at a draper's shop. In 1837, Williams was converted. He went to the Zion Congregational Church and became an involved member.[3]
In 1841, he went to London and worked again in a draper's shop. After three years, in 1844, was promoted to department manager. He married the boss’s daughter, Helen Jane Maunder Hitchcock in 1853. Williams became a member of the Weigh House Congregational Church and used his time for evangelization.
Appalled by the terrible conditions in London for young working men, he gathered a group of his fellow drapers together to create a place that would not tempt young men into sin. That place was the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA), which he founded on 6 June 1844.[4] One of the earliest converts and contributors to the new association was George's employer, George Hitchcock.

Williams was knighted by Queen Victoria in her 1894 Birthday Honours. After his death in 1905, he was commemorated by a stained-glass window in the nave of Westminster Abbey. Sir George Williams is buried in St Paul's Cathedral.









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