5,636 research outputs found
President Cole and Dr. Stuart Cook, President of UMDNJ, 1999
President Cole shakes hands with Dr. Stuart Cook, President of UMDNJhttps://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/memories/1012/thumbnail.jp
Historic Hawthorn: a photographic essay - Cottage and Car - 43 Elgin Street
Historic Hawthorn: a photographic essay - Photograph taken by Swinburne student, Stuart Cole, as part of a design project in conjunction with the Hawthorn Historical Society
Historic Hawthorn: a photographic essay - 83 Liddiard Street, Hawthorn
Historic Hawthorn: a photographic essay - Photograph taken by Swinburne student, Stuart Cole, as part of a design project in conjunction with the Hawthorn Historical Society
Tennessee roads / Jesse Stuart. In Mountain herald / Lincoln Memorial University.
This picturesque poem was written by then-sophomore (and future celebrated author) Jesse Stuart about the roads of Tennessee
No. 617 Stuart Ruckman
Transcript (12, 40 pages) of two interviews by Matt Driscoll with Stuart Ruckman on April 9, 2010, and July 7, 2011Ruckman (b. 1966) was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. Stuart shares how his family, particularly his father, played a significant role in introducing him to the outdoors. Some of his initial explorations included a hike to the top of Mount Olympus when he was five years old, backpacking trips in the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains, and a successful summit attempt on the Grand Teton when he was twelve. Stuart discovered technical rock climbing due to the influence of his older brother Bret, five years Stuart\u27s senior. Bret learned under Dennis Turville, a well-respected Salt Lake climbing instructor. Stuart shares his observations on the Salt Lake climbing community of the late 1970s and 1980s, noting the intimacy of the community, while also pointing out the significant influence of a handful of climbers, including Merrill Bitter, Les Ellison, and Brian Smoot. He briefly describes the proliferation of new-route development in the Wasatch during his first decade in climbing. In collaboration with his brother Bret, Stuart published comprehensive guidebooks on climbing in the Wasatch Mountains. Stuart\u27s contributions as a first-ascensionist and co-author of Rock Climbing the Wasatch Range attest to his lasting impact on Utah climbing. Interview is part of the Outdoor Recreation History Project. Interviewer: Matt Driscol
Percy Cole at Bath Fair
Showman Percy W. Cole in Gondolas centre at Bath Fair, 30 April 1966. Digitisation and record funded by the Pilgrim Trust
Dynamics of a spherical body shedding from a hypersonic ramp. Part 1. Inviscid flow: Part I: inviscid flow
Numerical simulations are employed to investigate the dynamical separation of an initially stationary sphere from the surface of a two-dimensional ramp in hypersonic flow. We consider the inviscid limit, which is equivalent to assuming the sphere radius to be much larger than the ramp boundary-layer thickness; this assumption allows a range of Mach numbers and ramp angles to be explored efficiently. Of particular interest is determining how the shock-surfing phenomenon discovered by Laurence & Deiterding (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 676, 2011, pp. 396-431), in which a spherical body can stably oscillate about an oblique shock as it moves downstream, manifests itself in such a situation. First, the isolated interactions between a sphere and an oblique shock, and then between a sphere and an inviscid wall, are examined independently to elucidate relevant trends. Full trajectory predictions are subsequently performed using a decoupled model in which the shock and wall interactions are assumed to contribute independently to the aerodynamic forces. Three types of trajectories are found to be possible: surfing of the spherical body; initial expulsion outside the shock layer followed by re-Entry and entrainment; or direct entrainment. At relatively low hypersonic Mach numbers, the latter two types of trajectories are predominant, but at higher Mach numbers , surfing becomes possible over an increasingly wide range of ramp angles and downstream release locations. By reparameterizing the release location as the initial lateral distance of the sphere from the shock, good collapse of the transition boundary delineating surfing from ejection/re-Entrainment over various Mach numbers and ramp angles is obtained.</p
George MacLeod’s open-air preaching: performance and counter-performance
Stuart Blythe uses the methodology of performance to analyse George MacLeod’s open-air preaching. He points out that MacLeod’s preaching was derived from a theology of the incarnation, and an understanding of the paradoxes and dichotomies of common human life. This preaching, Blythe suggests, was also a counter-performance in the context of outlooks and ideologies inimical to the gospel. The paper raises interesting issues related to preaching as performance, and the further question as to whether or not the life and work of the Church as a whole might now be better understood as a counter-performance.Publisher PD
Percy Cole and George Newth at Bath Fair
Showman P. W. Cole and fairground enthusiast and modeller George Newth photographed at Bath Fair, 30 April 1966. Digitisation and record funded by the Pilgrim Trust
Redemption in the work of Francis Stuart
The idea of redemption is central to an understanding of the work
of Francis Stuart. Through an examination of its development and
expression, it is possible to demonstrate the integrity of his work and
its distinctive qualities. Such a demonstration is necessary because
Stuart's writing has been subjected to comparatively little scholarly
inquiry, although reviews of his work, especially that produced since
1949, suggest that it is impressive and important.
First, a general background to Stuart's work, a discussion of the
special problems associated with reading it, and a summary of his corpus
is provided. This indicates that the idea of redemption is important to
his earliest writing. The state of redemption is shown to be a
necessary apotheosis for Stuart's outcast heroes; it involves spiritual
suffering through which may be found a sense of reintegration and a
higher reality. This is expressed through interrelated themes such as
those of gambler, artist and ordinary man; mystic and criminal; sacred
and profane love; and spirituality and the mundane. The nature of the
redemptive experience is further elaborated by distinctive, complex
motifs, especially the hare, the ark and the woman-Christ. Their
recurrence provides an important element in the unity of Stuart's work.
Because Stuart's idea of the outcast raises important biographical
questions, an examination of the relationship between Stuart's life and
his work is made. Finally, the way in which the idea of redemption
exists in the language structures of Stuart's novels is examined, with
especial reference to his most recent work, The High Consistory. The
thesis shows that the development of the these of redemption
demonstrates the integrity of Stuart's work
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