1,134 research outputs found

    Portrait of the Assistant Government Anthropologist for Papua, F.E. Williams, Bootless Inlet, Papua, ca. 1923 [picture] /

    No full text
    Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; F.E. Williams, government anthropologist, Papua. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Inscription: "F.E Williams (Gov. Auth. Papua)", --In red ink. "F.E. Williams at Bootless" --In pencil.; Sarah Chinnery no.: Part 2.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4506321

    Human rights problems, perspectives and texts

    No full text

    Thermal analysis of the Wire and Arc Additive Manufacturing process using the F.E. method

    No full text
    In this research, a thermal analysis of the wire and arc additive manufacturing process is presented based on the F.E. method. An important quality of the F.E. model that is presented in this research is to describe the temperature field that is experienced by the deposited material in the wire and arc additive manufacturing process. In contrast to the traditional method of monitoring the substrate temperature, the F.E. model allows to describe the temperature field that is experienced by the deposited material constituting both the multilayer weld deposit and the component. Accordingly, the F.E. model is capable to describe the effect of the locally attained temperature field on the microstructure of the deposited material constituting the multilayer weld deposit in terms of the thermal characteristics including the temperature distribution, the locally attained temperature values, the cooling rates and the temperature gradients throughout the component. Two cooling methods are proposed to control the heat dissipation from the component to the environment based on the application of an interlayer waiting time and immersing the component into a cooling medium. The results show a significant effect of the cooling methods on the temperature field that is experienced by the material constituting both the multilayer weld deposit and the component. Indicating that the cooling methods that are proposed in this research are effective to control the microstructure and the temperature field that is experienced by the component in the wire and arc additive manufacturing process. The resulting microstructure is characterised in terms of the microstructural morphology and the microstructural constituents, using optical microscopy based on the average grain size and the distribution of alloying elements throughout the material constituting the multilayer weld deposit. In addition, the average grain size and the distribution of the alloying elements throughout the material are evaluated in terms of the hardness values.Materials Science and Engineerin

    Further education outside the jurisdiction of local authorities in post-war England

    No full text
    This paper revisits the three decades following the end of World War Two – a time when, following the 1944 Education Act, local education authorities (LEAs) were the key agencies responsible for running the education system across England. For the first time there was a statutory requirement for LEAs to secure adequate facilities for further education (FE), and the post-war era is generally remembered as a period when they dominated FE. Yet this is not the full story of further education in post-war England: it is often forgotten that a significant amount of FE existed outside the municipal framework. This paper returns to the post-war decades and begins to uncover the largely forgotten history of FE outside local authority control at that time. It highlights how voluntary and private organisations offered various forms of post-compulsory education outside the municipal framework, and how they contributed to the eclectic and diverse nature of FE across England. This, I argue, reflected not only the expedience, compromise and inertia that characterised further education in post-war England but was rooted in a capture of educational policy more generally by a privileged elite intent on maintaining a social order characterised by social, economic and cultural divisions

    ‘Because thy God loves England’: Bishop John Jewel and the Catholicity of the Church of England, 1535-1599

    No full text
    John Jewel (Bishop of Salisbury 1559-1571) became the champion of the Church of England mere months after the formation of the Elizabethan religious settlement. He preached a sermon at Paul’s Cross that challenged the Roman Church to prove that certain traditions had existed in the early church; a strategy that allowed him to portray the Church of England as the true inheritor of the apostolic church, due to its pure doctrine and right administration of the sacraments. This sermon started a decade of controversy, which influenced the development of demarcation lines between the Church of Rome and the Church of England. This thesis argues that Jewel’s work as a polemicist and apologist for the Church of England was a key factor in the development of a Protestant self-identity for the Church of England. Using a unique methodology and a vast knowledge of patristic and Biblical sources, Jewel re-defined the term ‘catholic’ in a way that enabled him to argue for the catholicity of the Church of England while still separating it from the Catholic Church. He gave the English Church authority and legitimacy by portraying it as both part of the true universal church, and yet distinctly English. Drawing on Jewel’s own works, as well as the works of the men who fought for and against him, this thesis demonstrates that Jewel made a significant contribution to the establishment of the Church of England as a national institution. It shows that Jewel was an active, popular leader who was involved in many of the defining moments of the early Elizabethan church. Also, it shows that his popularity did not end with his death in 1571. Rather, his work continued to influence the development of the Church of England throughout the reign of Elizabeth and beyond

    PRESENCE AS CYBER-IMMERSION AND INFANTILE LIFEWORLD TRANSITION FACTOR F.E. VASILYUK'S TYPOLOGY

    No full text
    Автор статьи анализирует психологические аспекты "виртуализации" человека и его бытия в контексте типологии жизненных миров Ф.Е. Василюка. Выдвигается гипотеза о сущностной близости пребывания человека в виртуальном пространстве и нахождения в инфантильном жизненном мире. Автор полагает, что ключевую роль в процессах киберпогружения и перехода в инфантильный жизненный мир может играть нахождение в "состоянии присутствия" как субъективного переживания пребывания в иллюзорном мире, альтернативном реальности.The author analyses psychological aspects of "virtualization" in terms of F.E. Vasilyuk's lifeworlds' typology. The author states that being in the cyberspace is similar to existence in the infantile lifeworld and that the "presence" phenomenon may serve as the key mechanism to cyber-immersion and "slipping" into the infantile lifeworld.111-11

    Area 'K' : administrative map Operation Overlord South Western Zone, 15 April 1944 /

    No full text
    Relief shown by hachures. Depths shown by contours.Shows marshaling and embarkation areas of allied forces in Devon, England, in preparation for Operation Overlord.At head of title: Top secret, copy no. 41."F.E. Kempf Lt. Col. F.A. planning group (G-4), Theodore Wyman jr. Colonel C.E. commanding."Topographic base map "Pts. of 1" sheets 138 & 145 of G.S.G.S series no. 3907."In lower left and right margins: Ref no. 523/1406--Produced from model supplied.Gift; James Roddy Huff; 01-30-2006. DL

    Deciduous enamel 3D microwear texture analysis as an indicator of childhood diet in medieval Canterbury, England

    No full text
    This study conducted the first three dimensional microwear texture analysis of human deciduous teeth to reconstruct the physical properties of medieval childhood diet (age 1-8yrs) at St Gregory's Priory and Cemetery (11th to 16th century AD) in Canterbury, England. Occlusal texture complexity surfaces of maxillary molars from juvenile skeletons (n=44) were examined to assess dietary hardness. Anisotropy values were calculated to reconstruct dietary toughness, as well as jaw movements during chewing. Evidence of weaning was sought, and variation in the physical properties of food was assessed against age and socio-economic status. Results indicate that weaning had already commenced in the youngest children. Diet became tougher from four years of age, and harder from age six. Variation in microwear texture surfaces was related to historical textual evidence that refers to lifestyle developments for these age groups. Diet did not vary with socio-economic status, which differs to previously reported patterns for adults. We conclude, microwear texture analyses can provide a non-destructive tool for revealing subtle aspects of childhood diet in the past

    England, Dr. F.E.

    No full text
    Passport photograph of man; Copy photograph of medical degree diploma dated June 14, 1954. Negative scan.In 1922, Kinso Ninomiya opened the Ninomiya Studio in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. Due to Executive Order 9066 in 1942, the studio was forced to close but was reopened by Kinso and his son, Elwin Ichiro, in 1949. The studio operated in Little Tokyo until its final closing in 1986. The Ninomiya Studio Collection captures slices of Japanese American life in Los Angeles from the 1950s through the 1980s. The collection contains formal portraiture and candid photography in black and white and color as well as commercial photography for local businesses and reproductions of older photographs. The negatives come in a variety of sizes, including 8 x 10 inch negatives and panoramic negatives on Cirkut film. Each negative scanned has been selected out of multiple negatives and prints from a set. The title of the negative scan reflects the purchaser's name
    corecore