2,578 research outputs found
Theology, News and Notes - Vol. 39, No. 04
Theology News & Notes was a theological journal published by Fuller Theological Seminary from 1954 through 2014.https://digitalcommons.fuller.edu/tnn/1115/thumbnail.jp
RJ Fuller interview, 19 May 2011
RJ Jack Fuller recounts his family\u27s connection to the Lawrence family of Bay Village. He provides a lengthy biographical sketch of Washington Lawrence and family, noting their impact on the development of Bay Village. He describes in detail the Lawrence Mansion and cottages. Fuller also describes his relationship to the village, describing changes in the community throughout his life and noting differences between Bay Village and other suburbs in the area
RJ Fuller interview, 19 May 2011
RJ Jack Fuller recounts his family\u27s connection to the Lawrence family of Bay Village. He provides a lengthy biographical sketch of Washington Lawrence and family, noting their impact on the development of Bay Village. He describes in detail the Lawrence Mansion and cottages. Fuller also describes his relationship to the village, describing changes in the community throughout his life and noting differences between Bay Village and other suburbs in the area
Radical Theory/Critical Praxis: Academic Geography Beyond the Academy?
Abstract included in text
2020 Academic Excellence Showcase Welcome Video
A brief welcome message to WOU\u27s 2020 Academic Excellence Showcase participants from WOU President Rex Fuller and WOU Provost Rob Winningham
Adventures of a currency trader : a fable about trading, courage, and doing the right thing / Rob Booker.
Includes index.Book fair 2012.xv, 221 pages :Praise for ADVENTURES of a CURRENCY TRADER "A truly easy, unique, and enjoyable read! Rob has done it onceagain to teach us in the funniest way possible...
how not to make themost common trading mistakes. If you are tired of reading how-tobooks, this is perfect for you. I highly recommend this book to alltraders. Everyone will learn something about themselves by readingthis book."—Kathy Lien, author, Day Trading the Currency Market,and Chief Strategist, www.dailyfx.com"Adventures of a Currency Trader is a must read foranyone who has ever traded or is thinking about trading in theForex markets. Rob Booker has a unique way of taking years ofmarket knowledge and transforming it into an educational andentertaining experience. It has quickly become a cult classic in mytrading library!"—H. Jack Bouroudjian, Principal, Brewer Investment Group"Brilliant! Rob's humor and humanity shine through in thisparable about trading and life. Filled with wisdom and wit, it's anexhilarating rollercoaster ride through the peaks and valleys ofthe learning curve, with many valuable lessons learned along theway."—Ed Ponsi, President, FXEducator.com"Rob's fable of everyman 'Harry Banes' is destined to become atrading classic. This is both the missing piece and the foundationthat comes before the strategies and methodologies. The search forthe Holy Grail begins and ends in the heart and mind. The journeyis authentic and real and if you're willing to take it with Rob,you will be rewarded in the end. Seldom has psychology and wisdombeen so entertaining!"—Raghee Horner, trader and author of Forex Trading forMaximum Profit and Days of Forex Trading"In a series of insightful and entertaining vignettes, RobBooker teaches both the novice and the experienced trader some hardwon truths about the currency market. It's a must read book writtenby a guy who survived the trenches and went on to prosper in thebiggest and most competitive financial market in the world."—Boris Schlossberg, Senior Currency Strategist, Forex CapitalMarkets LLC, and author of Technical Analysis of the CurrencyMarke
Hokum!
Hokum!, the first book to take a comprehensive view of short-subject slapstick comedy in the early sound era, challenges the received wisdom that sound destroyed the slapstick tradition. Author Rob King explores the slapstick short’s Depression-era development against a backdrop of changes in film industry practice, comedic tastes, and moviegoing culture. Each chapter is grounded in case studies of comedians and comic teams, including the Three Stooges, Laurel and Hardy, and Robert Benchley. The book also examines how the past legacy of silent-era slapstick was subsequently reimagined as part of a nostalgic mythology of Hollywood’s youth. “A valuable contribution to historiography in its ability to fill a hole in contemporary film history, increasing our understanding of both the (perceived) narrowed place of the comedy film short in the 1930s and the production and reception of slapstick comedy during that era.” -KATHRYN FULLER-SEELEY, Professor of Radio-Television-Film, University of Texas at Austin “With solid research, jewel-like prose, and plenty of wry humor, Rob King convincingly busts the myths and chases away the nostalgia for silent film comedy. Instead, we leave with a lasting sense of the form’s persistent cultural relevance.” -DONALD CRAFTON, author of Shadow of a Mouse “Hokum! moves deftly through questions of performance, aesthetics, technology, political economy, trade practices, and popular reception to convincingly unseat deeply entrenched understandings of the transition to sound and its impact on the history of screen comedy. This book is some of the smartest film history being written today.” -MARK LYNN ANDERSON, author of Twilight of the Idols ROB KING is Associate Professor at Columbia University’s School of the Arts and author of the award-winning The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture
Together in Mission: A Model for Flourishing Male/Female Ministry Partnerships in InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA
In this dissertation, I start by surveying the literature regarding male/female ministry partnerships, both in InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA and in the broader egalitarian theological community. After a thorough review, I posit that the literature reveals a gap around intentionality; that is, while there are values in place for flourishing male/female ministry partnerships both in InterVarsity and in the egalitarian community, there is an absence of blueprints for how to make those values a reality.
In response, I entered into a triangulated research protocol that surfaced ten attributes for flourishing male/female ministry partnerships in InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA. Such partnerships will be personally satisfying and missionally effective when they are marked by a vision for freely shared power, a belief that embracing difference advances the mission, a commitment to communicate, a corporate sensitivity to gender dynamics, a value for holistic friendships, a shared egalitarian theological conviction, the practice of public affirmation and modeling, a personal awareness of gender brokenness, thoughtful interpersonal boundaries, and a consistent learner’s posture.
Operating with the belief that the training pathway will be the more effective way to help staff throughout the organization engage these characteristics, I put forward a training model that groups the attributes into three domains; namely, the inner life, community culture, and intentional practices. When these three domains intersect, male/female ministry partnerships in InterVarsity are more likely to become places of flourishing.
Finally, I articulate five concrete recommendations for how InterVarsity could fill its intentionality gap by moving forward with focused training in the area of flourishing male/female ministry partnerships. Specifically, I encourage the organization to strongly consider articulating the need for training in male/female ministry partnerships, training every staff in the model, establishing a variety of training forms, hiring gender diversity personnel, and forming a network of champions. Purposefully engaging these things should ensure that male/female ministry partnerships could flourish throughout the organization.
Mentor: Elizabeth L. Glanville, Ph
Rob and Bert in Tokyo
This essay is steeped in contradiction: it is as much an attempt at mourning, coping, and letting go as it is an exercise in remembrance, rediscovery, and reconnection. One of the many areas of international legal scholarship where Rob Cryer left his mark is his oeuvre on the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE). To pay tribute to, and get re-acquainted with, Rob-the-person, I re-read his 2010 article on the ‘dignified dissenter’ in Tokyo, Dutch Judge Bert Röling. In that article, Rob uses the memoranda and the opinion of Bert-the-judge to assess his conceptual and legal contributions to the IMTFE judgment. They also serve him as a vehicle to get a better grasp of the author behind the text and the values and dilemmas that shaped Röling’s positions on the IMTFE bench. What more can we learn and understand about Rob Cryer while ‘reading Rob reading Bert’? What aspects of Röling’s legacy did he choose to foreground, and what qualities did he appreciate most? How did Rob treat his character when shedding light on the more contentious elements of Röling’s work? Even if this essay fails in its therapeutic purpose, it might still add a few mosaic pieces to the collective construction of Rob’s portrait in this volume
Sub-Series 4: Publications : Affirmation and Affirmation News - Documents Found with Newsletters, 1994-1997
A paper discussing the author, Rob Casteel, and his struggle with AIDS
- …
