1,069 research outputs found

    Clinton F and Beatrice Ward

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    Clinton F. and Beatrice Ward Parvin of Old Manatee (East Bradenton). She is the author of "I Remember, a family memoir." Copy on file at the Manatee County Central Library

    La Croix et les idoles d'après l'apologie d'Athanase 'Contre les paiens'

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    Through the analysis of some significant passages of Athanasius' apology «Against the Pagans on the Incarnation of the Word», and also thanks to their comparison with other selected texts by the same author, P. F. Beatrice tries to date this still problematic work to around the middle of the fourth century. In particular, he intends to show that Athanasius did know the Neoplatonic philosophy of his time sufficiently well and that the target of his polemic was especially Porphyry. But anti-pagan criticism also supplies Athanasius with a substantial support in his struggle with the Arian heresy which had been shared by his great precursor and adversary Eusebius of Caesarea

    750 years on : Beatrice of Nazareth revisited

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    This introductory essay to the special issue Beatrice of Nazareth (1200-1268). Milieu – Mysticism – Influence first offers a brief presentation of the life and literary legacy of the famous Cistercian nun, mystic and author who takes centre stage in the present volume. It then elucidates the emergence and subsequent international popularity of Beatrice studies, and discusses the diverse approaches that can be discerned in the current multidisciplinary scholarship on Beatrice. Finally, it explains how the five essays which are collected in this volume open up new avenues for research into the thirteenth-century Cistercian world and for future Beatrice studies

    Beatrice of Nazareth

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    Abstract: Beatrice of Nazareth (1200-1268) belongs to the first generation of women who wrote in Middle Dutch. She lived most of her life as a Cistercian nun in the Dutch-speaking area of the Duchy of Brabant (now a region in Belgium and the Netherlands). Besides having produced an extensive account of her life, because of which she is the first female vernacular author in the Middle Ages to write in the autobiographical genre, Beatrice also wrote several spiritual and mystical texts, both for herself and in the context of spiritual instruction. Although all but one of the original writings are now lost, to some degree her texts have still been preserved in Latin in the form of a medieval vita, the Vita Beatricis. This legacy complicates efforts to discern the exact number of Beatrice\u2019s writings, their content, and their purpose

    Beatrice Bishop Berle Award

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    The Beatrice Bishop Berle Award was presented to Dr. Vincent P. Dole in 1995 by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Division of Substance Abuse A gift from Mary Lee Gupta Beatrice Bishop Berle (1902-1993), was an American physician, teacher and author. Dr. Berle, who ran a neighborhood health clinic in East Harlem from 1953 until 1962, took a pioneering approach to family medicine by treating the entire family for the effects of heroin abuse by a member. She also helped to establish methadone maintenance as a significant treatment for heroin abuse. Photo by Lubosh Stepanekhttps://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/artifacts-ephemera/1041/thumbnail.jp

    W. H. FERGUSON: EARLY NEBRASKA ENTREPRENEUR

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    The main purpose of this study is to explain how and why William Henry Ferguson (1856-1937) became one of Nebraska\u27s most successful entrepreneurs. This task has required a careful examination of the business methods of Ferguson. These methods included a commitment to investing and the development of management strategies which allowed him to direct successfully his broadening interests. Because of constraints of time and space, this study is limited to the years, 1890 through 1903, the era critical for establishing the foundations of Ferguson\u27s business empire. During this time, Ferguson\u27s major investment was in grain elevators and he eventually owned approximately ninety elevators. With the profits from his elevators he gradually began to diversify so that he came to own a large amount of farmland, a dairy, a brick plant, and Capitol Beach Amusement Park, as well as an interest in many other companies including over one million dollars of the stock of what became Beatrice Foods. The focus of this study is largely on how Ferguson operated his grain elevators. The organization is basically topical rather than chronological. Each of the chapters (except Chapter One) treats a particular business trait of Ferguson. Chapter Two deals with his patterns of investing. Chapter Three details his approach to keeping business records. Chapter Four portrays his management of personnel. Chapter Five sets forth his relationship with his customers. Chapter Six analyzes the firmness and dispatch with which he acted. Chapter Seven sums up his compulsion to keeping costs low. Chapter Eight relates his efforts at reducing the rigors of competition. Each chapter attempts to indicate how a particular trait of Ferguson unfolded over the period of time when Ferguson established the basis of his financial success

    How to make your stories exciting

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    A blog post on the Scottish Book Trust website. Author Beatrice Colin provides creative writing tips for aspiring young authors

    A. T. McClintock Letter

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    A. T. McClintock Letter. Description: Letter sent to W. H. Ferguson, regarding the expansion of Beatrice Creamery Company's ice cream business

    Paradoxes and management approaches of competing for work in creative professional service firms

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    Despite their business relevance, creative professional service firms are under-researched, in particular with regard to how they compete for work. Competing for work is key to survival, but also extremely challenging due to the complexity of the services offered. In this paper we use a paradox framework to investigate the opposing demands that creative professional service firms experience when competing for work. Based on a set of semi-structured interviews in the context of architectural competitions, we show that creative professional service firms face two interwoven paradoxes which relate to the strategic intent (why to compete) and the design intent (what to propose) of client propositions. We describe these paradoxes and explain how organizations manage and cope with them through both synthesis and separation management approaches. Contributions of this study can be found in theorizing paradoxes of competing for work from the professional service provider's perspective, and in fostering the firms’ paradoxical mind-set, which facilitates the acceptance and resolution of complexity and different competing demands.Accepted Author ManuscriptPublic Commissionin

    Beatrice as a Theologian of Deification in the "Vita Beatricis"

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    The literary and spiritual-theological strategy of the anonymous author of the Vita Beatricis has attracted the attention of a number of researchers in the past, especially since the author of the Vita integrated an adaptation of the Seven Manners of Love into his text. The Latin author employs a complex, varied strategy. In this contribution, the theological dimension in the text is discussed, in the perspective of mainstream thirteenth-century theology. The anonymous author consistently presents Beatrice as a theological author, and especially as a theologian whose life and work bring to the fore a theological theme that was highly contested in the thirteenth century, namely that of deification
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