380 research outputs found
[Letter from Cuthbert Lee to James Ferdinand McCan - March 19, 1925]
Letter from Cuthbert Lee to James Ferdinand McCan, inviting McCan to the American Federation of Arts. Lee discusses the Western art market, the benefits of joining the federation, and that McCan was invited on an ad hoc basis due to his "connection with art" (invitations normally requiring a referral by a member)
St. Cuthbert, Ascet, Bishop and Saint of Anglo-Saxon Church
The author presents one of the best-known figures of northumbrian Church, in time of the transitional period from paganism to Christianity. On the base of two Lives of St. Cuthbert (The Anonymous life, Bede’s prose life) author describe life of Saint (childhood, youth, a monk, solitary life, a prior of Melrose and Lindisfarne, bishop of Northumbria). Finely author describes the spread of the cult of St. Cuthbert in Ireland, Scotland, North of England and Continent
Randolph Co Marker, Cuthbert GA
Randolph Co Marker Cuthbert GA
This marker is located outside the county Courthouse in Cuthbert, Georgia.
It reads as :
Randolph County was created by Act of Dec. 20, 1828 from Lee County. Originally Randolph County included all of what is now Stewart and Quitman and part of Terrell and Clay Counties. It was named for `John Randolph of Roanoke` (1773-1833), Virginia statesman, for many years a member of the House of Representatives and Senate. He actively opposed the War of 1812 and the Missouri Compromise. First officers of this County, commissioned Jan. 12, 1830, were: Michael H. Hinch, Sheriff; Thomas R. Mangham, Clerk Superior Court; John M. Dennis, Clerk Inferior Court; Arnold E. Bloodworth, Surveyor; Joseph Day, Coroner.
GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1956https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/historical_architecture_main/4696/thumbnail.jp
Among the Deep Sea Fishers, volume 12, issue 2 (July 1914)
Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell [illustration] -- Quest and conquest in Labrador / Wilfred T. Grenfell -- Off Fortune Head / Cuthbert Lee -- The mission hospitals -- The Seamen's Institute -- "I have called you friends" / Wilfred T. Grenfell -- The mission fleet -- Horse Island or St. Barbe -- Association items -- Annual Report of the Labrador Needlework Guild / Elizabeth Macklem -- Editorial notes.Includes map: Labrador and Newfoundland (p. [51]), showing Grenfell Missions, Moravian Missions, and co-operative stores.Among the Deep Sea Fishers: the Official Organ of the International Grenfell Association. This journal was published quarterly from 1903 to 1981 with the twofold purpose of providing "a record of Mission activities [and] also a strong and convincing appeal to every supporter and friend of Dr. Grenfell's work." The articles describe mission life, services and experiences. The Mission began under the auspices of the Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen but later a separate mission, the International Grenfell Association, was formed by Dr. Wilfred Grenfell
The race. By Mercurius Spur, Esq. [electronic resource] : With notes. By Faustinus Scriblerus.
Mercurius Spur = Cuthbert Shaw.With a half-title.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
THE THAMES-LEE WATER MAIN.
The Paper describes the design and construction of a concrete-lined tunnel, together with the necessary pumping plant, which will be used to transfer water from the River Thames to the Lee Valley storage reservoirs of the Metropolitan Water Board. This tunnel is believed to be the longest in Europe and the longest tunnel in soft strata in the world. This tunnel main has been made necessary because insufficient water is available from the River Lee to meet the needs of East London. The main was designed as a gravity main. Electrically driven boreholetype pumps located in a shaft at the Lee Valley end of the main deliver the water into the reservoirs. Whilst the shafts were lined with bolted reinforced concrete and cast iron segmental rings of conventional design. the tunnel was lined with unreinforced tapered concrete blocks which were expanded against the ground under the pressure of the rams of the shield used in driving the tunnel, thus avoiding the use of grout or bolts. Other features dealt with in the Paper include a new form of rotary shield which sustained a rate of driving of 360 ft per week for long periods, lining the tunnel with cement mortar by mechanical means, the design and construction of a siphon intake, and a Venturi meter in tunnel. </jats:p
Assessing the exposure risk and impacts of pharmaceuticals in the environment on individuals and ecosystems
Copyright @ 2013 The authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.The use of human and veterinary pharmaceuticals is increasing. Over the past decade, there has been a proliferation of research into potential environmental impacts of pharmaceuticals in the environment. A Royal Society-supported seminar brought together experts from diverse scientific fields to discuss the risks posed by pharmaceuticals to wildlife. Recent analytical advances have revealed that pharmaceuticals are entering habitats via water, sewage, manure and animal carcases, and dispersing through food chains. Pharmaceuticals are designed to alter physiology at low doses and so can be particularly potent contaminants. The near extinction of Asian vultures following exposure to diclofenac is the key example where exposure to a pharmaceutical caused a population-level impact on non-target wildlife. However, more subtle changes to behaviour and physiology are rarely studied and poorly understood. Grand challenges for the future include developing more realistic exposure assessments for wildlife, assessing the impacts of mixtures of pharmaceuticals in combination with other environmental stressors and estimating the risks from pharmaceutical manufacturing and usage in developing countries. We concluded that an integration of diverse approaches is required to predict 'unexpected' risks; specifically, ecologically relevant, often long-term and non-lethal, consequences of pharmaceuticals in the environment for wildlife and ecosystems
Brief sketch of the first settlement of the county of Schoharie, by the Germans : being an answer to a circular letter addressed to the author by the Historical and Philosophical Society of the State of New York /
Reprint of: Scoharie, [N.Y.] : Printed for the author by L. Cuthbert, 1823.Mode of access: Internet
Girls Like Soccer, Too
Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "Randolph Cuthbert from Tinidad gives instruction to Laurie McCoy and Karla Lee, both of Oklahoma City during Bethany Nazarene College's recent soccer camp.
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Capturing Liveness: Using projections to illustrate the modern human experience
The nature of “liveness” is the subject of much theoretical debate as our culture plunges deeper into the act of recording and reproducing performance. Theorists like Philip Auslander and Peggy Phelan have tried to define liveness as it opposes this “mediatized” condition, but as a millenial who has experienced a digital as well as physical existence, I ask why can’t liveness encompass both worlds? I turn to renowned scenic designer Robert Edmond Jones to explain the theoretical lens I employed in my design capstone project Random with a Purpose XXVI: Multiverse (RWAP). Using projected camera feeds, layered projection surfaces, and a system of live video mixing I sought to illustrate the multiplicity of self as it spans the live and mediatized. Regarding the sole performer as multiple allowed the audience to connect with them on a deeper level and experience a truly “live” event
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