16,081 research outputs found

    Interview with Stuart Moore, filmmaker, September 1976

    No full text
    Interview with Stuart Moore, filmmaker, produced by Eric Von Schrader and Double Helix, is a conversation with abstract filmmaker and electronic sound designer Stuart Moore conducted in his converted garage studio. Moore relates how he started making his own films, his approach and structure in filmmaking, and the concepts and content within abstract film, September 1976

    Claiming places: reading Acts through the lens of ancient colonization Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament., 525./ Eric C. Moore.

    No full text
    Description based upon print version of record.This "is a revised form of my doctoral dissertation completed at Emory University in 2017."--Page v.Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-238) and indexes."In this study, Eric C. Moore examines Acts of the Apostles against the backdrop of colonization in the ancient Mediterranean world. He shows how common cultural beliefs concerning the foundation of new communities shape Luke's account as well." --Introduction : Colonization as a Framework for Reading Acts -- Locating This Book's Approach to (Luke-) Acts -- Colonization - An Analytic Framework -- The Origins of the Cult Community in Jerusalem (Acts 1-5) -- Antioch of Syria : Colony and Mother Community -- Pisidian Antioch and the Rhetoric of "Second-Generation" Colonization -- Conclusion -- Appendix : Abridged Chart of Greek, Hellenistic, and Roman Colonies.1 online resource (xiii, 270 pages

    City of Sydney, Refuse Incinerator, [Pyrmont, New South Wales, 2] [picture] /

    No full text
    Title from acquisition documentation.; Part of the collection: Eric Milton Nicholls collection.; Incinerator designed by Walter Burley Griffin.; Inscriptions: "Moore Park design","Pyrmont"--In pencil left on verso; "W. B. Griffin, E. M. Nicholls","Reproduced by Leica Photo Service, Kyle House, Sydney"--Stamped on verso.; Condition: Good.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3603884-s424; Purchased from Marie and Glynn Nicholls, 2006.; Vernon inventory, Pt 1/14 No.5d. This incinerator was intended to be built at Moore Park, but eventually was built in Pyrmont

    ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Report

    No full text
    Publ. comme no. 5, 1993 de la revue, ASHE-ERIC Higher Education ReportBibliogr.: p. 97-111Index: p. 113-11

    Moore House burned in 1923 [picture].

    No full text
    Part of the collection: Eric Milton Nicholls collection.; Title from verso and acquisitions documentation.; Condition: Good.; ""FLW. Moore House?Burned in 1923"---Pencil inscription on verso.; Photograph probably taken by Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3603884-s849; Purchased from Marie and Glynn Nicholls, 2006.; Vernon inventory, Pt. 11/2 No.5

    Eric Fitch Daglish (1892–1966): naturalist, illustrator, author and editor

    No full text
    Eric Fitch Daglish (1892–1966) was a naturalist by inclination, a free-lance author and editor in business and, by practice, a wood-engraver of high repute. Taught wood-engraving skills by Paul Nash, he was a close friend also of other famous engravers (John Nash, Eric Gill) within the Society of Wood Engravers. He applied these skills to illustrating his own books for popular audiences on topics ranging from flowers to birds, beasts and the English countryside. Fluent in German, he translated books from that language to supplement his income in the years succeeding the First World War. He is perhaps best known for his bird books: Woodcuts of British birds, The life story of birds and Birds of the British Isles, but was also a prolific writer about dogs. His oeuvre is examined, and his contribution compared with other contemporary bird artists who embraced wood-engraving techniques. A bibliography of his natural history works as author and as editor is included. </jats:p

    From LaGrange to Obama’s Team: Michelle Moore on Community Power

    No full text
    In this episode of Cimiify, Eric welcomes Michelle Moore, a distinguished climate policy expert and former federal environmental executive under the Obama administration. Michelle shares insights from her journey growing up in rural Georgia to impactful roles in national climate policy, including reducing the government's energy bill by $11 billion. The episode delves into her motivations rooted in community and faith, her work with the non-profit Groundswell to promote community power and clean energy projects in underserved areas, and the importance of values-based system change. Michelle's philosophy of 'doing well by doing good' and her latest book, Rural Renaissance, are highlighted. The conversation also explores actionable steps individuals can take to support climate justice and policy changes. After the interview, design researcher Jacqui Himmel joins Eric to unpack the episode providing the most important calls to action from the discussion that you can implement today!US Department of Education’s Title IX Grant Program - Department of Global Studies at the University of Illinoi

    CFC12 data from Moore and Dahlen (2008)

    No full text
    Contains data of the 12-item, 5-point Consideration of Future Consequences scale (Strathman et al., 1994), reported in Moore and Dahlen (2008). N = 31

    CFC12 data from Moore and Dahlen (2008)

    No full text
    Contains data of the 12-item, 5-point Consideration of Future Consequences scale (Strathman et al., 1994), reported in Moore and Dahlen (2008). N = 31
    corecore