11,051 research outputs found
Under an orange glow at night, the Australian bush sits like an oil painting [picture] /
Part of collection: Firestorm 2003.; Title supplied by photographer.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3123512. "CFA Captain Danny Cook expresses a deep sorrow in watching the bush slowly destroyed by fire as it moves through the high plains of East Gippsland during the summer of 2003."--Simon O'Dwyer
A fire truck moving at full speed to contain a fire line, races past two firemen dousing one man with water [picture] /
Part of collection: Firestorm 2003.; Title supplied by photographer.; Signed by photographer in margin below image.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3121783. "I shoot five frames before falling to the ground in tears of laughter with CFA captain Danny Cook. For hours I had watched him pushed to the edge of his physical limits. Wiping tears from his eyes, he turned and said. 'Well, if you can laugh in hell, nothing can beat you.'"--Simon O'Dwyer
Dishes of Rotherham
© 2022 Simon GrennanCooking, dishing up and eating together might appear to be ordinary activities. Across every time and culture, they are also important community activities, providing identity, skills, a sense of connectedness, tradition and mental as well as physical well-being.
In the 1820s, 1830s and 1840s, one of the most famous and spectacular ways to dish up was provided by the porcelain tableware made by the Rockingham Pottery in Rotherham. The Rockingham Works made some of the most colourful, exuberant, lavish and expensive tableware available at the time, for a national and international clientele.
This book brings together food made by 10 cooks from contemporary Rotherham and some of the Rockingham tableware from Rotherham Museums, Arts and Heritage collection. The cooks come from different cooking traditions, including Pakistani, Sudanese, Guinean, Ukrainian, Czech, Yemeni, Malaysian and British. Each cook visited the Museum, chose an item of Rockingham tableware, and then cooked and styled their dishes to be served on the Rockingham items themselves.
Professor Simon Grennan organised the dishing up and worked with each cook and with photographer Sally Robinson to spectacularly style their food and dish it up on the Rockingham. Stills from a new film by David Sánchez Marín about the making of these displays appear alongside Sally’s photographs of the cooks' food. Portraits of each cook, drawn by Simon, recipes and personal stories from the cooks complete the work
War of Ghosts: Marshall, Veblen and Bartlett
The article discusses the historical relationship between economics and the tradition of experimental psychology established at Cambridge University. At the same time, we explore how the Cambridge model of the mind was implemented in the United States by Thorstein Veblen, who claimed instinct theory as a novel foundation for his evolutionary-institutional economics. While Veblen identified Alfred Marshall's economics with an older version of psychology, our comparison of the psychological thought of these two economists, as well as our investigation into the social dimensions and possibilities of the Cambridge psychological tradition as developed in the early twentieth century by F. C. Bartlett, points to substantial common ground
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/5e17b7c9-4bca-4fcf-8784-0915783532dd/thumb/128.jpgIt is possible that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/c9f13811-9c93-449b-8b79-31dd26e7a981/thumb/128.jpgIt is probable that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/413865c0-390a-449d-9d4e-f69f66754b8e/thumb/128.jpgIt is possible that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/48a1abe6-3896-473b-bc17-0796ead5e587/thumb/128.jpgIt is probable that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
The poetry of Raymond Souster.
Thesis (M.A.) - Department of English - Simon Fraser Universit
Dublin Simon Annual impact report 2015.
Figures included in this report are based on numbers accessing Dublin Simon Community’s services in 2015. At this time there are over 2,900 adults and 2,000 children in emergency accommodation in the Dublin region alone, some long term. Almost 1,000 families are currently facing homelessness, many accessing hotel rooms with no areas to cook or clean, and often just a bed to share. Still more than 100 people are sleeping on our city’s pavements and in parks. There are no places for these people to move onto and meanwhile the trauma and stress will have a dramatic and everlasting impact on their lives
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