3,450 research outputs found
Quigley, Maxwell Timothy, H1552
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/412048Surname: QUIGLEY. Given Name(s) or Initials: MAXWELL TIMOTHY. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: H1552. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 46185.227989
Item: [2016.0049.44312] "Quigley, Maxwell Timothy, H1552
064. Bach\u27s Credo Fugue with Dr. Maxwell
Dr. David Maxwell, the Louis A. Fincke and Anna B. Shine Professor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, shares some insights about a piece from Johann Sebastian Bach based on a hymn from Martin Luther, “We All Believe in One True God,” from the organ in the Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus. Seminary Associate Professor of Historical Theology Dr. Erik Herrmann sings the first stanza of the hymn to assist Maxwell in exploring the piece. Learn more at Concordia Theology.https://scholar.csl.edu/cjc/1065/thumbnail.jp
060. Bach on the Holy Spirit with Dr. David Maxwell
Dr. David Maxwell, the Louis A. Fincke and Anna B. Shine Professor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, shares some insights about the Pentecost hymn, “Come, Holy Ghost, Creator Blest” (LSB 498), from the organ in the Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus. He shares how J.S. Bach transforms, as only Bach can, an ancient hymn to the Holy Spirit. Learn more at Concordia Theology.https://scholar.csl.edu/cjc/1061/thumbnail.jp
Episode 21: The Personal Evolution of Faith and Learning with David Dunham, Jeff Groeling, and Jewerl Maxwell
In this week\u27s episode, Timothy sits down with David Dunham, Academic Engagement Librarian, and Dr. Jeff Groeling, Professor of Communication, for a conversation about the evolution of a personal perspective of faith-learning integration. We know that we are constantly growing and as our understanding of faith and our discipline grows, our understanding of the integration of the two ought to grow as well. Also in this episode is Timothy\u27s conversation with Dr. Jewerl Maxwell, Provost. Timothy and Jewerl explore the provost\u27s perspective on faith-pedagogy integration and where the University has opportunities ahead for the development of strategy, integrity, and trust.
The segment New Faculty Voices returns this episode with an introduction to Dr. Margaret Chasara, Assistant Professor of Economics
Tuttiett, Mary Gleed [pseud. Maxwell Gray] (1846–1923), novelist
Biographical entry of popular female author Maxwell Gray
Foreign direct investment in a macroeconomic framework : finance, efficiency, incentives, and distortions
Does foreign direct investment (FDI) increase domestic investment, or does it provide additional foreign exchange for a pre-existing current account deficit, or some linear combination of the two? The author investigates this question for a group of five Pacific Basin countries and a control group of 11 other developing countries. For the sample of all 16 developing countries, the author finds that FDI does not provide additional balance of payments financing for a pre-existing current account deficit. In the control group of 11 developing countries, FDI is associated with reduced domestic investment - implying that FDI to those countries is simply a close substitute for other capital inflows. For the five Pacific Basin market economies, however, FDI raises domestic investment by the full extent of the FDI inflow. The author finds that FDI has a significantly negative impact on national saving in the sample of all 16 developing countries. For the control group, this negative effect is similar in magnitude to FDI's negative effect on domestic investment - implying a zero effect on the current account. But FDI's negative effect on national saving in the five Pacific Basin developing market economies implies that FDI could have more of a negative effect on the current account than through increased domestic investment alone. The author also investigates the impact of FDI on economic growth in these 16 countries, taking into account distortions in the economies. He estimates reduced-form current account equations, and presents an analytical framework for estimating FDI's effect on economic growth in the presence of incentive-disincentive packages and other economic distortions. He illustrates his framework using indicators of foreign trade and financial distortions. His main conclusion: the effect of FDI differs markedly from one group of countries to another. FDI has a negative effect on economic growth in the control group. It has the same positive effect on growth as domestically financed investment does in the Pacific Basin countries. The main cause for the different effect is the low level of distortion in the Pacific Basin countries.Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Foreign Direct Investment,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Macroeconomic Management
DECAY OF SOLUTIONS OF MAXWELL-KLEIN-GORDON EQUATIONS WITH ARBITRARY MAXWELL FIELD
In the author's previous work, it has been shown that solutions of Maxwell-Klein-Gordon equations in R3+1 possess some form of global strong decay properties with data bounded in some weighted energy space. In this paper, we prove pointwise decay estimates for the solutions for the case when the initial data are merely small on the scalar field but can be arbitrarily large on the Maxwell field. This extends the previous result of Lindblad and Sterbenz, in which smallness was assumed both for the scalar field and the Maxwell field.SCI(E)ARTICLE81829-1902
[Timothy Maguire at Camp Lejeune]
Photograph of Marine corporal Timothy Maguire, administrator at Maxwell Hall in Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. Maguire, who lost his right arm to a bomb in Iraq and has several scars on his temple, stands next to other Marine soldiers and faces the right in front of a metal file drawer. This image is copyrighted
Maxwell Whiteman collection of Hendricks family papers undated, 1799-1872, 1971
Collection consists of Hendricks family papers that were in the possession of Maxwell Whiteman, author of Cooper For America. The collection includes accounts and business correspondence written to Harmon Hendricks primarily from trade metal agents Solomon Moses (1774-1857) and Joseph Lyon Moss (1804-1874). An invitation to the third annual meeting of the Coppers Manufacturers Association is also available. The collection also contains a copy of Whiteman's book, photographs of illustrations Whiteman used for Cooper in America, and a photograph of Edmund HendricksSid LapidusMr. Sid Lapidu
073. Ten Commandments and Lutheran Music from the Organ Bench
Dr. David Maxwell, the Louis A. Fincke and Anna B. Shine Professor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, reflects on the Ten Commandments and the way they are expressed in Lutheran music, including a piece from J.S. Bach, from the organ in the Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus.https://scholar.csl.edu/cjc/1074/thumbnail.jp
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