115,230 research outputs found

    Greater than Caesar: Christology and Empire in the Fourth Gospel.

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    Title: Greater than Caesar: Christology and Empire in the Fourth Gospel; Author: Tom Thatcher; Publisher: Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2009; ISBN: 978080066339

    Integrated transfers of terrigenous organic matter to lakes at their watershed level: A combined biomarker and GIS analysis

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    Terrigenous organic matter (TOM) transfer from a watershed to a lake plays a key role in contaminants fate and greenhouse gazes emission in these aquatic ecosystems. In this study, we linked physiographic and vegetation characteristics of a watershed with TOM nature deposited in lake sediments. TOM was characterized using lignin biomarkers as indicators of TOM sources and state of degradation. Geographical information system (GIS) also allowed us to integrate and describe the landscape morpho-edaphic characteristics of a defined drainage basin. Combining these tools we found a significant and positive relationship (R2 = 0.65, p < 0.002) between mean slope of the watershed and the terrigenous fraction estimated by Λ8 in recent sediments. The mean slope also correlated with the composition of TOM in recent sediments as P/(V + S) and 3,5Bd/V ratios significantly decreased with the steepness of the watersheds (R2 = 0.57, p < 0.021 and R2 = 0.71, p < 0.004, respectively). More precisely, areas with slopes comprised between 4° and 10° have a major influence on TOM inputs to lakes. The vegetation composition of each watershed influenced the composition of recent sediments of the sampled lakes. The increasing presence of angiosperm trees in the watershed influenced the export of TOM to the lake as Λ8 increased significantly with the presence of this type of vegetation (R2 = 0.44, p < 0.019). A similar relationship was also observed with S/V ratios, an indicator of angiosperm sources for TOM. The type of vegetation also greatly influenced the degradation state of OM. In this study, we were able to determine that low-sloped areas (0–2°) act as buffer zones for lignin inputs and by extension for TOM loading to sediments. The relative contribution of TOM from the soil organic horizons also increased in steeper watersheds. This study has significant implications in our understanding of the fate of TOM in lacustrine ecosystems

    Transferring to Gardner-Webb was Right Decision for Softball Player

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    Searching for a college that felt more like a family, softball player Christa Fullwood (’10) contacted Coach Tom Cole at Gardner-Webb University. Her best friend and former teammate was there, and college was the first time they hadn’t played together in over 10 years. “I called Coach Cole and discussed the possibility of coming to Gardner-Webb, and he was open to it,” recalled Fullwood, a native of Wilmington, N.C.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/gardner-webb-newscenter-archive/1874/thumbnail.jp

    An equivariant Quillen theorem

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    A classical theorem due to Quillen (1969) identifies the unitary bordism ring with the Lazard ring, which classifies the universal one-dimensional commutative formal group law. We prove an equivariant generalization of this result by identifying the homotopy theoretic Z/2\mathbb{Z}/2-equivariant unitary bordism ring, introduced by tom Dieck (1970), with the Z/2\mathbb{Z}/2-equivariant Lazard ring, introduced by Cole-Greenlees-Kriz (2000). Our proof combines a computation of the homotopy theoretic Z/2\mathbb{Z}/2-equivariant unitary bordism ring due to Strickland (2001) with a detailed investigation of the Z/2\mathbb{Z}/2-equivariant Lazard ring.Comment: 19 pages; v3: Minor changes. Accepted for publication in Adv. Mat

    Where Have All the Bootboys Gone? Skinhead Style and Graphic Subcultures

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    Exhibition of Skinhead graphics, including print material and photographs from the archives of Toby Mott, Gavin Watson and Toast. Limited edition Riso catalogue published, including essays by Garry Bushell, Tom Vague, Matt Worley, Shaun Cole, Russ Bestley and Ana Raposo

    Camas, Winter 2016-2017

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    Terrain I Knew / Seth Kantner -- Passengers / Terri Nichols -- No Meat / Gibson Collins -- The Summeriest Concert Ever / Brian Doyle -- It\u27s About Being Lost / Mary Pauline Lowry -- Hunting Geese / Sarah Rau Peterson -- Road Trance / Kevin Scott Chess -- A Map of Vaughn, New Mexico / Jeffery Alfier -- We Must Not / Mackenzie Cole -- Of Elwha, Kootenai / Sam Olson -- Road Story / Abby Chew -- Global Perspective / Tom Versteeg -- Ice Out / Noelle Sullivan -- Red Wings / Tom Versteeg -- Ice Frogs / P.V. Bec

    International publication of compositions and arrangements for jazz choir: Hey Cinderella; Hold my heart to blame; Anything goes: From the songbook of Cole Porter (2009); Who wants to be a millionaire; and You're sensational medley

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    Research and develop original compositions “Hey Cinderella” arranged for Adv, Int, and Beginner levels of Jazz Choir (dur. Approx 4-5 minutes) "Hold My Heart To Blame"(selected for the Wisconsin Choral Competitions Song List) and "The Gift Of Love" for publication by Really Good Music LLC., WI., USA. Also arrangements from the concert "Anything Goes: From the songbook of Cole Porter (2009)" - "Cole Porter Latin Medley", "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" and "You're Sensational Medley" devised and arranged for The Orpheus Choir Wellington NZ, for publication by Really Good Music LLC., WI., USA

    Guide to the Cole Danehower Collection

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    This collection is comprised of materials from Cole Danehower’s careers, both his time as a wine writer and before he relocated to Oregon. Materials include articles written by Danehower, information collected on a variety of topics related to the wine industry, interviews he conducted, books he acquired over time, and his on-site photographs. There are also materials celebrating his wedding and honoring his death

    Lawyering for Social Justice

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    It is an honor, albeit a sad one, to be invited to write this Essay in commemoration of Tom Stoddard and as commentary on his final publication. I first met Tom in the late 1970s, when we both joined the Board of Directors of the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. Both of us were American Civil Liberties Union staff attorneys, Tom for the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) and I for the Reproducfive Freedom Project in the national office. Later, for the last half of the 1980s, Tom was the Executive Director of Lambda during the same period that I was Director of the ACLU Lesbian and Gay Rights and AIDS Projects. Much of my professional life has been spent in tandem with Tom\u27s, and his absence creates a giant gap in that world. Not many of us are pioneers, but Tom Stoddard was. He fought for equality for lesbian and gay Americans before it was respectable; he was proudly out as a gay man before it was professionally safe to be out; and he taught one of the first courses centering on the rights of lesbians and gay men in any American law school. He lived to see the lesbian and gay civil rights struggle take its place with others as a campaign for human dignity and justice

    Leverage and Alcohol Addiction

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    This paper confronts the question of whether messages can be diluted or even contradicted by the format in which they are delivered through a textual analysis of the TNT procedural drama Leverage, examining the portrayal of alcoholism in the program. The procedural drama, which often focuses on figures in law and order occupations, is characterized by close-ended episodes that often feature happy endings. Alcohol addiction has been a staple of many television programs, but these programs were mostly comedies or serial dramas. Leverage, a procedural drama with a light touch, is a modern day Robin Hood tale focused on five thieves led by an alcoholic protagonist. This paper finds that main character displays the expected negative effects of alcohol addiction but also displays positive qualities not often seen when the character is sober. The paper also examines the reactions of the protagonist’s closest colleagues to his addiction, and finds that these reactions, while prominent in the program’s first two seasons, are treated inconsistently in later seasons. The inconsistent treatment of this alcoholism in later seasons, the fantastical and often humorous nature of the program, and the procedural expectation of positive resolution to conflicts begun at the beginning of an episode often undercuts the program’s message about the dangers of alcoholism. This paper briefly contrasts the portrayal of substance abuse addiction in House, M.D., another program characterized by close-ended episodes and happy endings, with Leverage’s depiction of alcoholism. Leverage’s relative failure to accurately depict alcoholism raises questions about whether the procedural drama is the appropriate vehicle for portraying serious internal issues such as addiction
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