(#1) Robert Spear Dunning Artist of Still Life Paintings Field Trip to Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, MD Presented by Darren Mohamed, Wilson College. (#2) Hello everyone. In this presentation, I shall spotlight still life art by exploring the life and works of Robert Spear Dunning and his contemporaries, who distinguished themselves by their use of this style. (#3) Still Life Art has been around since ancient times. This is a Still Life painting by ancient Egyptians ‘Offerings
Have you heard about NLP? “NLP stands for Neuro-Linguistic Programming, a name that encompasses the three most influential components involved in producing human experience; neurology, language, and programming” (Robert). It was created in 1971, by Richard Brandler and Frank Pucelik who were students at Kresge College at the University of California Santa Cruz. By using Neuro-Linguistic Programming is possible to modal our personal goals in a way that we will never feel demotivated. It is how we
Hans Frank served as a personal legal advisor to Adolf Hitler and was former “Generalgouverneur of Poland” a region which soon became the testing ground for the conspirators' program of "Lebensraum." Frank referred the policy which he envisioned to put into effect by declaring: "Poland shall be treated like a colony; the Poles will become the slaves of the Greater German World Empire." Frank can be considered the emblematic ‘desk perpetrator’, never personally drawing the trigger but managerially
Lady Macduff of Macbeth In reading Shakespeare's tragic drama Macbeth, one meets only one good woman - Lady Macduff. The remaining female characters are basically evil. Let's consider mainly Lady Macduff and only briefly the three witches. Blanche Coles states in Shakespeare's Four Giants that Macbeth's wife had considerable leverage over her husband's mind: This was her opportunity to do as she had promised herself she would do after she had read the letter - to pour
” 4. Connected to Nature “Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you.” --Frank Lloyd Wright By nature I mean a world predominantly uninterfered with by man. Building in a way that is sensitive to what is natural, its resources and habitats is a key issue in current debates about sustainable design. That said, it is nearly one hundred years since Frank Lloyd Wright offered architectural proposals showing how to live in harmony with the environment. He called this
Course: ARC 103 Title: Architecture and Sensitivity: A Manifesto for Sustainable Design This manifesto proposes an approach to sustainable design that I am interested in exploring during my time studying architecture. The idea of sustainability is a complex one, not without apparent contradictions. This makes it difficult to define in a wholly satisfactory manner. For the purposes of this manifesto I will advert to the definition proposed by Jason McLennan who asserts that sustainable design:
Othello contains various irregularities of time and occurrence which cause the audience to scratch their head in wonder and doubt. Let us analyze some of these shortcomings in this essay. In the Introduction to The Riverside Shakespeare Frank Kermode explains one of the difficulties in Othello: Othello murders his wife on the second night in Cyprus. The difficulty, of which Shakespeare was clearly aware, arises from the fact that this leaves no time for her to have had “stol’n
Agents identified 18 individuals as potential suspects to the murders; Cecil Price, Sam H. Bowers, Horace Doyle Barnette, Jimmy Arledge, Billy Wayne Posey, Jimmy Snowden, Alton W. Roberts, Lawrence A. Rainey, Bernard L. Akin, Travis M. Barnette, James T. Harris, Frank J. Herndon, Olen L. Burrage, Herman Tucker, Richard A. Willis, Edgar Ray Killen, Ethel Glen Barnett, and Jerry McGrew Sharpe. All of these individuals were in positions
was a painter who studied in Paris and came from Baltimore. He is Julius Robert Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer was the most important person of the twentieth century due to his creation of the School of Theoretical Physics in Berkeley, his crucial work on the development of the atomic bomb, which ended World War II, and his thoughtful opposition to the great destruction that could be wrought by the atomic bombs. Oppenheimer
Case Study 1: Understanding the Court System Chaplinsky V. New Hampshire Sherrie Davis Professor Scott H. Soc 205 April 25, 2016 Introduction The case under consideration is Fighting words and offensive speech of Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire 1942. Provocative words or indecent words that are either harming or might bring about the listener to promptly hit back or break the peace are considered to be the part of fighting words and offensive speech. Utilization of such words is not considered