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Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) managing director Dean de Largie talked with Proactive's Tylah Tully about the company's key projects, Shaw and Cooletha, located in Western Australia's Pilbara region. Dean shared updates on recent sampling results, highlighting grades of up to 65% iron at the Shaw Project and over 56% iron in the Cooletha Channel Iron deposits. The Shaw Project shows promise, with a rich iron band stretching approximately seven kilometers, including a high-grade zone that's 800 meters long and 130 meters wide. Dean noted that exploration efforts in 2025 will include drilling at both Shaw and Cooletha. With nearby infrastructure from major industry players such as FMG and Rio Tinto, ACM anticipates potential interest from neighbours as they advance these assets. Dean also mentioned a strategic shift toward iron ore due to its significant potential, despite earlier lithium exploration. A new technical advisor, Stuart Robinson, is expected to help refine geological models and guide exploration activities. Stay tuned for updates as ACM moves into a pivotal year, with plans to deliver exciting developments early in 2025. #ProactiveInvestors #AustralianCriticalMinerals #ASX #IronOreProjects #PilbaraMining #ShawProject #CoolethaProject #ASXStocks #MiningUpdates #ResourceExploration #IronOre #ProactiveStudio
In this episode, Natalie interviews Stuart Robinson, the Director of St Anne's Beach Huts Apartments in the charming Victorian seaside town of Lytham St Anne's. Stuart shares his inspiring journey from a corporate telesales job to transforming the traditional beach hut experience into a modern, family-friendly getaway. Stuart discusses the challenges he faced in reintroducing beach huts to the area, including navigating council regulations and overcoming initial skepticism. With a focus on community and sustainability, Stuart highlights the unique appeal of the beach huts, which have become a beloved destination for families and even celebrities. KEY TAKEAWAY Stuart's love for beach huts stems from his commitment to family and community, emphasising the importance of creating memorable experiences for visitors at St Anne's Beach Huts. The journey to establish the beach huts involved navigating numerous obstacles, including council regulations, environmental assessments, and financial hurdles. The beach huts operate on a rental model, allowing visitors to book them for the day, which fosters a unique experience for families and groups. Residents play a crucial role in the success of the beach huts by helping to monitor and protect them, fostering a sense of community ownership and pride in the beach hut project. Utilising social media effectively helped raise awareness and attract visitors to the beach huts, demonstrating the significance of modern marketing strategies in building a successful business. BEST MOMENTS "My wife and I were walking on the promenade one day... we thought, you know what, this could really work if we can manage to pull it off." "It sounds like persistence and consistency are the things to keep you driving at." "We approached the council with the idea... but it wasn't as easy as that. We spent an awful lot of time and an awful lot of money." "There's nothing better than proving someone wrong. In fact, it's probably the worst thing you can do for me, is tell me I can't do something." "It's a service industry, isn't it? And it's invariably with people who are delighted, you know, they're happy, they're enjoying themselves." HOST BIO My name is Natalie Young. I bought a beach hut to bring joy into my life after escaping an abusive relationship and a difficult divorce. Based in Christchurch, Dorset, my beach hut is affectionally called the Salty Seagull and is located on Friars Cliff beach with sea views to the Needles on the Isle of White. It is my slice of heaven. Owning and hiring a beach hut is more complicated than I realised and I am on a constant mission to discover the best ways to manage and care for your hut. I have researched the pros and cons of renting and the best ways to market and host. The beach, the sights and the sounds of the sea bring me huge joy. I hope this podcast will bring you smiles, laughter and joy too! SOCIAL LINKS https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61559730024536&sk=about https://www.linkedin.com/company/103555627/admin/feed/posts/?feedType=following PODCAST DESCRIPTION Welcome to the Bonkers about Beach Huts podcast, the show that's all about beach huts! Whether you are thinking of buying a beach hut and don't know where to begin or if you have had a beach hut in your family for generations this podcast is for you. As I travel across the UK exploring these coastal retreats and sharing personal stories of how the humble beach hut has shaped lives, I will also be creating the UK's first beach hut map. I will give tips on where and how to buy a beach hut. And share everything you need to know about beach hut maintenance plus advice on hiring a beach hut. We will be chatting with special guests from estate agents to lock specialists, beach hut associations to beach hut builders, and artists to interior designers. If you don't know what all the fuss is about, join us every week and you too will become a little bit Bonkers Bbout Beach Huts.
Insights on Islam and TerrorismHelp Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is our last episode with Stuart on his latest book, Prayer Power. Stuart encourages us to desperately seek to engage in persistent prayer and multiplying disciples. “God doesn't expect the impossible from us but for us to expect the impossible from him. He wants us to see the face of the nation in the next disciple we minister to.”
In this, our second last episode with Stuart, he talks about the vital importance of raising prayer support. This is for every single one of us who are making disciples (whether we are so called ‘full-time' or ‘bi-vocational'). Stuart refers to forming three important prayer groups: A core group of personal prayer intercessors who pray regularly for you A wider group of committed intercessors who are also praying frequently And regular team prayer with those ‘on team' with you locally He emphasises the importance of regular and brief communication which includes how God is answering previous prayer requests. “If you don't have adequate prayer cover, then you are an endangered species.”
In our fourth episode with Stuart, we continue exploring his book Prayer Power. But what about when it feels like God doesn't answer our prayers? Stuart shares a personal story of how he persevered in prayer for his family to come to faith. We hear how God wants us to have his best in his grace and timing, not always what and when we want it. We can keep our faith alive by simply finding one or two other believers and pray with them.
Stuart continues to talk about persistent prayer, persecution and poverty being the three common threads of seeing explosive church growth around the world. We hear of his experience in China, seeing passionate and persevering prayer amongst desperate locals. Referring to seeing prayer at Crossway birthed, Stuart shares how starting a culture of prayer is a mixture of personal discipline and God's grace.
In this second episode of our summer series with Dr Stuart Robinson, Stuart reflects on international revivals that were sparked by prayer. “We can work, but unless we're working with God, its just us working. But when we pray, God works.” “The history is very clear, when God's Spirit comes to revive an entire nation, seldom does he come to the big watering holes. He comes to the little outback places where there is just a group of little faithful people who are praying and praying." Stuart starts to share some of his own prayer experiences where he waited on and encountered God. He describes how prayer doesn't come easily to us as humans. It starts through the habit of discipline. Describing how Jesus got up early in the morning to pray, Stuart encourages us to start our day in the same way.
For this summer series we are talking with Dr Stuart Robinson about his book, ‘Prayer Power: Changing The World Around You'. Stuart begins by giving us a little backstory of how he has come to deeply value prayer. After seeing breakthrough amongst an unreached people group (UPG) overseas, Stuart and his wife Margaret came back to Australia. They arrived carrying a personal experience of the power of prayer, seeing tens of thousands amongst this UPG coming to faith. The result was the birthing of Crossway, one of the largest churches in Australia. In this first bite-sized episode, whilst referring to the decline of the western church, Stuart speaks of one of the key factors where he sees explosive exponential growth of the church. Persistent, prevailing and persevering prayer. “If you want your work, your church, your life, your family to go and to grow, you have to take into account this factor of persevering and prevailing prayer. Unless we discover this in the west, then we've had it.”
This week, we have the pleasure of hosting the talented Stuart Robertson, also known as "Stuart" because, let's face it, "S.D." just sounds a bit odd on its own!
Dr Stuart RobinsonSupport the show: http://historymakersradio.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We’re talking about the Great Commission with well known author Stuart Robinson. Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr Stuart Robinson is an Author & Pastor who has a great story to tell! From a non-Christian background he became a committed follower of Jesus Christ at a young age. He sensed an immediate call to Christian ministry, which through secular University and Theological College studies, crystallised into cross-cultural mission into South Asia for many years. He also spent many years as Pastor of Crossway Baptist Church in Melbourne. During Stuart’s time as Senior Pastor, Crossway also became known as a church planting, training centre and a major incubator of cross-cultural staff all supported and sent out to many other countries. Stuart himself has ministered in over 70 countries. He transferred his Senior Pastoral responsibilities to his successor in 2009 and since then has been released to write books, three of which have reached 'best seller' status. As a speaker his major topics include prayer, church growth, cross-cultural mission and Islam. When asked to describe his life and ministry he replies that he is, 'Just a nobody who has been sent to tell anybody that Somebody died for everybody.' That Somebody is Jesus Christ whom Stuart still follows. Listen in to his story! Support the show: http://historymakersradio.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr Stuart Robinson is an Author and Pastor who has a great story to tell! From a non-Christian background he became a committed follower of Jesus Christ at a young age. He sensed an immediate call to Christian ministry, which through secular University and Theological College studies, crystallised into cross-cultural mission into South Asia for many years. He also spent many years as Pastor of Crossway Baptist Church in Melbourne. During Stuart's time as Senior Pastor, Crossway also became known as a church planting, training centre and a major incubator of cross-cultural staff all supported and sent out to many other countries. Stuart himself has ministered in over 70 countries. He transferred his Senior Pastoral responsibilities to his successor in 2009 and since then has been released to write books, three of which have reached "best seller" status. As a speaker his major topics include prayer, church growth, cross-cultural mission and Islam. When asked to describe his life and ministry he replies that he is, "Just a nobody who has been sent to tell anybody that Somebody died for everybody." That Somebody is Jesus Christ whom Stuart still follows. Listen in to his story!
McKinley discusses the Angie Dodge Case and the wrongful conviction of Christopher Tapp. Sources: Summarized Interview Transcripts- http://assets.eastidahonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/08173225/redacted-Investigation-Report-by-Stuart-Robinson.pdf Genealogical DNA Article-https://www.eastidahonews.com/2019/07/the-angie-dodge-case-from-1996-until-today-whats-happened-why-and-whats-next/ Other Sources https://www.postregister.com/news/crime_courts/judge-denies-idaho-falls-motion-to-dismiss-tapp-lawsuit/article_de2e1ff6-355d-59b3-93e2-e9eb718ee2d0.amp.html https://www.ktvb.com/amp/article/news/crime/idaho-officials-pay-26m-for-wrongful-convictions-of-2-men/277-051f8bae-f15a-4c04-8233-a75cd4da8308 https://www.angiedodge.com/tribute/ https://innocenceproject.org/cases/christopher-tapp-has-murder-conviction-vacated-after-serving-21-years/
Bishop Stuart Robinson is one of Australia's best church planters and evangelists. So how did Stuart manage to kill a church plant stone dead literally overnight?This episode is one of the most listened to Blunder Bus episode of all times. And with good reason. It's a heart breaking story of listening to bad advice, and the consequences that come with that.You've probably worked out by now that the magic secret when it comes to failure is the ability to reflect on mistakes and learn. And that's what I do in my work as a Pastoral Supervisor which I do through my business, Generation Leadership.If you are looking for a Pastoral Supervisor to help you reflect on your work and ministry practice, I currently have some openings. So go to my website to find out moreI'd love to work with you and provide a safe space to reflect on what you are currently doing, and what you can learn. Check it out!If you would like to talk to Ed about Pastoral Supervision, visit the website hereOr you can email Ed at edward@generationleadership.com.auI'd love if you would rate and review this podcastAnd thanks for being on the journey on The Blunder Bus!
Kylie + Stuart not only won Paralympic Gold Medalists in Wheelchair Rugby in Tokyo 2020 but they also have one of the strongest mindsets I have come across, although their journeys are different, they both share determination, the drive to never give up despite hurdles and really do show whats possible when your life changes dramatically - your struggle can become your strength. We chat all about their journeys, the importance of support especially within their team, not only in play but in their lives and how the strength of friendship can play a huge role in success. We also dig deep into their mindset, goals and how visualisation helped with their most recent success. I was left feeling incredibly empowered and motivated, their positivity is infectious and their will to defy and show what you can achieve if you don't give up is mind blowing. I hope you are left feeling as inspired as I am. If you want to follow or chat more with them: @kyliegrimes7 + @LeglessRobbo
Many will know Stuart Robinson as a significant leader within the Aussie Church. He and his wife Margaret broke new ground as a pioneer missionary of contextualisation in South Asia. This work planted the seeds of a movement which was to grow to tens of thousands. After that he went on to be the pastor of what was to become Australia's largest Baptist Church. He is a voice well worth listening to. Now having 'retired', he has a global ministry. In this season he travels extensively into many nations. Making disciples and multiplying gospel movements amongst unreached people groups is what he lives for. This is the third of a series of 3 podcasts with Stuart. We discuss his calling back into pastoral ministry in Australia. How do you bring transformation to church culture? The challenge of shifting culture, and multiplying disciples among Christians. If you are involved in Church ministry you will want to listen to this! Stuart's numerous books and resources can be found at this website drstuartrobinson.com
Many will know Stuart Robinson as a significant leader within the Aussie Church. He and his wife Margaret broke new ground as a pioneer missionary of contextualisation in South Asia. This work planted the seeds of a movement which was to grow to tens of thousands. After that he went on to be the pastor of what was to become Australia's largest Baptist Church. He is a voice well worth listening to. Now having 'retired', he has a global ministry. In this season he travels extensively into many nations. Making disciples and multiplying gospel movements amongst unreached people groups is what he lives for. This is the second of a series of 3 podcasts with Stuart. In this post Stuart shares his story seeing movement in South Asia. We discuss multiplication, contextualisation and establishing groups who grow. You will learn of the importance of the person of peace. Stuart's numerous books and resources can be found at this website drstuartrobinson.com
Many will know Stuart Robinson as a significant leader within the Aussie Church. He and his wife Margaret broke new ground as a pioneer missionary of contextualisation in South Asia. This work planted the seeds of a movement which was to grow to tens of thousands. After that he went on to be the pastor of what was to become Australia's largest Baptist Church. He is a voice well worth listening to. Now having 'retired', he has a global ministry. In this season he travels extensively into many nations. Making disciples and multiplying gospel movements amongst unreached people groups is what he lives for. This is the first of a series of three podcasts with Stuart. In this post we jump into his story of becoming a disciple. The early days. We learn that discipleship is not simply about knowledge but is relational. Making disciples is about prayer and the word, fellowship and mission. It rolls on the wheel of obedience. You will learn that discipleship is caught and not taught. Join us as we follow the journey of transformation. Of how God can take a kid from a poor Aussie family and transform his life through discipleship. Stuart's numerous books and resources can be found at this website drstuartrobinson.com
Hosted by Scotty's CEO, Stuart Robinson, our special guest is veteran, Sergeant Rick Clement, here to discuss his years of service in the British Military before his accident, and talk about taking part in the Scotty's Jump Day (27th July 2019). For more information about Scotty's, and to support the charity: Visit us online at scottyslittlesoldiers.co.uk Find us on twitter: @CorporalScotty Follow our Instagram: @scottyslittlesoldiers Like you Facebook page: /scottyslittlesoldiers Music and additional sound effects supplied by: Epidemic Sound epidemicsound.com Scotty's Little Soldiers, Registered Charity No 1136854
Today in botanical history, we celebrate an American doctor, a Viscountess, and a Canadian fiction writer. We hear a little excerpt about September - such a milestone month for so many people. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about one of America's greatest explorers. And then we'll wrap things up with tomato tips from garden writer Stuart Robinson who shares how to get the last of your harvest to ripen faster. A question on many gardener's minds... Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy. The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf. Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org Curated News Torture Orchard | The Counter | Julie Cart Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there's no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you'd search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group. Important Events September 15, 1795 Birth of James Gates Percival, American poet, surgeon, and geologist. In The Language of Flowers, he wrote, In Eastern lands they talk in flowers, And they tell in a garland their loves and cares: Each blossom that blooms in their garden bowers, On its leaves a mystic language bears. In The Flight of Time, he wrote, Roses bloom, and then they wither; Cheeks are bright, then fade and die; Shapes of light are wafted hither, Then, like visions, hurry by. September 15, 1872 Birth of Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley, English gardening author, and teacher. Her Glynde College for Lady Gardeners in East Sussex was patronized by Gertrude Jekyll, Ellen Willmott, and William Robinson. She wrote, It is with real sorrow that we see so many [survivors] of an era of not particularly good taste in the shape of iron benches. It is their undoubted durability which has preserved them, and we who try to rest upon them are the sufferers, not only for their unpleasing appearance but from the ill-chosen formation of the back… September 15, 1937 Birth of Marjorie Harris, Canadian non-fiction writer, garden expert, and garden author. She was the host of The Urban Gardener radio show for CBS. In addition to countless articles and columns for various publications, she wrote more than a dozen books on gardening. She wrote, The longer you garden, the better the eye gets, the more tuned to how colors vibrate in different ways and what they can do to each other. You become a scientist as well as an artist, with the lines between increasingly blurred. Unearthed Words The windows are open, admitting the September breeze: a month that smells like notepaper and pencil shavings, autumn leaves, and car oil. A month that smells like progress, like moving on. ― Lauren Oliver, Vanishing Girls Grow That Garden Library The World was My Garden by David Fairchild This book came out in 1938, and the subtitle is Travels of a Plant Explorer. In this book, you learn directly from the fabulous Plant Explorer David Fairchild about what it was like to travel the globe searching for new plant species to bring home to the United States. In this first-hand account, David shares his extensive botanical expertise in addition to detailed stories about his time with primitive cultures in the far reaches of our planet. In addition to his outstanding botanical work, David was a great photographer, and he provided all of the photos for this remarkable book. This book is 634 pages of botanical exploration with David Fairchild as your guide. You can get a used copy of this rare, out-of-print book, The World was My Garden by David Fairchild, and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $50. Today's Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart September 15, 2004 On this day, in The Gazette (Montreal), garden writer Stuart Robinson shared tips for getting tomatoes to ripen faster. He wrote: The first trick is to trim some of the leaves covering the green fruit so that they're more exposed to the sun. This helps them warm up during the daytime. But the very best way of making sure that all the fruit on a vine turns ripe is to cut down on their competition. Step one is to pinch off all the side shoots... Be ruthless and remove them all, even if they seem to be producing a small set of flower buds… Step two is… trim the growing tips from all the remaining stems to stop the plant from getting any bigger. One gardener I know swears that severe pinching threatens the plant so much that it hurries to set its fruit (and seeds) much quicker. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
Day Forty One is the message by guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson shared with The Rock Christian Church on Sunday 15th August 2021.
Day Forty One is the message by guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson shared with The Rock Christian Church on Sunday 15th August 2021.
This week I’m talking to Stuart Robinson. Stuart is the CEO of Scotty’s Little Soldiers, the charity he helped set up with his sister Nikki, after her husband Corporal Lee Scott was tragically killed by an IED in Afghanistan in 2009. Dealing with Lee’s death was desperately painful, but made even worse by the fact his children, Kai and Brooke, had lost their daddy. We chat about Stuart's early career, the tragic events of 2009 and the amazing charity which he has helped his sister build from scratch. This is a massively inspiring story and a great lesson in finding work that ‘’doesn’t feel like work’’. As always, I hope you love this chat as much as I did!
We're talking to Dr Stuart Robinson about his latest book. Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What difference might it make to Reformed systematic theology if we were to recover and deploy the fundamental importance of the Trinity, the incarnation, the ascension, and especially the Church, rather than expend all our energy only on the (certainly indispensable) doctrines of justification by faith alone, epistemology and revelation, theological method, the cross, and the atonement?In the 19th century, Presbyterian minister and professor Stuart Robinson wrote a book entitled The Church of God as an Essential Element of the Gospel. Not only would such a title certainly fair poorly in terms of sales today, but its very thesis would draw accusations--maybe even charges--of clericalism, traditionalism, and any number of others epithets expressive of the often irrational and even violent distaste amongst western Christians for the Church as organization rather than only organism--the Church as a defined body, with authoritative rituals and patterns of life, practices, and officers, apart from which the notion of an individual Christian life and faith is traditionally meaningless.Some will no doubt fear that such a book title and theology, making the Church an essential of the gospel, is a slippery slope towards Rome. But this is really only an indication of how very far we have fallen in our day from the biblical and traditional Christian teaching regarding not only the Church but the nature of saving faith and of the Christian life. The truth is that the ordinary necessity to salvation of our relationship to the real-life flesh and blood worshipping assembly--the organization we call the Church--exists in a friction-full relationship with our modern default mode of almost rabid individualism. And so we are unable often to appreciate the teaching of the Westminster Standards about the preaching and the sacraments of the Church as means of saving grace rather than only nice and helpful edifying addenda to the central thing of the Christian's individual cognitive disembodied faith in Jesus. Reformed theology has a rich tradition of clarity on this matter, and Robinson's book is only one of many expressions of the biblical commitment to the Church as the "ark of safety."Another work in this vein is the work of Dr. Robert Letham, who's recently published Systematic Theology explicitly teaches, and attempts to recover, the traditional Reformed understanding of the Church as essential to the gospel. How might today's church recover such a view of the gospel? And what difference might that make to Reformed systematic theology?Today's Greystone Conversation episode is a discussion on these very questions between Dr. Mark A. Garcia and Dr. Robert Letham. The Rev. Dr. Robert Letham is a Fellow at Greystone in Theology and History. Dr. Letham is an eminent theologian and historian, and an example of Greystone's commitment to careful patristic scholarship and confessional Reformed catholicity. He will be teaching a Greystone course module this winter on the doctrine of the Trinity and its outworking in history. Register today!
The Blunder Bus welcomes one of the great leaders of the Australian Church, Bishop Stuart Robinson, who shares (with incredible vulnerability) how he managed to kill a church he was planting stone dead! It's a heart breaking story about being unhelpfully influenced by the judgements and opinions of others. This one is a 'must-listen'.If you would like to talk to Ed about Pastoral Supervision, visit the website hereOr you can email Ed at edward@generationleadership.com.auI'd love if you would rate and review this podcastAnd thanks for being on the journey on The Blunder Bus!
Historical Collections of the Past A socially-distanced Caleb Cangelosi joins Jonathan and James via Zoom. Caleb is the senior pastor at Pear Orchard Presbyterian Church in Ridgeland, MS, and the founder of Log College Press—the topic of our conversation today. Log College Press is a publishing company and free online library that seeks to collect and reprint historic Christian texts, especially from 18th and 19th century American Presbyterian writers. With approximately 6000 works by over 900 authors in its free PDF library, Caleb enthusiastically shares with us the broad appeal the resources offer to all. Show Notes · Explore the Resources of Log College Press · A Forty-Three Year Pastorate in a Country Church by C.W. Grafton · Various devotional writings by William Swan Plumer · Discourses of Redemption by Stuart Robinson · Aging in Grace: Letters to Those in the Autumn of Life by Archibald Alexander
Stuart is a real servant to the sport. He's been a long time member of the North Berks Mototcycle Club, a minder, an event organiser and a Parent to his daughter riding competitively in European and World rounds. I've been guilty of interviewing a lot of riders lately, and this chat with Stuart is a refreshing perspective as someone who make it all happen for us to ride! Beyond his own riding, Stuart has been a minder for around 20 years, and plays a critical role in the running of the Berks Bonanza Supertrial. He also shares some lessons for the outreach program that he and the north berks motorcycle club do to foster support for the sport of trials amongst the local community. Links: North Berks Footage: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoU5e0xihds Feedback: podcast@trials.com.au
Tommo is joined by Stuart Robinson decorated RAF regiment gunner of multiple tours of duty. 3x invictus games competitor and Team GB wheelchair rugby athlete. Robbo sustained horrific and potentially life threatening injuries during a tour of bastion where he lost both his legs, one below the Knee and one above. This is part 1 Dead mammoth coffee Infusion CBD COMBAT FUEL WARRIOR15
Today we talked to Dr. Preston Graham about Stuart Robinson, the spirituality of the church, and the original True Presbyterian.
I was reading in Facebook yesterday, a friend had planted all of these autumn crocus, colchicums, in her garden. Like any bulb, it takes lots of dedication to get them planted and then you have all of the anticipation - waiting to see if they come up and if they meet your expectations. Anyway, she'd invited some friends over to come and check them out. Instead of being amazed by the beautiful autumn crocus, her friends were completely taken her gorgeous hydrangea. Isn't that the way it goes? We toil in our gardens and then we invite people over to come and see it. Yet, the plants we expect others to be amazed by, the plants that have stolen our hearts, are not always the plants that are the most popular with our visitors. So, my piece of advice, if you have an affinity for autumn crocus, is don't plant hydrangea. If you do have hydrangea, only invite other gardeners over. Only gardeners will appreciate the dedication that it takes to plant colchicum. Only gardeners are sensitive to the fact that if they've been invited over to "see the colchicum", they will ooh and aah only for the autumn crocus, and offer merely a passing nod to the show-stealing hydrangea. Brevities #OTD Today is the birthday of the botanist Sarah Hynes who was born on this day in 1859, Hynes was born in Danzig, Prussia and she immigrated to Australia in the mid 1800's. After graduating from the University of Sydney, she and Georgina King brought in fresh flowers for a botanical display at the Sydney Technological Museum. This is how Haynes came to know the director of the Museum, Joseph Henry Maiden. Maiden hired Haynes as a botanical assistant and when he was promoted to be the director of the Sydney Botanic Garden, he hired Hynes to be in charge of the herbarium. Once Hynes arrived at the botanic garden, she ran into difficulties with her male bosses. She was pointing out disparities between herself and her male counterparts; she had requested better pay. In 1905, Hynes was suspended and cited for 39 counts of insubordination including the use of "unladylike" phrase "lowdown, dirty larrikin trick." Hynes stood her ground and denied the charges, which were ultimately dismissed. But, five years later, it happened again. After this suspension, Haynes had had enough; she transferred to the Department of Public Instruction. After this position, Haynes spent the rest of her professional life teaching science to high schoolers. William Fitzgerald named the (Acacia hynesiana) for her, in recognition of her work with Joseph Henry Maiden on his book Forest Flora. #OTD Today is the birthday of the botanical artist Faith Fyles who was born on this day in 1875. Fyles was trained as a botanist, but her natural artistic talent became apparent early in her career. She was the first female hired by the Canadian Department of Agriculture. In 1920, she transferred to the horticulture division where she began producing colored illustrations of plant specimens; especially fruits and ornamentals. Fyles is remembered for her work on the 1920 bulletin, Principal Poison Plants of Canada. The bulletin was prepared for farmers so that they could discern the problematic plants on their properties and avoid pasturing animals with poisonous plants. The book was offered free through the Ottawa Department of Agriculture. Over her career, Fyles had the opportunity to study art with Stanhope Forbes in England and with Rene Menard and Lucien Simon in Paris. #OTD Today is the birthday of the Mexican botanist Helia Bravo Hollis who was born on this day in 1901. Bravo Hollis was the first woman to graduate with the title of Biologist in Mexico. By the age of 29, she was named curator of the University's herbarium where she was assigned the job of studying the cactus. In 1937, Bravo Hollispublished "Las cactáceas de México", making her a leader of global cactus research. Bravo Hollis focused on cactus in and in 1951, she cofounded the Mexican Cactus Society. Six cacti species are named in her honor. In 2001, the Cactus Society had planned to celebrate her 100th birthday, but she died four days shy of the century mark. Bravo Hollis also helped found the Botanical Gardens at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. She served as the director of the Gardens throughout the 1960s. When a strike occurred, Bravo-Hollis offset the pay owed her workers with money out of her own pocket. Last year, Google commemorated the 117th birthday of Bravo Hollis with a Doodle. If you search for her online, you'll see a memorable image of Bravo Hollis, in a skirt and blazer with a knife in her hand, standing next to an Echinocactus platyacanthus, also known as the giant barrel cactus, that appears to be over 5 ft tall and just as wide; a very impressive specimen. This species is the largest barrel cacti. In Mexico, where the cactus is a native, the hairs are harvested for weaving and a traditional candy is made from boiling the pith. Today, the Helia Bravo HollisBotanical Garden, with more than 80 species of cactaceae, is found at the Biosphere Reserve of Tehuacán. Unearthed Words Today is the birthday of the American poet WS Merwin, who always went by William, and who was born on this day in 1927. In 2010, Merwin and his wife, Paula, co-founded the Merwin Conservancy at his home in Haiku, Maui. Merwin used the 19 protected acres surrounding his home to cultivate 400 different species of tropical trees; and many of the world's rarest palm trees. Merwin bought the property in 1977, and every day, he planted one tree. Merwin's story is outlined in an excellent opinion piece about Merwin that was featured in the New York Times earlier this year. “come back believer in shade believer in silence and elegance believer in ferns believer in patience believer in the rain” “Obviously a garden is not the wilderness but an assembly of shapes, most of them living, that owes some share of its composition, it’s appearance, to human design and effort, human conventions and convenience, and the human pursuit of that elusive, indefinable harmony that we call beauty. It has a life of its own, an intricate, willful, secret life, as any gardener knows. It is only the humans in it who think of it as a garden. But a garden is a relationship, which is one of the countless reasons why it is never finished.” “On the last day of the world I would want to plant a tree.” Today's book recommendation: Planting in a Post-Wild World by Thomas Rainer and Claudia West This book came out in 2015 and the subtitle is Designing Plant Communities for Resilient Landscapes. Right from the start, one can tell that this book has a different philosophical underpinning than other books on landscape design. And, I love that they incorporate the use of the word community; Rainer and West are trying to get us to think about our gardens as communities. If we could begin to see our gardens and the plants in them in the way that Rainer and West do, we would be much more sensitive to concepts like density and diversity in our plantings. But, don't let those terms throw you; Rainer and West are all about extracting design principals that help gardeners focus on wise selections and year-round interest; all through the lens of community. If we could all do a better job of understanding the way plants behave in the wild, our gardens would benefit greatly. I love what they write in the beginning of their book because I think it sets the tone for what they are trying to accomplish: "The way plants grow in the wild and the way they grow in our gardens is starkly different. In nature, plants thrive even in inhospitable environments; in our gardens, plants often lack the vigor of their wild counterparts, even when we lavish them with rich soils and frequent water. In nature, plants richly cover the ground; in too many of our gardens, plants are placed far apart and mulched heavily to keep out weeds. In nature, plants have an order individual harmony resulting from their adaptation to a site; our gardens are often arbitrary assortments from various habitats, related only by our personal preferences.... In fact, the very activities that define gardening – weeding, watering, fertilizing, and mulching – all imply a dependency of plants on the gardener for survival. Gardeners are often frustrated when some plants spread beyond their predetermined location and surprised while others struggle to get established.... Further complication is the availability of plants from every corner of the globe... So how do we shift the paradigm, making desirable plantings that look and function sympathetically with how they evolve in nature? By observing and embracing the wisdom of natural plant communities." Today's Garden Chore Add some color to your garden with chrysanthemums. On this day in 2000, Stuart Robinson offered this advice about mums in his weekly column in the Montreal Gazette: "Before shutting things down for the winter, there are a few ways to make the fall garden look a bit nicer. Brighten up your fall flower beds with some colorful chrysanthemums. If you didn't plant any in the spring, so what. Markets and garden supply stores usually have lots of them on special at this time of the year. Buy a few of the larger pots, dig holes in the flower bed (removing a few poor-performing annuals if you have to) and just drop them in and water them well. If you do it when nobody's looking, your neighbors will never know." Something Sweet Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart As I was researching the poet William Merwin, I came across an interview with him done by Joel Whitney back in 2010. During the interview, Merwin revealed that his mother used to read him poetry and one of his early favorites was Robert Louis Stevenson's A Child's Garden of Verses. When asked about Stevenson, Merwin recalled that Stevenson had spent a great deal of time in Hawaii: "and played cards with King Kalakaua... Kalakaua cheated at cards... They obviously got along very well together, Stevenson and Kalakaua. They were playing cards one day, and Stevenson said, 'I’ll beat him this time: four aces.' And Kalakaua said, 'Five kings beats it all.'" Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
In this episode Mark Denholm speaks with Stuart Robinson about his role within the organisation, a look back over the developments within the Bees and at the Hive, the new Bees academy, Matt Coté and more
Break out of the data centre and into the cloud with VMware's latest Network Virtualisation offering NSX-T. Also known as VMware NSX Data Center, NSX-T delivers virtualised networking and security entirely in software making it a key pillar of the SDDC. In this Tech Focus episode, Cloud Insiders host Stuart Robinson and Xtravirt Senior Consultant Graham Smith discuss what NSX-T is, the key use cases and what it means for the future of the data centre. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today's message is from our visiting guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson, entitled Dying to Live. He shares with us what is going on in the world in the lives of christians under persecution for their faith, and the lengths they are prepared to go to to honour their Saviour, Jesus Christ.
Today's message is from our visiting guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson, entitled Dying to Live. He shares with us what is going on in the world in the lives of christians under persecution for their faith, and the lengths they are prepared to go to to honour their Saviour, Jesus Christ.
How do you know if your infrastructure is working if you’re not monitoring it?This podcast is a Tech Focus on VMware vRealize® Operations™ - VMware’s operations management and monitoring product. In this episode, Xtravirt Senior Consultant Simon Eady. chats to Cloud Insiders host Stuart Robinson about IT infrastructure management and monitoring and why organisations shouldn’t underestimate it’s importance, after all it could save your bacon. Simon also talks to us about VMware vROps, what it is and how it works and how it can make a difference to effective monitoring.Links:https://vrealize.vmware.com/sample-exchange/https://marketplace.vmware.com/vsx/https://docs.vmware.com/https://labs.hol.vmware.com/HOL/catalogs/catalog/1212https://www.youtube.com/user/vmwaretv/videosRead more about the importance of IT infrastructure monitoring in Simon's blog See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Stuart Robinson is a brilliant yet heart-centered entrepreneur and business coach. Today, Stuart talks with Kris about forming his tech company at the age of 27, selling it in 2015 and his new path as an EOS Professional Implementer. He first had experience with EOS as a business owner before he made it his full-time passion. They talk about the EOS model and why it makes businesses more scalable, profitable and effective, the Six Components, case studies of clients he has helped and ideas for business owners to effectively solve critical issues. Key Takeaways: [1:44] EOS stands for Entrepreneurial Operating System. [3:44] Stuart got into this business as a result of the success he had implementing the EOS at his own company, and experienced how life-changing it was for him and those around him. He found it through a leadership peer group and discovered that helping others was really his passion. [5:41] Stuart grew up in Colorado, and now lives in Boulder. He loves the outdoors and all the experiences Colorado has to offer. [9:30] Gino Wickman founded EOS based on the discovery that when strengthening six key components, many of the day-to-day issues that pop up are resolved. The EOS model is a framework and a way to see your business at its very root. [10:11] The Six Key Components of EOS covered in Traction: 1. The Vision Component — making sure you are clear on where you want to take your business and how you want to get there. 2. The People Component — the right people in your organization that share the vision and can help you execute daily upon that vision. 3. The Data Component — running the business on numbers and true data, rather than egos or opinions. 4. The Issues Component — getting issues from every level out on paper and making sure you are working towards a real solution. 5. The Process Component — this is the component that is most neglected, but is extremely important to focus on. Knowing what exactly makes their business unique, the process behind how it runs, and what value each sector brings to the whole. 6. The Traction Component — creating a laser focus on the important initiatives (“rocks”) as a company and proper execution of the vision. [14:39] The components are tied together in a meeting pulse, to make sure everyone is spending their time wisely and effectively in meetings. [16:01] EOS Implementation has become a global initiative, and Stuart says there are about 200 implementers around the world currently. [19:11] In the EOS process, everyone in the organization has a number and a scorecard. The 1, 2, or 3 measurables (KPI’s) are what is expected of that individual on a weekly basis to keep track of measurable goals. [23:42] The first day Stuart meets with a client is called their “focus day.” This is where they implement all the foundational tools into their business and get everyone on the same page of the vision. [26:08] IDS stands for Identify, Discuss, and Solve. This helps to uncover the root cause of an issue, so it can be solved for good instead of just putting a band-aid over the symptoms. [32:55] If he could do it all over again, Stuart would have looked for help and support from others earlier in his journey. Mentioned in This Episode: Kris Murray Child Care Marketing Solutions Child Care Success Academy Child Care Success Summit Traction: Get a Grip on Your Business, by Gino Wickman Focus: The Future Of Your Company Depends on It, by Al Ries Next Level Traction EOS Worldwide Organizational Checkup The Dream Manager, by Matthew Kelly The Tim Ferriss Show
In this Cloud Insiders episode, a Tech Focus on Docker - a tool designed to make it easier to create, deploy and run applications by using containers. Find out what containers are, why organisations are using them and why Docker is the most popular platform for developers, with Cloud Insiders host Stuart Robinson and Xtravirt Senior Consultant Paul Kennard . See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Cloud Insiders host Stuart Robinson talks to Xtravirt Senior Consultant Steve Wood about VMware® AppDefense - a datacentre endpoint security product that protects applications running in virtualised environments.Listen in to find out what AppDefense is, how it works, how it can be deployed and what it means for the security of IT infrastructure.Steve has also put together a demo on deploying AppDefense, which you can view by going to:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1i5VBPyyeo&t=This episode was recorded before the release of VMware's vSphere Platinum which as Steve alludes to in this episode now includes AppDefense. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today's message is Obedience by guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson. - Dr Stuart says that his subject is not necessarily a popular one. No one talks about submission, responsibilities, or obedience. The drum beat of our western world media,
Today's message is Obedience by guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson. - Dr Stuart says that his subject is not necessarily a popular one. No one talks about submission, responsibilities, or obedience. The drum beat of our western world media,
Today's message is Obedience by guest speaker Dr Stuart Robinson. - - Dr Stuart says that his subject is not necessarily a popular one. No one talks about submission, responsibilities, or obedience. The drum beat of our western world media,
Hailing from Canberra, Australia, the 1992 sophomore album Psychohum by the Falling Joys is what alternative or college or indie rock, however you want to classify it, looked to be heading pre-Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Eclectic and unpredictable, with guitar tones and vocals that easily slip between shoegaze, jangle pop, new wave and mainstream rock riffing, the Falling Joys sound like a band hitting their stride as songwriters and musicians. Led by vocalist/guitarist Suzie Biggie, who manages to invoke 79/80 Blondie one moment and Spooky era Lush the next, pulls off a wide array of styles with melodic cohesion. Paired with bassist and vocalist Pat Hayes on tunes like Incinerator, and Stuart Robinson's effected riffage on a song like God In A Dustbin, there is a lot to like about Psychohum. At the same time, that uninhibited approach can take a band down some lesser advised paths, with odd tangents into Chili Pepper funk and Sinatra swing. Which approach wins out? Tune in to hear our take on Psychohum. Intro - Dynamite 10:16 - Black Bandages 15:05 - Incinerator 19:50 - A Winter's Tale 22:17 - Lullaby 24:36 - Fortune Teller Outro - God In A Dustbin Facebook / Twitter / Instagram Zazzle Merch Store http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com
Hailing from Canberra, Australia, the 1992 sophomore album Psychohum by the Falling Joys is what alternative or college or indie rock, however you want to classify it, looked to be heading pre-Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Eclectic and unpredictable, with guitar tones and vocals that easily slip between shoegaze, jangle pop, new wave and mainstream rock riffing, the Falling Joys sound like a band hitting their stride as songwriters and musicians. Led by vocalist/guitarist Suzie Biggie, who manages to invoke 79/80 Blondie one moment and Spooky era Lush the next, pulls off a wide array of styles with melodic cohesion. Paired with bassist and vocalist Pat Hayes on tunes like Incinerator, and Stuart Robinson's effected riffage on a song like God In A Dustbin, there is a lot to like about Psychohum. At the same time, that uninhibited approach can take a band down some lesser advised paths, with odd tangents into Chili Pepper funk and Sinatra swing. Which approach wins out? Tune in to hear our take on Psychohum. Intro - Dynamite 10:16 - Black Bandages 15:05 - Incinerator 19:50 - A Winter's Tale 22:17 - Lullaby 24:36 - Fortune Teller Outro - God In A Dustbin Facebook / Twitter / Instagram Zazzle Merch Store http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com
von Stuart Robinson Phil 4,11; Apg 20,35; Lk 6,38; Ps 50,12; 1Kö 17,10-17; 1Mo 29,20; Phil 4,19; 1Mo 4,3; 1Mo 14,20; 1Mo 28,22; 3Mo 27,30-34; Mal 3,6-12; Lk 11,42; 2Kor 8,5; 2Kor 8,7; Predigtserie: Es geht um... Teil 3
Elite's Client Advisory Board is an important source of communications for Elite and its clients to develop innovative ways to improve law firm efficiency. Stuart Robinson, Financial Controller for Irwin Mitchell, the 11th largest law firm in the UK, discusses his role on the Elite Client Advisory Board with Patrick Hurly, VP of Customer Advocacy at Elite.
00:00 - Burton Cummings news / Rodarama prize giveaway with Dukes of Hazzard trivia / Global News reporter Matt Carty on Osborne Village soon to get more parking spots 9:15 - Burton Cummings concert announcement / 680 CJOB's Bob Irving from Blue Bomber mini camp 17:40 - Greg conquers his fear of snakes! Wildlife Haven Rehabilitation Centre 2nd annual Open House Fundraiser happening on Sunday April 30th, 12-4pm at Transcanada Centre in Ile-des-Chenes. We're joined by Judy Robertson, Stuart Robinson and Steve Loney from the centre, along with a Kestrel named Cricket and a Hognose snake named Bruce. 36:35 - Elayna Bilous, owner of Black Caviar Productions, is on one of those RRC VIP Grad billboards. We are acquaintances through work, so I (Brett) invited her down to learn more about Black Caviar. 53:46 - Dr. Syras Derksen, psychologist with Dr. Syras Derksen & Associated -- Femme Fatale: Sexy Women Sway Men to Do Bad Things 72:59 - Seinfeld Untold Stories from Entertainment Weekly 84:11 - Hal Anderson tees up his show for the weekend 88:50 - Richard Cloutier & Julie Buckingham tee up THE NEWS, then a story of how last night I bumped into my grade 11 English teacher.
There's plenty of talk on radio, but with 20twenty you'll find Life, Culture & Current events from a Biblical perspective. Interviews, stories and insight you definately won't hear in the mainstream media. This feed contains selected content from 20twenty, heard every weekday morning. See www.vision.org.au for more details Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
FIESTA. Predigt vom 13.11.2016: „Day Forty-One" von Dr. Stuart Robinson? www.fiestaonline.de FACEBOOK: facebook.com/fiesta.bs INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/fiesta_bs Der FIESTA.Gottesdienst der Braunschweiger Friedenskirche findet jeden Sonntag ab 17.3
This week, A new HTC phone, Facebook's developer conference, a camera that'll kill the green screen, biotech that's improving lives, DIY braces and...is a proposed bill the end of American privacy?...All this and more this week on The Drill Down. What We're Playing With Andy: Miitomo Dwayne: SONY SEL55210 telephoto lens Alpha/NEX - BRAVIA connectivity Headlines Lytro's 755 megapixel Cinema light field camera is going to kill the green screen Tesla recalls 2,700 Model X vehicles over potentially dangerous seat flaw HTC 10 announced: a modern phone with familiar design "It's very difficult to get excited about smartphone announcements nowadays, even flagship devices," Stuart Robinson of Strategy Analytics Audible Book of the Week The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook by Ben Mezrich Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Welcome to My Room from Miitomo Grooves by DJ Cutman Hot Topic 'Leaked' Burr-Feinstein Encryption Bill Is a Threat to American Privacy F8 conference 2016: the biggest news from Facebook's developer event This is Facebook's gorgeous, open-source 360-degree video camera Facebook will now let any camera stream to Facebook Live, even a DJI drone Facebook's buried Save feature has 250 million users a month, and a new button to help it spread Facebook launches a bot platform for Messenger Music Break: The Final Countdown by Europe Final Word: The Cyborgs Are Coming Chip, Implanted in Brain, Helps Paralyzed Man Regain Control of Hand Just Like Human Skin, This Plastic Sheet Can Sense And Heal Here's How A College Student Created His Own Braces For Less Than $60 The Drill Down Video of the Week SpaceX successfully lands its rocket on a floating drone ship for the first time Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box product manager Tosin Onafowokan.
In 2002, Stuart Robinson (piano) and Daniel Michalak (bass) met on an orientation trip for Duke University. The two began making music together. In 2004, Daniel met fellow Duke student Bryan Rahija (guitar) while studying abroad in Bolivia. They returned to the U.S. with a few demos as well as some of the local flare that still shines through their signature sound. Daniel, Stuart, and Bryan enlisted Daniel's brother John on the drums and the quartet soon began making music together under the moniker Bombadil.The head of Ramseur Records stumbled upon a few demos and immediately signed them. In 2006, they released a self-titled EP. In 2007, John left the band. One Craigslist ad later, they had found James Phillips to man the drum kit. With the new band assembled they completed and released their first full-length album A Buzz, A Buzz in 2008. The album as well as their energetic live shows found them receiving more and more attention. They found themselves touring all across the U.S. and playing festivals such as Bonnaroo and Floydfest. Now with recognition as well as some mileage as a band, they hit the studio again to record Tarpits and Canyonlands. By the time the album was released, the band had fallen into limbo. They declared themselves in a state of hiatus as Stuart had left the band and Daniel was suffering from nerve damage in his hands.In November of 2010, the quartet reconvened at Pendavavis Farm near Portland, OR (where the Decemberists recorded The King Is Dead) for an intense, ambitious 10 day recording session that would become All That Rain Promises. After more than a year off, Bombadil had come back from the brink. The album was officially released in 2011. 2012 saw the return of Bombadil as they began regaining the momentum that they had. They also began test driving songs for their newest effort Metrics of Affection due out July 23rd. Although Bryan has stopped touring with the band to finish grad school, the other three have hit the road hard this year in support of their upcoming album.After overcoming every possible obstacle, Bombadil is back and better than ever before. They are hitting the road with a new ferocity and cohesiveness. They are four incredibly talented musicians who continuously write music and hone their skills. There are not too many bands these days with 4 vocalists, 4 songwriters, and a producer. If their recent shows are any indication, Metrics of Affection is bound to be their best album to date. Check out the album cover and tracklisting below.Bombadil will also be playing having a Metrics of Affection album release show at Lincoln Theatre on July 27th at 9pm. They are sure to have some special surprises in store. If you missed the Local Artist of the Month interview with Bombadil in which we talked about the new album and debuted quite a few new songs, you can listen to it below or you can subscribe to our iTunes podcast.
Stuart Robinson is an Author and Pastor. He's spent many years working in South Asia, pioneering cross-cultural ministries and writing numerous books. "Mosques and Miracles", is one such book, introducing readers to Islam and how we should be responding to the impact of Islam.
Deep insights from Dr Stuart Robinson.
Dr Stuart Robinson with deep insights into Islam
1216 - The 21st Century - 21Oct07 Ps Stuart Robinson-01 by WDBC
1215 - It Must Be Done - 21Oct07 Ps Stuart Robinson-00 by WDBC
Pokud, protože, přesto - Dr. Stuart Robinson (14.1.2007) by KC Český Těšín