The Saint's Tragedy 1
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MCA-700 Midline/Reissue Series
MCA 700 Discography by David Edwards, Mike Callahan & Patrice Eyries © 2018 by Mike Callahan MCA-700 Midline/Reissue Series: By the time the reissue series reached MCA-700, most of the ABC reissues had been accomplished in the MCA 500-600s. MCA decided that when full price albums were converted to midline prices, the albums needed a new number altogether rather than just making the administrative change. In this series, we get reissues of many MCA albums that were only one to three years old, as well as a lot of Decca reissues. Rather than pay the price for new covers and labels, most of these were just stamped with the new numbers in gold ink on the front covers, with the same jackets and labels with the old catalog numbers. MCA 700 - We All Have a Star - Wilton Felder [1981] Reissue of ABC AA 1009. We All Have A Star/I Know Who I Am/Why Believe/The Cycles Of Time//Let's Dance Together/My Name Is Love/You And Me And Ecstasy/Ride On MCA 701 - Original Voice Tracks from His Greatest Movies - W.C. Fields [1981] Reissue of MCA 2073. The Philosophy Of W.C. Fields/The "Sound" Of W.C. Fields/The Rascality Of W.C. Fields/The Chicanery Of W.C. Fields//W.C. Fields - The Braggart And Teller Of Tall Tales/The Spirit Of W.C. Fields/W.C. Fields - A Man Against Children, Motherhood, Fatherhood And Brotherhood/W.C. Fields - Creator Of Weird Names MCA 702 - Conway - Conway Twitty [1981] Reissue of MCA 3063. -
Ottawa (Ontario, Canada) PARTNER MANAGED Reseller Online Auction - Armstrong Street
09/25/21 03:53:35 Ottawa (Ontario, Canada) PARTNER MANAGED Reseller Online Auction - Armstrong Street Auction Opens: Wed, Apr 15 5:00pm ET Auction Closes: Fri, Apr 24 8:00pm ET Lot Title Lot Title 0001 Antique Sessions brand Gingerbread Clock, 0029 lot of 6 Amazing Spiderman comics, high working grades 0002 NHL Charity Golf jersey, hand signed by 0030 lot of 8 Batman comics, high grades players, Hawerchuk and Simpson 0031 lot of 7 Captain America comics, high grades 0003 G.I. Joe 12" figure with Safari outfit kit 0032 lot of 8 Daredevil comics, high grades 0004 G.I. Joe Desert Soldier 12 inch figure 0033 lot of 8 Batman in Detective comics, high 0005 G.I. Joe Virus Pandemic Fighter, 12 inch figure grades 0006 Patrick Roy, Habs, hand signed card 0034 lot of 6 Mickey Mouse comics, 1970s 0007 Thomas Chabot, Senators, hand signed card 0035 lot of 8 Superman comics, high grades 0008 wooden topper sign for Erie Digger claw 0036 lot of 8 Avengers comics, high grades gaming machine 0037 diecast Corgi Batmobile in box 0009 1970s Viewmaster with reels, box and 0038 lot of 3 early Story of Our Nations books, 1891 paperwork 0039 2nd lot of 3 early Story of Our Nations books, 0010 collection of 28 old metal soldier figurines 1891 0011 complete set of 12 Nascar Matchbooks 0040 huge lot of over 400 Magic cards 0012 Whiz brand Commando rare can, 1940s 0041 2nd huge lot of over 400 Magic cards 0013 original World War I canteen, British issue 0042 lot of over 300 Pokemon cards 0014 lot of 6 Stereoview cards, early 1900s 0043 sealed metal box of Star Wars -
Orphee Manuscript Engl Translation.Pdf
ORPHÉE MÉCANIQUE Orpheus: Can you still remember the noise of the world? The noise of the streets, the subway, the noise of the electronic industry and the noise of the forests and rivers? Now, in this unbearable silence don't you yearn for it again? My head is full of this noise. I give it to you. Would you like to have it? Then, wait and attention....now! (the sound of the Psykotron) Orpheus: Can you remember the sound of breaking glass the harbor's nocturnal song the silent explosions from afar the sudden cloudburst in the afternoon the panting of your lover the buzzing of the fridge the instructing voice of a CAT scan the Christmas eve demonstrations Orpheus: Think of all the wonders, the sounds, the voices that filled you with light, there up above. Chorus: When Orpheus: The librarian standing on noise insulated floor gets scared of the visitors. Chorus: When Orpheus: On the 17th floor the elevator gets stuck Chorus: When Orpheus: The young physicist discovers numb spots on his skin Chorus: When Orpheus: The wind wails through the halls of an abandoned schoolhouse Chorus: When Orpheus: The doting old lady tenant always dials the wrong number Chorus: When Orpheus: Somebody suddenly plunges to a fall pass your window Chorus: When Orpheus: In the icy cold winter harbor the girls stand frozen to lampposts Chorus: When Orpheus: The world explodes behind your eyes Chorus: When Orpheus: At night the huge luminous ships arrive Chorus: When Orpheus: Out of narcosis, the patient awakes GHOSTS (Orpheus) Maya Deren is dead, Dennis Hopper is -
Archons (Commanders) [NOTICE: They Are NOT Anlien Parasites], and Then, in a Mirror Image of the Great Emanations of the Pleroma, Hundreds of Lesser Angels
A R C H O N S HIDDEN RULERS THROUGH THE AGES A R C H O N S HIDDEN RULERS THROUGH THE AGES WATCH THIS IMPORTANT VIDEO UFOs, Aliens, and the Question of Contact MUST-SEE THE OCCULT REASON FOR PSYCHOPATHY Organic Portals: Aliens and Psychopaths KNOWLEDGE THROUGH GNOSIS Boris Mouravieff - GNOSIS IN THE BEGINNING ...1 The Gnostic core belief was a strong dualism: that the world of matter was deadening and inferior to a remote nonphysical home, to which an interior divine spark in most humans aspired to return after death. This led them to an absorption with the Jewish creation myths in Genesis, which they obsessively reinterpreted to formulate allegorical explanations of how humans ended up trapped in the world of matter. The basic Gnostic story, which varied in details from teacher to teacher, was this: In the beginning there was an unknowable, immaterial, and invisible God, sometimes called the Father of All and sometimes by other names. “He” was neither male nor female, and was composed of an implicitly finite amount of a living nonphysical substance. Surrounding this God was a great empty region called the Pleroma (the fullness). Beyond the Pleroma lay empty space. The God acted to fill the Pleroma through a series of emanations, a squeezing off of small portions of his/its nonphysical energetic divine material. In most accounts there are thirty emanations in fifteen complementary pairs, each getting slightly less of the divine material and therefore being slightly weaker. The emanations are called Aeons (eternities) and are mostly named personifications in Greek of abstract ideas. -
2009 Land Management Plan
2009 LAND MANAGEMENT PLAN (Updated Annual Harvest Plan -2014) Itasca County Land Department 1177 LaPrairie Avenue Grand Rapids, MN 55744-3322 218-327-2855 ● Fax: 218-327-4160 LAND MANAGEMENT PLAN Itasca County Land Department Acknowledgements This Land Management Plan was produced by Itasca County Land Department employees Garrett Ous, Dave Marshall, Michael Gibbons, Adam Olson, Bob Scheierl, Roger Clark, Kory Cease, Steve Aysta, Tim Stocker, Perry Leone, Wayne Perreault, Blair Carlson, Loren Eide, Bob Rother, Andrew Brown, Del Inkman, Darlene Brown and Meg Muller. Thank you to all the citizens for their sincere input and review during the public involvement process. And thank you to Itasca County Commissioners Lori Dowling, Karen Burthwick, Rusty Eichorn, Catherine McLynn and Mark Mandich for their vision and final approval of this document. Foreword This land management plan is designed for providing vision and direction to guide strategic and operational programs of the Land Department. That vision and direction reflects a long standing connection with local economic, educational and social programs. The Land Department is committed to ensuring that economic benefits and environmental integrity are available to both present and future generations. That will be accomplished through actively managing county land and forests for a balance of benefits to the citizens and for providing them with a sustained supply of quality products and services. The Department will apply quality forestland stewardship practices, employ modern technology and information, and partner with other forest organizations to provide citizens with those quality products and services. ________________________________ Garrett Ous September, 2009 Itasca County Land Commissioner 1177 LaPrairie Avenue Grand Rapids, MN 55744-3322 218-327-2855 ● Fax: 218-327-4160 ICLD - LMP Section i., page 1 of 3 Itasca County Land Department Land Management Plan Table of Contents i. -
Playwright and Minister
PLAYWRIGHT AND MAN OF GOD: RELIGION AND CONVENTION IN THE COMIC PLAYS OF JOHN MARSTON by Blagomir Georgiev Blagoev A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of English University of Toronto © Copyright by Blagomir Georgiev Blagoev (2010) PLAYWRIGHT AND MAN OF GOD: RELIGION AND CONVENTION IN THE COMIC PLAYS OF JOHN MARSTON Blagomir Georgiev Blagoev Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of English University of Toronto 2010 ABSTRACT John Marston’s literary legacy has inevitably existed in the larger-than-life shadows of his great contemporaries William Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. In the last two centuries, his works were hardly taken on their own terms but were perceived instead in overt or implicit comparison to Shakespeare’s or Jonson’s. As a result, Marston’s plays acquired the lasting but unfair image of haphazard concoctions whose cheap sensationalism and personal satire often got them in trouble with the authorities. This was the case until recently, especially with Marston’s comic drama. Following revisionist trends, this study sets out to restore some perspective: it offers a fresh reading of Marston’s comic plays and collaborations—Antonio and Mellida, What You Will, Jack Drum’s Entertainment, The Dutch Courtesan, The Malcontent, Parasitaster, Eastward Ho, and Histrio-Mastix—by pursuing a more nuanced contextualization with regard to religious context and archival evidence. The first central contention here is that instead of undermining political and religious authority, Marston’s comic drama can demonstrate consistent conformist and conservative affinities, which imply a seriously considered agenda. This study’s second main point is that the perceived failures of Marston’s comic plays—such as tragic ii elements, basic characterization, and sudden final reversals—can be plausibly read as deliberate effects, designed with this agenda in mind. -
The Victor Black Label Discography
The Victor Black Label Discography Victor 25000, 26000, 27000 Series John R. Bolig ISBN 978-1-7351787-3-8 ii The Victor Black Label Discography Victor 25000, 26000, 27000 Series John R. Bolig American Discography Project UC Santa Barbara Library © 2017 John R. Bolig. All rights reserved. ii The Victor Discography Series By John R. Bolig The advent of this online discography is a continuation of record descriptions that were compiled by me and published in book form by Allan Sutton, the publisher and owner of Mainspring Press. When undertaking our work, Allan and I were aware of the work started by Ted Fa- gan and Bill Moran, in which they intended to account for every recording made by the Victor Talking Machine Company. We decided to take on what we believed was a more practical approach, one that best met the needs of record collectors. Simply stat- ed, Fagan and Moran were describing recordings that were not necessarily published; I believed record collectors were interested in records that were actually available. We decided to account for records found in Victor catalogs, ones that were purchased and found in homes after 1901 as 78rpm discs, many of which have become highly sought- after collector’s items. The following Victor discographies by John R. Bolig have been published by Main- spring Press: Caruso Records ‐ A History and Discography GEMS – The Victor Light Opera Company Discography The Victor Black Label Discography – 16000 and 17000 Series The Victor Black Label Discography – 18000 and 19000 Series The Victor Black -
The Righteous Brothers by Jerry Bfay At
The Righteous Brothers B yJerry Bfayat •— —■ a d i o , w i t h o u t a d o u b t , is t h e m o s t i m p o r - and “Leaving It All lip to You,” which years later tant vehicle for a recording artist. How became a Number One hit for Dale & Grace. Two- many times did y o u turn on your radio part harmony was not unique then - but a pair of and hear a great song b y a great a r t i s t s ! white boys emulating the great black two-part-har Rmaybe Johnny Otis singing “Willie and thm e Hand on y sound? That w as new. Jive,” the Magnificent Men doing “Peace of Mind,” or For Bobby Hatfield and Bill M edley (bom a m onth the Soul Survivors performing “Expressway (To Your apart in 1940), it began separately. Both started Heart)” - not realizing these were white performers, singing at Orange County, California, clubs as ones who had the soul and the ability to sound teenagers. In the early 1960s, Bobby had his group, black? Conversely, did you ever lis the Variations, and Bill his, the ten to an artist like Ella Fitzgerald, Paramours. In 1962, Bobby’s group Carmen McRae or Nancy Wilson incorporated with the Paramours. and say to yourself, “Wow, what a One of their first big shows together fantastic performer,” and assume was at the Rendezvous Ballroom, in she was white? That’s the wonder Balboa, California, a famous haunt ful thing about music: The great during the big-band era. -
Jordanes and the Invention of Roman-Gothic History Dissertation
Empire of Hope and Tragedy: Jordanes and the Invention of Roman-Gothic History Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Brian Swain Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2014 Dissertation Committee: Timothy Gregory, Co-advisor Anthony Kaldellis Kristina Sessa, Co-advisor Copyright by Brian Swain 2014 Abstract This dissertation explores the intersection of political and ethnic conflict during the emperor Justinian’s wars of reconquest through the figure and texts of Jordanes, the earliest barbarian voice to survive antiquity. Jordanes was ethnically Gothic - and yet he also claimed a Roman identity. Writing from Constantinople in 551, he penned two Latin histories on the Gothic and Roman pasts respectively. Crucially, Jordanes wrote while Goths and Romans clashed in the imperial war to reclaim the Italian homeland that had been under Gothic rule since 493. That a Roman Goth wrote about Goths while Rome was at war with Goths is significant and has no analogue in the ancient record. I argue that it was precisely this conflict which prompted Jordanes’ historical inquiry. Jordanes, though, has long been considered a mere copyist, and seldom treated as an historian with ideas of his own. And the few scholars who have treated Jordanes as an original author have dampened the significance of his Gothicness by arguing that barbarian ethnicities were evanescent and subsumed by the gravity of a Roman political identity. They hold that Jordanes was simply a Roman who can tell us only about Roman things, and supported the Roman emperor in his war against the Goths. -
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ÐÑ €Ñ‚ÑŠÑ€ Хилър Филм ÑÐ ¿Ð¸ÑÑ ŠÐº (ФилмографиÑ) Miracle of the White https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/miracle-of-the-white-stallions-665016/actors Stallions Teachers https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/teachers-1211139/actors See No Evil, Hear https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/see-no-evil%2C-hear-no-evil-1213118/actors No Evil Married to It https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/married-to-it-1226574/actors Playhouse 90 https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/playhouse-90-1248532/actors Tobruk https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/tobruk-1406378/actors Taking Care of https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/taking-care-of-business-1415430/actors Business The Wheeler https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-wheeler-dealers-1520030/actors Dealers The Out-of-Towners https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-out-of-towners-1567345/actors The Hospital https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-hospital-1630422/actors The In-Laws https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-in-laws-1766888/actors The Americanization of https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-americanization-of-emily-1852239/actors Emily Carpool https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/carpool-1924207/actors The Babe https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-babe-2004019/actors Man of La Mancha https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/man-of-la-mancha-2640322/actors The Addams Family https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-addams-family-266532/actors Penelope https://bg.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/penelope-3036314/actors -
Download Booklet
MONTEVERDI © Lebrecht Music & Arts Photo Library ???????????? Claudio Monteverdi (1567 – 1643) The Coronation of Poppea Dramma musicale in a Prologue and two acts Libretto by Giovanni Francesco Busenello, English translation by Geoffrey Dunn Prologue Fortune Barbara Walker soprano Virtue Shirley Chapman soprano Love Elizabeth Gale soprano Opera Ottone, most noble lord Tom McDonnell baritone Poppea, most noble lady, mistress of Nero, Janet Baker mezzo-soprano raised by him to the seat of empire Nero, Roman emperor Robert Ferguson tenor Ottavia, reigning empress, repudiated by Nero Katherine Pring mezzo-soprano Drusilla, lady of the court, in love with Ottone Barbara Walker soprano Seneca, philosopher, preceptor to Nero Clifford Grant bass Arnalta, aged nurse and confidante of Poppea Anne Collins mezzo-soprano Lucano, poet, intimate of Nero, nephew of Seneca Emile Belcourt tenor Valletto, page of the empress John Brecknock tenor Damigella, lady-in-waiting to the empress Iris Saunders soprano Liberto, Captain of the praetorian guard Norman Welsby baritone First soldier Robin Donald tenor Second soldier John Delaney tenor Lictor, officer of imperial justice Anthony Davey bass Pallas Athene, goddess of wisdom Shirley Chapman soprano Chorus of Sadler’s Wells Opera Orchestra of Sadler’s Wells Opera Raymond Leppard 3 compact disc one Time Page Act I 1 Sinfonia 2:55 p. 30 Prologue 2 ‘Virtue, go hide yourself away’ 7:16 p. 30 Fortune, Virtue, Love Scene 1 3 ‘Again I’m drawn here’ 8:32 p. 31 Ottone, Soldier 2, Soldier 1 4 ‘My lord, do not go yet!’ 9:54 p. 32 Poppea, Nero Scene 2 5 ‘At last my hopes have ended’ 6:38 p. -
From Place to Place
From Place to Place By Irvin S. Cobb FROM PLACE TO PLACE CHAPTER I THE GALLOWSMITH THIS man that I have it in mind to write about was, at the time of which I write, an elderly man, getting well along toward sixty-five. He was tall and slightly stooped, with long arms, and big, gnarled, competent-looking hands, which smelled of yellow laundry soap, and had huge, tarnished nails on the fingers. He had mild, pale eyes, a light blue as to colour, with heavy sacs under them, and whitish whiskers, spindly and thin, like some sort of second-growth, which were so cut as to enclose his lower face in a nappy fringe, extending from ear to ear under his chin. He suffered from a chronic heart affection, and this gave to his skin a pronounced and unhealthy pallor. He was neat and prim in his personal habits, kind to dumb animals, and tolerant of small children. He was inclined to be miserly; certainly in money matters he was most prudent and saving. He had the air about him of being lonely. His name was Tobias Dramm. In the town where he lived he was commonly known as Uncle Tobe Dramm. By profession he was a public hangman. You might call him a gallowsmith. He hanged men for hire. So far as the available records show, this Tobias Dramm was the only man of his calling on this continent. In himself he constituted a specialty and a monopoly. The fact that he had no competition did not make him careless in the pursuit of his calling.