FALL 2016 Newberry Seminars Picturing America: Art in the United States Arts, Music, and Language from the Colonial Period to the Civil War From Bach to Brahms: New Skills for Wednesdays, 11 am - 1 pm From Bach to Brahms: New Skills for Enhanced Listening September 14 - October 26 Enhanced Listening Tuesdays, 2 - 4 pm This seminar will explore early American art September 13 - November 8 from the colonial period to the Civil War, (class will not meet October 11) decades of dramatic upheaval that witnessed the Everyone can have a new and enriched experi- birth of a new nation, Western expansion, and Everyone can have a new and enriched experi- a rapidly changing society. Sessions will focus ence with each visit toto thethe concertconcert hall.hall. BelieveBelieve itit or not, one’s listening skills can be improved with on visual analysis of works of art, as well as or not, one’s listening skills can be improved with discussions of primary and secondary sources that just pen and paper.paper. ThisThis coursecourse resemblesresembles “Music“Music 101,” but with a novel twist: the visualization of illuminate the historic and cultural context of the 101,” but with a novel twist: the visualization of works’ production. Artists to be discussed include thematic material. OurOur journeyjourney willwill provideprovide anan overview of J.S. Bach and the Baroque, Haydn Copley, West, Homer, and individuals associated overview of J.S. Bach and the Baroque, Haydn with the Hudson River School. Information and Mozart as representatives ofof thethe ClassicalClassical period, Beethoven as the bridge to Romanticism, about first readings will be sent upon registration. period, Beethoven as the bridge to Romanticism, Seven sessions, $220. and Brahms—whoBrahms – who combinescombines Classical,classic, romantic, Romantic, and modern all in one.one. PleasePlease listenlisten toto Bach’sBach’s Patricia Smith Scanlan holds a PhD in American art Brandenburg Concertos, Concertos, Nos. Nos. 2 and 2 and3 for 3 thefor thefirst from Indiana University, serves as an adjunct lecturer firstclass. class. Eight Eight sessions, sessions, $240. $240. at the Art Institute of , and has taught at Stephanie Ettelson, who has been well-known for her DePaul University and the Newberry. Stephanie Ettelson, who has been well-known for her pre-concert lectures and classes on symphonic and cham- ber music for more than four decades, brings a unique The Birth of Modern Art: Impressionism to Now perspective to “The Art of Listening,” incorporating Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm her background as an orchestral and chamber music September 14 - October 5 violinist, arts writer, and music reviewer. violinist, arts writer, and music reviewer. In this four-week course, we will explore how and why the modernist art movement developed Music of the Belle Époque Music of the Belle Époque in late-nineteenth-century France and spread to Tuesdays, 2 - 4 pm the rest of the world, leaving a host of “ism’s” September 13 - November 22 (Post-Impressionism, Cubism, Surrealism) in its (class will not meet October 11) wake. We will examine not only the world of Every era in music history has produced works fine arts, but also how broader cultural, political, Every era in music history has produced works industrial, and economic changes have created that stir our souls, but perhaps none more so than the Belle Époque. This class will provide and perpetuated revolutionary and exciting than the Belle Époque. This class will provide a artistic developments. Four sessions, $160. looka look into into the the music music of ofthe the astonishingly astonishingly creative periodcreative in period Paris thatin Paris succeeded that succeeded the Franco- the Judy Pomeranz, art critic and advisor, has written PrussianFranco-Prussian War and War the andParis the Commune. Paris Commune. The and lectured extensively on art history topics. She has BelleThe Belle Époque Époque was was a sublime, a sublime, artistic artistic moment moment delivered lectures at the Smithsonian Institution and has that introduced music by some of the greatest given tours of museum exhibitions around the country. European composers to the Parisian public and to She is also the published author of two novels and the world, including Stravinsky, Ravel, Debussy, many short stories. de Falla, Strauss, Respighi, Fauré, Saint-Saëns, and many more. Ten sessions, $270. and many more. Ten sessions, $270. Art and Politics Stephen Kleiman, a composer and orchestra conductor Stephen Kleiman, a composer and orchestra conductor Thursdays, 2 - 4 pm in Europe and former music director of the National September 15 - October 27 Chamber Orchestra in Washington, DC, holds a BS (class will not meet October 13) degree from the Mannes College of Music and an MM in music composition from the University of Michigan. The 2016 election season offers an opportunity in music composition from the University of Michigan. to explore the historical links between art and His compositions have been performed all over the world, and he has taught at the Newberry since 2008. politics by considering artworks produced in world, and he has taught at the Newberry since 2008. Europe and America from the Renaissance to the present. Themes to be considered include the From Beau Brummell to Cary Grant: The Dandy From Beau Brummell to Cary Grant: The Dandy visual display of power, art and social protest, and the Evolution of Modern Masculinity and the Evolution of Modern Masculinity artists’ responses to war and revolution, public Tuesdays, 2 - 4 pm art and politics, and art and identity politics. September 13 - November 1 Six sessions, $200. (class will not meet October 11) (class will not meet October 11) Margaret Farr is an art historian who has worked at The “dandy” has been a figure in Western social the Art Institute of Chicago for over 18 years and has life and culture for over two centuries. Beyond taught at the Newberry, St. Xavier University, and his choices in style and fashion, the dandy Columbia College. creates a persona by playing with notions of individuality, gender, sexuality, and social class. This seminar will explore the many facets and Musical Interpretation: The Keys to Accessing This seminar will explore the many facets and Great Performances types of the dandy, concentrating on the figure’s heyday in nineteenth-century literature and Thursdays, 2 - 4 pm heyday in nineteenth-century literature and September 15 - November 17 visual culture and examining its echoes on the modern stage and screen. Seven sessions, $220. In this seminar, we will address issues that Jeffrey Nigro is a research associate in the Depart- perplex most music listeners: What makes a Jeffrey Nigro is a Research Associate in the Depart- great performance? What should we expect ment of Ancient and Byzantine Art and an Adjunctadjunct lecturer at the Art Institute of Chicago. of the performer? Why do we find some Lecturer at the Art Institute of Chicago. performances incredible, while performances of William Phillips taught English as a second/foreign William Phillips taught English as a Second/Foreign the same pieces by different musicians fall flat? Languagelanguage for for 35 35 years years in in the the U.S., U.S., Saudi Saudi Arabia, Arabia, Often, the emotions we feel while listening to a and Japan. performance influence our assessment of its artistry. Over the course of ten sessions, we structured and colorful music embodied an will look at ways to understand how emotional extreme departure from tradition—one of the reactions factor into the interpretation of music. movement’s defining tenets. While it is debatable Ten sessions, $270. whether Maurice Ravel can be considered an Impressionist, he is often yoked with Debussy, Stephen Kleiman (see bio previous page). and we will examine him as an antipode to Debussy’s style. Works by figures as disparate Andiamo in Italia: An Italophile’s Travel Course as Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Igor Stravinsky, Thursdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm Pierre Boulez, and others would not have September 15 - November 17 been possible without this powerful stylistic movement. Eight sessions, $240. There are many passiones—fine art, architecture, music, film, fashion, gastronomy, or shopping John Gibbons, teacher of piano, composition, music —that can capture an Italophile’s imagination. theory, and a variety of music appreciation classes for This course is intended for those who have adults, holds a PhD in music composition from the prior experience traveling in Italy or studying . John is a long-time instructor at the language. Our classroom role-play of real- the University of Chicago Graham School. life travel situations and our practice of high- frequency language patterns will prepare you for Music, Aesthetics, and Ideology in a more enjoyable and authentic exploration of Cultural History Italian language and culture. Ten sessions, $270. Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm Susan Pezzino, a lifelong Italophile and former United September 21 - November 9 States Fulbright Scholar, holds an MA in applied Some musical masterpieces are relevant not linguistics and works as a professional language teacher only because of their musical elements but also and multimedia curriculum designer in Chicago. because of their cultural significance. Such works illuminate key moments in history—moments Dinner Parties Gone Wrong when music played an especially important Thursdays, 6:15 - 7:45 pm role—from the Reformation through the Soviet September 15 - November 3 Revolution, to Nazi Germany. Each week, this Throughout history the dinner party has course will analyze a different masterpiece and traditionally been conceptualized as the height examine its contemporary aesthetics, ideology, of etiquette, civility, and decorum. Perhaps this and cultural history. Compositions to be analyzed is why so many novelists and filmmakers use it musically include Palestrina masses, symphonies as a forum for precisely the opposite: uncouth by Beethoven and Shostakovich, and tone poems debauchery, anarchic subversion, and all-around by Smetana, Scriabin, and Richard Strauss. bad behavior. Encompassing everything from the Writings of Nietzsche, Adorno, Berlioz, Wagner, Bible and fantastic literature, to the theatre of the and Stravinsky will also be considered. Eight absurd and surrealist cinema, this interdisciplinary sessions, $240. course will examine instances of dinner parties John Gibbons (see bio above). gone terribly wrong. Information about first readings will be sent upon registration. Eight In the Shadow of Beethoven: Classical-Romantic sessions, $200. Music in the Nineteenth Century Harrison Sherrod is the Coordinator of the Karla Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture September 21 - October 26 at the University of Chicago and a programmer at South Side Projections. Ludwig van Beethoven is universally viewed as the most disruptive figure in music history. While exhibiting great respect for the Classical The music traditions established by Haydn and Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm Mozart, his music also pioneerd the Romantic September 20 - November 8 spirit followed by other composers in the The Harlem Renaissance was a literary and nineteenth century. Beethoven’s treatment of intellectual flowering that fostered a new musical form, style, and genre will allow us to black cultural identity in the 1920s and 1930s. gain a fuller appreciation of the Romantic music Writers such as and Zora masterpieces that followed his lead of respecting Neale Hurston, as well as journalists, visual the past while, at the same time, forging ahead artists, and musicians flourished, while jazz with innovative ideas. We will consider how provided the soundtrack for their work—or the Beethoven’s example influenced the musical very medium through which it materialized. styles of Schubert, Schumann, Chopin, Berlioz, In this class we will explore all aspects of the Wagner, Verdi, Tchaikovsky, Brahms, and Harlem Renaissance, enjoying the diversity of Mahler. Please listen to any recording of expressions while elucidating their meaning and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in C Minor for the power. Eight sessions, $240. first class. Six sessions, $200. Beatriz Badikian-Gartler has taught literature and Dr. David Pituch is a classically trained saxophonist, writing in the Chicago area for the last 30 years. recording artist, and musicologist. Trained at and the University of Colorado in Boulder, he has performed with numerous Impressionism in Music orchestras in Europe and the United States. Wednesdays, 11 am - 1 pm September 21 - November 9 Although Claude Debussy despised the term “Impressionism,” he is regarded as its greatest musical exponent. We will consider the historical development of Impressionism, as well as the specific ways in which Debussy’s radically The Ring Cycle: Wagner’s Mythic Sources Painting with Style: Artists and Fashion, Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm 1850-1914 September 21 - November 16 Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm October 11 - November 22 There’s more to Richard Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung than dragons and swords! This Artists have always recorded fashion by depicting course explores the rich tapestry of materials the dress of their day. But in the nineteenth that Wagner’s operas bring together from century, certain artists influenced fashion by mythology, literature, and philosophy. We will inspiring trends, promoting new styles, and even trace Wagner’s process of building his libretti designing garments. This seminar will explore from the Icelandic Saga of the Volsungs, the the intersection of art and fashion in the work of German Nibelungenlied, and nineteenth- six painters—Franz Zaver Winterhalter, Dante century philosophical ideas. Excerpts from Gabriel Rossetti, Mary Cassatt, James Tissot, a wide range of texts will be discussed as we John Singer Sargent, and Gustave Klimt—whose discover the roots of Wagner’s masterwork. work influenced ideas about style that endure Nine sessions, $260. today. Seven sessions, $220. Dr. Karl E. H. Seigfried writes on myth and religion Debra N. Mancoff, author of Fashion Muse: for The Norse Mythology Blog and The Wild Hunt, Inspiration Behind Iconic Designs; Fashion and he is currently working on his third graduate in Impressionist Paris; Icons of Beauty: Art, degree at the University of Chicago Divinity School. Culture, and the Image of Women; and Mary Cassatt: Reflections of Women’s Lives, writes Bookbinding: An Eighteenth-Century Miniature on art, fashion, and culture. Almanach Stucture Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm Bookbinding: Discovering the Journal September 21 - October 12 Saturdays, 9:30 am - noon October 22 - November 12 Almanachs were common reference books in Europe and the Americas in the seventeenth An essential part of travel for centuries, the journal and eighteenth centuries. They contained served as a record of voyage before the camera, or, indispensible knowledge such as astronomical in this century, the phone. Adventurers, travelers, data, weather forecasts, and planting scientists, and immigrants kept meticulous notes information. Participants will have the of their travels and discoveries, leaving us pri- opportunity to examine a number of examples mary source material through which we can of historical almanachs from the Newberry’s enter the minds of writers and their time periods. collection. They will then create a model of a Participants will look at a variety of journals in specific eighteenth-century miniature Swiss the Newberry collection and make a journal that almanach examined in class that includes a incorporates interesting features from all of them. clever custom slipcase for protection. There Some bookbinding experience is useful, but not will be a $20 materials fee for this course. necessary. There will be a $20 materials fee for Four sessions, $160. this class. Four sessions, $200. Lesa Dowd is the Director of Conservation Services Barbara Korbel recently retired from her positions for the Newberry. Outside of her daily work in conser- as a book conservator at the Art Institute and, vation, she enjoys researching historical book structures more recently, the Newberry. Her time is now filled and practicing the art of fine French bookbinding. exploring book collections in the Chicago area, making historical models of her discoveries, and teaching them to others. Italian Music since 1850 Thursdays, 2 - 4 pm September 22 - November 10 Music and Place Saturdays, 1 - 2:30 pm In the second half of the nineteenth century, October 22 - November 19 Italian classical music was almost exclusively operatic. Verdi, Puccini, Mascagni, and The Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris inspired Leoncavallo created masterworks that still polyphonic music as grand as the cathedral itself; hold a place in the international repertoire. Richard Wagner erected an opera house in In the twentieth century, new composers Bayreuth specifically designed to house his Ring like Respighi brought renewed interest in Cycle; and totalitarian Soviet Russia employed the orchetra, while folk and popular music the arts as state propaganda. Social, political, have developed independently from classical. and physical context can influence, and, indeed, We will hear examples of all these genres, determine the nature of musical works and performed by Italian artists of past and present. practices. By the same token, music can shape Eight sessions, $240. the spaces that it occupies. This course examines the ever-meaningful dialogue between music Guy A. Marco (PhD, University of Chicago) has and place by studying examples from medieval taught in 11 universities, written or edited 50 books, Paris, seventeenth-century Venice, London in and published a hundred articles and reviews. He has the eighteenth century, Wagner’s Bayreuth, and led Newberry seminars since 1996. Soviet Russia. Information about first readings will be sent upon registration. Five sessions, $170. Regina Compton holds a PhD in musicology from the Eastman School of Music. Her research focuses primarily on baroque music, especially Handel’s operas, on which she has forthcoming articles in the Händel-Jahrbüch and the Journal of Musicological Research. The Chicago Fire of 1871: A Whodunit Chicago Interest Saturdays, 1 - 3 pm September 24 - October 8 Tour of Conservatory Saturdays, 10 am - noon This seminar will explore the myths about the September 10 - September 17 Chicago Fire presented by Richard Bales in his The Garfield Park Conservatory on the West 2002 book, The and the Myth of The Garfield Park Conservatory on the West Mrs. O’Leary’s Cow. We will examine his theories Side of Chicago was the concept of Prairie School landscape architect Jens Jensen; at the and arguments about more than a dozen possible School landscape architect Jens Jensen; at the causes for the Fire. The instructor will encourage time of its completion in 1908, the conservatory was considered revolutionary. This class will open-ended discussion in examining this ever- was considered revolutionary. This class will debatable topic. Optional reading for the first focus on that history as well as current and future usage of the conservatory and Garfield Park. The class: chapter 1 of Bales’s The Great Chicago Fire. usage of the conservatory and Garfield Park. The Three sessions, $120. seminar will meet at the Newberry for its first session, which will feature a lecture about the Maurice Champagne (Masters of Arts in teaching, history of the conservatory. The second session Northwestern University; Masters of Computer will meet at Garfield Park Conservatory and Science, DePaul University) taught high school English will consist of a behind-the-scenes tour of the and computer science and was a computer consultant building, surrounding gardens, and production before retiring. For the past 11 years, he has been greenhousesgreenhouses. Two Two sessions, sessions, $160. $160. a docent for the Chicago Architecture Foundation, John Raffetto (BA in landscape architecture, creating many tours and writing nmerous articles for the John Raffetto (BA in Landscape Architecture, CAF Docent News. University of Illinois Urbana; MA in Environmentalenvironmental Studies,studies, NortheasternNortheastern IllinoisIllinois UniversityUniversity Chicago)Chicago) isis a retired Horticulturisthorticulturist for for Garfield Garfield and and Lincoln Park It Didn’t All Go Up in Flames: conservatories. Exploring Pre-Fire Chicago Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm October 19 - November 9 Exploring More Chicago Neighborhoods Saturdays, 2 - 3:30 pm Think the Fire burned your chances for discov- September 10 - October 29 ering what Chicago was like in its early days? Think again! Come join us as we explore a gold This seminar will explore seven of Chicago’s neighborhoods through a series of readings and mine of pre-Fire treasures, many drawn from the neighborhoods through a series of readings and Newberry’s collection, including maps, diaries, walking tours: , McCormickville, Printer’s Row, Wicker Park, Old Town, church records, newspapers, and sheet music. Printer’s Row, Wicker Park, Old Town, Selected primary source readings will further Uptown, and East Rogers Park. We will study the history of each neighborhood’s initial inform our discussions about what life was really the history of each neighborhood’s initial like for early Chicagoans. Four sessions, $160. settlement and its changing population and popularity in the years since. We will examine Ginger Frere, MLS, is a professional researcher the built environment, paying special attention and lecturer. to residential, commercial, and institutional architecture; transportation infrastructure; Matt Rutherford, MLS, is Curator of Genealogy and architecture; transportation infrastructure; Local History at the Newberry. and landscape architecture, as well as the community’s distinctive local traditions, ethnic foods, religious spaces, athletic events, and artistic objects. The neighborhoods selected for Genealogy this fall seminar will be the same as those covered in the Summer 2016 version of this seminar, but From Research to News to Help: The Latest do not overlap with the set of neighborhoods Genealogical Internet Techniques covered in the 2013 version. Eight sessions, $200. Saturday, 9 am - noon September 24 Diane Dillon is Director of Exhibitions and Major Projects at the Newberry. She holds a PhD in the See how a professional genealogist uses the latest Historyhistory of of art Art from from Yale Yale University. University. Internet techniques from Research to News to Help, including both free and subscription websites, and learn how you can incorporate Richard J. Daley: Hierarchies of Chicago Thursdays, 6 - 7:30 pm these techniques into your genealogical pursuits Thursdays, 6 - 7:30 pm as well. One session, $65. September 22 - October 27 This seminar examines the life and times Marsha Peterson-Maass is a forensic genealogist and This seminar examines the life and times member of The DNA Detectives that give adoptees of the one person whose power constructed contemporary Chicago: Richard J. Daley, mayor answers by analyzing DNA. She’s led Newberry contemporary Chicago: Richard J. Daley, mayor seminars since 2002. from 1955-1976. O’Hare Airport, the University of Illinois at Chicago, our expressways, the booming Loop and North Side Lakefront, and Compiling Your Medical Family Tree (now-demolished) public housing projects: he Saturday, 1 – 4 pm built or enabled them all, and they continue to September 24 influence the city four decades after his death. We will read two classic biographies, as well as You can compile your Medical Family Tree and We will read two classic biographies, as well as Predisposition Results Sheet even if you don’t fiction and poetry depicting Daley’s influence, to explore not just how he shaped Chicago, but how have formal medical or genealogical training! explore not just how he shaped Chicago, but how This lecture provides a basic understanding he was shaped by Chicago, especially his home neighborhood of Bridgeport, and by institutions of key concepts and will explore ways to find neighborhood of Bridgeport, and by institutions family health records through both traditional like the Roman Catholic Church and the Cook County Democratic Party. Six sessions, $170. genealogical research methods and using today’s County Democratic Party. Six sessions, $170. commercial atDNA medical predisposition test Bill Savage teaches Chicago literature at Northwestern results. One session, $65. University, and he has been leading seminars at the University, and he has been leading seminars at the Marsha Peterson-Maass (see bio above). Newberry since 1992. Introduction to Western European Surnames 5. Records Group III Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm Saturday, October 22, 9 am – noon September 27 - October 25 In this seminar, we will discuss wills and probate (class will not meet October 11) records, immigration and naturalization records, Surnames often represent fossilized vocabulary local histories and city/county/telephone from the distant past, and this seminar will directories, genealogical publications (including reveal the mysteries you can discover from your PERSI), military records, tax records, and ethnic family’s last names. The course will provide records. One session. an introduction to the surnames of Western Europe, as they variously derive from first names 6. Organizing Your Project, Paper, and (patronymics), occupations, nicknames, and place Digital Files names. In addition to a primary focus on English, Saturday, October 22, 1 – 4 pm French, German, Italian, and Spanish, we will touch on Jewish surnames, as well as Dutch, We’ll explore how to create research and pre- Gaelic, Scandinavian, and Slavic. Please read sentation plans, how to turn your piles of paper chapter 1 of Elsdon Smith’s American Surnames for into files, and best practices for organizing digital the first class. Four sessions, $160. files, while going over other common-sense suggestions from an organizational consultant Jack Shreve is a historical linguist who has a PhD and leading genealogical experts. One session. from the University of Pittsburgh and 32 years of teaching experience at Allegany College of Maryland. Marsha Peterson-Maass is a forensic genealogist and member of The DNA Detectives that give adoptees Fundamentals of Genealogy®: answers by analyzing DNA. She’s led Newberry seminars since 2002. Basics for Everyone Saturdays, October 8 - October 22 Proving Your Pedigree The Newberry has one of the strongest Saturdays, 1 - 4 pm genealogical research collections in the nation. October 22 - November 19 Whether you’re a beginner or simply looking for (class will not meet November 5) formal fundamentals training, try these seminars, tailored to meet your research needs. Take all six How much evidence is enough to prove your or just those that interest you most. pedigree? What if the evidence does not agree? Do you trust the sources from which you created Six session rate: $300. Individual sessions: your family tree? Should you? Do you believe $65 each. your genealogical brick walls are permanent? The goal of genealogical research is to accurately 1. Research Methodology reconstruct identities and relationships that Saturday, October 8, 9 am - noon are now forgotten. This course will provide We will tackle the fundamentals of accredited a framework to prove each generation in an genealogical research and process methodology, ancestral line using the Genealogical Proof including research basics, strategies for beginners, Standard. Please read pp. 1-22 of Thomas W. precepts, and establishing standards of proof. Jones’s Mastering Genealogical Proof for the first We will review genealogical software, online class. Four sessions, $200. resources for research, and genetic genealogy. Karen Stanbary, CG (SM) is a professional genealogist One session. trained in advanced genealogical methodologies and the use of DNA analysis in genealogical problem-solving. 2. Records Group I Saturday, October 8, 1 – 4 pm Genetic Genealogy We will cover how to find and use vital records, Saturdays, 9:30 am - 12:30 pm U.S. federal and other census records, maps, land October 22 - November 19 records, religious records, and newspaper records. (class will not meet November 5) One session. All genealogists know the frustration of being 3. Records Group II stymied when a paper trail ends or there is Saturday, October 15, 9 am – noon not enough evidence to prove a relationship. But DNA analysis, combined with traditional In this session, we will focus on library research documentary research methods, can extend and reference tools, including genealogical the reconstruction of your family tree. This resources at the Newberry, a Newberry tour, seminar will explore the biological concepts library catalog searching, inter-library loan, of genetics and inheritance patterns, helping Chicago genealogical materials, and more using participants gain the necessary skills to analyze Newberry.org, Ancestry.com, and FamilySearch. DNA results within a genealogical context. org. One session. Although not required, participants will derive maximum benefit from the course if they have 4. Networking, Analyzing, and Recording DNA autosomal results and if they bring their Saturday, October 15, 1 – 4 pm own computers to class. This course serves as a We will discuss networking, both “the old- prerequisite for the Advanced Genetic Genealogy fashioned way” and newer methods of online Practical Applications seminar which will be networking through genealogical service offered in Spring 2017. Please read chapters 1 and providers (like Ancestry.com), social media, 2 of Thomas W. Jones’s Mastering Genealogical societies, eMailing lists, e-bulletin boards, Proof for the first class. Four sessions, $200. DNA databases, and more. We will also discuss Karen Stanbary (see bio above). information analysis methods using worksheet examples, recording software, citations, and style sheets. One session. Beyond Shaky Leaf Hints Part 1: What to Do Next Frank A. Biletz received his PhD in history from the Saturday, 9 am - noon University of Chicago. He is currently an adjunct October 29 instructor in history at Loyola University Chicago and has been teaching seminars at the Newberry since 1994. Curb your dependence on Ancestry’s shaky leaf hints by taking your genealogical project to the next level! Learn accredited genealogy Medieval Britain 1066-1307 through methodology, many new ways to use Historical Fiction Ancestry.com, how to “fix records” and enter Thursdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm information correctly, and how to find and use September 15 - November 17 new research strategies. One session, $65. Explore the highlights of medieval British Marsha Peterson-Maass (see bio previous page). history­—including the Norman Conquest, the Anarchy, the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland, and the Conquest of Wales—through Beyond Shaky Leaf Hints Part 2: quality historical fiction. Novels by Morgan Where to Go Next Llywelyn, Georgette Heyer, Sharon Penman, Saturday, 1 – 4 pm and others will introduce the period. With the October 29 readings as background, class meetings will Go well beyond shaky leaf hints by learning an discuss issues such as church-state relations, integrated approach to using Ancestry.com with food and drink, medicine, land tenure and other repositories (both online and dusty paper). military service, law and commerce, and the We’ll learn how to find and use these repositories role of women in society. Please read David plus research guides, research strategies, and Howarth’s 1066: The Year of the Conquest for a multitude of helpful online tools such as the first class. Ten sessions, $270. RootsWeb and FamilySearch. One session, $65. Matthew Bird, a law librarian and independent Marsha Peterson-Maass (see bio previous page). scholar, has a BA in history from Princeton University and a PhD in international politics from the University of Wales. Resources for Jewish Genealogy in Chicagoland Saturday, 10 - 11:30 am November 5 Hamilton: Primary Sources for “The Ten-Dollar Founding Father without a Father” This comprehensive presentation covers a brief Wednesday, 5:45 – 7:45 pm history of Jewish communities in Chicago and October 12 then launches into the records and resources available for today’s genealogical researcher. We Explore the story behind will cover vital records (death, marriage, birth), the musical phenomenon location/residence records, naturalization records, through books, legal documents, and sources for understanding manuscripts, and images life in Jewish Chicago. We will devote a special from the Revolution section to resources available at the Newberry, and and the early American case studies will be utilized to pull the research republic in the Newberry’s process together. One session, $45. collection, including letters and pamphlets Mike Karsen is a member of the Association of written by Alexander Professional Genealogists (APG), the Genealogical Hamilton, Aaron Burr, Speakers Guild (GSG), and is Past President of George Washington, the Jewish Genealogical Society of Illinois. He has and Thomas Jefferson. presented over 300 talks on genealogy topics locally, Expect illuminating discussion and documents on nationally, and internationally. Mike is the author of dueling, Federalism, adultery, equality, finance, the JewishGen website Guide to Jewish Genealogy and much more! One session, $85. in Chicagoland, and he has published articles on genealogy. Will Hansen is Director of Reader Services and Curator of Americana at the Newberry.

History and Social Science Debating the Constitution: The Federalist Papers and Anti-Federalist Essays Germany since 1945: Reckoning with the Past Thursdays, 2 - 4 pm Section A: Tuesdays, 1 - 3 pm September 15 - October 20 Section B: Tuesdays, 5:45 – 7:45 pm September 13 - November 22 One of the most remarkable debates in history (class will not meet October 11) took place in 1787-88, when American essayists debated the merits of the Constitution drafted In this survey of German history from the in Philadelphia. Participants in this seminar devastated aftermath of the Second World will discuss several of the renowned Federalist War to the stability and prosperity of the Papers supporting the Constitution along present, topics to be treated will include the with essays of anti-Federalists whose criticisms economic reconstruction of post-war Germany; helped shape how the Constitution was ulti- reckoning with the Nazi past; the division into mately implemented and interpreted. Please democratic West and Communist East; the read the Articles of Confederation and the emergence of Ostpolitik; the cultural ferment U.S. Constitution for the first class. Six and political crises of the 1970s; the fall of the sessions, $200. Wall and political reunification; Germany’s role in the Europe Union; and the challenge of Joseph S. Harrington has a master’s degree in history immigration. Please read the introduction and from the University of Connecticut. He has led chapter 1 of Konrad Jarausch’s After Hitler for the numerous Newberry adult education seminars. first class. Ten sessions, $270. History and Social Science Shakespeare (continued) Shakespeare’s Hamlet Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm The Origins of Christianity September 21 - November 16 Saturdays, 10 am - noon (class will not meet September 28) September 17 - November 19 For over four centuries, Shakespeare’s Hamlet In this historical survey of the emergence of has occupied an elevated place in the hearts Christianity from the time of Jesus through and minds of countless theater patrons, the first generations of Christians, topics to be moviegoers, readers, and thinkers alike. During treated will include Roman paganism; Second this eight-week seminar, we will read, view, Temple Judaism; the search for the historical and discuss the entire play, focusing on our Jesus; the conversion of Paul and his evangelical individual understanding and appreciation of mission; the Jewish Revolt (66-74 AD) and the text, its characters, as well as the viewpoints its consequences; the growing separation of of filmmakers and play directors who have Christianity from Judaism; the increasing need interpreted Shakespeare’s timeless masterpiece. to distinguish orthodoxy from heresy; and the Eight sessions, $240. emergence of the New Testament as a canon of authoritative writings. Please read chapters 1 and John Nygro is a lecturer, actor, and musician in the 2 of L. Michael White’s From Jesus to Christianity Chicago area with a 40-year career in the arts. His for the first class. Ten sessions, $270. talks have been heard at universities and libraries and on the radio. Frank A. Biletz received his PhD in history from the University of Chicago. He is currently an adjunct Music Inspired by Shakespeare instructor in history at Loyola University Chicago and Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm has been teaching seminars at the Newberry since 1994. September 21 - November 16 (class will not meet September 28) Just and Unjust Wars Thursdays, 6 - 7:30 pm From their first appearances in the sixteenth September 22 - November 10 century, the plays and poetry of William Shakespeare have inspired classical composers to The debate over what qualifies as a just war is create works of beauty and universal dramatic among the most durable streams of thought in appeal. Participants will view, listen to, and Western civilization. In this seminar we will discuss music inspired by Shakespeare’s writings survey the history of the tradition from St. in various genres: opera, symphonic music, Augustine to twenty-first-century thinkers. choral works, solo songs, ballets, and film Then we will assess its applicability to recurrent scores. We will experience the delicate balance issues of war and peace, including when war composers have struck as they’ve paid respect to is justified, how to limit it once initiated, and Shakespeare’s texts while using their music for such notions as aggression, self-defense, other- strong personal expression. Eight sessions, $240. defense, humanitarian intervention, nuclear war, preemptive war, preventive war, civil war, and John Nygro (see bio above). terrorism. Please read chapters 1 and 3 of Corey and Charles’s The Just War Tradition for the first The Play’s the Thing: Shakespeare and class. Eight sessions, $200. Victorian Art Richard Hoskins (PhD, University of Chicago Saturdays, 1 - 3 pm Divinity School; JD, Northwestern University School October 8 - November 19 of Law) is a senior lecturer at the Northwestern (class will not meet October 22) University School of Law. Queen Victoria and her subjects had no need to brush up on their Shakespeare. From picture Freedom from Fear: The Great Depression galleries to popular publications, the visual arts and the New Deal brought the themes and characters of the Bard Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm to life. Explore an intriguing array of images October 11 – November 29 that present Shakespeare’s iconic works from the Victorian perspective, including Pre-Raphaelite The Great Depression and the New Deal painting, fancy dress and costume, fan fiction, transformed the economic, social, and political fairy painting, the language of flowers, “safe” landscape of America. To understand how Shakespeare, and Queen Victoria’s view of the this ocurred, we will explore the causes of the Bard. Six sessions, $200. depression; global responses, including the threat of war, to America’s changing role in the Debra N. Mancoff, author of Fashion Muse: world; the emergence of new ideas to solve the Inspiration Behind Iconic Designs; Fashion consequences of the Depression; the struggles for, in Impressionist Paris; Icons of Beauty: Art, and against, the New Deal; the role of everyday Culture, and the Image of Women; and Mary people in the defense of economic and social Cassatt: Reflections of Women’s Lives, writes on justice for all Americans; and the continued art, fashion, and culture. challenges today to the ideals for which so many fought during those years. Information about first readings will be sent upon registration. Eight sessions, $240. Brooke Heagerty holds a PhD in history. Her current project focuses on the legacies of slavery and the power of history and memory. Elizabeth I: Woman, Ruler, and Myth Literature of the New England Renaissance Saturday, 10 am - 1 pm Thursdays, 2 - 4 pm October 29 September 15 - November 17 As a female ruler in a man’s world, Queen Literature of the New England Renaissance, or Elizabeth I turned perceived disadvantages Transcendentalism, is understood to reflect an into strengths by inspiring the greatest creative appreciation for the role intuition plays in both talents of the English Renaissance. Poetry, music, self-governance and our capacity to conceive and portraiture were employed to portray her of God. The period is considered to have lasted as an exceptional personality. This program from about 1830 until the end of the Civil War in will examine Elizabeth’s transformation into 1865. The two central questions of the seminar myth through the writing of Shakespeare and will be: 1. What does it mean to be reborn/ Spenser, the music of Dowland and Morley, and transcended? 2. How did this rebirth influence the paintings of Hilliard and Gheeraerts. One in the twentieth century? session, $65. Ten sessions, $270. Jeffrey Nigro is an art historian, adjunct lecturer, and Lyle Roebuck (BA, MA in classical Latin) is a research associate in the Department of Ancient and published fiction writer living in Chicago. Byzantine Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, where he also serves as President of the Classical Art Society. Popular and Literary Victorian Fiction John Nygro (see bio above). Wednesdays, 6 - 7:30 pm September 14 - November 2 In this seminar we will read examples of Literature and Theater Victorian fiction in order to explore the concerns and anxieties of the era—one of rapid The Ideal Woman as Portrayed in Two change, modernization, travel, and colonial Eighteenth-Century French Novels expansion. We will examine the importance Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm of archetypes created by Victorian fiction and September 14 - November 9 discuss the influence of popular literature on (class will not meet October 12) serious writers such as Henry James and Joseph By the late eighteenthth century, most Parisians Conrad as they worked their way from realist read constantly—everything from daily street to modernist techniques in their writing. Please notices to political treatises to novels. Two read the prologue and First Period of Wilkie novels, Rousseau’s Julie and Laclos’ Dangerous Collins’s The Moonstone for the first class. Liaisons, became the most widely read texts of Eight sessions, $200. the time. Each is compelling and romantic, yet Elzbieta Foeller-Pituch is the Assistant Director purposely sets out models for ideal behavior for of the Chabraja Center for Historical Studies at women. This seminar will consider the ideas Northwestern University, where she also teaches the novels advance and will seek to understand literature classes. why each was controversial. We will also examine pamphlets and related publications in the Newberry’s collection that illuminate public The Heidegger Question: Philosophy and Nazism reaction to each. Please read the introduction and Thursdays, 6 - 7:30 pm Part 1 of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Julie for the first September 15 - November 10 class. Eight sessions, $240. (class will not meet October 13) The philosophy of Martin Heidegger (1879- Diann Lapin has taught a wide range of humanities courses at the university and professional school levels. 1976), widely regarded as among the most Her scholarly interests are focused on cultural and class important of the twentieth century, has tensions during the French Revolution. become a lightning rod for social and political controversy. Critics note deep connections between Heidegger’s philosophical principles Darwin and the Darwinian Revolution and some aspects of Nazi ideology, his active Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm dedicated participation in the “Nazification” September 14 - October 26 of Germany in the 1930s, and his personal In this seminar, we will gain a thorough anti-Semitism. Should Heideggerian thought understanding of Darwin’s ideas through be regarded as irredeemably tainted with Nazi readings from his works The Origins of Species, ideology? We will discuss the original debates The Descent of Man, and Autobiography. The and review more recent treatments of this seminar will also address important matters of question. Information about first readings will historical context and the qualities of Darwin’s be sent upon registration. Eight sessions, $200. work that were both typical and novel for his Eugene Newman (ABD, Loyola University of time. Finally, the seminar will examine the Chicago) has led Newberry seminars in philosophical extent to which Darwin’s ideas influenced topics since 2001. a wide range of later authors and debates, including those associated with the concept of Social Darwinism. Please read pp. 21-118 of The Autobiography of Charles Darwin for the first class. Seven sessions, $220. Dean Kostantaras, a lecturer at the University of Illinois at Chicago, holds a PhD in history from George Washington University. Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov Once upon a Time... Saturdays, 10 am - noon Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm September 17 - November 19 September 27 - November 1 We will examine Dostoevsky’s final novel, The Why have fairy tales endured through the Brothers Karamazov, in a new enjoyable translation centuries? Beyond enchantment, what universal by Ignat Avsey. The text will be read as a messages do fairy tales offer individuals, cultures, polyphony of voices, narratives, and themes: a and the world collectively? In most cultures, gripping mystery, a family novel, a tangle of love there is no clear line separating myth from folk triangles, a philosophical discourse, a political and fairy tales. Because these tales often speak and spiritual quest, and a fairy tale. Readings will in the language of symbols and archetypes, we be supplemented by biographical, historical, and will have fun examining how they influence life critical information, and by episodes from the and literature, transcend age barriers, and how Russian film adaptation provided by the seminar the same fairy tale can be adapted in numerous leader. Please read Books One and Two for the countries, exploring works ranging from The first class. Ten sessions, $270. Brothers Grimm to George R.R. Martin’s Game of Thrones. Please bring your favorite fairy tale to Julia Kriventsova Denne studied literature at St. the first class. Six sessions, $200. Petersburg University, Russia, and teaches Russian literature in the Chicago area. Colleen Delegan, a member of the Writer’s Guild of America, West, is an award-winning author, screenwriter, and ghostwriter. Philosophy and Walking Saturdays, 10 am - noon September 17 - October 15 Survey of American Drama: Breaking Out of the Zoo Friedrich Nietzsche famously declared, Wednesdays, 6 - 7:30 pm “It is only ideas gained from walking that September 28 - November 16 have any worth.” A pantheon of thinkers, including Socrates, Kant, and Thoreau—all The plays of Edward Albee, Sam Shepard, David avid walkers—might agree with him. This Mamet, Wendy Wasserstein, and others will course will ask, Why is walking so integral be the primary focus of this discussion-based to philosophizing, a practice that’s traditionally seminar. Their works offer an insightful glimpse conducted from the comfort of the classroom or an into the idea of what it meant to be an American armchair? Please note: each session of this in the second half of the twentieth century, a seminar will meet at a different location time of upheaval and great social change. By across town and will involve walking around. concentrating on theme and the unique use of Information about first readings will be sent language, we will examine these plays as works upon registration. Five sessions, $160. of literature, theater, and social commentary. Please read Edward Albee’s The Zoo Story for Harrison Sherrod is the Coordinator of the Karla the first class. Eight sessions, $200. Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture at the University of Chicago and a programmer at South Todd Bauer holds an MA in liberal studies from Side Projections. Northwestern University and is a playwright whose works have been performed in Chicago, New York, Women Who Conquered the World with Their Wit and Washington, DC. Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm September 21 - December 7 A Serial Reading of Our Mutual Friend (class will not meet October 12 or November 23) Wednesdays, 2 - 4 pm October 12 - November 30 From their debut in Berlin in the 1780s to their appearance in 1930s California, women’s salons Our Mutual Friend is Charles Dickens’s last served as welcoming havens where all classes and completed novel, filled with humor, dark satire, creeds could openly debate art, music, literature, multiple plotlines, and remarkable prose. This and politics. We shall explore the history of seminar considers the book in serial weekly some of these salons—with a special emphasis installments (no spoilers) for an engaging, on the Americans in Paris of the nineteenth in-depth look at Dickens’s literary craft, social and twentieth centuries—where remarkable criticism, and psychological insight. Please read women of intellect resolved that neither gender pages 13-51 (chapters 1.1-1.4) for the first class, nor religion would impede their ability to bring but please do not read the book’s introduction. about social change. Ten sessions, $270. Eight sessions, $240. Dagmar Herrmann, a long-time instructor at the Steven J. Venturino, PhD, teaches at Loyola Newberry, is an award-winning translator and University Chicago and is the author of The independent scholar. Complete Idiot’s Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism. Contempory Novels: Living Together and No Poem Left Behind: A Wokshop on Revision Apart in the Modern World Saturdays, 1 - 3 pm Tuesdays, 2 - 3:30 pm September 24 - November 12 October 18 - November 29 Although one challenge for poets can be the (class will not meet November 22) proverbial blank page, more often the more We will discuss the theme of alienation and prominent difficulty is what’s already on the connection in four contemporary novels of page and what to do with it. This workshop significant literary merit: Jane Gardam’s Old is the place to bring your rough drafts and Filth; William Maxwell’s So Long, See You word-mess for a thoughtful critique as well as Tomorrow; Ian McEwan’s On Chesil Beach; and a discussion about poems—contemporary and Michael Cunningham’s The Hours. We will traditional—that can show us different ways to consider how each novel exquisitely captures start a poem, develop it, and make a graceful the complexity of relationships in our time. In exit when it’s over. Information about first addition, we will explore the authors’ varied readings will be sent upon registration. Eight backgrounds, their different styles, and the moral sessions, $240. questions they raise in their works. Please read Debra Bruce (debrabrucepoet.com), is the author pp. 1-128 of Jane Gardam’s Old Filth for the first of four books, most recently Survivors’ Picnic. class. Six sessions, $180. She is a professor emeritus at Northeastern Illinois Linda Levine (MA in English education, Northwestern University. University) has taught English and other humanities subjects for several decades, including previous seminars Picture This: Writing Picture Books for Children at the Newberry. Wednesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm September 28 - November 9 (class will not meet October 12) Writing Workshops This workshop focuses on how to create and Writing for the Theater write a successful children’s picture book that Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm connects with both young readers and today’s September 13 - November 1 ever-changing marketplace. Participants’ manuscripts will be shared and discussed to Designed for beginning playwrights as well highlight the variety of picture books and as for writers of other media, this seminar structures, craft, the writing process, and emphasizes what makes a scene work, how to publishing opportunities. Writers of all levels develop character through dialogue and action, will be offered a supportive, challenging, and and how to think in theatrical terms. Weekly encouraging environment. Six sessions, $200. writing assignments will focus on points of attack, conflict, resolution, text, and subtext. At Esther Hershenhorn authors award-winning picture the conclusion of the class, students will have a books and middle-grade fiction, coaches children’s- better understanding of how to write scenes that book writers, and recently served on The Society of are dramatic, engaging, and entertaining. Eight Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Board of sessions, $240. Advisors. Douglas Post is an award-winning playwright whose plays have been produced around the world. He has NaNoWriMo Support Group taught at Northwestern University, DePaul University, Tuesdays, 5:45 - 7:45 pm and . He currently teaches at November 1 - November 29 . November is National Novel Writing Month, wherein writers challenge themselves to write a Writing the City: A Poetry Workshop 50,000 word novel in 30 days. Join us for a place Saturdays, 1 - 3 pm to check-in, gain support, and share tips to make September 17 - November 19 it to the end. One hour per week will focus on check-in and motivation tips, the other on craft This 10-week workshop will encourage the considerations and optional/voluntary sharing of exploration of Chicago’s cultures, arts, history, work. Five sessions, $170. and current events through city excursions (optional), in-class writing exercises, and Julie Benesh (PhD, MFA) is an award-winning assignments. Attention will be given to the fiction writer who has taught over a dozen Newberry craft of the poetic form and breaking out of seminars. old writing habits. We will also learn from published pieces by a diverse selection of Chicago poets. Our goals will be to establish a positive environment for generating work, learn from critical feedback, and participate in a supportive creative and observant community. Expect to leave the workshop with at least 10 new poems. Ten sessions, $270. Valerie Wallace holds an MFA in creative writing from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and has taught workshops throughout Chicago. She is an editor with RHINO Poetry and the author of The Dictators’ Guide to Good Housekeeping. Fall 2016 Seminars Welcome to the Fall 2016 term of the Newberry Adult Education Seminars Program. We are proud to offer a wide variety of informal, non-credit courses designed for adults with busy schedules and inquiring minds, all under the roof of one of the nation’s most renowned humanities research libraries. Registration opens Tuesday, August 9 at 10 am. The early registration deadline is Friday, September 2 at 4 pm. After this date, registration costs will increase by 10 percent, and classes with fewer than the minimum seven registrants will be canceled. All listed prices in the brochure reflect the early registration cost. The term begins Saturday, September 10 with classes starting on a rolling basis after that. Register online at www.newberry.org/adult-education-seminars or call (312) 255-3700.

Seminar registrations are processed on a first-come, first-served basis. Many seminars fill quickly; therefore, we encourage you to enroll early. Full payment is required at the time of registration, and we cannot pro-rate tuition to compensate for missed classes. Seven registrants are needed to run a class.

We offer a 10% discount to: – For all seminars longer than two – Associates of the Newberry at the sessions, tuition (less the 10% Author level ($100 and above), or processing fee) is refundable until – Seniors 65 and over, or 24 hours prior to the second class – Students (valid student ID required) meeting.

Refunds: Requests for refunds must be Books and Materials: The Newberry received in writing; to request a refund, Bookstore stocks most required and email us at [email protected]. recommended titles for the seminars. The Seminars Office retains a 10% Associates of the Newberry at the Author processing fee. level ($100 and above) receive a 10% – For single- or two-session seminars, discount on all seminar texts. Book and tuition (less the 10% processing fee) material costs are not included in the tuition is refundable until 24 hours before the price unless otherwise noted. seminar begins.

To register for a seminar please submit this form, along with your payment, to: , Attn: Seminars, 60 W. Walton Street, Chicago, IL 60610

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Tuition $ SEMINAR TITLE

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¨ I am a senior (65 or older). (10% discount) or Discount ¨ I am a student (with a copy of valid ID enclosed). (10% discount) or Amount $ ¨ I am an Associate of the Newberry Library at the Author level ($100) or above. Associates at the Author level of $100 or above receive a 10% discount on seminar tuition. Total $ ¨ I want to become an Associate now at the $ ______level. (over) SEMINAR REGISTRATION FALL 2016 all public programs are free, and no reservations are required. required. are reservations no and free, are programs public all check list; apartial is This Programs 2016 Public Fall Newberry Thursday, September 22, 6pm 22, September Thursday, Witches The Schiff, Stacy author Prize-winning Pulitzer Author Meet the 6pm 14, September Wednesday, Knowles Carol Roots” Family His for Quest Man’s “One History Your Family Preserving 10, 10 am September Saturday, FoundationHistory Illinois of University the and Illinois of State the Wars in Colonial of Society the by Cosponsored Griffin Revolution,” Patrick American the of Origins the and Duties Townshend “The Lecture History Colonial SEPTEMBER 31, 6pm August Wednesday, Moore, Natalie Author Meet the AUGUST and tours. curator-led programming on exhibition for information Visit www.newberry.org/creating-shakespeare 31, 23 2016 –December September Shakespeare Creating EXHIBITIONS NAME ( NAME SIGNATURE CARD NUMBER ¨ ¨ ( E-MAIL DAY PHONE( CITY STATE ADDRESS ZIP

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) The South Side The ) ) EVENING *If registering after September 2, please add 10% to your tuition. your to 10% add please 2, September after registering *If ¡ www.newberry.org VISA ¡ MASTERCARD for more programs. Unless otherwise noted, noted, otherwise Unless programs. more for ¡ $ . selflessness, and reunion, adapted by by adapted reunion, and selflessness, trust, love, of story A heartwarming Cricket on the Hearth Reading Theatrical 7, 5:30 December pm Wednesday, calendar. a2017 Newberry receive attendees All Gage Jill Print” and Image, “Calendars, Representatives Artist Campagna Munro by Cosponsored Lecture and Party Release Calendar DECEMBER 6pm 20, October Thursday, Center Miller Jack the by Cosponsored Joanne Freeman Hamilton Alexander on Lecture OCTOBER month at 9 am: 9/10, 9 am: at 10/1,month 11/5, 12/3 the of Saturday first the held Usually HISTORY ORIENTATION GENEALOGY AND LOCAL 17, 10 December am Saturday, Chicago. of Project Shakespeare the from actors by performed story, Christmas Dickens Charles the from Christian Jeff EXPRESS AMERICAN

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