The Cowboy Wa Y Interview: Janine Tu R N Er and Constituting America
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English Translation of the German by Tom Hammond
Richard Strauss Susan Bullock Sally Burgess John Graham-Hall John Wegner Philharmonia Orchestra Sir Charles Mackerras CHAN 3157(2) (1864 –1949) © Lebrecht Music & Arts Library Photo Music © Lebrecht Richard Strauss Salome Opera in one act Libretto by the composer after Hedwig Lachmann’s German translation of Oscar Wilde’s play of the same name, English translation of the German by Tom Hammond Richard Strauss 3 Herod Antipas, Tetrarch of Judea John Graham-Hall tenor COMPACT DISC ONE Time Page Herodias, his wife Sally Burgess mezzo-soprano Salome, Herod’s stepdaughter Susan Bullock soprano Scene One Jokanaan (John the Baptist) John Wegner baritone 1 ‘How fair the royal Princess Salome looks tonight’ 2:43 [p. 94] Narraboth, Captain of the Guard Andrew Rees tenor Narraboth, Page, First Soldier, Second Soldier Herodias’s page Rebecca de Pont Davies mezzo-soprano 2 ‘After me shall come another’ 2:41 [p. 95] Jokanaan, Second Soldier, First Soldier, Cappadocian, Narraboth, Page First Jew Anton Rich tenor Second Jew Wynne Evans tenor Scene Two Third Jew Colin Judson tenor 3 ‘I will not stay there. I cannot stay there’ 2:09 [p. 96] Fourth Jew Alasdair Elliott tenor Salome, Page, Jokanaan Fifth Jew Jeremy White bass 4 ‘Who spoke then, who was that calling out?’ 3:51 [p. 96] First Nazarene Michael Druiett bass Salome, Second Soldier, Narraboth, Slave, First Soldier, Jokanaan, Page Second Nazarene Robert Parry tenor 5 ‘You will do this for me, Narraboth’ 3:21 [p. 98] First Soldier Graeme Broadbent bass Salome, Narraboth Second Soldier Alan Ewing bass Cappadocian Roger Begley bass Scene Three Slave Gerald Strainer tenor 6 ‘Where is he, he, whose sins are now without number?’ 5:07 [p. -
Diadem Gold Mining Co
aiyiM iwaftwfiFBywiwftBiaww1' 1,,iw Mf MJff Wednesday, May i, 1901 THE SUMPTER MINER Diadem Gold Mining Co. : OFFICERS Mines Situated on Green- This Mine is Working j President J. H. ROBBINS J Every Day j Mayor of Sumpttr a. N.C.RICHARDS horn Mountain Attorney (Uw J This Mine is a Shiping Sec'y and Treas...OTTO HERLOCKER Baker County Mine i4 At. Cathltr First Bank ol Sumpttr f Directors J. H. Robblns, N. C. J The Baker Cl!y SamplInK Works Richards, E. M. Anderson, M. D. gives the following returns (or two Supt. of Mines... DAVID O'NEIL small shipments: Lot 68-1- . 253 sacks X Of Iter P, O.. Baker County, Oregon 1,000,000 SHARES of ore, dry weight, 13,06) pounds. In addition to the officer of the company Z Gold, 7 ounces; silver, 940 ounces. J among the atockholderi are: Hon. Lee Mantle, T : PAR VALUE $1 00 EACH Gold per oz, $20; treatment cost 98. late IT. S. Senator, Hutte, Montana: Tho. R. Net price per Freight, Hindi, County Treasurer, Butte, Montana; I ton, 130.50. late of Hon. John F. Forbes, Attorney-at-La- Butte; Zi a 97 per ton. Net value lost, 9800,24. Chas. S. Warren, Speculator, Butte; los. F. Par-- T Lot No. 102. 378 sack ore; dry dee, Miner, Phllllpsburg, Montana; H. M. Grant, weight, 18,810. Gold, 6.20 ounces; Insurance Adfuster, Portland; Geo. W, McDow- - ell, Broker Portland; CB. Richardson, Contrac- - Home Office silver, q ounces; gold $20 per ounce. tor, Walla. Walla, Wash.; Hector McRea. -
A Paratextual Analysis of Nurturing Opera Audiences: Transmedia Practices, Interactivity and Historical Interpretation in the We
. Volume 16, Issue 1 May 2019 A paratextual analysis of Nurturing Opera Audiences: Transmedia practices, interactivity and historical interpretation in the Welsh National Opera’s promotion of the ‘Tudors Trilogy’1 Rachel Grainger and Márta Minier, University of South Wales, UK Abstract: This article examines contemporary opera marketing strategies in the context of paratextuality and transmedia storytelling using the case study of the Welsh National Opera’s (WNO) 2013 ‘Tudor trilogy’ (Anna Bolena, Maria Stuarda, Roberto Devereux by Gaetano Donizetti). The WNO’s marketing, and education & outreach campaigns for their Tudor opera performances build on the contemporary manifold ‘presence of the past in British society’ (Wright 2009: ix) and the widespread use of technologically aided branding in the arts world. We will argue that the WNO’s creative and heritagising recourse to the Tudor period as ‘usable past’ (Jordanova 2006, Smith 1997: 37) and ‘playable past’ (Kapell and Elliott 2013: 362) not only determines the main branding context for the performed opera trilogy as a cultural product but that there is also a lucrative case of one brand supporting another: the Tudor brand as a phenomenon of contemporary retro-culture bolstering the WNO brand as a not exclusively upper class but accessible and chic brand. WNO’s Tudors performance cluster is a project where significant agencies and configurations of the contemporary heritage industry converge: high opera meets Tudormania, digital marketing company Yello brick and the National Trust as -
From the Garden of Eden to the New Creation in Christ : a Theological Investigation Into the Significance and Function of the Ol
The University of Notre Dame Australia ResearchOnline@ND Theses 2017 From the Garden of Eden to the new creation in Christ : A theological investigation into the significance and function of the Old estamentT imagery of Eden within the New Testament James Cregan The University of Notre Dame Australia Follow this and additional works at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses Part of the Religion Commons COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further copying or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice. Publication Details Cregan, J. (2017). From the Garden of Eden to the new creation in Christ : A theological investigation into the significance and function of the Old Testament imagery of Eden within the New Testament (Doctor of Philosophy (College of Philosophy and Theology)). University of Notre Dame Australia. https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses/181 This dissertation/thesis is brought to you by ResearchOnline@ND. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of ResearchOnline@ND. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FROM THE GARDEN OF EDEN TO THE NEW CREATION IN CHRIST: A THEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE SIGNIFICANCE AND FUNCTION OF OLD TESTAMENT IMAGERY OF EDEN WITHIN THE NEW TESTAMENT. James M. Cregan A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, Australia. School of Philosophy and Theology, Fremantle. November 2017 “It is thus that the bridge of eternity does its spanning for us: from the starry heaven of the promise which arches over that moment of revelation whence sprang the river of our eternal life, into the limitless sands of the promise washed by the sea into which that river empties, the sea out of which will rise the Star of Redemption when once the earth froths over, like its flood tides, with the knowledge of the Lord. -
Outer Garments: Copes, Cloaks and Mantles
CHAPTER 2 Outer Garments: Copes, Cloaks and Mantles Introduction was very much the province of the highest ranks, secular or ecclesiastical, in Europe. The cope is a form of vestment which has changed very In its ecclesiastical history the earliest use of the little over the centuries. It originated (like the chasuble, cope seems to have been as a hooded garment worn see chapter 3) from a Roman garment, the earliest form by monks and priests in church, probably for warmth of which was not particularly grand, called the paenula. and for protection against the weather. The Catholic This was a semi-circular cloak, open down the front, Encyclopedia notes some interesting eighth- to ninth- worn as everyday clothing by the ordinary citizen, and century mentions of a garment called a cappa (still an apparently by women and the upper classes as a pro- alternative name for a cope) which make clear that tection from the weather when travelling. This latter some were indeed everyday cloaks, others more suit- version could be made of splendid rather than merely able for liturgical wear – and in one instance that the practical material, and it was this which gradually, in garment called by some a cuculla (cowl) was the same fact very slowly, became part of ecclesiastical dress, and as that called by others a cappa, and was part of monas- even more slowly developed a ceremonial use. Because tic dress.1 This casts an interesting light on the ultimate of its originally protective function it was usually volu- origins of the Franciscan cowl of later centuries (see the minous, so that it could be wrapped around the body cowl of St Francis of Assissi, 4.4). -
Subducted Carbonates, Metasomatism of Mantle Wedges, and Possible Connections to Diamond Formation: an Example from California
American Mineralogist, Volume 90, pages xxx–xxx, 2005 Subducted carbonates, metasomatism of mantle wedges, and possible connections to diamond formation: An example from California MIHAI N. DUCEA,1,* JASON SALEEBY,2 JEAN MORRISON,3 AND VICTOR VALENCIA1 1University of Arizona, Department of Geosciences, Tucson, Arizona 85721, U.S.A. 2California Institute of Technology, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A. 3University of Southern California, Department of Earth Sciences, Los Angeles, California 90089, U.S.A. ABSTRACT We investigated calcite globules and veins in two spinel-garnet peridotite xenoliths from the sub- Sierra Nevada mantle. The studied xenoliths were entrained in a Miocene (11 Ma) volcanic plug. These carbonates are associated spatially with silicate glass inclusions, suggesting that they are primary inclusions—inclusions that formed at high temperature in the mantle and not at or close to the Earthʼs surface. The host peridotites represent samples of the lithospheric mantle wedge beneath the Meso- zoic California magmatic arc, as indicated by radiogenic isotopic ratios measured on clinopyroxene 87 86 separates [ Sr/ Sr(11 Ma) = 0.7058–0.7061, εNd (11 Ma) = –1.9 to –0.7]. Mineral chemistry of the peridotite major phases is typical of a mantle section that was depleted of melt. The δ18O values of olivine and orthopyroxene from the two samples are also typical of mantle rocks (δ18O = 6–6.5‰). In contrast, calcite veins have δ18O of 18–20‰ and δ13C of –14‰, arguing for a subducted sedimentary origin for these carbonates. Presumably, the carbonates were expelled from the downgoing slab and fluxed into the overlying mantle wedge as CO2- or CO2-H2O-rich fluids or melts. -
On Site Opera Press Kit 2016
PRESS KIT 2016 P.O. Box 231480 | New York, NY 10023 347-394-3050 | [email protected] | www.osopera.org QUOTES Gregg Kallor's The Tell-Tale Heart • “The starkly simple production by Sarah Meyers, which placed Pojanowski in the merciless glare of a single spotlight, proved one of the most effective stagings I've seen from the always-inventive On Site Opera” –The Observer • “Part of the draw of The Crypt Sessions is its unique venue. Performances happen in the Crypt Chapel...an inspired setting for The Tell-Tale Heart—the vaulted, cloistered qualities well suited for a meditation on entombment.” –Parterre Box Dominick Argento’s Miss Havisham’s Wedding Night & Hector Berlioz’s La Mort de Cléopâtre • “I would not have wanted to hear either opera anywhere else....Without that separation from the audience, Partridge and Gaissert leveraged the closeness, relying on the transparency of their characters’ damaged psyches, indulging in murmured pianissimos and quick turns that might get lost in a bigger house. The result was both lavish and intimate.” — NY Magazine • “There was the gobsmacking experience of having the performers right there at one’s elbow, inches away – Cleopatra’s gown wafting against your shoulder as she passed, Miss Havisham’s old lace perfuming the air as her doleful countenance met yours in a transfixing intimacy. And, above all, there was the sound!” La Scena Musicale Marcos Portugal's The Marriage of Figaro • “So Much More Than Sleep No More. On Site Opera's immersive version of Marriage of Figaro is on point. This lively young cast was so irresistible that you wouldn’t ever want them to stop singing.” –The Observer • “On Site Opera presents the ultimate in intimate productions by performing works in spaces that fit the setting of the story. -
From Agriculture to Ecotourism: Socio-Economic Change, Community Development and Environmental Sustainability in a Costa Rican Village
From Agriculture to Ecotourism: Socio-Economic Change, Community Development and Environmental Sustainability in a Costa Rican Village By Josephine Howitt Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies In partial fulfillment of the requirements For the Master of Arts in Globalization and International Development School of International Development and Global Studies Faculty of Social Sciences University of Ottawa © Josephine Howitt, Ottawa, Canada, 2012 Abstract: This research is an ethnographic case study of the emerging ecotourism economies in the agricultural village of San Gerardo de Rivas, Pérez Zeledón, Costa Rica. Due to the village’s location as the main entry point to climb the country’s tallest mountain within Chirripó National Park, the majority of households in San Gerardo now derive some income from tourism. I conducted twenty household surveys, followed by twenty-one semi-structured interviews with male and female heads of households and representatives of local organizations and tourism businesses. Drawing on local perspectives, I found that ecotourism was a complementary income source to agriculture and that men and women were engaging differently in ecotourism employment. Local organizations were involved in the participatory management of ecotourism activities within Chirripó National Park. Ecotourism has affected environmental practices and local people are strategically negotiating the direction of tourism development, including through using environmental discourses, to optimize the benefits to their community. ii Acknowledgements I would like to thank the individuals from San Gerardo de Rivas who participated in my research and shared their time and experiences with me. I am so grateful to the community members who welcomed me to their village and invited me to community events, to visit their farms or to enjoy a coffee and pan casero (homemade bread) while waiting for the rain to ease. -
A Picture Perfect 1932 Lincoln KB Sport Phaeton
Volume 20 Issue 9 September 1, 2020 A picture perfect 1932 Lincoln KB Sport Phaeton The Pride and Joy of Lou and Judi Cosentino In March of 2018, we went to our first major auto auction and show in Amelia Island, Flori- da. We became interested in antique autos after visiting John Staluppi’s Cars of Dreams in North Palm Beach, Florida. We had acquired a 1931 Packard Super 8 and loved the cars of the 1930s. The 1932 Lincoln KB Sport Phaeton was gorgeous, but did not draw significant interest from bidders. We were surprised, jumped in, and won the bid. Welcome to the The KB 232-B Sport was designed by the Walter M. Murphy Company in Pasadena, Califor- Northstar News, the nia, and constructed in Lincoln’s own body plant. Lincoln made eight-cylinder (KA) and 12- cylinder (KB) cars in 1932. This was the first year that Lincoln offered 12-cylinder engines. Lin- monthly publication of coln produced 43 KB Phaetons that year, and of these, only 13 were Sport Phaetons. This model the Northstar Region was almost identical to the Dual Cowl Sport Phaeton, lacking only the tonneau cowl. We were of the Lincoln and told this is the only survivor of this body type. The base price of the Sport Phaeton in 1932 was $4500. It is recognized as a Full Classic by the Classic Car Club of America. Continental Owners We were pleased to find that this car was previously owned by a Minnesotan, Jim Griffin, a Club. We value your Lincoln historian. -
UPOA-Volume-94.Pdf
Utah Peace Officers Association Board of Directors UPOA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Rev. 1-3-18 PRESIDENT/PUB. SAFETY REGION B REPRESENTATIVE REGION J REPRESENTATIVE RETIREMENT Vacant Cory Norman, SCI PD Arlow Hancock, UHP, Cache Co. SO 435-705-0795 801-381-5417 [email protected] [email protected] PRESIDENT ELECT REGION B REPRESENTATIVE REGION K REPRESENTATIVE Arlow Hancock, UHP, Cache Co. SO Merv Taylor, Weber State Univ. PD Jeff Jones, UHP 801-381-5417 801-549-7434 435-743-6530 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] VICE PRESIDENT REGION C REPRESENTATIVE UTAH ALARM SYS SEC. LIC. BD Damon Orr, San Juan County SO Phil Kirk, Park City PD Larry Gillett, Retired/Corrections 435-979-2116 435-615-5512 801-968-9797 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT REGION C REPRESENTATIVE ULELC - LEGISLATIVE CHAIR Eric Whitehead, Lindon PD Domonic Adamson, Pleasant Grv PD Brian Locke, Cache County SO 801-769-8600 801-404-1514 435-755-1280 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] SECRETARY REGION C REPRESENTATIVE PISTOL CHAIR Mike Galieti, Retired PD Kirk Folsom, Lehi PD Greg Severson, Sandy PD 801-707-8610 801-768-7110 801-568-7237 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] TREASURER & ADMIN. ASST. REGION D REPRESENTATIVE MULTI GUN CHAIR Kent Curtis, Retired U of U PD Skyler Jensen, Cache County SO Jeremy Dunn, Enoch PD 801-560-7367 435-754-4798 435-704-4344 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] SERGEANT AT ARMS REGION E REPRESENTATIVE K -9 TRIALS CHAIR Shalon Shaver, Iron County SO Jeremy Dunn, Enoch PD Rose Cox, Retired SLC PD 435-867-7555 435-704-4344 385-229-0742 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] LEGAL COUNSEL REGION F REPRESENTATIVE CORRECTIONS REP. -
Hospitality Management and Public Relations
HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT AND PUBLIC RELATIONS BTS MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS 1. If you are staying in a five star hotel , you are an a) Extra high budgeted tourist b) Guest of the hotel c) Middle budgeted tourist d) Guest of the company that has invited you 2. A Dharamshala is suitable for a) Those business man who can stay in graded hotels b) Low income families c) Only rich merchants d) All the above 3. What is the main feature of a time share establishment a) It is a private property b) Its rooms / resources are shared by guests / tourists according to specified time schedules. c) It is a facility of one star grade d) None of these 4. In a single bedroom , the number of glasses given to the guests is a) 1 b) 2 c) 4 d) None of these 5. Where is hotel Ashok located in New Delhi a) Jor Bagh b) Chanakya puri c) Sunder Nagar d) New Friends Colony 6. The guest enters into a large hotel from its a) Lobby b) Front Office c) Reception d) Restaurant 7. Cocktails are mixed only by expect cocktail makers or experienced bar tenders. Infact, they are proud of their skills. Why is that so ? a) Cocktails are difficult to make b) It is important to mix different liquors and fruit juices in a correct proportion , the guest should not digest on add cocktail and become sick c) They are at the forefront of the sales departments in the bar and so, they feel proud of their cocktail making skills. -
BESTEN Think Tank XV: the Environment People Nexus in Sustainable Tourism: Finding the Balance
BESTEN Think Tank XV: The Environment People Nexus in Sustainable Tourism: Finding the Balance 17-21 June 2015 Faculty of Economic & Management Sciences Division of Tourism Management University of Pretoria South Africa BEST EN Think Tank XV The Environment-People Nexus in Sustainable Tourism : Finding the Balance Proceedings Editor Rachel Hay [email protected] BEST Education Network James Cook University 1 James Cook Drive Townsville QLD 4811 These proceedings are published under a Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/) Publisher James Cook University Townsville, Australia ISBN 978-0-9942333-2-5 To cite papers from these proceedings, please use this format. Lead author surname, Initial, second and subsequent author surname, initial.,(2014)“Title of Paper”, in R. Hay (ed.) Conference Proceedings of BEST EN Think Tank XV. Townsville, Australia: James Cook University, page number(s) of contribution. ii BEST EN Think Tank XV The Environment-People Nexus in Sustainable Tourism : Finding the Balance Preface Dear Friends of BEST EN, We are pleased to present the proceedings of the BEST Education Network (BESTEN) Think Tank XV entitled The Environment People Nexus in Sustainable Tourism: Finding the Balance. The event was held in the Kruger National Park, South Africa, June17-21, 2015, in conjunction with the Faculty of Economic & Management Sciences; Division of Tourism Management; University of Pretoria, South Africa. BEST EN is an international consortium of educators committed to furthering the development and dissemination of knowledge in the field of sustainable tourism. The organization’s annual Think Tank brings together academics and industry representatives from around the world to discuss a particular theme related to sustainable tourism and push the research and education in this specific field forward.