ADDENDUM to CATALOG 2009-2010 (Fall 2009)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

ADDENDUM to CATALOG 2009-2010 (Fall 2009) This Addendum reflects emendations and additions to the 2009-2010 Manhattanville Catalog effective Fall 2009. The changes included herein supersede corresponding information found in sections of the catalog cited below. Following are changes to Grading and Evaluations [p.7]: In addition, the instructor has the option of awarding grades of A- (3.75), B+ (3.25), and B- (2.75), and C+ (2.25), and C- (1.75). Students (except those on probation) may choose to take up to 4 credits a semester on a Pass/Fail rather than a letter grade basis. However, this grading option must be indicated on the registration form and can only be changed up to the end of the Add/Drop period. Thereafter the decision cannot be changed. Following are changes for the Art History prerequisites: All 3000-level art history courses have the following prerequisite: Two art history courses at the 1000- or 2000-level. ARH: 3080 Seminar for Majors has the following prerequisites: ARH: 1011 and ARH: 1012 with a minimum grade of C- and one 3000-level art history course. Following are changes for Studio Art: Art 4008/5066: Photographic Essay (3 cr.) ** This course is designed to give the intermediate and advanced photography student a means to explore and capture real events, nothing posed, and nothing made-up. There will be an overview in basic black-and-white photographic techniques, including darkroom and lab procedures. Students will also be exposed to the history of photography through a slide presentation. The focus is on content as well as artistic style, capturing images and events rather than making them. Prerequisite: Students need only to have developed film before this class. (Fall) Following are courses for Castle Scholars Program: CSCH 1010: The Power of the Photograph This seminar takes as its inspiration Vicki Goldberg’s 1991 book, The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed our Lives (Abbeville). We will look at the role photographs have played in shaping attitudes, laws and culture since its public announcement in 1839. Topics will include: The Invention of Photography, The Photograph as Witness, The Eye of Discovery, Political Persuasion through Photography, Photography and the Rise of Celebrity Culture, Photography and the Art World, The Camera and Social Reform, The Rise of News Photography, The Photo Magazines (LIFE and LOOK), The Rise of TV and Photography in the 21st Century. Emphasis will be placed on developing the student’s ability to write and speak about photography. (Spring) CSCH 1208: The Environmental Imagination The utopian tradition in the social sciences has often served as the basis not only for critique but also for the explicit and unconscious yearnings of the human community. In this course we will examine the key texts and voices in that tradition with a view towards their contribution to an environmental imagination-a sensibility that insists on the intrinsic value of the eco-system. The importance of environmental movements (how they are formed) and whose interests are served by them will be examined in great detail. Grass roots organizations, to determine the variety of resources open to those interested in environmental politics. Theories of environmental politics will be studied to provide a background and context for the on going debates regarding "rights" and the "environment." Power relations between advanced industrialized nations and developing nations will be examined in order to identify areas of commonality as well as those that are contested. (Fall) (Spring) CSCH 3006: Lit/Film of South Asian Diaspora The course will introduce students to the literatures and films of authors and filmmakers of South Asian descent -- Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Sri Lankans -- living in the United Kingdom and North America. The course will focus on the effects of decolonization on immigration patterns of South Asians in the diaspora, and more recently, the effects of globalization on the creation of transnational identities. The discussion of primary works and films will explore issues of gender, sexuality, religion, and class in the acculturation of South Asians to their adopted homes in the West. Finally, the course will examine the often problematic relationship of South Asians in the diaspora with their country of origin as well as with other cultures in their countries of adoption. (Fall) CSCH 3007: Atlantic Revolution 1760-1820 This seminar will examine the sequence of revolutions that exploded across the North Atlantic in the period between 1770 and 1810. It will concentrate on the "great" revolutions, i.e. the American and the French, but it will include the experiences of smaller entities in the constellation such as Holland, Ireland, and Haiti. We will examine the origins of this upheaval in its cultural and intellectual context (the eighteenth century Enlightenment) its economic context (the rise of European empires and the commercial revolutions) and finally the rise of popular politics and a popular press. The comparative aspects of success and failure will also be addressed. This course also may count toward the requirements for the major or minor in History. (Fall) CSCH 3008: The Heroic: Classical & Modern The theme of this course is consideration of representations of “the heroic” in the Western tradition, both classical and modern. Below are proposed texts with annotations as to use, conceptualization, and thematics. After two theoretical considerations of the question, we would follow a chronological approach, employing both historical and imaginative artistic expression. Lives exemplifying military, political, and artistic heroism are included. Besides the reading, discussion, and viewing of movies, students would research and write on a heroic life of their choice. (Spring) CSCH 3009: Education across Culture/Time In this course students will read, analyze, discuss, and write extensively about education across cultures and time in fiction and non-fiction. The course will focus on the impact of formal and informal education on the intellectual, social, and cultural life of the individual and the society. (Spring) CSCH 3010: Britain: Past & Present (Spring) CSCH 3080: Castle Scholars Senior Retreat (Spring) CSCH 3081: FYP Teaching Assistant (Fall and Spring) CSCH 3210: Great Cities, Ideas and Law This course looks at three great capital cities in history, ancient Athens, ancient Rome, and London, and examines the interplay between law, politics, and culture in those cities at different times in the past. Readings in the history of law, politics, art and architecture, literature, philosophy, and music. Satisfies perspective requirement for Legal Studies and Criminal Law. (Fall) Following are courses for the Communication Studies Program: COMM 3044: Feminist Media Theory This seminar explores feminist theory and its application to mass media. Lectures, discussions, and readings in first, second, and third wave feminism will help students to develop an understanding of historical, psychoanalytic, interpretive, and social scientific approaches to the study of media and communication. Research paper and presentation required. (Fall) COMM 3080: Gender and Communication Gender and communication focuses on interactive relationships between gender and communication in contemporary society. During the course we explore the multiple ways communication in our society creates and perpetuates gender roles; we consider how individuals enact socially created gender differences in public and private settings and how this affects success, satisfaction and self-esteem; and we connect gender theory and research to our professional and personal experience. Throughout the course we discuss not only what is in terms of gender roles, but also what might be, and how we might act to improve our individual collective lives. (Fall) Following is a course for Dance & Theatre DTH 3XXX: Performance Seminar: Politics & Performance Can art change lives? This course will explore the work of theatre artists, choreographers, and collectives who believe that the role of the performance is not only to challenge accepted political and social structures but to motivate audiences to public action. We will read theory and study traditionally scripted plays (Brecht, Hansbury, Fo), as well as collectively evolved performance pieces (such as San Francisco Mime Troupe, Augusto Boal's Theater of the Oppressed, Joseph Chaikin and the Open Theater, Teatro Campesino, Tectonic Theater's Laramie Project) and the work of choreographers such as Kurt Jooss and Bill T. Jones. A studio component will allow students o explore whether theory holds up to the test of performance. Preq: Creative Process. 3 credits. (Spring) (NOTE: Two Performance Seminars are required of all majors, one for minors. This course is one of a series of specialty enrichment seminars which include: Non-Western Performance, NY Performance Now, Playback Theatre, Voice of Chekhov and others.) Following are courses for the First-Year Program: First-Year Seminar I (Fall) and II (Spring) The First-Year Seminar sequence is designed to provide an intellectually stimulating experience that allows first-year students to discover the intellectual liberation afforded by the liberal arts and develop foundational critical reasoning skills. Each First-Year Seminar section is organized around a special topic or theme and incorporates instruction the learning objectives of the General Education Critical and Analytical Reasoning Competency credit requirement.
Recommended publications
  • 2018-2019 Community Handbook

    2018-2019 Community Handbook

    School Planner Co. Community Handbook 2018 – 2019 School Planner Co. School Planner Co. Notes 1 School Planner Co. Message From President Jonathan Gibralter Welcome to Wells College! We are delighted you chose to join the Wells community. This Community Handbook has been compiled as a tool to help you explore what it means to be a part of Wells College. It will address many of your questions and provide a guideline for your time here. I encourage you to review it carefully and keep it handy. You are beginning an exciting academic journey; sharing in an experience and gaining skills that will last a lifetime. A Wells education requires that you stretch your thinking, explore new topics, and develop your unique strengths as you prepare for what lies ahead. The Wells experience challenges both the individual and the collective, and the Wells community is one in which we will all have the chance to understand and celebrate our differences—and our commonalities. A Wells education will require you to move beyond the familiar, and this handbook has been designed to help you through that process. It encompasses what is available to you, what is expected of you, and what you can expect from others. In order to be successful in this shared endeavor, there are established guidelines, policies and procedures to help community members collaborate in a spirit of understanding. In addition to those official policies and procedures, we have also included a calendar which we hope will be useful as you begin a year full of deadlines and celebrations.
  • Louise Mackie '61 to Receive This Year's Wca Award

    Louise Mackie '61 to Receive This Year's Wca Award

    WellsNotes Spring 2021 Wells College Alumnae and Alumni Newsletter Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni LOUISE MACKIE ’61 TO RECEIVE THIS YEAR’S WCA AWARD The Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni will present the 2021 WCA Award to Louise W. Mackie ’61, for her exceptional contributions to the field of historic textiles from Islamic lands. Louise Mackie received her bachelor of arts in art history from Wells College and with Carol Gaines Ruckle ’61 after graduation enjoyed visiting her Wells professor, Hannelore Glasser, in Florence, Italy, during two enlightening years of traveling, studying and working in Europe and the Middle East. That led to secretarial work in the Islamic Art Department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York which inspired studying Islamic art history with Professor Richard Ettinghausen for a master of arts at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts, integrated with stimulating graduate studies at the American University in Cairo, Egypt. She recently retired as curator of textiles and Islamic art at the Cleveland Museum of Art in Cleveland, Ohio. During her impressive curatorial career of 45 years, Mackie held positions at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, The Textile Museum in Washington, D.C., and taught at the University of Toronto. She was a founding director (in 1987) and past president of the Textile Society of America, which is thriving with over 800 WCA AWA R D members; sat on the Advisory Committee of The Textile Museum; and served on the Conseil de Direction of the Centre International d’Etude des Textiles Anciens (CIETA) CEREMONY INVITATION in Lyon, France.
  • Connecticut College Alumnae News, May 1958

    Connecticut College Alumnae News, May 1958

    Connecticut College Digital Commons @ Connecticut College Linda Lear Center for Special Collections & Alumni News Archives 5-1958 Connecticut College Alumnae News, May 1958 Connecticut College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/alumnews Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "Connecticut College Alumnae News, May 1958" (1958). Alumni News. 128. https://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/alumnews/128 This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the Linda Lear Center for Special Collections & Archives at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni News by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. Connecticut College Alumnae News WEST ENTRANCE, FRANK LOOMIS PALMER AUDITORIUM MAY, 1958 Executive Boord of the Alumnae Association President, AGNES B. LEAHY '21, 222 East 57th S:., New York, N. Y. First Vice President, SARAH PITHOUSE BECKER '27 Second Vice President: VIRGINIA EGGLESTON SMITH '24 Secretory: ELISABETH JOHNSON HUJ\IE '30 Treasurer, MARJORIE LAWRENCE WEIDIG '45 Directors, ELiNOR HUNK£N TORPEY '24 ELIZABETH DUTTON '47 ARTEMIS BLESSlS RAMAKER 'SO Alumnae Trustees: ROBERTA NEWTON BLANCHARD '21 NATALIE R. MAAS '40 MARION NICHOLS ARNOLD '32 Chairman of Nominating Cammitt ee: LUCILLE CAIN DALZELL '33 Chairman of Finance Committee: FLORENCE HOPPER LEVICK '27 Acting Executive Secretary for 1957-58: CHARLOTTE
  • Greg Stewart Stewargk@Jmu.Edu Gregstewartsite.Org EDUCATION Master of Fine Arts – Ohio University, Athens, OH Bachelor of Fine

    Greg Stewart [email protected] Gregstewartsite.Org EDUCATION Master of Fine Arts – Ohio University, Athens, OH Bachelor of Fine

    Greg Stewart [email protected] gregstewartsite.org EDUCATION Master of Fine Arts – Ohio University, Athens, OH Bachelor of Fine Arts – State University of New York at Brockport ONE PERSON EXHIBITIONS October 2011 – On The Edge Is Decorated With Carvings. Grand Central Arts, Los Angeles, CA June 2011 – Engine Of Bones Man The Handyman. 1708 Gallery, Richmond, VA November 2010 – Meat Not Taken, Redux Contemporary Art Center, Charleston, SC May 2009 – Beast or By-Product: Food Shelter Clothing, Dean Project, New York, NY January 2009 – Tools For An Upright Animal, Miller Gallery, Bridgewater College, Bridgewater College, Bridgewater, VA April 2008 – Drought Sympathy, University of Georgia, Athens, GA January 2007 – Trace Connector, Mercer Gallery, Rochester, NY January 2006 – Trace Extender, Firehouse, Burlington, VT September 2004 – Haas Gallery, Bloomsburg University, Bloomsburg, PA September 2002 – 1708 Gallery, (Gallery II), Richmond, VA November 2000 – Yaffe and Ruden, New York, NY April 2000 – Adams Gallery, Dunkirk, NY March 2000 – McDonough Museum of Art, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH December 1999 – Mercer Gallery, Rochester, NY April 1999 – University Gallery, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA February 1998 – Brownson Gallery, Manhattanville College, Purchase, NY October 1997 – University Gallery, Nazareth College, Rochester, NY February 1994 – Tower Fine Arts, SUNY Brockport, Brockport, NY SELECTED COLLABORATIVE PROJECTS February 2010 – Plastic Drift, Clementine, Harrisonburg, VA. With J. Walker Tufts June 2009 – Flexible Geography, Harrisonburg, VA June 2009 – Walkway To Knowhere: Chesapeake Avenue and Black’s Run Creek, Harrisonburg, VA July 2007 – Mobile Unit Corn Production Extended. Harrisonburg, VA October 2007 – Topovehicles, State University of New York at Geneseo, Geneseo, NY January – May 2006 – The Public Table.
  • Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni

    Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni

    WellsNotes Spring 2020 Wells College Alumnae and Alumni Newsletter Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni WCA TO HONOR TWO DISTINGUISHED ALUMNAE THIS MAY The Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni (WCA) is proud to announce the two recipients of the 2020 WCA Award: Gwen Wilkinson ’77 and Stephanie Batcheller ’79. Both alumnae have had distinguished careers in the field of law with a particular emphasis on public service: Gwen as a district attorney and social justice advocate, and Stephanie as a public defender and legal educator. GWEN WILKINSON ’77 STEPHANIE BATCHELLER ’79 The Wells College Association of Alumnae The Wells College Association of Alumnae and Alumni is honoring Gwen Wilkinson and Alumni is honoring Stephanie ’77 with the WCA Award in recognition Batcheller ’79 with the WCA Award for of her public service, especially in the her accomplishments in the field of law and prosecution of perpetrators of child abuse contributions to the justice system. and domestic violence and in addressing Stephanie, a career public defender who has other social justice issues. argued before courts in Georgia, Maryland Gwen established herself as a proactive, and New York, is a senior staff attorney with ethical and passionate advocate for social the New York State Defenders Association justice throughout her career as a prosecutor (NYSDA). Since 1998, she has been with the and social services attorney in Tompkins association’s nonprofit Public Defense Backup County, N.Y. Those same attributes define her work with community Center, where she serves as senior staff attorney, developing client- organizations, providing context for how her education at Wells framed centered representation training strategies for new public defense the passion and drive she is known for.
  • 1 November 18, 2016 Dear President-Elect Trump, As Do You, We

    1 November 18, 2016 Dear President-Elect Trump, As Do You, We

    November 18, 2016 Dear President-elect Trump, As do you, we “seek common ground, not hostility; partnership, not conflict.” In order to maintain the trust required for such productive engagement, it is essential that we immediately reaffirm the core values of our democratic nation: human decency, equal rights, freedom of expression, and freedom from discrimination. As college and university presidents, we commit ourselves to promoting these values on our campuses and in our communities, and we stand alongside the business, nonprofit, religious, and civic leaders who are doing the same in organizations large and small. In light of your pledge to be “President for all Americans,” we urge you to condemn and work to prevent the harassment, hate, and acts of violence that are being perpetrated across our nation, sometimes in your name which is now synonymous with our nation’s highest office. In our schools, on job sites and college campuses, on public streets and in coffee shops, members of our communities, our children, our families, our neighbors, our students, and our employees are facing very real threats, and are frightened. One of the roles of leaders is to protect and empower the most vulnerable. As President-elect, this responsibility rests heavily on you. Let this be a mark of your leadership. Raymond E. Crossman President Adler University Mauri Ditzler President Albion College Mark Zupan President Alfred University Jeff Abernathy President Alma College Biddy Martin President Amherst College 1 William R. Groves Chancellor Antioch University John M Sullivan President Art Academy of Cincinnati Paul C. Pribbenow President Augsburg College Steven Bahls President Augustana College Marjorie Hass President Austin College Leon Botstein President Bard College Mac Powell President Bastyr University Scott Bierman President Beloit College Mariko Silver President Bennington College David C.
  • Powerpoint Slides

    Powerpoint Slides

    1 2 3 4 5 NYSAC Thanks our Workshop Sponsor: Higher Education in the Age of Covid-19 A Presentation for the New York State Association of Counties Mary Beth Labate, CICU President October 1, 2020 Adelphi University • Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences • Albany Law School • Albany Medical College • Alfred University • American Academy McAllister Institute • American Museum of Natural History, Richard Gilder Graduate School • Bank Street College of Education • Bard College • Barnard College • The Belanger School of Nursing • Boricua College • Brooklyn Law School • Canisius College • Cazenovia College • Clarkson University • Cochran School of Nursing • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Watson School of Biological Sciences • Colgate University • College of Mount Saint Vincent • The College of New Rochelle • The College of Saint Rose • Columbia University • Concordia College • The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art • Cornell University • The Culinary Institute of America • Daemen College • Dominican College • D’Youville College • Elmira College • Excelsior College • Fei Tian College • Finger Lakes Health College of Nursing • Fordham University • Hamilton College • Hartwick College • Helene Fuld College of Nursing • Hilbert College • Hobart and William Smith Colleges • Hofstra University • Houghton College • Iona College100+ • Ithaca College private, • The Jewish Theological Seminarynot • Keuka-for College- • Theprofit King’s College • Le Moyne College • Long Island University • Manhattan College • Manhattan School
  • Feduni Researchonline Copyright Notice

    Feduni Researchonline Copyright Notice

    FedUni ResearchOnline https://researchonline.federation.edu.au Copyright Notice This is an original manuscript/preprint of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Continuum in September 2020, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2020.1782838 CRICOS 00103D RTO 4909 Page 1 of 1 Comic investigation and genre-mixing: the television docucomedies of Lawrence Leung, Judith Lucy and Luke McGregor Lesley Speed In the twenty-first century, comedians have come to serve as public commentators. This article examines the relationship between genre-mixing and cultural commentary in four documentary series produced for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that centre on established comedians. These series are Lawrence Leung’s Choose Your Own Adventure (2009), Judith Lucy’s Spiritual Journey (2011), Judith Lucy is All Woman (2015) and Luke Warm Sex (2016). Each series combines the documentary and comedy genres by centring on a comedian’s investigation of a theme such as spirituality, gender or sex. While appearing alongside news satire, these docucomedies depart from the latter by eschewing politics in favour of existential themes. Embracing conventions of personalized documentaries, these series use performance reflexively to draw attention to therapeutic discourses and awkward situations. Giving expression to uncertain and questioning views of contemporary spirituality, gender and mediated intimacies, the docucomedies of Lawrence Leung, Judith Lucy and Luke McGregor stage interventions in contemporary debates that constitute forms of public pedagogy. Documentary comedy These series can be identified as documentary comedies, or docucomedies, which combine humour and non-fiction representation without adhering primarily to either genre. Although the relationship between comedy and factual screen works has received little sustained attention, notes Paul Ward, a program can combine both genres (2005, 67, 78–9).
  • Newsletter New Faces on the Hill Curriculum Library Re-Christened “Regina Maria Brimmer, SSJ Children’S Collection” Warren Anderson, M.Ed

    Newsletter New Faces on the Hill Curriculum Library Re-Christened “Regina Maria Brimmer, SSJ Children’S Collection” Warren Anderson, M.Ed

    SEPTEMBER 2005 Newsletter New Faces on the Hill Curriculum Library Re-christened “Regina Maria Brimmer, SSJ Children’s Collection” Warren Anderson, M.Ed. Director of Student Activities At the Reunion Weekend Aida Beaupied, Ph.D. gathering to honor the Associate Professor of Spanish “Golden Griffins,” (alums Patricia M. Canning, M.A., CFRE graduating in 1955 and Director of Alumnae & before), President Carol Jean Alumni Relations Vale, SSJ, Ph.D., singled out Donna Celano, Ph.D. 1940 graduate Regina Maria Assistant Professor and Coordinator, Brimmer, SSJ, for a singular Communications honor. The Curriculum Suzanne Del Gizzo, Ph.D. Library, housed on the third Assistant Professor of English floor of Logue Library, was re-christened the “Regina Jacqueline deMarteleire, M.B.A. (new title) Maria Brimmer, SSJ Manager of Experiential Education Children’s Collection” as a tribute to her decades of Erin Fidler, M.Ed. service to Logue Library. Assistant Athletic Trainer President Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, right, presents Sister Regina Maria’s vision Regina Maria Brimmer, SSJ, with a plaque Gloria Hodgert, Ph.D. (new title) and wise librarianship has built commemorating the name change of the Director of Act 101 a collection of nearly 7,000 Curriculum Library to the "Regina Maria Brimmer, SSJ Children's Collection." Christina Hopely, B.A. titles to enrich the experience Assistant to the Dean for of education majors, students teachers, members of the education department, and Student Life just plain lovers of children’s books. She has amassed a broad range of both children’s Gwendolyn Ingram literature and up-to-date textbooks in all disciplines for grades kindergarten through Assistant to the Dean of 12, which includes includes Caldecott and Newbery Award books.
  • Connecticut College News Vol. 7 No. 7

    Connecticut College News Vol. 7 No. 7

    Connecticut College Digital Commons @ Connecticut College 1921-1922 Student Newspapers 11-25-1921 Connecticut College News Vol. 7 No. 7 Connecticut College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1921_1922 Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "Connecticut College News Vol. 7 No. 7" (1921). 1921-1922. 23. https://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1921_1922/23 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1921-1922 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. Connecticut College News VOL. 7, No.7 NEW LONDON, CONNECTICUT, NOVEMBER :l5,InI PRICE Ii CENTS ., SIMMONS ENTERTAINS THE NEW HUMANISM BARON KORF SPEAKS "THE MENAECHMI" STUDENT GOVERNMENT AS VIEWED BY ON RUSSIA AND WORTHY OF NOTE. DELEGATES. MONSIEUR SARTON. THE FAR EAST. FIRST OF ITS KIND TO BE I PRESENTED HERE, EASTERN COLLEGES REPRE- On Tuesday, October 12th. Mlsa 'l'ue Service League was very ror- SENTED. Er-nst introduced as speaker- for the tunate in its choice of the m-at lecturer On November the nineteenth, 'J'hc afternoon Monsieur Geor-ge Sartou or of the vear. On Monday evening, No- JleulIcckm; of l'f(lulllS was presented by We who have never attended a Belgium, Monsieur- Sarton is giving vember t went y -fir-at, Baron jcorr, tor- the Latin department. It was the first Student Government Conference do his life to the problem of creating an rnor-i y Aestsrant Oover-nor-Cener-at of time a play in an ancient language has not realize what a truly big thing it interest in the history of science.
  • The Academy of the Holy Cross Acceptance List—Classes of 2009

    The Academy of the Holy Cross Acceptance List—Classes of 2009

    The Academy of the Holy Cross Acceptance List—Classes of 2009-2012 Carleton University Acadia University Carnegie Mellon University Adelphi University Case Western Reserve University Albright College Catawba College American University Cazenovia College Appalachian State University Cedar Crest College Arcadia University Central Pennsylvania College Arizona State University Charleston Southern University Auburn University Christopher Newport University Averett University Clark Atlanta University Barry University Clemson University Baylor University Coastal Carolina University Bellarmine University Colby College Belmont Abbey College Colby-Sawyer College Belmont University Colgate University Bennett College College of Charleston Bennington College College of Mount St. Joseph Berklee College of Music College of Southern Maryland Birmingham-Southern College College of the Holy Cross Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania College of William and Mary Boston College Colorado State University Boston Conservatory Columbia College Boston University Concordia University - Montreal Bowling Green State University Cornell University Bradley University Creighton University Bridgewater College Curry College Brock University D'Youville College Brooklyn College of the CUNY Dalhousie University Brown University Dean College Bryn Mawr College Delaware State University Bucknell University Delaware Valley College Buffalo State College of SUNY Denison University Butler University DePaul University Cabrini College DeSales University California State University,
  • Club Cruceros Movie Database Name Year Rating Genre Notes

    Club Cruceros Movie Database Name Year Rating Genre Notes

    11/15/2015 Club Cruceros Movie Database Page 1 Name Year Rating Genre Notes 13 2010 R Drama/Thriller 1408 2007 PG‐13 Horror/Mystery 1408 2007 PG‐13 Horror/Mystery 1492 1992 PG‐13 Adventure/Biography/Drama $5 A Day 2008 PG‐13 Comedy/Drama 10 Years 2011 PG‐13 Comedy/Drama/Romance 10,000 A.C. 2008 PG‐13 Action/Adventure/Drama 10,000 B.C. 2008 PG‐13 Action/Adventure/Drama 10,000 BC 3 Movie Disc 2008 PG‐13 Action/Adventure/Drama 10.5 Apocalypse 2006 UR Drama/Sci‐Fi/Thriller 12 Dogs of Christmas, The 2012 G Family Christmas 12 Monkeys 1995 R Mystery/Sci‐Fi/Thriller Reg 4 12 Monkeys 1995 R Mystery/Sci‐Fi/Thriller 12 Rounds 2009 PG‐13 Action/Crime/Thriller 12 Rounds 2009 PG‐13 Action/Crime/Thriller Blu Ray 13 Going On 30 2004 PG‐13 Comedy/Fantasy/Romance 13 Seconds 2003 R Horror/Fantasy/Mystery 13th Warrior, The 1999 R Action/Adventure/Fantasy 15 Minutes 2001 R Action/Crime/Drama 15 Minutes 2001 R Action/Crime/Drama 15 Minutes 2001 R Action/Crime/Drama 15 Minutes 2001 R Action/Crime/Drama Reg 4 15 Minutes 2001 R Action/Crime/Drama 150 Cartoon Classics Var G Animated 16 Blocks 2006 PG‐13 Action/Crime/Drama 17 Again 2009 PG‐13 Comedy/Drama/Fantasy 20 Great Westerns Var UR Western 20 Great Westerns Var UR Western 21 Grams 2003 R Crime/Drama/Thriller 21 Jump Street 2012 R Action/Crime/Comedy 21 Jump Street 2012 R Action/Crime/Comedy 24 Redemption 2008 TV Action/Adventure/Crime 24 Season 1 2001 TV Action/Adventure/Crime 24 Season 1 2001 TV Action/Drama/Mystery 24 Season 1 Episode 1‐4 2001 TV Action/Adventure/Crime 24 Season 2 2002 TV Action/Adventure/Crime