SUMMER Goodbye to WARMING COCKTAILS Labor Day Bbqtips Fall Fashion

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SUMMER Goodbye to WARMING COCKTAILS Labor Day Bbqtips Fall Fashion 8/23-9/5 2018 8/23-9/5 fall fashion fall Labor day bbq tips Labor day WARMING COCKTAILS WARMING goodbye to goodbye SUMMER HAMPTONS Monthly 8/23- 9/5, 2018 HAMPTONSMONTHLY.COM VOL.4 NO.8 WHY BUY WHEN YOU CAN RENT GLENWOOD MANHATTAN’S FINEST RESIDENCES GLENWOODNYC.COM 1 BEDROOMS FROM $3,295 • 2 BEDROOMS FROM $4,495 UPTOWN 212-535-0500 DOWNTOWN 212-430-5900 OPEN 7 DAYS, 10AM-6PM 3 BEDROOMS FROM $6,795 • CONVERTIBLE 4 BEDROOMS FROM $8,395 NO FEE Live the Glenwood lifestyle in these fine neighborhoods: TriBeCa · FiDi · Battery Park North · Fashion District · Lincoln Square All the units include features for persons with disabilities required by FHA | Equal Housing Opportunity Murray Hill · Midtown East · Upper East Side 40394_G_WhyBuy_HamptonsMonthly_12.875x9.0625.indd 1 8/13/18 12:06 PM DESTINATION: HAMPTONS DESTINATION: WESTHAMPTON BEACH AREA Schedule of Events | 2018 EVERY SATURDAY Westhampton Beach Farmer’s Market Village Green (Corner of Mill Rd & Main St) May 19 – October 27 | 9:00am – 11:00am EVERY MONDAY Westhampton Beach Monday Night Movies The Great Lawn on Main Street July 9 – September 3 | 7:00pm EVERY TUESDAY Westhampton Beach Kids On The Green The Village Green July 10 – August 28 | 5:30pm SATURDAY & SUNDAY | AUGUST 4 & 5 Annual Mary O. Fritchie Juried Outdoor Art Show Saturday 10:00am – 6:00pm Sunday 10:00am – 5:00pm SATURDAY & SUNDAY | OCTOBER 6 & 7 Gordon Werner Arts & Crafts Show The Great Lawn Saturday 10:00am – 6:00pm Sunday 10:00am – 5:00pm SD #1. MLS# 3040586. $5,900,000. SATURDAY – MONDAY | OCTOBER 6 – 8 Westhampton Beach Sidewalk Sale Westhampton Beach Village Passionate about the Hamptons. Experts in all things luxury and waterfront. Committed to using 10:00am – 6:00pm our luxury brand marketing and cutting-edge technology to bring each and every property from just listed to sold. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13 Harvest Festival Boundless Reach. Remarkable Brand. Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty. The Great Lawn 12:00pm – 5:00pm Westhampton Beach | 631.288.1050 danielgale.com 100 Main St, Westhampton Beach, NY Each Office Is Individually Owned And Operated. Each Office Is Individually Owned And Operated. 12.75 X 8.9375 SHOP. EAT. DRINK.PLAY. EATALY | H&M | KATE SPADE NEW YORK | NOBLETREE COFFEE PHILOSOPHY | PURE LIQUID WINE & SPIRITS SAM EDELMAN | SEPHORA @WestfieldWorldTradeCenter #WestfieldWTC westfield.com/wtc CONTENTS AUG 23 - SEPT 9 Strawberry 28 28 Lemonade DINING & COCKTAILS Come In We're (Still) Open Five Restaurants That Keep Their Kitchens Running Year- Round 28 Cooler Temps, Warming Cocktails No Booze Sews a Liquid Blanket Quite As Nice As Whiskey 34 Chef Spotlight Interview: Labor Day 1.5 oz Tito’s Handmade Vodka BBQ Tips & Tricks The 4 oz lemonade Princes of the Pit Spill On the Cover 22 the Beans and We Don't 4 muddled strawberries Photo by Brandon Colón Mean the Side Dish 38 CHEERS TO Just add Tito’s Handmade Vodka, It seems like those legendary SUMMER! East End sunsets are creeping lemonade and strawberries over up earlier and earlier with every ice. Stir and garnish with a passing day. Sadly, this means Off Season Out East the end of summer is near. Summer's Our Favorite strawberry and lemon slice. With our days in the Hamptons 46 becoming shorter and shorter but You Can Enjoy the FASHION & BEAUTY let's make the most of them and Hamptons Year Round create enough memories to get 78 The New Season Switch us through to next Memorial Day when those long, warm, sunny Up Wearing Your days will make their bright Favorite Summer Pieces return. Into Fall 44 Seasonal Transition Styling Your Summer Pieces for Autumn 54 78 AMERICA’S ORIGINAL CRAFT VODKA® 16 HAMPTONSMONTHLY.COM TR-1536_Cocktail_Summer_SL_Hamptons.indd 1 8/10/18 9:11 AM CONTENTS Beauty Spotlight: Beauty Counter Safer Skincare In Saint-Tropez since 1976 for Post-Summer Reviving 62 THE FREETIME BLAZER IN EVERY ISSUE Instagram Photos Featuring Your Photos 24 Men's Grooming Sensory Ingredients 50 Rue La La Picks Fall Fashion Preview: Men's 42 Women's 52 Women's Beauty The Beauty of Recovery 60 Your Jitney Playlist 62 Curated by DJ Kris Bistre 66 Calendars Live Music 70, Events 72 & Meanwhile in 70 Manhattan 74 24 Our Blazers are manufactured in european Ateliers using the LIKE US & finest Italian fabrics FOLLOW US! SOUTHAMPTON 14 Jobs Ln. Southampton, NY 11968 2018 Hamptons Monthly © (631) 259-3812 Hamptons Monthly magazine makes every effort to ensure the accu- racy of the information it publishes, but cannot be held responsible for PALM BEACH 4872 any consequences arising from errors or omissions. All rights reserved. 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Reproduction in whole or in part strictly prohibited. Suite C2, Palm Beach, FL 33480 (561) 225-1884 18 HAMPTONSMONTHLY.COM cremieux.frcremieux.fr GOURMET PIZZAS | FRESH-GRILLED ITEMS | SEASONAL MENU CREATIVE DIRECTOR Meghan Feola SALADS | SMOOTHIES | BAR | COFFEE SHOP EDITOR Robin Singer NATIONAL SALES MANAGER Chris Serino DIRECTOR OF SALES Jonathan Lipton ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES New York Bobby Adcroft Jeff Marvin Kris Bistre David Patrone Corey Boico Laura Segui Michael Doucet John Schandler Las Vegas Lisa Chatham Anthony Griffit Heidi Gonzalez Chicago Meaghan Marrese Chris Whalen Los Angeles James Moretti Miami Rick Westerfield PHOTOGRAPHY Lisa Staryak Alfonso Cantarero FEATURE WRITERS Rachel Askinasi Michael Raver Leah Blewett Ian Shapiro Gabrielle Lipton Marina Zogbi Photo: TRINA @prescribedthesun Photo: TRINA @prescribedthesun Division of VECTOR MEDIA CEO Marc Borzykowski COO Chad Silver CRO Gary Greenstein Hamptons Monthly 560 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022 PHONE: 1-888-322-1679 To subscribe: [email protected] To submit calendar events or contact the editorial dept: [email protected] HamptonsMonthly.com VECTOR PUBLISHING 20 HAMPTONSMONTHLY.COM Cheers to Summer! was raised on the value of the thank you note. So, that’s what Raise your I this is to all of you: my thank you note for allowing Hamptons glass to another Monthly to be a part of your summer. We love being your silent companion and offering restaurant summer in the recommendations, providing style inspiration, encouraging you Hamptons to be adventurous, and acting as your overall guide to soaking in every bit of wonder and beauty available to us on the East End. I hope we’ve led you well. With Labor Day looming, marking the unoffiil coe t th season, I ask you for one last time to raise your glass to another summer in the Hamptons. We’re glad you joined us! Robin Singer EDITOR 22 HAMPTONSMONTHLY.COM @thevillagemayor Follow us on instagram @hamptonsmonthly and tag your pictures to be featured @lets.eat.yall @saltyvisionz @sunrisecay @alexandravoya @cherishandbestow @sayhellowellness @wanderlustitinerary @eastendeats27 @islanddrone @cheerstoalcohol Introducing our summer wardrobe. Limited Edition Summer BOTTLES @thevillagemayor @thevillagemayor @andrew_girod @golden_windows @eastendtaste @ashleydarryl @thevillagemayor @luke.nyc @thelittlegoldmix @caranicell Follow us on instagram @hamptonsmonthly and tag your pictures to be featured Please drink responsibly. Corona Extra® Beer and Corona Light® Beer. Imported by Crown Imports, Chicago, IL. 181368_CX_SummerIntro_Bottles_HamptonsAd_6.4375x9.0625_v2.indd 1 5/18/18 5:00 PM 181368 CRN – CX PRINT SUMMER INTRO BOTTLES – HAMPTONS FULL PAGE AD App: InDesign CC Actual Trim: 6.4375"h x 9.0625"w Pubs Hamptons Artist: SR Actual Live: 6.3125"h x 8.9375"w Proof #: 2 Actual Bleed: 6.6875"h x 9.3125"w Scale: 100% Markets: Color: 4/C Fonts: TradeGothic, CoronaCaslon Antique Come In We're (Still) Open Five Restaurants That Keep Their Kitchens Running Year-Round s summer winds down, the food circuit in the Hamptons might slow Ain some spots, but it’s buzzing as ever in others if you know where to look. Or, to save you the effort, we’ve rounded up our preferred East End restaurants open all year long. The Maidstone ooks can be deceiving. The Maidstone Hotel’s white clapboard exterior Land warm light glowing from behind its grid windows may suggest that this 19th-century construction is a cozy country inn, but such is not the case. Refurbished by a Swedish hotelier in 2008, the Maidstone is now a beacon of Scandinavian fine taste, from its design mixing contemporary lines with pops of color and art to its un-fussed but impeccable food, spurred by local seafood and fresh garden produce – think seared scallops with fresh corn or chicken cooked to a golden crisp with fennel and kale pesto. Like any reputable hotel, The Maidstone also boasts a fashionable lobby bar, with a daily happy hour menu and craft cocktails served until late for when you’re not quite ready to go home after dessert. (207 Main St., East Hampton) The Maidstone The Maidstone Nick & Toni’s here would all the celebrities eat Wif Nick & Toni’s closed? This institution has been dishing up Tuscan fare to the American royalty for 30 years now, firing the freshest meats and fishes in its wood-burning oven, pouring the most discerning vintages from its extensive wine list, hanging the most unusual outsider art on its walls to make sure there’s a certain degree of levity accompanying that Dungeness crab bucatinni. Lamb, pork chops, and free range chicken cooked in simple but perfectly-executed up-dos embody the Italian philosophy that less is more when ingredients are good enough to speak for themselves. Unlike the summer months when getting a table here can be a trial in patience, autumn brings better odds, though a happy alternative is to come for brunch: buttermilk-fried chicken with black-pepper waffles, and smoked salmon scrambled eggs with shaved asparagus and baby watercress add discerning twists to the classics, best washed down with fine champagne. (136 N. Firing the freshest Main St., East Hampton) meats and fishes in its wood- burning oven The Highway Restaurant & Bar Highway Restaurant & Bar haring the same restaurant portfolio a few of the inventive comfort foods here that Swith Manhattan heavy-hitters like the change regularly with available ingredients.
Recommended publications
  • Feb06 OTOW News.Indd
    PAGE 1 C M Y K Folks showed up in all kinds of attire at the Happy Hour Sock Hop, Page 17. Vol. 19, No. 8 ♥ February 2006 The Pub Reopens! BY TONI TAYLOR Back by popular demand! On Monday, February 6, The Pub will reopen to On Top of the World residents and will be serving lunch only, Monday through Sat- urday, from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. with a new menu, new staff and new atmosphere. The Pub will be operated and managed by the Hos- pitality Division of On Top of the World Communities, the all new management team that joined the company within the last two months and that also oversees op- erations at Candler Hills Restaurant. The menu at the Pub will differ from that of Candler Hills Restaurant in that it will offer a lighter faire, such as a variety of salads, hot/cold sandwiches, hamburg- ers, hot dogs and soup, along with dessert selections as well. Although the new menu choice is of a lighter nature, it will be prepared by an experienced chef. Chef David Pigeon, along with his staff, will oversee food preparation and service. Menu prices range from $2.25 to under $7. Dining atmosphere in the Pub is casual. No reser- vations are needed; the restaurant is walk-in and self- seat. Wait-service will extend from inside the Pub to the covered terrace just outside the facility in the pool pavilion area. No food or drink will be served on the deck area surrounding the pool itself.
    [Show full text]
  • I Wouldn't Be Here If Not for My Family
    PRICELESS ISSUE NO. 77 AUG/SEP 11 Published by Joe Renna for the Sons of Peterstown Sports Club I WOULDN’T BE HERE IF NOT FOR MY FAMILY incent Santillo wanted to publicly thank his family for surviving as long as he did Vand giving him the quality of life he enjoyed. Vinny was quadriplegic since the age of 14. He was hospitalized before he could write his thank you and passed away on May 10, 2011, a month shy of the thirty-fifth anniversary of his accident. Vinny loved the water, swimming and especially diving. He would do it with confidence and joy. He was playing in a friends pool on June 24, 1976 and a routine dive ended in tragedy when he injured his 3rd and 4th vertebrae. The diagnosis was not good. Vinny was quadriplegic, he had little or no movement of upper and lower extremity muscles. He would be confined to a wheelchair the rest of his life and in need of constant care and assistance in activities of daily living. Though the outlook was grave, Vinny’s approach to life was extraordinary and the dedication of his family was virtuous. The shock and surprise of Vinny’s accident slowly turned into harsh reality for his parents and siblings. During the three months that Vinny was in Alexian Brother’s Hospital the family converted the storefront of their home into his living quarters. Santillo’s Pizza, the family owned business since 1912, would no longer have seating and instead would offer take-out and delivery only.
    [Show full text]
  • Parent Newsletter from the Head of School Dear SDA Parents
    Volume 4, Issue 2 May 2016 Parent Newsletter From the Head of School Dear SDA Parents, This is the last issue of the St. Dominic Academy Parent newsletter for the 2015-2016 school year. It will also be my last letter as Head of School, as I am retiring at the end of June, 2016. The past six years have gone by incredibly fast since I arrived at the Academy in the summer of 2010. Many wonderful things have happened during those six years. The installation of a campus-wide network launched our faculty and students on an exciting journey in technology-enhanced instruction. The STEM program, which we introduced in our 7th and 8th grade program three years ago, has been expanded into the high school curriculum, giving our students advanced opportunities in math and science. Our new building – Siena Hall – was officially opened during the last week of April and provides the Academy with a beautiful space for new programs and events. All of these changes are exciting and strengthen the Academy’s position as a premier academic institution in our area. Each year we have welcomed students from places farther away from Jersey City than we did in the past. They are coming from many places, drawn by our reputation for strong academics and a student body known for diversity in many areas – ethnicity, religious affiliation and economic levels. They thrive by being in a welcoming, peaceful community of learners, where each girl has the opportunity to find her own voice. As an educator with 30 years of experience in Catholic girls’ schools, I can say with great confidence that there is no better place for a young woman to spend her high school years than at St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spaniards & Their Country
    ' (. ' illit,;; !•' 1,1;, , !mii;t( ';•'';• TIE SPANIARDS THEIR COUNTRY. BY RICHARD FORD, AUTHOR OF THE HANDBOOK OF SPAIN. NEW EDITION, COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME. NEW YORK: GEORGE P. PUTNAM, 155 BROADWAY. 1848. f^iii •X) -+- % HONOURABLE MRS. FORD, These pages, which she has been, so good as to peruse and approve of, are dedicated, in the hopes that other fair readers may follow her example, By her very affectionate Husband and Servant, Richard Ford. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAOK. A General View of Spain—Isolation—King of the Spains—Castilian Precedence—Localism—Want of Union—Admiration of Spain—M. Thiers in Spain , . 1 CHAPTER II. The Geography of Spain—Zones—Mountains—The Pyrenees—The Gabacho, and French Politics . ... 7 CHAPTER in. The Rivers of Spain—Bridges—Navigation—The Ebro and Tagus . 23 CHAPTER IV. Divisions into Provinces—Ancient Demarcations—Modern Depart- ments—Population—Revenue—Spanish Stocks .... 30 CHAPTER V. Travelling in Spain—Steamers—Roads, Roman, Monastic, and Royal —Modern Railway—English Speculations 40 CHAPTER VI. Post Office in Spain—Travelling with Post Horses—Riding post—Mails and Diligences, Galeras, Coches de DoUeras, Drivers and Manner of Driving, and Oaths 53 CHAPTER VII. SpanishHorsea—Mules—Asses—Muleteers—Maragatos ... 69 — CONTENTS. CHAPTER VIII. PAGB. Riding Tour in Spain—Pleasures of it—Pedestrian Tour—Choice of Companions—Rules for a Riding Tour—Season of year—Day's • journey—Management of Horse ; his Feet ; Shoes General Hints 80 CHAPTER IX. The Rider's cos.tume—Alforjas : their contents—The Bota, and How to use it—Pig Skins and Borracha—Spanish Money—Onzas and smaller coins 94 CHAPTER X.
    [Show full text]
  • The Life of George Borrow by Herbert Jenkins</H1>
    The Life of George Borrow by Herbert Jenkins The Life of George Borrow by Herbert Jenkins This etext was produced by David Price, email [email protected], from the 1912 John Murray edition. THE LIFE OF GEORGE BORROW by Herbert Jenkins PREFACE During the whole of Borrow's manhood there was probably only one period when he was unquestionably happy in his work and content with his surroundings. He may almost be said to have concentrated into the seven years (1833-1840) that he was employed by the British and Foreign Bible Society in Russia, Portugal and Spain, a lifetime's energy and resource. From an unknown hack-writer, who hawked about unsaleable translations of Welsh and Danish bards, a travelling tinker and a vagabond Ulysses, he became a person of considerable importance. His name was acclaimed with praise and enthusiasm at page 1 / 665 Bible meetings from one end of the country to the other. He developed an astonishing aptitude for affairs, a tireless energy, and a diplomatic resourcefulness that aroused silent wonder in those who had hitherto regarded him as a failure. His illegal imprisonment in Madrid nearly brought about a diplomatic rupture between Great Britain and Spain, and later his missionary work in the Peninsula was referred to by Sir Robert Peel in the House of Commons as an instance of what could be achieved by courage and determination in the face of great difficulties. Those seven rich and productive years realised to the full the strange talents and unsuspected abilities of George Borrow's unique character.
    [Show full text]
  • Migratory Shepherds and Ballad Diffusion1
    Oral Tradition, 2/2-3 (1987): 451-71 Migratory Shepherds and Ballad Diffusion1 Antonio Sánchez Romeralo In 1928, in his now famous anthology of Spanish ballads, Flor nueva de romances viejos, Ramón Menéndez Pidal included the following comment concerning a romance that is very well known throughout the central regions of the Iberian Peninsula, particularly among shepherds: This attractive, authentically pastoral ballad, of purely rustic origin, had its origin, I believe, among the shepherds of Extremadura, where it is widely sung today, accompanied by the rebec, especially on Christmas Eve. Nomadic shepherds disseminated it throughout Old and New Castile and León; I heard it sung even in the mountains of Riaño, bordering on Asturias, at the very point where the Leonese cañada [nomadic shepherds’ path] comes to an end. But it is completely unknown in Asturias, as well as in Aragon, Catalonia, and Andalusia. This means that areas which did not get their sheep from Extremadura did not come to know this pastoral composition. (Menéndez Pidal 1928:291). Years later, in 1953, Menéndez Pidal was to modify his commentary on the ballad’s geographic diffusion, extending it to “all provinces crossed by the great paths of migration, those of León and Segovia, which go from the valleys of Alcudia, south of the Guadiana, to the Cantabrian mountains and El Bierzo,” and would now make no defi nite statement concerning the composition’s exact origin (Menéndez Pidal 1953:2:410). The ballad to which these comments refer is La loba parda (The Brindled She-Wolf). The present article will discuss two of Menéndez Pidal’s assertions regarding this romance: a) its supposedly rustic, pastoral character (“de pura cepa rústica .
    [Show full text]
  • Professor Recognized for Work to End Violence
    Thursday September 24, 2015 The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton Volume 98 Issue 13 FB.COM/THEDAILYTITAN WWW.DAILY TITAN.COM INSTAGRAM & TWITTER @THEDAILYTITAN Doctor Professor recognized lectures on heart for work to end violence health Heart disease symptoms differ between sexes DARLENE CASAS Daily Titan A woman dressed in busi- ness attire went to the doc- tor and was treated for heart disease. That same wom- an — now garishly dressed — visited another doctor complaining about the same symptoms, but was told to take Xanax. This anecdote was told to 45 audience members by John Zamarra, MD, during an Osh- er Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) medical series lecture at the Fullerton Elks Lodge Wednesday morning. Zamarra, who has been a solo practitioner since 1976, explained that women’s heart disease is often untreated or misdiagnosed because for the YUNUEN BONAPARTE / DAILY TITAN past half century, most stud- Criminal justice professor Gregory Chris Brown works with the Southern California Cease Fire Committee in order to reduce gang-related violence in Los Angeles. ies on heart disease have been Brown’s involvement in the SCCFC is helping him conduct research on original gangsters and how they become involved in gangs. done by men. Heart disease affects wom- Gregory Brown hearty and unrestrained laugh- State Fullerton. ‘70s, Brown said. happening in the streets of en more than it does men be- ter comes from an office, fill- Brown works with the The city of Los Ange- LA, but also to be success- cause women typically have helps community ing the destitute halls.
    [Show full text]
  • Sketches and Adventures in Madeira, Portugal, and the Andalusias of Spain
    SKETCHES AND ADVENTURES THE ANDALUSIAS OF SPAIN. BY THE AUTHOR OP DANIEL WEBSTER AND HIS COTEMPORARIES.' NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, 82 <fc 331 PEARL STREET. 1856. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S56, by HARPER <fc BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. Annex DP H-l PREFACE. PASSING the summer months in a village in New Hamp- shirea village, let me say parenthetically, which, from its nice houses, well-cultivated farms, and pleasant scenery, re- minds me more of Old England than any other country town I have seen in New England and being necessarily thrown for occupation mostly upon my own resources, I concluded to write out some recollections of a short residence in Madeira and the European Peninsula a part of the world which has been comparatively but little visited by the American or gen- eral tourist. The want of regular communication between the United States and those countries is doubtless the reason of their being so little known to our countrymen. The few who have visited them always speak with grateful acknowl- edgment of the pleasure they derived from the tour or sojourn. Two of our most eminent citizens General Dix and Mr. John Van Buren passed a winter in Madeira, receiving and conferring great gratification in their visit. The former has written the best book the island ever forth with- upon put ; out and full of details in a pretension, yet interesting ; chaste, concise and has created a desire lucid, and style ; among those whose means and education qualify them for travel to participate in enjoyments he so keenly relished.
    [Show full text]
  • A Partial Glossary of Spanish Geological Terms Exclusive of Most Cognates
    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY A Partial Glossary of Spanish Geological Terms Exclusive of Most Cognates by Keith R. Long Open-File Report 91-0579 This report is preliminary and has not been reviewed for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey editorial standards or with the North American Stratigraphic Code. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. 1991 Preface In recent years, almost all countries in Latin America have adopted democratic political systems and liberal economic policies. The resulting favorable investment climate has spurred a new wave of North American investment in Latin American mineral resources and has improved cooperation between geoscience organizations on both continents. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has responded to the new situation through cooperative mineral resource investigations with a number of countries in Latin America. These activities are now being coordinated by the USGS's Center for Inter-American Mineral Resource Investigations (CIMRI), recently established in Tucson, Arizona. In the course of CIMRI's work, we have found a need for a compilation of Spanish geological and mining terminology that goes beyond the few Spanish-English geological dictionaries available. Even geologists who are fluent in Spanish often encounter local terminology oijerga that is unfamiliar. These terms, which have grown out of five centuries of mining tradition in Latin America, and frequently draw on native languages, usually cannot be found in standard dictionaries. There are, of course, many geological terms which can be recognized even by geologists who speak little or no Spanish.
    [Show full text]
  • The Religious and Political Reasons for the Changes in Anglican Vestments Between the Seventeenth Century and The
    THE RELIGIOUS AND POLITICAL REASONS FOR THE CHANGES IN ANGLICAN VESTMENTS BETWEEN THE SEVENTEENTH AND NINETEENTH CENTURIES THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the University of North Texas in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS By Andrea S. Albright, B.S. Denton, Texas August 1989 Albright, Andrea S., The Religious and Political Reasons for the Changes in Anglican Vestments Between the Seventeenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Master of Arts (Art History), August 1989, 182 pp., 32 illustrations, bibliography, 56 titles. This study investigates the liturgical attire of the Church of England from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century, by studying the major Anglican vestments, observing modifications and omissions in the garments and their uses, and researching the reasons for any changes. Using the various Anglican Prayer Books and the monarchial time periods as a guide, the progressive usages and styles of English liturgical attire are traced chronologically within the political, social and religious environments of each era. By examining extant originals in England, artistic representations, and ancient documentation, this thesis presents the religious symbolism, as well as the artistic and historical importance, of vestments within the Church of England from its foundation to the twentieth century. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS... .. .. ...... .v Chapter I. INTRODUCTION .1 Statement of the Problem Methodology Review of Literature II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND ITS ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS . 10 The Catholic Ecclesiastical Vestments Formation of the Anglican Church Establishment of the Church of England and its Prayer Book Changes in Vestments during the Tudor Period III.
    [Show full text]
  • The Drew Forum Speaker Series Is Generously Sponsored by the Blanche and Drew.Edu/Events Irving Laurie Foundation and the Thomas H
    indicia text tk WINTER 2017 Drew University 36 Madison Ave. MAGAZINE Madison, NJ 07940 drew.edu Mark Your Calendars SETH MEYERS Emmy Award–winning writer and current host of Late Night with Seth Meyers. FEBRUARY 4 | 8 p.m. Mayo Performing Arts Center, Morristown, NJ In The Game: EARL MONROE | IRA BERKOW Hall of Fame basketball star, with Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist. MARCH 14 | 8 p.m. $85.4 million Dorothy Young Center for the Arts, Drew University from 14,001 RON CHERNOW unique donors! THE Thomas H. Kean Visiting Lecturer Thank you. Best-selling author of the book that inspired the Pulitzer Prize–winning DREW musical Hamilton. Nina Subin APRIL 5 | 8 p.m. FORUM Simon Forum, Drew University The Drew Forum speaker series is generously sponsored by the Blanche and drew.edu/events Irving Laurie Foundation and the Thomas H. Kean Visiting Lectureship. Winter 2017 | Contents Thanks to the One And All campaign—and the EXPANDED $85.4 million raised from 14,001 distinct donors— CENTER FOR CIVIC Junior ENGAGEMENT AND Drew boasts this vast array of achievements. PROFESSORSHIP 1 PAGE 31 On the pages that follow, we take a closer look CIVIC at what was made possible by the generosity SCHOLARS of our remarkable community—One And All. PROGRAM ADDED PAGE 3 $31+ RENOVATED NEW YORK SEMESTER ON MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS MILLION HALL OF PAGE 22 TO THE ENDOWMENT SCIENCES PAGE 47 PAGE 40 BALDWIN Percent Increase ENVIRONMENTAL HONORS PROGRAM in CLA Alumni STUDIES AND Participation SUSTAINABILITY PAGE 6 7 PAGE 30 3 Faculty MAJOR Fellowships PAGE 36 PAGE 41 16 STUDENT ARTS-ACROSS-THE-CURRICULUM 38 RESEARCH SCHOLAR INITIATIVE SHIPS FELLOWSHIPS KEAN PAGE 14 PAGE 172 READING PAGE 28 FEATURES EVERYTHING ELSE ROOM NEW ANNUAL 6 A Fellowship of Scholars 4 Mead 205 PAGE 40 31 Into The Forest 42 Honor Roll 12 GIVING 14 Answered Prayers of Donors Ehinger INTERNSHIP RECORDS 154 Classnotes Center FUNDS 22 Manhattan Matters 172 BackTalk PAGE 34 PAGE 172 PAGE 30 DREW MAGAZINE Volume 44, No.
    [Show full text]
  • November-December 2016
    CityofBrea.net November-December 2016 Countdown to Brea’s Centennial Celebration he birthday count for the City of Brea goes up to 100 Tyears on February 23, 2017! A countdown to celebra- tion has begun. Next year will become a showcase for fun, learning, discovery and pride. How will you be involved? Celebrate! Special events open with a community parade and pic- nic on Saturday, February 18. More activities are set to follow throughout the year. Many local groups are plan- ning to salute Brea’s first century. You won’t want to miss these events and become part of history! Volunteer! Get close to the action by volunteering to help. Make Help make history and get on board to celebrate Brea’s Centennial in 2017. new friends by working with others on engaging Cen- tennial activities. Call 714-990-7152. Bookmark CityofBrea.net/Centennial Please go online to see a calendar of events Sponsor! where more details will be added over time. Every dollar adds up to the opportunity for sharing Brea’s Plus, you can get full information on story in presentations, parties and partnerships that becoming a Centennial sponsor. Think bring people together with a welcome to a very special about featuring a Centennial touch in your place. There are many ways, large and small, to donate community event! and enjoy major sponsor benefits. Call 714-990-7738. Honoring All Those Who Have Served City of Brea Veterans Day Ceremony Friday, November 11, 10:00-10:45 a.m. (Rain or Shine) Brea War Memorial at the Brea Civic & Cultural Center, 1 Civic Center Circle, Brea Join the community as we pay tribute to all military heroes, veterans, retired and active duty, and to honor those Breans who have made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.
    [Show full text]