171St University of Notre Dame Commencement Program University of Notre Dame

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

171St University of Notre Dame Commencement Program University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Law School NDLScholarship Commencement Programs Law School History 5-13-2016 171st University of Notre Dame Commencement Program University of Notre Dame Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/commencement_programs Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation University of Notre Dame, "171st University of Notre Dame Commencement Program" (2016). Commencement Programs. Paper 180. http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/commencement_programs/180 This Program is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School History at NDLScholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Commencement Programs by an authorized administrator of NDLScholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 171 st MAY 13-15, 2016 UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME COMMENCEMENT 1 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FRIDAY, MAY 13 NOON – 2 P.M. 9 – 10:30 A.M. HESBURGH PROGRAM IN PUBLIC SERVICE MINOR IN EUROPEAN STUDIES RECOGNITION GRADUATION LUNCH BREAKFAST For Hesburgh Program graduating seniors and their families Hosted by the Nanovic Institute for European Studies LaFortune Student Center – Ballroom By invitation only For information contact [email protected] or 574-631-5253 2 – 4 P.M. South Dining Hall – Oak Room (2nd Floor) SENIOR HISTORY RECEPTION For graduating majors, their guests, and faculty 9 A.M. Short program to begin at 2 p.m. Dessert reception to follow AFRICANA RECOGNITION PRAYER SERVICE McKenna Hall – Atrium and Auditorium Reception immediately following Ryan Hall – Chapel 2:30 – 4:30 P.M. PROGRAM OF LIBERAL STUDIES GRADUATION 10 A.M. – NOON RECEPTION EDUCATION, SCHOOLING, AND SOCIETY Legends of Notre Dame – Nightclub RECEPTION Graduates and their families are invited 3 – 5 P.M. Remick Commons – Visitation Hall DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS AND PROGRAM IN ARABIC AND MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES SENIOR 10:30 A.M.– NOON RECOGNITION CEREMONY AND RECEPTION SOCIOLOGY GRADUATION BRUNCH AND North Dining Hall – F-Wing RECOGNITION CEREMONY For graduating seniors and their families 3 – 5 P.M. Tickets required for celebration. Contact department for DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS RECOGNITION information CEREMONY AND RECEPTION North Dining Hall – D-Wing Tickets are required - contact department for information - Shannon Carter (574) 631-9263 11 A.M. – 1 P.M. Reception to follow: Irish Green GENDER STUDIES PROGRAM GRADUATION DeBartolo Performing Arts Center - Patricia George Decio RECEPTION Theatre (Inclement weather location: O’Shaughnessy Hall – Great Hall) West of O’Shaughnessy Hall – South Quad 3 – 5 P.M. HESBURGH-YUSKO SCHOLARS PROGRAM 11 A.M. – 1 P.M. RECEPTION DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND For Hesburgh-Yusko Scholars Program graduating seniors and LITERATURES AWARDS CEREMONY their families. Refreshments will be served Tickets required Main Building - Room 120 Washington Hall – Auditorium 4 – 5:30 P.M. 11:30 A.M. – 12:30 P.M. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION SENIOR LEGACY GRADUATE SCHOOL MASS RECEPTION All members of the Notre Dame community are invited, especially Alumni and the Class of 2016 graduates who are legacies graduating masters and doctoral students and their families and are invited to attend with their families. guests Eck Visitor's Center Basilica of the Sacred Heart 4 P.M. LITURGICAL CHOIR COMMENCEMENT CONCERT University of Notre Dame Liturgical Choir Open to the public / Free admission Basilica of the Sacred Heart Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May 13-15, 2016. Except when noted, all ceremonies and activities are open to the public and tickets are not required. 2 4 P.M. 5:30 P.M. NATIVE AMERICAN RECOGNITION CEREMONY COMMENCEMENT BAND CONCERT By invitation only Free and open to the public. Legends of Notre Dame Tickets required - call 574-631-2800 DeBartolo Performing Arts Center – Leighton Concert Hall 4 – 5:30 P.M. DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY RECEPTION AND 6 – 8 P.M. RECOGNITION CEREMONY DEPARTMENT OF AFRICANA STUDIES AND DOAN Jordan Hall – Room 101 SCHOLARS RECOGNITION CEREMONY See department for reservations. Reception begins at 6 p.m. 4 – 5:30 P.M. Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. THEOLOGY DEPARTMENT COMMENCEMENT South Dining Hall – Hospitality Room RECEPTION Reception honoring graduating senior majors and their families 6 – 7:30 P.M. Appetizers will be served. R.S.V.P. via electronic invitation. KROC INSTITUTE UNDERGRADUATE Residence of Professor Anderson – Address provided on invitation RECOGNITION CEREMONY AND RECEPTION For graduating Peace Studies undergraduates, their guests, 4:30 P.M. and Peace Studies faculty and fellows. Light refreshments EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES AND CULTURES AWARD will be served CEREMONY McKenna Hall – Auditorium Reception immediately following DeBartolo Hall – Room 102 7 P.M. LATINO RECOGNITION CEREMONY 4:30 P.M. Reception immediately following: LaFortune Student Center – GAMMA DELTA CHAPTER OF PI SIGMA ALPHA Ballroom INDUCTION CEREMONY Washington Hall - Auditorium DeBartolo Hall - Room 140 7:30 P.M. 4:30 – 6 P.M. ENGLISH MAJORS END OF YEAR CELEBRATION KELLOGG INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL Dessert reception to follow: Irish Green (no ticket required) STUDIES AWARDS CEREMONY AND RECEPTION DeBartolo Performing Arts Center - Patricia George Decio For graduating International Development Fellows, Latin Theatre American Studies minors, International Development Studies minors, International Scholars, award recipients, their families, 8 P.M. and friends of the Institute. Awards presentation begins at 5 p.m. DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC COMMENCEMENT Hesburgh Center for International Studies – Auditorium and CONCERT Courtyard Featuring the Department of Music students Free and open to the public. Tickets required – call 574-631- 5 P.M. 2800 ALLIANCE FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION MASS DeBartolo Performing Arts Center – Leighton Concert Hall Members and families of ACE 23 welcome Reception to follow in Remick Commons in Visitation Hall SATURDAY, MAY 14 Dillon Hall – Chapel 5 – 6 P.M. 9 - 11 A.M. DEPARTMENT OF AMERICAN STUDIES AND ROTC COMMISSIONING CEREMONY THE JOHN W. GALLIVAN PROGRAM SENIOR Tickets required for ceremony RECOGNITION AND GRADUATION RECEPTION Reception to follow: Irish Green O’Shaughnessy Hall – Great Hall DeBartolo Performing Arts Center – Leighton Concert Hall 5 P.M. 9:30 A.M. – NOON ESTEEM PROGRAM DINNER DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN AND RUSSIAN For ESTEEM graduates, their families, and faculty LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES CONVOCATION By invitation only North Dining Hall – F-Wing Morris Inn – Smith Ballroom 9:30 A.M. 5 – 7 P.M. LAW SCHOOL PRAYER SERVICE PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT RECEPTION AND Tickets required AWARD RECOGNITION Basilica of the Sacred Heart For graduating seniors, their guests, and faculty Rolfs Sports Recreation Center 3 10 A.M. 1 – 3 P.M. AFRICANA RECOGNITION CEREMONY DEPARTMENT OF FILM, TELEVISION, AND Reception immediately following: LaFortune Student Center – THEATRE SENIOR RECEPTION Ballroom For graduating seniors and their families Washington Hall – Auditorium DeBartolo Performing Arts Center – Philbin Studio Theatre 10 A.M. – NOON 1 P.M. DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY RECEPTION SERVICE SEND-OFF CEREMONY For graduating seniors, their guests, and faculty Tickets required. Go to http://socialconcerns.nd.edu/postgraduate/ McKenna Hall – Atrium service_sendoff.shtml for more information Reception to follow: Irish Green 10 A.M. DeBartolo Performing Arts Center – Leighton Concert Hall GRADUATE SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT CEREMONY AND CONFERRING OF DEGREES 1:30 – 3:30 P.M. Students assemble at 9 a.m. Reception to follow MEDIEVAL INSTITUTE CEREMONY AND Compton Family Ice Arena RECEPTION For undergraduate and graduate students in Medieval Studies 10 A.M. – 1 P.M. Alumni Hall – Chapel INSTITUTE FOR LATINO STUDIES OPEN HOUSE Certificate Ceremony for graduates at 11 a.m. 2 P.M. McKenna Hall – Room 230 ASIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER RECOGNITION CEREMONY 10 A.M. Washington Hall – Auditorium MENDOZA COLLEGE OF BUSINESS GRADUATE CEREMONY AND CONFERRING OF DEGREES 2 – 4 P.M. Joyce Center – Purcell Pavilion KROC INSTITUTE M.A. RECOGNITION CEREMONY AND RECEPTION 11:30 A.M. – 12:30 P.M. For graduating Peace Studies graduate students, their guests, PHI BETA KAPPA INITIATION and Peace Studies faculty and fellows Initiates are requested to arrive at 11 a.m. Tickets required Hesburgh Center for International Studies – Auditorium DeBartolo Hall – Room 101 2 – 4 P.M. NOON UNIVERSITY WRITING CENTER OPEN HOUSE DEPARTMENT OF ART, ART HISTORY, AND For graduating Writing Center tutors and their families DESIGN RECEPTION AND LUNCH Coleman-Morse Center – Room 203 (Inclement weather location: Riley Hall of Art and Design – Room 309) 2:30 P.M. Riley Hall of Art and Design – Front Lawn DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE SENIOR RECOGNITION CEREMONY 12:15 P.M. Cap and gown required. No tickets required MENDOZA GRADUATE BUSINESS GRADUATION Compton Family Ice Arena RECEPTION FOR: Executive - Master of Business Administration 3 – 4 P.M. Master of Business Administration DEBARTOLO PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Master of Nonprofit Administration GUIDED TOURS Master of Science in Accountancy DeBartolo Performing Arts Center Master of Science in Business Analytics Master of Science in Finance 3 – 4 P.M. Master of Science in Management DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT RECEPTION For EMBA, MBA, MNA, MSA, MSBA, MSF, and MSM For graduating seniors and their families graduates and their families Mendoza College of Business – Potenziani Family Atrium Ticketed event Century Center – Downtown South Bend 3 – 3:45 P.M. PRESIDENT’S MEET AND GREET 12:30 P.M. All degree candidates, their families, and guests are welcome LAW SCHOOL HOODING AND CONFERRING to stop by for a brief visit and photo opportunity with
Recommended publications
  • Lessons from Burkina Faso's Thomas Sankara By
    Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance in Contemporary Africa: Lessons from Burkina Faso’s Thomas Sankara By: Moorosi Leshoele (45775389) Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy At the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SUPERVISOR: Prof Vusi Gumede (September 2019) DECLARATION (Signed) i | P a g e DEDICATION I dedicate this thesis to Thomas Noel Isadore Sankara himself, one of the most underrated leaders in Africa and the world at large, who undoubtedly stands shoulder to shoulder with ANY leader in the world, and tall amongst all of the highly revered and celebrated revolutionaries in modern history. I also dedicate this to Mariam Sankara, Thomas Sankara’s wife, for not giving up on the long and hard fight of ensuring that justice is served for Sankara’s death, and that those who were responsible, directly or indirectly, are brought to book. I also would like to tremendously thank and dedicate this thesis to Blandine Sankara and Valintin Sankara for affording me the time to talk to them at Sankara’s modest house in Ouagadougou, and for sharing those heart-warming and painful memories of Sankara with me. For that, I say, Merci boucop. Lastly, I dedicate this to my late father, ntate Pule Leshoele and my mother, Mme Malimpho Leshoele, for their enduring sacrifices for us, their children. ii | P a g e AKNOWLEDGEMENTS To begin with, my sincere gratitude goes to my Supervisor, Professor Vusi Gumede, for cunningly nudging me to enrol for doctoral studies at the time when the thought was not even in my radar.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014-2015 Catalogue
    CATALOGUE 2014–2015 CONTENTS 2 Academic Calendar 2014 – 2015 7 The College—General Information 12 Athletics 13 Academic Support Services 15 Student Support Services 15 College Health Services 16 Extracurricular Activities 18 The Center for Experiential Learning 22 Information Technology 23 Admission 27 Academic Regulations 36 The Curriculum 38 Requirements for Graduation 42 Programs of Study 46 The Honors Program 47 Courses of Instruction 261 Interdisciplinary Minors 273 Off-Campus Study Programs 274 Summer School 274 Reserve Officer Training Corps Programs 275 General Billing Information 280 Financial Aid 286 Officers of Administration and Instruction 303 Directory Saint Anselm College reserves the right to change or modify, without prior notice, the provisions, requirements and information in this catalogue and in its other publications. Saint Anselm College 100 Saint Anselm Drive Manchester, NH 03102-1310 Tel: (603) 641-7500, 1-888-4ANSELM Fax: (603) 641-7550, E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://www.anselm.edu ACADEMIC CALENDAR 2014 – 2015 First Semester August 29 - August 31 Friday - Sunday New Student Orientation September 1 Monday Labor Day - College Holiday September 2 Tuesday Classes begin/Modified Schedule * September 9 Tuesday Last day to change registration October 10 Friday Course material due from departments October 10 - October 14 Friday - Tuesday Fall recess begins at 5:30 PM October 15 Wednesday Classes resume October 20 Monday Mid-term deficiencies due October 24 - October 26 Friday - Sunday Family Weekend November
    [Show full text]
  • Africans: the HISTORY of a CONTINENT, Second Edition
    P1: RNK 0521864381pre CUNY780B-African 978 0 521 68297 8 May 15, 2007 19:34 This page intentionally left blank ii P1: RNK 0521864381pre CUNY780B-African 978 0 521 68297 8 May 15, 2007 19:34 africans, second edition Inavast and all-embracing study of Africa, from the origins of mankind to the AIDS epidemic, John Iliffe refocuses its history on the peopling of an environmentally hostilecontinent.Africanshavebeenpioneersstrugglingagainstdiseaseandnature, and their social, economic, and political institutions have been designed to ensure their survival. In the context of medical progress and other twentieth-century innovations, however, the same institutions have bred the most rapid population growth the world has ever seen. The history of the continent is thus a single story binding living Africans to their earliest human ancestors. John Iliffe was Professor of African History at the University of Cambridge and is a Fellow of St. John’s College. He is the author of several books on Africa, including Amodern history of Tanganyika and The African poor: A history,which was awarded the Herskovits Prize of the African Studies Association of the United States. Both books were published by Cambridge University Press. i P1: RNK 0521864381pre CUNY780B-African 978 0 521 68297 8 May 15, 2007 19:34 ii P1: RNK 0521864381pre CUNY780B-African 978 0 521 68297 8 May 15, 2007 19:34 african studies The African Studies Series,founded in 1968 in collaboration with the African Studies Centre of the University of Cambridge, is a prestigious series of monographs and general studies on Africa covering history, anthropology, economics, sociology, and political science.
    [Show full text]
  • An Examination of Nuu-Chah-Nulth Culture History
    SINCE KWATYAT LIVED ON EARTH: AN EXAMINATION OF NUU-CHAH-NULTH CULTURE HISTORY Alan D. McMillan B.A., University of Saskatchewan M.A., University of British Columbia THESIS SUBMI'ITED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the Department of Archaeology O Alan D. McMillan SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY January 1996 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without permission of the author. APPROVAL Name: Alan D. McMillan Degree Doctor of Philosophy Title of Thesis Since Kwatyat Lived on Earth: An Examination of Nuu-chah-nulth Culture History Examining Committe: Chair: J. Nance Roy L. Carlson Senior Supervisor Philip M. Hobler David V. Burley Internal External Examiner Madonna L. Moss Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon External Examiner Date Approved: krb,,,) 1s lwb PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENSE I hereby grant to Simon Fraser University the right to lend my thesis, project or extended essay (the title of which is shown below) to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. I further agree that permission for multiple copying of this work for scholarly purposes may be granted by me or the Dean of Graduate Studies. It is understood that copying or publication of this work for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission.
    [Show full text]
  • RCS Demographics V2.0 Codebook
    Religious Characteristics of States Dataset Project Demographics, version 2.0 (RCS-Dem 2.0) CODE BOOK Davis Brown Non-Resident Fellow Baylor University Institute for Studies of Religion [email protected] Acknowledgements I would like to thank the following persons for their assistance, without which this project could not have been completed. First and foremost, my co-principal investigator, Patrick James. Among faculty and researchers, I thank Brian Bergstrom, Peter W. Brierley, Peter Crossing, Abe Gootzeit, Todd Johnson, Barry Sang, and Sanford Silverburg. I also thank the library staffs of the following institutions: Assembly of God Theological Seminary, Catawba College, Maryville University of St. Louis, St. Louis Community College System, St. Louis Public Library, University of Southern California, United States Air Force Academy, University of Virginia, and Washington University in St. Louis. Last but definitely not least, I thank the following research assistants: Nolan Anderson, Daniel Badock, Rebekah Bates, Matt Breda, Walker Brown, Marie Cormier, George Duarte, Dave Ebner, Eboni “Nola” Haynes, Thomas Herring, and Brian Knafou. - 1 - TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 3 Citation 3 Updates 3 Territorial and Temporal Coverage 4 Regional Coverage 4 Religions Covered 4 Majority and Supermajority Religions 6 Table of Variables 7 Sources, Methods, and Documentation 22 Appendix A: Territorial Coverage by Country 26 Double-Counted Countries 61 Appendix B: Territorial Coverage by UN Region 62 Appendix C: Taxonomy of Religions 67 References 74 - 2 - Introduction The Religious Characteristics of States Dataset (RCS) was created to fulfill the unmet need for a dataset on the religious dimensions of countries of the world, with the state-year as the unit of observation.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    SOCIAL POWER AND CULTURAL CHANGE IN PRE-COLONIAL BRITISH COLUMBIA1 COLE HARRIS rom the first White contacts along the Coast in the 1770s to the establishment of British colonies in the mid-nineteenth Fcentury, outside involvement in the territory that is now the province of British Columbia turned primarily on imperial geopolitical claims and the spatial momentum of commercial capital. Exogenous diseases accompanied — in some cases slightly preceded — these explicit interests. All such introductions reached into space that, along parts of the Coast and the major salmon rivers, probably supported as dense non-agricultural populations as anywhere in the world. The numerous peoples of the northern Cordillera responded to these introductions in ways that have been subject to renewed scrutiny in recent years, part of a worldwide interest in contact processes and in the strategies and tactics of colonialism and resistance. It seems useful, therefore, to review current under­ standings of the major new vectors of power in the northern Cordillera during these years and, in this light, to consider what generalizations can now be offered about social power and cultural change during the better part of a century between the first appearance of Europeans and the creation of colonies. The crew of brilliant anthropologists and ethnographers who first studied the Native cultures of the Northwest Coast in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries rarely raised questions about cultural change and social power during the early contact years. Franz Boas and others of his and the next generation gathered ethnographic information from elderly informants and sought to record traditional 1 I thank Daniel Clayton, Robert Galois, Richard Mackie, and two anonymous reviewers for comments on a draft of this essay.
    [Show full text]
  • How the Liverpool Care Pathway Was Used As an Excuse For
    Right at Home Southern MD Home Care for the Elderly - Home Care for the Physically Disabled Feedback Like 2.5m DailyMail Wednesday, Apr 15th 2015 11AM 58°F 2PM 64°F 5-Day Forecast Home U.K. News Sports U.S. Showbiz Australia Femail Health Science Money Video Travel Columnists Latest Headlines News Arts Headlines Pictures Most read News Board Wires Login Lethal force caught Victory for wife of Abandoned teen White supremacist, Missouri death row Celebrity chef is 'Everyone knows it's on camera: ex-Clippers owner who gave birth to 20, claims he shot inmate loses 11th found hanging not right!': Gossip Care Pathway scrapped after damning Site Web Enter your search report reveals how relatives were shouted at by nurses for giving loved ones a drink Ministers order Liverpool Care Pathway to be ditched within a year, Review by Baroness Neuberger reveals how end-of-life treatment was used as an excuse for appalling levels of care open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com Families were not told their loved ones were on the 'pathway' to death By MATT CHORLEY, MAILONLINE POLITICAL EDITOR and DANIEL MARTIN FOR THE DAILY MAIL PUBLISHED: 07:02 EST, 15 July 2013 | UPDATED: 09:06 EST, 15 July 2013 153 View comments Like Follow Daily Mail @DailyMail Nurses shouted at relatives who tried to give their dying loves ones a sip of water, an inquiry into the controversial Liverpool Care Pathway revealed today. Follow +1 Daily Mail Daily Mail Ministers moved to scrap the end of life plan after a damning inquiry found it was being used as an excuse for poor care.
    [Show full text]
  • Heinrich Zimmermann and the Proposed Voyage of the Imperial and Royal Ship Cobenzell to the North West Coast in 1782-17831 Robert J
    Heinrich Zimmermann and the Proposed Voyage of the Imperial and Royal Ship Cobenzell to the North West Coast in 1782-17831 Robert J. King Johann Heinrich Zimmermann (1741-1805) a navigué sur le Discovery lors du troisième voyage de James Cook au Pacifique (1776-1780) et a écrit un compte du voyage, Reise um die Welt mit Capitain Cook (Mannheim, 1781). En 1782 il a été invité par William Bolts à participer à un voyage à la côte nord-ouest de l'Amérique partant de Trieste sous les couleurs autrichiennes impériales. Ce voyage était conçu comme réponse autrichienne aux voyages de Cook, un voyage impérial de découverte autour du monde qui devait comprendre l'exploitation des possibilités commerciales du commerce des fourrures sur la côte nord- ouest et le commerce avec la Chine et le Japon. Zimmermann a été rejoint à Trieste par trois de ses anciens compagnons de bord sous Cook -- George Dixon, George Gilpin et William Walker, chacun destiné à naviguer comme officier sur le navire impérial et royal Cobenzell. Les lettres et le journal de Zimmermann qui ont survécu fournissent une source valable à cette étude des origines du commerce maritime des fourrures sur la côte nord-ouest. On 24 July 1782, George Dixon wrote from Vienna to Heinrich Zimmermann, his former shipmate on the Discovery during James Cook’s 1776-1780 expedition to the North Pacific: Dear Harry, Yours I Rec‘d, and am glad you have Resolution, like the Honest Sailor which I allways have taken you for, and are willing to be doing sum thing both for your self and the Country.
    [Show full text]
  • Robotica Prep with Purpose, the Look Is Straight Edge – Sharp and Tailored
    AW 10 BEAUTY TREND BEAUTY b c d a e f g ROBOTICA PREP WITH PUrpOSE, the look is straight edge – sharp and tailored. No-nonsense hair with a deep side-part. Keep it together with a tightly-wound bun or a straight pony. Chiselled cheeks: imperative. h ; Firstview. Firstview. ; Elle Glass Elle ; Words Words ; Easy Rider Evie, let your hair hang down. Soft khaki eyes with Christine Thornton Christine a peach flush, natural brows and nude lips – Pucci AW 10 i j k l brings it back to the days of wash and go a.Céline AW 10. b.Balenciaga backstage AW 10. c.Stella McCartney backstage AW 10. d.Calvin Klein AW 10. e. Balenciaga AW 10. f.Calvin Klein backstage AW 10. Direction Art Firstview. wherever the wind takes you. g.Stella McCartney AW 10. h.Calvin Klein AW 10. i. Balenciaga backstage AW 10. j.Balenciaga AW 10. k. Rodarte backstage AW 10. l.Stella McCartney AW 10. 94 95 BEAUTY TREND b c a d ROUGE “Couture IS about WAITIng,” says Karl Lagerfeld. This look is moody and messed up – to make your mark, TEAM A TIDY RED LIP WITH TRYST-FRESH HAIR AND CLEAN SKIN. e f ; Firstview. Firstview. ; Give Me Elle Glass Elle A Reason ; Words Words ; “Do you have to have a reason for loving?” asks Brigitte Bardot. Luigi Murenu – on hair for Riccardo Tisci’s GIVENCHY AW 10 – gives you all the reason Christine Thornton Christine you need to rake it back into a loose, low pony. Caught and kept close – a velvet ribbon round your neck tied in a simple bow.
    [Show full text]
  • Pirelli Calendar 2010 by Terry Richardson London
    Pirelli Calendar 2010 by Terry Richardson London, 19 November 2009 – The 2010 Pirelli Calendar, now in its 37th edition, was presented to the press and to guests and collectors from around the world, at its global premiere in London. The much-awaited appointment with ‘The Cal’, a cult object for over 40 years, was held this year at Old Billingsgate, the suggestive late 19th century building on the banks of the Thames, where from 1875 to 1982 it housed the capital city’s fish market. Following China, immortalized by Patrick Demarchelier in the 2008 edition, and Botswana shot by Peter Beard a year later, 2010 is the year of Brazil and of American photographer Terry Richardson, the celebrated “enfant terrible” known for his provocative and outrageous approach. In the 30 images that scan the months of 2010, Terry Richardson depicts a return to a playful, pure Eros. Through his lens he runs after fantasies and provokes, but with a simplicity that sculpts and captures the sunniest side of femininity. He portrays a woman who is captivating because she is natural, who plays with stereotypes in order to undo them, who makes irony the only veil she covers herself with. This is a return to the natural, authentic atmospheres and images of the ‘60s and ‘70s. It is a clear homage to the Calendar’s origins, a throwback to the first editions by Robert Freeman (1964), Brian Duffy (1965) and Harry Peccinotti (1968 and 1969). Terry Richardson, like his illustrious predecessors, has chosen a simple kind of photography, without retouching, where naturalness prevails over technique and becomes the key to removing artificial excesses in vogue today to reveal the true woman underneath.
    [Show full text]
  • Busted ... Now What?
    Best of the Best Cupid in the Bend Ruth Riley and Troy Murphy have been Believe it or not there are creative ways to Wednesday nominated for the Naismith awards along with spend your Valentine's Day at Notre Dame­ 15 other male and female national finalists. with or without a significant other FEBRUARY 14, Sports + page 24 Scene+ page 14·15 2001 THE The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saillt Mary's I VOL XXXIV NO. 89 ' HTTP://OBSERVER.ND.EDU Busted... now what? Consequences for parietal violations vary across campus guests of the opposite sex are not to begin tor of residence life. "The longer the vio­ By MARIBEL MOREY drunk enough that they don't want to go before 10 a.m. on any day and are not to lation, the more intentional it becomes," back to their dorm-hall monitor," said Assistant News Editor extend beyond 2 a.m." What might have For the most part, 10-15 minute viola­ Shoup. "When they're intoxicated, they're seemed as a small detail during spring tions end with a warning while 30 minute talking louder than they thought they Many prospective students are awed by visitation affects the lives of every student violations or more go directly to Reslife, were." the crazed football fans, the Golden Dome on campus. said Sister Adrienne Piennette, rector of Some students, however, say they enjoy or the sense of community that is sensed "Yes, parietals have a larger effect on Welsh Family Hall. parietals and others disagree so strongly throughout campus, especially within res­ social life.
    [Show full text]
  • Report Title 16. Jahrhundert 17. Jahrhundert 18. Jahrhundert
    Report Title - p. 1 Report Title 16. Jahrhundert 1583 Geschichte : China - Europa : England Elizabeth I. schreibt einen Brief an den Kaiser von China um Kontakt aufzunehmen. [Hsia8:S. 220] 1596-1597 Geschichte : China - Europa : England Elizabeth I. schickt drei Schiffe nach China und gibt Benjamin Wood einen Brief an den Kaiser mit. Die Schiffe erleiden Schiffbruch im Golf von Martaban, Burma. [Hsia8:S. 220,LOC] 17. Jahrhundert 1625 Geschichte : China - Europa : England Engländer erreichen die chinesische Küste. [Wie 1] 1637 Geschichte : China - Europa : England Die ersten englischen Schiffe kommen an der Küste von Süd-Ost China an. [Stai 1] 1683-1684 Geschichte : China - Europa : England William Dampier durchquert die chinesischen Meere. [Boot] 1698-1701 Geschichte : China - Europa : England James Cunningham reist 1698 als Arzt einer Fabrik der British E.I. Company nach Amoy [Xiamen]. 1699 wird er Fellow der Royal Society und reist 1700 wieder nach China. 1701 erreicht er die Insel Chusan [Zhoushan]. 1699 Geschichte : China - Europa : England / Wirtschaft und Handel Gründung der British East India Company in China, was den Handel mit Hong Kong fördert. [Wik] 18. Jahrhundert 1766 Geschichte : China - Europa : England James Lind besucht Guangzhou und sammelt chinesische Gegenstände und Bücher. [Kit1:S. 59] Report Title - p. 2 1774-1784 Geschichte : China - Europa : England Huang Yadong hält sich in England auf. He is described as Wang-y-Tong, who worked as a page in the John Frederick Sackville's household at Knole and attended the local Sevenoaks School. Huang Yadong is known to have visited the naturalists Mary Delany and the Duchess of Portland at the latter’s country seat of Bulstrode, discussing Chinese plants and their uses with them.
    [Show full text]