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Lights: the Messa Quarterly
997 LIGHTS: THE MESSA QUARTERLY FALL 2012 Volume 2, Issue 1 Copyright © 2012 by the Middle Eastern Studies Students’ Association at the University of Chicago. All rights reserved. No part of this publication’s text may be reproduced or utilized in any way or by any means, electronic, mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information stor- age and retrieval system without written permission from the Middle Eastern Studies Students’ Association board or by the permission of the authors in- cluded in this edition. This journal is supported in parts by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago. Lights: The MESSA Journal Fall 2012 Vol. 2 No. 1 The Middle Eastern Studies Students’ Association’s Subcommittee of Publications at The University of Chicago Winter 2012 Staff Executive board: Gwendolyn Collaço, Graphic Design and Digital Editor John Macdonald, Review Editor Nadia Qazi, Production Editor August Samie, Submissions Editor and Managing Editor Peer reviewers: Gwendolyn Collaço Carol Fan Golriz Farshi Gordon Cooper Klose Amr Tarek Leheta Johan McDonald Kara Peruccio Nadia Qazi Tasha Ramos Mohmmad Sagha August Samie Armaan Siddiqi Samee Sulaiman Patrick Thevenow Andy Ver Steegh Patrick Zemanek Editors: Daniel Burnham Amy Frake Gordon Cooper Klose Nour Merza Emily Mitchell Brianne Reeves Faculty Advisors: Dr. Fred M. Donner and Dr. John E. Woods Table of Contents Featured Master’s Thesis: Reading Parsipur through the Eyes of Heday- at’s Blind Owl: Tracing the Origin of Magical Realism in Modern Persian Prose, by Saba Sulaiman................................................................................. 1 Branding a Country and Constructing an Alternative Modernity with Muslim Women: A Content Analysis of the United Arab Emirates, by Kateland Haas............................................................................................... -
Tipperary News Part 6
Clonmel Advertiser. 20-4-1822 We regret having to mention a cruel and barbarous murder, attended with circumstances of great audacity, that has taken place on the borders of Tipperary and Kilkenny. A farmer of the name of Morris, at Killemry, near Nine-Mile-House, having become obnoxious to the public disturbers, received a threatening notice some short time back, he having lately come to reside there. On Wednesday night last a cow of his was driven into the bog, where she perished; on Thursday morning he sent two servants, a male and female, to the bog, the male servant to skin the cow and the female to assist him; but while the woman went for a pail of water, three ruffians came, and each of them discharged their arms at him, and lodged several balls and slugs in his body, and then went off. This occurred about midday. No one dared to interfere, either for the prevention of this crime, or to follow in pursuit of the murderers. The sufferer was quite a youth, and had committed no offence, even against the banditti, but that of doing his master’s business. Clonmel Advertiser 24-8-1835 Last Saturday, being the fair day at Carrick-on-Suir, and also a holiday in the Roman Catholic Church, an immense assemblage of the peasantry poured into the town at an early hour from all directions of the surrounding country. The show of cattle was was by no means inferior-but the only disposable commodity , for which a brisk demand appeared evidently conspicuous, was for Feehans brown stout. -
UPDATE 230 South Broad Street • Suite 1700 Philadelphia, PA 19102 215-545-6678 • Fax: 215-545-3342
UPDATE 230 South Broad Street • Suite 1700 Philadelphia, PA 19102 215-545-6678 • Fax: 215-545-3342 www.atlantic10.org ATLANTIC 10 ANNOUNCES COMMISSIONER’S HONOR ROLL FOR THE SPRING 2009 SEMESTER FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PHILADELPHIA, Pa. – Atlantic 10 Commissioner Bernadette V. McGlade today announced the Commissioner’s Honor Roll for the Spring 2009 semester, honoring each student-athlete in the Atlantic 10 with a 3.5 grade point average or better. Among the 1,164 members of the Commissioner’s Honor Roll are Lamarra Currie of Charlotte, La Salle's Christa Dominick, Katelyn Murray of St. Bonaventure and George Washington's David Zenk, who were recently awarded postgraduate scholarships by the Conference. Below are the members of the Commissioner’s Honor Roll for the Spring of 2009. Charlotte Name Sport Cl. Hometown Previous School Major Hailey Beam W. Soccer Jr. Charlotte, N.C. Texas Tech Finance/Marketing Travis Beaulieu M. Soccer So. Apex, N.C. Old Dominion Pre-Kinesiology Liana Blue XC/Track & Field Sr. McLeansville, N.C. NE Guilford Chemistry Shamar Bowden M. Basketball Fr. Greensboro, N.C. The Miller School University College Sunita Brathwaite W. Track & Field Jr. Linden, N.J. Middlesex CC Psychology Lauren Brown W. Soccer Jr. French Town, N.J. Delaware Valley Regional Exercise Science Danielle Burgin W. Basketball Sr Asheville, N.C. Asheville Criminal Justice Brad Clinard M. Tennis Sr. High Point, N.C. GTCC Middle College Economics Rachelle Coward W. Basketball Fr. Dartmouth, Nova Scotia Oak Hill Academy Pre-Biology Courtney Cowles Volleyball Sr. Eden Prairie, Minn. Eden Prairie Psychology Candace Cunningham W. -
Reverend Peter Schneider
Reverend Peter Schneider Peter Schneider was born on October 8, 1806 in Schoenborn, Alsace. He was the son of Joseph Schneider and Eva Steckle. His education was at the Lycee at Zabern, before he entered the Novitiate of the Redemptorists in Vienna, Austria. For reasons unknown, he did not stay with the Redemptorists for long. At some point after leaving, but before arriving in Canada, he served in the Diocese of Strasbourg. It was during that time that he evidently decided to become a missionary in the Americas, and left for the Diocese of New York. Around 1830, Bishop Alexander MacDonnell invited him to come to Canada, which was in need of priests at the time, and sent him to the seminary in Montreal to finish his priestly studies. He was ordained on June 19, 1836 in Montreal. Father Schneider was a formidable man even in his youth, possessing a commanding bearing and the ability to speak three languages (French, German and English). One can only imagine the impact he would have had on the rural communities he served. His first such assignment was in Amherstburg and Sandwich, where baptismal registers suggest he was in the area from 1836 to 1837, focusing more on Sandwich in the latter half of that period. By 1838, he had taken up residence in Goderich, ministering to the Catholics there and in the surrounding areas of Guelph, Wilmot and Waterloo. While doubtless Father Schneider was held in great esteem from the start, due to his presence and his demeanor, an event recalled during this time speaks to the respect and esteem he enjoyed among Catholics and Protestants alike, which was not common in those days: the tale has it that he was walking alone to Goderich when he came across a group from the Protestant- affiliated Orange Order. -
UNITED STATES ARMY WWI CHAPLAINS 1. Abbott, Alexander Howes 2. Abbott, Joseph V. 3. Abrams, William Edward 4. Acker, Lawr
UNITED STATES ARMY WWI CHAPLAINS 52. Arrowood, William W. 53. Arthur, Elijah A. 54. Ashford, William Curtis 1. Abbott, Alexander Howes 55. Ashmore, Charles Morriston 2. Abbott, Joseph V. 56. Aston, Andrew Clement 3. Abrams, William Edward 57. Atherholt, Edgar Frank 4. Acker, Lawrence 58. Atkinson, Harry Grant 5. Ackerman, Willliam 59. Atkinson, John Clark 6. Ackermann, Maurice 60. Atkinson, William Alexander 7. Ackley, Charles B. 61. Atkinson, William Austin 8. Acree, Claude Ferdinand 62. Auger, Elias 9. Adams, Chauncey Allen 63. Aull, Roger 10. Adams, Jr. , Eleazar Tarrant 64. Austin, Clarence L. 11. Adams, James B. 65. Averitt, Erwin L. 12. Addison, James Thayer 66. Axton, John Victor 13. Ahern, Stephen Leo 67. Axton, John T. 14. Aiken, William A. 68. Babcock, Byrl F. 15. Akin, Russell Ernest 69. Babcock, Sidney Henry 16. Albers, Joseph Henry 70. Babst, Julius J. 17. Alderton, Walker Moore 71. Bachelor, Theodore 18. Alexander, Eugene 72. Bachman, Francis D. 19. Alexander, William Marvin 73. Bacon, Alvin C. 20. Alfriend, William J. 74. Baczyk, Andrew J. 21. Allan, John James 75. Baer, Brenton Lloyd C. 22. Allchin, Frederick James 76. Bagby, Arthur Guy 23. Allen, Garrett LeRoy 77. Bagget, John F. 24. Allen, Jacob D. 78. Bailey, George Monballiu 25. Allen, Louis Chowning 79. Baird, William Parcell 26. Allgood, Jackson Lee 80. Baker, Abe L. 27. Allison, George William 81. Baker, Abram L. 28. Alton, John T. 82. Baker, Arthur M. 29. Amiger, William T. 83. Baker, Charles J. 30. Andem, Ralph Taylor 84. Baker, Henry Vernon 31. Anderson, Edgar W. 85. Baker, Wesley Leroy 32. -
DID JOSHUA REYNOLDS PAINT HIS PICTURES? Matthew C
DID JOSHUA REYNOLDS PAINT HIS PICTURES? Matthew C. Hunter Did Joshua Reynolds Paint His Pictures? The Transatlantic Work of Picturing in an Age of Chymical Reproduction In the spring of 1787, King George III visited the Royal Academy of Arts at Somerset House on the Strand in London’s West End. The king had come to see the first series of the Seven Sacraments painted by Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665) for Roman patron Cassiano dal Pozzo in the later 1630s. It was Poussin’s Extreme Unction (ca. 1638–1640) (fig. 1) that won the king’s particular praise.1 Below a coffered ceiling, Poussin depicts two trains of mourners converging in a darkened interior as a priest administers last rites to the dying man recumbent on a low bed. Light enters from the left in the elongated taper borne by a barefoot acolyte in a flowing, scarlet robe. It filters in peristaltic motion along the back wall where a projecting, circular molding describes somber totality. Ritual fluids proceed from the right, passing in relay from the cerulean pitcher on the illuminated tripod table to a green-garbed youth then to the gold flagon for which the central bearded elder reaches, to be rubbed as oily film on the invalid’s eyelids. Secured for twenty-first century eyes through a spectacular fund-raising campaign in 2013 by Cambridge’s Fitzwilliam Museum, Poussin’s picture had been put before the king in the 1780s by no less spirited means. Working for Charles Manners, fourth Duke of Rutland, a Scottish antiquarian named James Byres had Poussin’s Joshua Reynolds, Sacraments exported from Rome and shipped to London where they Diana (Sackville), Viscountess Crosbie were cleaned and exhibited under the auspices of Royal Academy (detail, see fig. -
State of Connecticut Appellate Court Docket Sixth Term
STATE OF CONNECTICUT APPELLATE COURT DOCKET SIXTH TERM - MARCH 2021 COURT DATES ARE EXPECTED TO BE MARCH 1 - 19, 2021 All cases in this docket are listed in numerical order, and may be assigned during this term of Court. Please notify me by the close of business, Tuesday, February 2, 2021: by filing a "Assignment Form-Appellate Court" (JD-AC-014) as an "Assignment Form (Response to Docket)" which is listed under the "Preliminary Paper/Appeal Document" selection in Appellate E-filing. 1. If you have Ready cases pending both in this Court and in the Supreme Court, or have multiple Ready cases pending in this court. 2. If you have compelling reasons for not assigning a case during this term of Court. Dates and reasons must be provided. No "Assignment Form" is required if you do not meet the above criteria. Counsel of record who are exempt from E-filing may fax their "Assignment Form - Appellate Court" to (860) 757-2217, or deliver it by first class mail to 231 Capitol Avenue., Hartford, CT 06106 Waiver requests must be filed as "Correspondence to Court Regarding Waiver of Oral Argument" which is listed under the "Preliminary Paper/Appeal Document" section in the Appellate E-filing. Assignments for oral argument in the Supreme Court and Appellate Court shall take precedence over all other assignments. See P.B. §69-3. Camera and electronic media coverage is governed by §70-9 of the rules of appellate procedure. Any motions to limit or preclude coverage must be filed by February 22, 2021. INFORMATION ON THE ASSIGNMENT OF CASES WILL BE AVAILABLE ON OR BEFORE February 18, 2021 , at www.jud.ct.gov. -
The Mount's Culture of Service
AUTUMN 2010 Alumni, Students college of & Friends mount saint vincentnews Mount students and staff in Guatemala INSIDE The Culture of Service: COVER Dr. Natalia Smirnova Brings More International Flavor to the Mount: PAGES 2 & 3 Dr. Joseph Skelly Explores Reform for the Middle East in his New Book: paGE 4 Kevin Garlan Presents at the National Conference for the American Anthropological Association: PAGE 5 The 2010 Scholarship The Mount’s Culture of Service: Tribute Dinner Breaks the Records. Over “…let us love one another, for charity is of God.” $550,000 Raised for Scholarships: paGE 6 For students attending the College of Mount espouses the teachings of Saint Vincent de Saint Vincent, an undergraduate education Paul, the 18th-century French priest who Jessica Abejar ’11 Earns Kudos in C200 consists of much more than mere courses, championed aid to the sick, the reviled Summer Internship: lectures, and lab work. For the College is, and the poor. Among Saint Vincent’s famous PAGE 8 as Dianna Dale, Vice President for Student sayings: “It is only for your love alone that Athletics Top Ten: Affairs puts it, “mission driven.” The College the poor will forgive you the bread you give paGE 9 aspires to develop a whole person: young to them,” and “Dearly beloved, let us love Renowned Alumna men and women who appreciate the fact one another, for charity is of God.” Rosemary T. Berkery that what one individual does inevitably has The College also celebrates the good Inspires the Class an effect on the lives of others. works of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, the first of 2010 with her Commencement Mount Saint Vincent was founded by American to be canonized by the Roman Address: the Sisters of Charity of New York and it Catholic Church. -
Most-Common-Surnames-Bmd-Registers-16.Pdf
Most Common Surnames Surnames occurring most often in Scotland's registers of Births, Marriages and Deaths Counting only the surname of the child for births, the surnames of BOTH PARTIES (for example both BRIDE and GROOM) for marriages, and the surname of the deceased for deaths Note: the surnames from these registers may not be representative of the surnames of the population of Scotland as a whole, as (a) they include the surnames of non-residents who were born / married / died here; (b) they exclude the surnames of residents who were born / married / died elsewhere; and (c) some age-groups have very low birth, marriage and death rates; others account for most births, marriages and deaths.ths Registration Year = 2016 Position Surname Number 1 SMITH 2056 2 BROWN 1435 3 WILSON 1354 4 CAMPBELL 1147 5 STEWART 1139 6 THOMSON 1127 7 ROBERTSON 1088 8 ANDERSON 1001 9 MACDONALD 808 10 TAYLOR 782 11 SCOTT 771 12 REID 755 13 MURRAY 754 14 CLARK 734 15 WATSON 642 16 ROSS 629 17 YOUNG 608 18 MITCHELL 601 19 WALKER 589 20= MORRISON 587 20= PATERSON 587 22 GRAHAM 569 23 HAMILTON 541 24 FRASER 529 25 MARTIN 528 26 GRAY 523 27 HENDERSON 522 28 KERR 521 29 MCDONALD 520 30 FERGUSON 513 31 MILLER 511 32 CAMERON 510 33= DAVIDSON 506 33= JOHNSTON 506 35 BELL 483 36 KELLY 478 37 DUNCAN 473 38 HUNTER 450 39 SIMPSON 438 40 MACLEOD 435 41 MACKENZIE 434 42 ALLAN 432 43 GRANT 429 44 WALLACE 401 45 BLACK 399 © Crown Copyright 2017 46 RUSSELL 394 47 JONES 392 48 MACKAY 372 49= MARSHALL 370 49= SUTHERLAND 370 51 WRIGHT 357 52 GIBSON 356 53 BURNS 353 54= KENNEDY 347 -
Co. Tipperary Senior Hurling Final Match Programme 1997
Co. Tipperary Senior Hurling Final Match Programme 1997 o make HEM I -WEST _free \ c ~ L L FOR INFORMAll A N HEALTH CLIIR liN LIIE 1, 1.30 p.m.' (OUNl'Y M INOA HURLING FINAl GOLDfN-KILFfRCLf v. TOOMfVRRR Aeite6ir: SEAN\US ROCHE (Kilsheelan) 100 p.m.: NENAGH Co-Or COUNTY SENIOR HURUNG FINAL C.J. KICKHRMS (Mllllinahone) v. CLONOULTV-ROSSMORf Aeite6ir: MICHAEL CAHill (Kilruone McOonoghs) Maria Morrissey, County Youth Officer and Clonoulty- '1 Rossmore: Richard Sheehan , Mullinahone ; Noel Dundon I 'TIpperary Star'; Liz Howard ; Seamus O'Doherty; Jim Fogarty ~/ and Jerry Ring and Brendan O'Connor for their photography. JOHN McCORMACK, Programme Kil kenny Peop~ Pnnting Ltd. 056·63366 3 • ~ El Company Ltd. : ~ ® Shannon, E I ® Professional Co. Clare 100% Irish Owned LE Y •... , . .. LEADER .', TOOMEVARA: Back row (I. to r.): Padraig McGrath, Paddy O'Brien, Anthony O'Neill, Brian McGrath, Michael Kelly. Kevin Cummins, Andrew Ryan, Paul McGrath. Front row: Brendan Dunne, Andrew Ryan (captain), Stephen O'Meara, James OMeara, Owen Bnslane, Ken Hall. Thomas Ryan. Noel Dundon Of course Tipperary now clubs should be seen in By have a new minor Semple Stadium and It is (Tipperary Star) manager in Paudie Butler everybody's dream to (Drom l inch) and although make it to a minor final. If he success of the he was involved as a you are lucky you might Tipperary team in the selector with the team in get two and that's what minor grade over the the last lew years he really sets the minor final apart past few years has has a hard act to follow Irom all the others. -
Mid-Tipperary Senior Hurling Final Match Programme 2007 Maclochlainn (R D Markings) Ltd
Mid-Tipperary Senior Hurling Final Match Programme 2007 MacLochlainn (R_d Markings) Ltd. id Tipperary Sen ior CUurHnf) Centenary ~ina( (1907 - 2007) REITEOIR: Willie Clohessy (Drom- Inch) Semple Stadium, 9th Meanfoir, 2007 T<>m<W o'l-f~ lUach €3 Runai ro Proud to be associated with the Mid Tipperary Board GAA Centenary 1907-2.007 Celebrations Fdilre s euis mhor mhais dornfaille a ChUT I"OII1Ih gaeh aoirw: Bla [JalhalT Stmd I Semple Innll agu, la sud agam go mbcidh sar chlulchi again" I wish \0 e~lcnd a "cry ~pcdal welcome 10 e>cl)'onc Hlday. 10 Semple Stadium. for tile: MId Semor Hurling Champion,hip Final bct .... cell Loughl11(ll"(: Ca.<.lleincy allil Thurles San.ftelds. [n panicular.l would like 10 welcome tile captam, of tne fonner MId Senior Hurling winning learns "00 are our special gucm today. Today's game, hold special significance as 2007 marks the cemenary of lhe fon1l3\ioo ofthc Mid Tipperary Bo.1ru - fin-I Rlceling having been held in Thurle, on the 9th June 1907. Variou, events hll"C been taken place during the course of the year starting wilh the: launch of the Centenary year cclebrnllon~ 00 the 231212007 which il"lCludcd the un'tlling of a plaque OUtside Hayes HOle! by Munster Council ChaIrman _ Sean Fogarty. A )"outh weekend .. as held in May including a School~ (!tILZ and an Under 12 Ilurling Bht7 ... here all players ..ere gi'cn an opponunuy 10 sample the new d~~~ing room facilitle~ at Semple Stadium and a gallic on the famcd pilch. -
John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and the Promotion of a National Aesthetic
JOHN BOYDELL'S SHAKESPEARE GALLERY AND THE PROMOTION OF A NATIONAL AESTHETIC ROSEMARIE DIAS TWO VOLUMES VOLUME I PHD THE UNIVERSITY OF YORK HISTORY OF ART SEPTEMBER 2003 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Volume I Abstract 3 List of Illustrations 4 Introduction 11 I Creating a Space for English Art 30 II Reynolds, Boydell and Northcote: Negotiating the Ideology 85 of the English Aesthetic. III "The Shakespeare of the Canvas": Fuseli and the 154 Construction of English Artistic Genius IV "Another Hogarth is Known": Robert Smirke's Seven Ages 203 of Man and the Construction of the English School V Pall Mall and Beyond: The Reception and Consumption of 244 Boydell's Shakespeare after 1793 290 Conclusion Bibliography 293 Volume II Illustrations 3 ABSTRACT This thesis offers a new analysis of John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, an exhibition venture operating in London between 1789 and 1805. It explores a number of trajectories embarked upon by Boydell and his artists in their collective attempt to promote an English aesthetic. It broadly argues that the Shakespeare Gallery offered an antidote to a variety of perceived problems which had emerged at the Royal Academy over the previous twenty years, defining itself against Academic theory and practice. Identifying and examining the cluster of spatial, ideological and aesthetic concerns which characterised the Shakespeare Gallery, my research suggests that the Gallery promoted a vision for a national art form which corresponded to contemporary senses of English cultural and political identity, and takes issue with current art-historical perceptions about the 'failure' of Boydell's scheme. The introduction maps out some of the existing scholarship in this area and exposes the gaps which art historians have previously left in our understanding of the Shakespeare Gallery.