13,094 research outputs found
Apocalypse - 1999
Contributers include: Michael Pendragon, Robert F. Tredray, Michael Catalano, R. Kimm, Richard Broderick, Randi Davis, Errol Miller, Gayl J. Johnson, Michael H. Brownstein, Maureen Flannery, Helen Ann Berg, Mary Elizabeth Kisner, Frank Varela, Kathleen Sanchez, John Rossi, F.J. Schaak, Candy Hamilton, B.Z. Niditch, Emilio del Valle, Robert Roden, Amy Stauffer, Nathan Hoks, Richard Reevehttps://neiudc.neiu.edu/apocalypse/1003/thumbnail.jp
MacBeth Playbill
Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance and Film
Angell Blackfriars Theatre
MacBeth
Written by William Shakespeare
April 19-23, 1996
Directed by John Garrity
Scenery and Costumes designed by David Costa Cabral
Lighting designed by Christopher Brown
Fight Choreography by Normand Beauregard
Dance Choreography by Wendy Oliver
Original music composed and performed by Mary Casale
Cast: First Witch – Stacey Lynn Cloutman, Second Witch – Abigail Christian, Third Witch – Stephanie Kraus, Rebel Army – Thomas Gregory Broderick, Kevin Casey, Amanda Blake Davis, Christopher Motta, Karen O’Connor, Jennifer A. O’Donnell, Heath A. Tiberio, Banquo, A Lord – Dan Lesho, MacBeth, Thane of Glamis – Stephen Cabral, Malcolm, Elder Son of Duncan – Brian Patrick Gorman, Duncan, King of Scotland – John J. McNiff, Donalbain, Son of Duncan – Christopher Saulnier, Lennox, A Lord – Stephen Radochia, Ross, A Lord – Russell Berrigan, Angus, A Scottish Noble – Roberta MacIvor, MacDuff, Thane of Fire – Chris Perrotti, Fleance, Son of Banquo – Michael Sablone, Menteith, A Lord – Heath A. Tiberio, Caithness, A Lord – Thomas Gregory Broderick, A Scottish Noble – Kerrie Lynn Diana, Holy Woman – Jeanine Cappello, Lady Macbeth – Megan Gibbons, Messenger – Amanda Blake Davis, Porter – Kevin Casey, Seyton – Stephen Schonhoff, Gentlewoman – Jennifer A. O’Donnell, Servant to Lady Macbeth – Elizabeth Brady, 1st Murderer – Brian E. Canell, 2nd Murderer – Christopher Motta, 1st Apparition – Karen O’Connor, 2nd Apparition – Elizabeth Brady, 3rd Apparition – Amanda Blake Davis, Eight Kings – Jessica Billings, Thomas Gregory Broderick, Brian E. Canell, Brian Patrick Gorman, Roberta MacIvor, Jennifer A. O’Donnell, Christopher Saulnier, Heath A. Tiberio, Lady MacDuff – Beth Ford, Young MacDuff – Ethan Epstein, Soldiers – Christopher Motta and Kevin Casey, Doctor – Jessica Billings, Siward, An English Lord – Christopher Motta, Messenger – Karen O’Connorhttps://digitalcommons.providence.edu/macbeth_pubs/1000/thumbnail.jp
The Old Bailey proceedings and the representation of crime and criminal justice in eighteenth-century London
The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, published accounts of felony trials held at London’s central criminal court, were a remarkable publishing phenomenon. First published in 1674, they quickly became a regular periodical, with editions published eight times a year following each session of the court. Despite the huge number of trial reports (some 50,000 in the eighteenth century), the Proceedings, also known as the “Sessions Papers”, have formed the basis of several important studies in social history, dating back to Dorothy George’s seminal London Life in the Eighteenth Century (1925). Their recent publication online, however, has not only made them more widely available, but also changed the way historians consult them, leading to greater use of both quantitative analysis, using the statistics function, and qualitative examination of their language, through keyword searching. In the context of recent renewed interest in the history of crime and criminal justice, for which this is the most important source available in this period, the growing use of the Proceedings raises questions about their reliability, and, by extension, the motivations for their original publication. Historians generally consider the Proceedings to present accurate, if often incomplete, accounts of courtroom proceedings. From this source, along with manuscript judicial records, criminal biographies (including the Ordinary’s Accounts), polemical pamphlets such as Henry Fielding’s Enquiry into the Causes of the Late Increase of Robbers (1751), and of course the satirical prints of William Hogarth, they have constructed a picture of eighteenth-century London as a city overwhelmed by periodic crime waves and of a policing and judicial system which was forced into wide-ranging reforms in order to meet this challenge
UNH Law Alumni Magazine, Winter 2012
https://scholars.unh.edu/alumni_mag/1003/thumbnail.jp
The Roles of a Consultant in a Cooperative System Headquarters
published or submitted for publicatio
Commencement Exercises Program, July 27, 1963
The 1963 Bryant College Commencement Program. This year marked Bryant\u27s Centennial Commencement
Commencement Exercises Program, August 14, 1931
Commencement Exercises Program, August 14, 1931
For Our Information, September & October 1954, Vol. VII, no. 2-3
An official publication of the ILR School, Cornell University, “for the information of all faculty, staff and students.
UNH Law Alumni Magazine, Winter 2013
https://scholars.unh.edu/alumni_mag/1001/thumbnail.jp
The Crescent Student Newspaper, June 5, 1934
Student newspaper of Pacific College (later George Fox University). 4 pages, black and white.https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/the_crescent/1906/thumbnail.jp
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