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ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE
ANNAPOLIS
JUNE 1997
EARTH SHRINES
Mireya Cirici, oil paintings
Inspired by the Mexican altars erected for the Day of
the Dead, Cirici spent four years painting this series,
which attempts to explore man's connection to the
divine. This wi ll be Cirici's first exhibit in Santa Fe.
Exhibit opens with a reception Friday, June 6, from 5
to 7 p.m. in the Fireside Lounge and continues through June 26.
GALLERY HOURS: Friday through Saturday, 5 to 8 p.m.; Sunday, 1 to
5 p.m. The Gallery is located on the second floor of Peterson
Student Center. For more information, p lease contact Ginger
Roherty at 505-984-6099.
�SHAKESPEARE IN SANTA FE, IN ASSOCIATION WITH ST. JOHN'S
COLLEGE, IS PROUD TO PRESENT
THE WINTER'S TALE
Directed by Nagle Jackson
Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights
July 6 through August 17
The Bard's late play is a romantic adventure filled with jealous fury,
magical sea voyages, young love and the healing powers of time.
Come early and enjoy savory gourmet picnic dinners by Wild Oats Dining, along
with Renaissance entertainment starting at 6 p.m. Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. in
the St. John's College Meem Library Courtyard. General admission is free. Preferred
seating is available with a contribution of $15 or $25 per person. For more information call 982-2910.
TEA AND SHAKESPEARE
Join Shakespeare and St. John's, with special guest Nagle Jackson, director of The
Winters Tale, for a few words about the Bard - his wit and wisdom, poetry, truth,
and continued relevance in our lives today. 4 to 5:30 p.m., Saturday, June 21, in the
St. John's College Coffee Shop. Call 982-2910 for reservations. Admission is $9.
CHILDREN'S FAIRY TALE HOUR
Charming tales for the little ones presented by Shakespeare in Santa Fe's Summer
Intern Program. 6 p.m., Wednesdays, August 6 and 13. Admission is.free.
Admission is free.
THE MYTH OF SANTA FE: CREATING A MODERN
REGIONAL TRADITION
Chris Wilson, University of New Mexico. The lecture will be followed by
a reception and book signing. 3 p.m., Sunday, June 22, in the Great Hall.
The "Speaking Volumes" Lecture Series is sponsored by the St. John's College Library
and Fine Arts Guild.
Admission is free to all lectures.
THE SPIRIT OF AMERICAN CONSERVATISM: OR, IF
YOU THINK COMBINING ATHENS AND JERUSALEM
IS HARD, TRY ADDING PHILADELPHIA
John Agresto, president, t. John's College, 3 p.m., Wednesday, June
18, in the Junior Common Room.
Goo OF ISAAC
Phil Lecuyer, 3 p.m., Wednesday, June 25 , in the Junior Common Room.
ON OEDIPUS
REx
Basia Miller, 3 p.m., Wednesday, July 2 , in the Junior Common Room.
�CHARLES BELL
Tuesdays at 8 p.m. in the Private Dining Room.
Admission is free.
June 3:
1600: THE TRAGIC DIVIDE (SHAKESPEARE):
Vortex of transformation
June 10: BAROQUE FORMULATION: Quixotic rebirth,
Cartesian consciousness
June 17: EARLY CHRISTIANITY: From the origins to the fall of Rome
June 24:
1400: PILGRIM'S ALL (CHAUCER'S WORLD):
"In the
temple playing"
July 1:
Cycles:
Patters of history, early civilizations; where are we now?
FRANZ SCHUBERT
Peter Pesic, piano
D. 946; SONATA IN B-FLAT, D. 960
8 p.m., Friday, June 20, in the Great Hall.
THREE PIANO PIECES,
Admission is free.
BEGINNING LIFE DRAWING CLASS
THE ART OF SEEING
Six Saturdays, June 21 through July 26, 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m., $90.
This class will focus on concepts such as contours, negative space and
proportion as a way of learning to see and draw the human figure. For
more information on the class, please call Michele Beinder at 4664872. To register call the Student Activities Office at 984-6139.
Registration deadline is June 14.
LANDSCAPES
Peter Ruta, oil paintings
A retrospective of landscapes from the last 15 years, the exhibit will
provide a capsule history of Santa Fe's growth in that time.
Exhibit opens with a reception Friday, July 11, from 5 to 7 p.m. , in
the Fireside Lounge and continues through July 27 .
FRED HERSCH, JAZZ PIANO
With numerous personal albums, performances and producing credits on another 80
albums, and two Grammy nominations behind him, Fred Hersch has, as The New
Yorker said, stepped " into the front rank of today's pianists. "
8 p.m., Monday, July 28, in the Great Hall. Call for ticket information.
�U. S. Postage
PAID
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
S '
TA FF.
•
ANNAPOLIS
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599
Please call 984-6104 to be placed on che
mailing list. Published ten times each year
by the Public Relations Office. Printed by
and with generous support from Academy
Printers, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Be dre .T a circle
th at ~hut me sutHeretic, rebel, a
thing te fleut.
But Leve and I had
the '.Tit te '.Yin:
we drew a circle
that teek him in.
1
-
0
Ed\Yin Markhi;..m
Non-Profit
Organization
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
�
Text
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paper
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4 pages
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, June 1977
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, June 1977.
Publisher
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St. John’s College
Coverage
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Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1977-06
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
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text
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pdf
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English
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SF_Community_Calendar_1977_06
Calendar
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St.Tohn'u.---------------------------------------~
C"ollege
~-ommunity Events
October 1987
OCTOBER 2
Friday, 8 p.m.
OCTOBER 3
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
~
~
LECTURE:
"On Euclid I-35: Equality and Identity" by
Mr. David P. Jones, St. John's College tutor. Free.
The Great Hall.
*FILMS: Vive La France!
"Jules and Jim" (Truffaut,
1961) and "Black Orpheus" (Camus, 1959). The Great
Hall.
OCTOBER 4
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
GALLERY RECEPTION: Dedication and blessing of fresco
mural in Peterson Student Center by artist Frederico
Vigil. Other artists also represented in the gallery
exhibit: Bernadette Vigil, oil painting; Anthony
Carl Tsosie, sculptor and builder; Miguel Baca
Chavez, writer, composer. On display in the art
gallery, Peterson Student Center, through October 31,
Wednesday - Sunday, 1-5 p.m. or by appointment.
OCTOBER 6
Tuesday, 8:15 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Michelangelo-Storm Center" (man, style, culture,
world-soul). Dr. Charles Bell presents this new,
slide-enriched version of his show. Free. Junior
Common Room.
OCTOBER 13
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"FaustArchetype" (cresting in Goethe, Beethoven, Hegel).
Dr. Charles Bell. Free. Junior Common Room.
OCTOBER 16
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE:
OCTOBER 17
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
To Be Announced.
Free.
The Great Hall.
*FILMS: A Charlie Chaplin Festival. The Little Tramp
stars in "The Gold Rush" (1925) and "City Lights"
(1931). With shorts:
"The Immigrant" (1917), "The
Pawnshop" (1916), "One A.M." (1916). The Great Hall.
OCTOBER 20
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE/SLIDE SHOW: Susan A. Kuss, artist and
teacher, will use historical and contemporary
paintings in her presentation, "The Art of Light and
Color". Free.
The Great Hall.
OCTOBER 20
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Cycles"
(patterns of history, early civilizations, the Vicoquestion). Dr. Charles Bell. Free. Junior Common
Room.
OCTOBER 23
Friday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: The Stanford String Quartet. This
performance supported, in part, with funds provided
by the Western States Arts Foundation, The New Mexico
Arts Division, and the National Endowment for the
Arts.
Beethoven: Quartet in F, Op. 18 No. 1
Bartek: Quartet No. 4
Dvorak: Quartet No 10 in E-flat
Tickets available at the door:
$7,
$3.50 students/senior citizens. The Great Hall.
*Film showings: 7 PM and 9:15 PM
Admission: S3 . Double Feature $4
Location: The Great Hall
Box Office opens: 6:45 PM
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST
MINUTE CHA GES
Please Post
fur more information, call
982-3691, ext. 288
�OCTOBER 24
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.rn.
*FILMS: Dance the night away with Fred and Ginger!
"Swing Time" (1936) and "Top Hat" (1935), with a
short tribute to Big Band music, "Cab Calloway and
His orchestra in Hi-De-Ho" (1937). The Great Hall.
OCTOBER 27
Tuesday, 8 p.rn.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Greece,
the Tragic Myth and Deed" (Homer to Plato).
Dr. Charles Bell. Free.
Junior Common Room.
OCTOBER 30
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE:
To Be Announced.
Free.
The Great Hall.
NOTE: The Calendar of Events is now mailed only to those patrons who
responded to last month's request to remain on the list. We welcome
newcomers, and will gladly reinstate others who may have previously found it
difficult to contact us.
Should you know anyone who might enjoy the Calendar,
please encourage that person to contact the public relations office, extension
288.
St. ohn's
ollege
1160 Camino de la Cruz Blanca
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
Address Correction Requested
BULK RATE
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
PERMIT 0. 231
SA TAFE, M
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
2 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, October 1987
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, October 1987.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1987-10
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1987_10
Calendar
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Text
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA
FE
ANNAPOLIS
COMMUNITY EVENTS
JULY/AUGUST 1997
Shakespeare in Santa Fe,
in association with
St. John's College,
is proud to present
THE WINTER'S TALE
Directed by Nagle Jackson
Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights
July 6th through August 17th
The Bard's late play is a romantic adventure filled with jealous fury,
magical sea voyages, young love and the healing powers of time.
Come early and enjoy savory, gourmet picnic dinners by Wild Oats
Dining, along with Renaissance entertainment, starting at 6 p.m.
Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. in the St. John's College Meem
Library Courtyard. General admission is free. Preferred seating is
available with a contribution of $15 or $25 per person. For more
information, call 982-2910.
CHILDREN'S FAIRY TALE HOUR
Charming tales for the little ones presented by Shakespeare in Santa
Fe's Summer Intern Program.
6 p.m. Wednesday, August 6 and 13. Admission is free.
�PETER RUTA, OIL PAINTINGS
"Landscapes"
A retrospective of landscapes from the last 15 years, the exhibit will
provide a capsule history of Santa Fe's growth. Exhibit opens with a
reception on Friday, July 11, from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Fireside Lounge,
and continues through July 27.
KATHLEEN GRAY SCHALLOCK, OIL PAINTINGS
SYLVIA AARONSON, PHOTOGRAPHY
Exhibit opens with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. on Friday, August 8, in the Fireside
Lounge, and continues through August 28.
GALLERY HOURS: Friday-Saturday, 5-8 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m. The gallery is located
on the second floor of Peterson Student Center. For more information, please contact
Ginger Roherty at 505-984-6099.
Admission is free to all lectures.
SUPPLIANTS, TRAITORS AND SILENT WITNESSES: OEDIPUS' HORIWN
Basia Miller
3 p.m., Wednesday, July 2, in the Junior Common Room.
TBA
3 p.m., Wedne day, July 16, in the Junior Common Room.
ARISTOTELIAN MIND
Frank Hunt
3 p.m., Wednesday, July 23, in the Junior Common Room.
THE DESIGN OF THE ODYSSEY
Peter Pesic
3 p.m., Wednesday, July 30, in the Junior Common Room.
"I SING OF A.RMS AND A MAN": ON VIRGIL'S A.ENIED
Claudia Honeywell
3 p.m., Friday, August 8, in the Junior Common Room.
ON THE DISCOVERY OF NATURE
James Carey, Dean of the College
8 p.m., Friday, August 22, in the Great Hall.
TBA
8 p.m., Friday, August 29, in the Great Hall.
Admission is free.
THE CREATION OF SPANISH HERITAGE ON THE
UPPER Rio GRANDE
Charle Montgomery, Department of Hi tory, University of Fl rida
The le ture will be followed by a reception.
7:30 p.m., Wednesday, July 16, in the rear Hall.
The peaking Volume Lecture erie i
ollcge Library and Fine Arts uild.
pon ored by the
t. John'
�FALL 1997
COMMUNITY SEMINAR SERIES
For more than 15 years, the Community Seminar Series has been making seminars on the great books taught
by St. John's tutors available to Santa Feans for modest class fees. However, rising costs associated with this
program make it necessary for us to raise the class fees for the first time in six years. The increase will be phased
in over the next two years. For the 1997-98 academic year, community seminars will be $20 per class meeting.
The following year the rate will move to $25 per class meeting. If you have any questions about the
Community Seminar Series or the fee structure, please call the Communications Office at 505-984-6104.
We appreciate your support for the Community Seminar Series and look forward to seeing you at class this fall.
l
Scientific and Reli~ous Skepticism
If my senses sometimes deceive me, can I ever have knowledge of the exterior world? What are the scope
an limits of empirical knowledge? And if"the Devil has the power to assume a pleasing shape," can I ever
have religious knowledge? What do Shakespeare and Descartes teach us about scientific skepticism and religious skepticism?
TUTOR:
Michael Bybee
SESSIONS:
Eight Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m.
BEGINS:
October 7
TEXTS:
Shakespeare's Hamlet and Othello; Descartes' Meditations
Hamlet, acts I and II
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$160
The Gospel and the Epistles of St. John the Divine: On the Incarnation of the
Word of God
2
We shall consider John's writings with a view to seeing who he thought Jesus was. If the class likes, we may also
read St. Athanasius on the subject.
TUTOR:
David Starr
SESSIONS:
Six Tuesdays, 5-7 p.m.
BEGINS:
October 7
TEXT:
I suggest reading two or more of the following translations, although I recommend
King James and the Douay-Rheims versions: King James, Douay-Rheims, Revised
Standard, American Standard, New American and New English. Avoid paraphrases,
expansions and versions promising great contemporary relevance.
FIR T ASSIGNMENT:
Gospel according to Sr. John, Chapters 1-6
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
�3
Faulkner, Go Down Moses
On the surface, this cycle of seven short stories concerns the relacionship between blacks and whites in the
post-Civil War South. Lurking underneath, however, one is confronted with the limitations of justice, honor and
freedom. Faulkner is ultimately concerned with che nacure of woman and man, and whac ic means co love and
endure.
TUTOR:
Michael Rawn
Seven Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.
SESSIONS:
BEGINS:
Occober 1
TEXT:
Any edicion
"Was"
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
TBA
ROOM:
FEE:
$140
4
Homer, Iliad
The Iliad lies at che foundacions ofWescern thoughc and licerature. It is a delight co read and discuss as well.
TUTOR:
Maren Cohn
SES IONS:
Six Tuesdays, 4:30-6:30 p.m.
BEGINS:
September 30
TEXT:
Fagles, Ficzgerald or Lacrimore cranslacion
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
Books 1-4
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
S
Tocqueville, Democracy in America
Tocqueville visiced America in 1830 and published the first two volumes of his refleccions in 1835. As he
says himself, his choughcs on democracy go far beyond mere reportage on his journeys. Tocqueville's observations, analysis, hopes and fears retain enduring interest for all who care about the future of democracy in
America and the world.
TUTOR:
Stephen Van Luchene
Six Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.
SESSIONS:
Occober 1
BEGINS:
TEXT:
Any edition
FIRST ASSIGNMENT:
TBA
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
6
Goethe, Faust
Goethe's Faust is, in some mysterious way, an archetypal fable of Western culture. Since my student days I
have read and re-read the German. Teaching the work I have searched for a colerable cranslations, and for my
Symbolic Hiscory show - Faust: Creative War of Spirit - I have translated various crucial passages for both
sense and for poetry. For a close reading and discussion of Part I and selections from Part II, I will add much of
this supplementary material, often using Xeroxes of parallel texts.
TUTOR:
Charles Bell
Eight Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.
SES IONS:
BEGI
Occober 8
TEXT:
Any translation
Begin with Faust in his study ( cene I) and read through Scene 4, the pact with
FIRST As IGNMENT:
Mephistopheles.
ROOM:
TBA
F E:
$160
�Texts are available in the St. John's College Book tore
Open Monday - Friday, 8:45 a.m. - 8 p.m. (Closed 4 - 4:45)
Open Saturday, 1 - 7 p.m.
For bookstore information, call 984-6056
Detach and mail completed form with enrollment fee to:
Fall Community Seminar Series
St. John's College, 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599
You will receive a confirmation card with yom· room number, recommended text
and first assignment two week before the beginning of the seminar.
For information or to register with a credit card, call 984-6104.
Please make check payable to St. John's College.
Deadline to enroll is September 15, 1997.
Please enroll me in the following Community Seminar.
(Indicate First and Second choice)
If registering for more than one per on, put initials next to each one.
Name (s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Address_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
State_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Work Phone.______________ Home Phone._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Please charge my:
0 VISA
O MIC
0 American Exprt> ·
Nameasitappear oncard _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
Card #:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Exp. clatt> _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Amount$._______ S i g n a t u r e · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
�Graduate study in Eastern Classics centered on the
reading and discussion of the fundamental texts from
INDIA
CHINA
JAPAN
with language study in classical Chinese and Sanskrit,
leading to a master of arts.
Contact: The Graduate In titute-CSS , St. John's College
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
505-984-6083
�FRED HERSCH, JAZZ PIANO
With numerous personal albums, performance and producing credits
on another 80 albums, and two Grammy nominations to his name,
Fred Hersch has, as The New Yorker wrote, stepped "into the front
rank of today's pianists."
8 p.m., Monday July 28, in the Great Hall.
$15 for general admission; $35 for reserved seating (reserved seating
tickets also include a CD of Hersch's 1995 performance at St. John's
College) .
CHARLES BELL
Tuesdays at 8 p.m. in the Private Dining Room. Admission is free.
July 1: THE DARK AGES: Luminous! The world scene, birth of a culture
July 8: CYCLF.S: Patterns of history, early civilizations; where are we now?
July 15: 1600: THE TRAGIC DIVIDE (SHAKESPEARE): Vortex of
transformation
July 22: GREECE: THE TRAGIC MYTH AND DEED: Homer to Plato, fruit of the fall
July 29: 19TH CENTURY: LoADED DREAM: Romantic, Realist, Symbolist, Socialist
August 5: PASCAL'S
REVERSAL:
Baroque antinomies of reason and faith
August 12: THE LARGER DECLARATION: America against the ferment of Europe
August 19: 0 WESTERN STAR (WHITMAN'S AMERICA): Trial and the will to affirm
August 26: FACE AND LANDSCAPE: A resume of man and the world, 1000 to the 1900s
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE
(1993)
Director Martin Scorsese's sumptuous adaptation of Edith Wharton's
Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about repressed emotion in a conventionbound society.
7 p.m., Monday, July 14, in the Great Hall. Admission is free.
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE LIBRARY
LIBRARY
&
F I N E
ARTS
G UI LD
& FINE ARTS GUILD
The guild, formed in 1994, includes both the Library and Art allery
committees, and has a membership of 190. Its mission is to enhance
and strengthen the library's resources, services, facilities and community outreach; to showcase nationally recognized artists, as well as students and art societies; and to promote an appreciation of and interest
in the fine art .
Once a year, member hip in the guild is open to the public. New
members are now invited to join and current member are invited to renew their
memberships. Individual membership is $15, family i $20, and business is $100. If
you are interested in renewing your membership or joining, you may request an
application form by calling inger R herty at 505-984-6099.
�ST. JOHN'SCOLLEGE
~\r-.T\
F l ,
•
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca
anta Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599
Please call 984-6104 to be placed on the
mai ling list. Published ten rimes each year
by rhe Public Relations Office. Printed by
and with generous support from Academy
Printers, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
U. S. Postage
PAID
Non-Profit
Organization
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
8 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, July 1977 - August 1977
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, July 1977 - August 1977.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1977-07
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1977_07
Calendar
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0cd7188297cf9a2e4223ce17c3d8bfba
PDF Text
Text
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
S
NTA
ANNAPOLIS
.FE
COMMUNITY EVENTS
SEPTEMBER 1997, SANTA FE
STILL
LIVES -
QUIET PLACES
JUDITH TOBIN, OIL PAINTINGS
Tobin, a local artist, paints fruits, vegetables, flowers,
churches and other "quiet" subjects with an intensity
of color and subtlety that make them come alive.
Tobin says that in creating this series she was drawn to
"the way light and shadow transform simple objects
into things of mystery removed from human presence."
Exhibit opens with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. on Friday,
September 5, in the Fireside Lounge, and continues through
September 25.
GALLERY HOUR : Friday-Saturday, 5-8 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m. The
gallery is located on the second floor of Peterson Student Center. For
more information, please contact Ginger Roherty at 505-984-6099.
�Admission is free to all lectures.
EROTICS AND HEROICS IN GENESIS
Mark Shiffman
University of Chicago
8 p.m., Friday, August 29, in the Great Hall.
1-6
BUTTERFLIES ON THE BRAIN: ON NEURONS,
NEUROANATOMY AND CONSCIOUSNESS
George Aigla
8 p.m., Friday, September 12, in the Great Hall.
JOB'S LEVIATHAN
Robert Sacks
8 p.m., Friday, September 19, in the Great Hall.
READING PLUTARCH LIKE A BOOK
Linda Wiener
8 p.m., Friday, September 26, in the Great Hall.
KATHY MCINTOSH, HARPSICHORD, AND
STEVE ROSENBERG, RECORDER
8 p.m., Saturday, September 27, in the Great Hall.
Admission is $10.
Films are shown in the Great Hall of Peterson Student Center.
Admission is $3 per feature or $4 for both. Refreshments are
available, including popcorn with real butter, candy, natural
sodas and herbal teas. The film society is an independent organization run entirely by students.
SATURDAY, AUGUST
30
7 p.m., DELICATESSEN, France, 1991, directed by Jean-Pierre
Jeunet and Marc Caro
9:15 p.m., MILLER'S CROSSING, USA, 1990, directed by Joel Coen
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
6
7 p.m., PATTON, USA, 1970, directed by Franklin J. Schaffner
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
13
7 p.m., DESTRY RIDES AGAIN, USA, 1939, directed by George Marshall
9:15 p.m., WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION, USA, 1957, directed by Billy
Wilder
24
7 p.m., CLEAN SHAVEN, USA, 1994, directed by Lodge Kerrigan
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
�ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA
FE
ANNAPOLIS
COMMUNITY SEMINAR DAY
4:30 - 6:30 P.M.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4
Community Seminar Day offers the opportunity to read and discuss great books at
St. John's College. Participants choose one of th 16 topic Ii ted below, read the
a
igned text in advance, and then join with other on eminar day in a di cussion of
the work. The seminars are open to people of all educational and professional backgrounds. No previou knowledge of the subject or author is required. All classes
are conducted and led by members of the St. John's College faculty.
Seminar do tend to fill very quickly, so you should register as soon as po sible to
ensure a space. To regi ter, please return the enclosed form along with a $10 registration fee. We also accept registration by phone with a major cred it card. The fee
is non-refundable unless the seminar of you1· choice is full and you have not indicated a second choice .
We cannot accept regi trations without payment.
Following the seminars, participant are invited to attend a free reception in the
Great Hall, which is located upstair in Peter on Student Center. Usher will be on
hand to direct you to your classroom.
1. GIORGIONE, "SLEEPING VE US," AND MANET, "OLYMPIA"
Wt- will look at two deeply intere ting painting of female nudes. We will compare
these two painting , one from the 1500' and the other from the 20th century, looking for in ight into the visual art of painting.
Tutor: Jim ohn
T ex t: olor copie available in the book tore.
Room: TBA
�2.WALLACE STEVENS, "THE MAN WITH THE BLUE GUITAR"
Tutor: Josh Kates
Text: Photocopy available in the bookstore
Room: TBA
3. ST. BASIL THE GREAT, ''ON THE HOLY SPIRIT"
Written in the fourth century, this work by a major patristic theologian explores the
persona of the Holy Spirit in relation to the Trinity, on the one hand, and the
Church on the other.
Tutor: James Carey
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
4. CAMUS, "THE MYTH OF SISYPHUS"
Camus suggests that we can be unconscious and blissful, as in a drugged stupor, or
we can be conscious of the human condition. If we are unconscious, we feel the
human tragedy. But Camus says we can feel real joy if and only if we are conscious.
How?
Tutor: Michael Bybee
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
5. SOPHOCLES, OEDIPUS AT COLONUS
Sophocles returns to the Oedipus story after Oedipus has spent many years wandering, to set forth Oedipus' death and mystifying legacy.
Tutor: Basia Miller
Text: David Grene translation
Room: TBA
6. EURIPIDES, THE BACCHAE
For the ancient world, this is the definitive presentation of the Dionysian myth, and
thus of the god to whom all tragedies were dedicated. It reveals the horror at the
root of all tragedy.
Tutor: David Starr
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
7. E.T.A. HOFFMAN, "THE SANDMAN"
A terrifying story of torn-out eyes and optical prostheses.
Tutor: Thomas Scally
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
8. FIRST SAMUEL
The Biblical account of the origin of the monarchy in Israel.
Tutor: Frank Pagano
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
9.SHAKESPEARE,OTHELLO
Othello is Shakespeare's great drama of evil and sexual jealousy.
Tutor: James Wilkinson
Text: Newest Arden edition, edited by
Room: TBA
E.A.J. Hoffman, recommended
10. JOB
The seminar will explore the great text of human suffering, which asks the question
of God: "Why do the just uffer?"
Tutor: Maren Cohn
Text: Any edition
Room:TBA
�- - - ------------------------------~
11. PAUL'S LETTER TO THE ROMANS
In his letter to the Romans, Paul attacks justification by works while advocating
predestination and justification by faith. He further argues that hecau e the law
first posits sin as sin, transcending the law through faith leads to a state of grace in
which "nothing is unclean in itself." To what extent does this radical freedom
beyond the law epitomize Christian salvation and to what extent does it unleash the
potential for politically dangerous form of indulgent self-righteousness?
Tutor: Leonard Ortmann
Text: Any edition
Room: TBA
12. LEO STRAUSS, NATURAL RIGHT AND HISTORY
With the coming of historicism and relativism is there anything left to he said in
defense of the ideas of natural law and natural right? This will he a brief introduction to the thought of Leo Strauss, perhaps the most important, as well as the most
controversial, political philosopher of the 20th century.
Tutor: John Agresto
Text: Chicago University Press
Assignment: Introduction and Chapter 1
Room: TBA
13. TOCQUEVILLE, DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA
Tocqueville visited America in 1830, and as he says himself, his thoughts on democracy go far beyond mere reportage of his journey. Tocqueville's observations,
analy is, hopes and fears retain enduring intere t for all who care about the future
of democracy in America and the world.
Tutor: Stephen Van Luchene
Text: Vol. 1, Vintage edition required
Assignment: Introduction and Chapters 13-16
Room: TBA
14. HENRY JAMES, DAISY MILLER
The unconventional behavior of an attractive, young American woman, Daisy
Miller, both scandalize and intrigues the Europeans whom he meets. Her end certainly reveals her to have been mistaken in one crucial decision. Is she a ort of
tragic heroine, or merely a mi guided fool?
Tutor: Janet Dougherty
Text: Daisy MiUer and Other Stories
Room: TBA
15. LEIBNITZ, MONADOLOGIE
A philosophical synthesis of only 22 pages of central importance in We tern thought
and a critical influence on modern scientific and organic thinking.
Tutor: Charles Bell
Room: TBA
Text: Photocopy available in the bookstore
16. SEMINAR TO BE CONDUCTED IN SIGN LANGUAGE
Epictetus - Philosopher of Stoicism
Epictetus was horn a slave hut managed to get an education and became a freedman
and a philosopher. He was exiled from Rome because the Roman emperor saw Stoic
philo opher a enemies of tyranny. Stoic philosophy, of which Epictetu i one of
the best repre entatives, wa a major part of the thought of the ancient GrecoRoman world.
Tutor: amuel Johnson
Text: Photocopy will be ent to you
Room: TBA
Note: This seminar will he conducted in Sign and i intended for native users of
ign. Other interested person . should contact the tutor.
�E
R
G
s
I
R
T
A
T
I
0
N
Your enrollment will be confirmed
Make check payable to St. John's College
Texts are available in the
t.
John's College Bookstore
Open Monday - Friday 8:45 a.m. - 8 p.m. (Closed 4 - 4:45)
Open Saturday 1 - 7 p.m.
For bookstore information, plea e call 984-6056
Detach and mail completed form with $10 enrollment fee to:
Fall Community Se:rninar Day
Public Relations
St. John's College
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, Santa Fe,
w Mexico 87501
For information call 984-6104; deadline to enroll i October 24
Please enroll me in the following Community Seminar. (Indicate fir t and econd choice.
If registering for more than one person, put initials next to each one.)
1st choice_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2nd choice_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
State_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Work Phone
Please charge my:
Home Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
D VISA
0 MIC
0 American E pres
Name a it appears on card _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Card#_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Expiration date_ _ _ _ _ __
Amount
~-------Signature _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
�FALL 1997
COMMUNITY SEMINAR SERIES
For more than 15 years, the Community Seminar Series has been making seminars on the great books taught
by St. John's tutors available to Santa Feans for modest class fees . However, rising costs associated with this
program make it necessary for us to raise the class fees for the first time in six years. The increase will be phased
in over the next two years. For the 1997-98 academic year, community seminars will be $20 per class meeting.
The following year the rate will move to $25 per class meeting. If you have any questions about the
Community Seminar Series or the fee structure, please call the Communications Office at 505-984-6104.
We appreciate your support for the Community Seminar Series and look forward to-seeing you at class this fall.
Proust, Remembrance of Things Past, Vol I
Proust's Remembrance o/Things Past is justly considered by many to be the greatest novel of the 20th century, ut some readers hasten to begin it on their own. This seminar hopes to be an introduction to this wonderful work by taking the first part, "Swan's Way," without rushing, and taking the time to savor Proust's magnificent style and appreciate the author's grand and eloquent project of recapturing the past.
TUTOR:
Jim Cohn
SESSIONS:
Six Wednesdays, 4:30 - 6:30
BEGINS: October 1
TEXTS:
Moncriess and Kilmartin translation
ROOM: TBA
FIRST ASSIGNMENT:
TBA
FEE:
$120
2
Scientific and Religious Skepticism
TUTOR:
SESSIONS:
TEXTS:
FIRST ASSIGNMENT:
ROOM:
~1 Bybe•
Tuesday
-9
kespeare's ,
11amlet, acts I ana 11
TBA
l.
.1d Othe
BEG!
;canes'
FEE:
October 7
itions
$160
The Gospel &the Epistles of St. John the Divine: On the Incarnation of the Word
of God
3
We shall consider John's writings with a view to seeing who he thought Jesus was. If the class likes, we may also
read St. Athanasius on the subject.
TUTOR:
David Starr
SESSIONS:
Six Tuesdays, 5-7 p.m.
BEGINS: October 7
TEXT:
I suggest reading two or more of the following translations, although I recommend
King James and the Douay-Rheims versions: King James, Douay-Rheims, Revised
Standard, American Standard, New American and New English. Avoid paraphrases,
expansions and versions promising great contemporary relevance.
FIRST ASSIGNMENT:
Gospel according to St. John, Chapters 1-6
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
�4 Faulkner, Go Down Moses
TUTOR:
SESSIONS:
BEGINS:
TEXT:
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
ROOM:
FEE:
~1
Rawr
Wedne~
s,
p.m.
ober 1
1U1Y edition
"Was"
TBA
$140
5
Homer, Iliad
The Iliad lies at the foundations of Western thought and literature. It is a delight to read and discuss as well.
TUTOR:
Maren Cohn
SESSION :
Six Tuesdays, 4:30-6:30 p.m.
BEGI
September 30
TEXT:
Fagles, Fitzgerald or Lattimore translation
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
Books 1-4
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
6
Tocqueville, Democracy in America
Tocqueville visited America in 1830 and published the first two volumes of his reflections in 1835. As he
says himself, his thoughts on democracy go far beyond mere reportage on his journeys. Tocqueville's observations, analysis, hopes and fears retain enduring interest for all who care about the future of democracy in
America and the world.
TUTOR:
Stephen Van Luchene
Six Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.
SESSIONS:
BEGINS:
October 1
TEXT:
Any edition
FIRST AsSIGNMENT:
TBA
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$120
7
Goethe, Faust
Goethe's Faust is, in some mysterious way, an archetypal fable of Western culture. Since my student days I
have read and re-read the German. Teaching the work I have searched for a tolerable translations, and for my
Symbolic History show - Faust: Creative War of Spirit - I have translated various crucial passages for both
sense and for poetry. For a close reading and discussion of Part I and selections from Part II, I will add much of
this supplementary material, often using Xeroxes of parallel texts.
TUTOR:
Charles Bell
Eight Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.
SES IONS:
October 8
BEGINS:
Any translation
TEXT:
FIRST ASSIGNMENT:
Begin with Faust in his study ( cene 1) and read through Scene 4, the pact with
Mephistopheles.
ROOM:
TBA
FEE:
$160
�Texts are available in the St. John's College Bookstore
Open Monday - Friday, 8:45 a.m. - 8 p.m. (Clo ed 4 - 4:45)
Open Saturday, 1 - 7 p.m.
For bookstore information, call 984-6056
Detach and mail completed form with enrollment fee to:
Fall Community Seminar Series
St. John's College, 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599
You will receive a confirmation card with your room number, recommended text
and first assignment two weeks before the beginning of the eminar.
For information or to register with a credit card, call 984-6104.
Please make checks payable to St. John' College.
Deadline to enroll is September 15, 1997.
Plea e enroll me in the following Community Seminar.
(Indicate First and Second choice)
If registering for more than one person, put initials next to each one.
2nd choice_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Address_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
State_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Work Phone______________ Home Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Please charge my:
D VISA
D M/C
D American Express
Nameasitappearsoncard_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
Card#_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Exp.date_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Amount$ _______ Signature_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
�Graduate study in Eastern Classics centered on the
reading and discussion of the fundamental texts from
INDIA
CHINA
JAPAN
with language study in classical Chinese and Sanskrit,
leading to a master of arts.
Contact: The Graduate lnstitute-CSS, St. John's College
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
505-984-6083
�Sponsored by the St. John's College Film Society and made possible in part with the support of the Cultural Services of the
French Embassy, The Centre National du Cinema, and FACSEA (Society for French American Cultural Services and
Educational Aid). Admission is $3.
Wednesday, October 8
7 p.m., LA CITE DES ENFANTS PERDUS (The City of Lost
Children), France, 1996, directed by Jean-PierreJeunet and Marc Caro
LIBRARY &
FINE ARTS
GU IL D
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE LIBRARY & FINE ARTS GUILD
The guild, formed in 1994, includes both the Library and Art
Gallery committees, and has a membership of 190. Its mission
is to enhance and strengthen the library's resources, services,
facilities and community outreach; to showcase nationally recognized artists, as well as students and art societies; and to promote an appreciation of and interest in the fine arts.
Once a year, membership in the guild is open to the public. New members
are now invited to join and current members are invited to renew their memberships. Individual membership is $15, family is $20, and business is $100.
If you are interested in renewing your membership or joining, you may
request an application form by calling Ginger Roherty at 505-984-6099 .
.ANNuAL LIBRARY BOOK SALE
10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday, October 11 and 12, in
the Ault-Evers Room in Meem Library.
All sales benefit the library. Special reference, out-of-print, art
books and collectibles.
Hardcover books $2; paperbacks $1; music scores $2; sheet
music $.25; records (per disc) $.50.
THIRD .ANNuAL SPANISH COLONIAL ARTS MARKET
10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday, October 11, on the Lower and Upper Placita.
Come view, admire and purchase works from some of New Mexico's most
gifted Spanish artists. Several different art forms will be featured. Among the
represented artists, several have exhibited or have permanent pieces in the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Several also have won the
Governor's Award, and the Grand Prize and First Prize awards at the
Traditional Spanish Market.
Invited artists include: Marie Romero a h, Ramon Jose Lopez, Felix Lopez,
Monica Sosaya Halford, Eliseo and Paula Rodriguez, Charlie Carrillo, David
Nabor Lucero, Filimon Aguilar, Lawrence Baca, Jimmie and Debbie Trujillo,
Kathleen Sais Lerner, Don Sandoval and others.
�U. S. Postage
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA
FE
A
NAl"OLI S
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
Please call 984-6104 to be placed on the
mailing list. Published ten times each year
by the Public Relations Office. Printed by
and with generous support from Academy
Printers, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
PAID
Non-Profit
Organization
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
12 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, September 1977
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, September 1977.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1977-09
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1977_09
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/76ce04b15d1e35ba8250e89ca708ef12.pdf
2a3946c7df09d0ae5985280f7541d269
PDF Text
Text
St.John'
~-------------------------------------------..
C"ollege.....
~ ~
~~C-:ommunity
Events
~
September 1987
AUGUST 28
Friday, 4 p.m.
CONVOCATION:
P. Riccards.
Welcome address to new students by President Michael
The Great Hall.
AUGUST 30
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
GALLERY RECEPTION: ~nvitational show sponsored by the Santa Fe
chapter of the American Institute of Architects, curated by Gretchen
Bergen. On display through September 30, Wednesday - Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
or by appointment. Glass art also on exhibit at Armory of the Arts,
August 18-September 15.
SEPTEMBER 2
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Pianist Peter Pesic, musician-in-residence, will play the
first of four Schubert concerts, in which he will perform the
composer's complete piano sonatas.
Sonata in E-flat, Op. 122
Sonata in a, Op. 142
Sonata in D, Op. 53
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great Books Program; proceeds
to benefit the St. John's scholarship fund. Admission by volunteer
donation. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 4
Friday, 8 p.m.
DEAN'S ANNUAL LECTURE:
Free. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 5
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
*FILMS: Opening American Classics bash. John Sayles' "The Brother
From Another Planet" and Jonathan Demme's "Something Wild." The Great
·-Hal
This-year, c-ar-tool'ls anEl traile1 , pl a NEW projec-tor and sound
system.
SEPTEMBER 9
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Pianist Peter Pesic, musician-in-residence, will play the
second of four Schubert concerts, in which he will perform the
composer's complete piano sonatas.
Sonata in C [unfinished]
Sonata in G, Op. 78
Sonata in c, Op. post.
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great Books Program; proceeds
to benefit the St. John's scholarship fund. Admission by volunteer
donation. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 11
Friday, 7 p.m.
*FILM: Vittorio de Sica's "The Bicycle Thief." This is an AllCollege Seminar film and will be shown FREE OF CHARGE. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 12
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
*FILMS: An evening with Alfred Hitchcock:
"Spellbound." The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 16
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: "Sherlock Holmes" by John Bennett Shaw, owner of the
world's largest collection of Holmes memorabilia, including 12,000
publications on Holmes, Watson, and their creator, Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle. Free. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 17
Thursday, 7 p.m.
BICENTENNIAL CCJo1MUNITY CELEBRATION: Keynote address by St. John's
President Michael P. Riccards, speaking in honor of the Constitution,
on this, the anniversary of the Bicentennial Celebration. Co-sponsored
by the Santa Fe Bicentennial Committee and the Santa Fe Public
Schools. Music, refreshments. Free. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 18
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE:
"Knowledge and Faith" by Dean James Carey.
To Be Announced:
Free.
"Rebecca" and
The Great Hall.
CONTINUED
*Film showings: 7 PM and 9:15 PM
Admission: $3, Double Feature $4
location: The Great Hall
Box Office opens: 6:45 PM
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST
MINUTE CHANGES
Please Post
For more information, call
982- 3691, ext. 288
�SEPTEMBER 19
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
*FILMS: Great films of India directed by Satyajit Ray:
of Apu" and "Two Daughters." The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 20
Sunday 2-5 p.m.
WISH FOR THE WORLD AUCTION: Live and silent auctions, complimentary
refreshments. Auctioneer Richard Sealey. Merchandise, art\oA'.>rk,
services. Admission $5. The Great Hall. For further infonnation call
982-4931.
SEPTEMBER 23
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: "Glass and New Mexican Artists" by Susan Campbell, in
coordination with the current art gallery display. Free. Junior
Corrrnon Room.
SEPTEMBER 23
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Pianist Peter Pesic, musician-in-residence, will play the
third of four Schubert concerts, in which he will perfonn the
composer's complete piano sonatas.
Sonata in a, Op. 164
Sonata in A, Op. 120
Sonata in A, Op. post.
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great Books Program; proceeds
to benefit the St. John's scholarship fund. Admission by volunteer
donation. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 25
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: Professor Ben Bart of the University of Pittsburgh will
discuss Flaubert's Madame Bovary. Free. The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 26
Saturday, 7&9:15 p.m.
*FILMS: Classic American Romance:
"Annie Hall." The Great Hall.
SEPTEMBER 30
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Pianist Peter Pesic, musician-in-residence, will play the
final of four Schubert concerts, in which he will perfonn the
composer's ccmplete piano sonatas.
Sonata in B, Op. 147
Sonata in a, Op. 42
Sonata in B-flat, Op. post.
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great Books Program; proceeds
to benefit the St. John's scholarship fund. Admission by volunteer
donation. The Great Hall.
"The World
"It Happened One Night" and
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
2 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, September 1987
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, September 1987.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John’s College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1987-09
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1987_09
Calendar
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St. John'
College
_ _. . . . ommunity Events
February 1988
'lliRCXXli
FEBRf.ll>,RY 14
ARI' G\LLERY:
Continued showin:J of "Photograt=hic Images Prcdoce:::l by
Diverse M?ans," the t=hotograt=hs of GERALD LDVINS, both black ard
v.hite ard in color. Art Gallery, Peterson Stu:Jent Center, no
admission charge. (fen W=dnes:3ay-Surday, 1-5 p.m. or by ar:poinbrent .
***************************************************************************************************
**
WINTER FILM SERIES, 1988: Shakespeare International. Sponsore:::l
**
**
by the I:l?an of St. John' s College, films will be shov.n FREF' on
**
**
six successive ~s:3ay evenin:Js. Discussion to follow each
**
**
showing. Please join us in the Great Hall.
**
**
**
FEBRUZ\RY 3
"'Ihe Tamin:J of the Shrew'' (1967). Italian director Franco Zeffirell i **
**
W::rlnes:lay, 7 p .m.
guides Elizabeth Taylor and Richard BJrton throt.Bh this conic maze.
**
**
**
**
FEBRUARY 10
**
"A Midsurmer Night's Drean" (1935) . USA, directed by fvt:lx Feinhardt & **
W::rlnes:lay, 7 p.m.
**
Willian Dieterie. A magnificently entertainin:J adaptation, sta rring
**
**
Jates cagney, Dick Fbv.ell, Olivia de Havillard, Joe E. Brov.n, ard
**
**
Mickey Iboney as Puck.
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
FEBRUARY 17
W::rlnes:lay, 7 p .m.
"Macbeth" (1971). Iblard's Ranan Fblanski adapts the great trage:::ly in**
an unusu3l screenplay.
**
**
**
W::rlnes:lay, 7 p.m.
**
**
***************************************************************************************************
FEBRUARY 24
FEBRf.ll>,RY 2
Tt.Es:3ay, 8 p .m.
FEBRf.ll>,RY 3
W::rlnes:lay, 3: 30 p.'TI.
"King Lear" (1971). Great Britain, directed by Peter Brook. P3ul
Scofield stars for one of the great stage directors of our time.
Stark ard beautiful black and Y.hite.
SYMB::>LIC HISTORY THR<XJGI SIG-IT AND SCUJD: "Nature, the Perceptive
Field" (the organizing universe, Heracli tean celebration). Tuto r
Etneritus 01arles Bell. Free. Junior Carmon !ban.
LECTURE/DIS:USSION: IY\VID HAWKINSON, City G3.tes Biblical Stlily
Center, Minnear:olis, will present "Excdus 1-4. Fbrtrait of the
Liberator as a Young Man." Free. Junior Carmon !ban, P2terson
Stu:Jmt Center. '!his prOJran is _part of a larger stu:Jy being
cordocted this v.eek urder the title "'Ihe Violence of Excdus:
Narrative and Law."
LErr'URE: HELEN IDRBERG-Hax;E will
_ h110lo:JY ·
-Qei . _ .i , "
}a, a
rarote area of the oorthern Hi11alayas. Tlis prOJran is co-sr:onsorro
by the Santa Fe Council on International Relations ard St. John's
Coll93e. R?freshnents will be serve:::l. Free. Junior Cartron Roon,
Peterson Stu:Jent Center.
FEBRf.ll>,RY 5
Friday 8 p.m.
FEBRf.ll>,RY 6
Saturday, 7 & 9:15 p.m.
FEBRf.ll>,RY 9
'fues:3ay, 8 p .m.
•film showings: 7 PM and 9:15 PM
Admission: $3, Double Feature $4
location: The Great Hall
Box Office opens: 6:45 PM
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST
MINUTE CHANGES
LECTURE/DIS:USSION: Earl Schwartz, City G3.tes Biblical Stu:ly
Center, Minnear:olis, will present "Halachah of Self-I:l?fense in
Excdus." Free. '!he Great Hall. '!his pr0Jran is part of a larger
stu:Jy being cordocted this v.eek urder the title "'Ihe Violence of
Excdus: Narrative ard Law."
*FILMS: en Black knerica. "Lilies of the Field" (1963) starring
Sidney Fbi tier and a charming tevy of nuns. "'Ib Kill a M:x:-kin:Jbid"
(1963) with Gregory Feck ard Brock Peters in the screen adaptation of
Harper Lee's Pul i tz.er Prizewinning oovel. CEcars all 'round for both
films.
SYMOOLIC HIS'IDRY THR<XJGI SIG-IT AND SCUID: "1400: Pilgrims All"
(the w:::>rld of 01aocer). Tutor Bneritus O'larles Bell. Free. Junior
Cartron Roon.
Please Post
For more information, call
982-3691, ext. 288
�FEBR~ 10
W::dnes::lay, 4 p.m.
OOETRY REl\DING:
'IHECXX>RE ENSLIN returns to S.X: to recd his PJetry
A resident of rvain, Ehsl in
v-.as associate::1 with the Black l'-buntain p:>ets of the 50s arrl
corroborated with N=w M2xican Keith Wilson in prcx'locing the 1985 book
of p:::etry, M2eti ng at Jal. Free. Jm ior Ccmron Roan.
an:1 condoct "A M..lsical Investigation."
FEBRUARY 12
Friday 8 p.m.
EU;ENE V. 'IHAW, note::1 art dealer, administrator of the
Ft>llock-Krasner Foundation to aid vislEl artists, and S.X: alUT111us
'47, will present a prcgran Entitled "Jackson Ft>llock am the Art of
Drawing." Free. 'lhe Great Hall.
FEBR~
16
'I\Es:Jay, 8 p .m.
SYMEOLIC HIS'IDRY THRCXJGf SIG-n' AID SOOND: "Blake: Fire-FU:Jue of
Delight." Tutor Etrer i tus Cllarles Bell. Free. Junior Ccmron Roan.
FEBR!".V\RY 19
Friday, 8 p.m.
CCN:ERT: D\NIEL H-IILLIPS, violinist, will present a recital,
featuring t¥.D sonatas by J.S. Bach as v.ell as a nEW v..ork for solo
violin by I.Eon Kirchner. 'Ihis fine artist is often heard at the
Santa Fe 01amber MJsic Festival as v.ell as the Sp)leto and M:irlboro
Festivals. 'Ihe Great Hall. Tickets available at the door: $7/ 3. 50
senior citizens, stt..dents.
FEBR!".V\RY 20
Saturday, 7
&
LECI'URE:
9: 15 p.m.
*FILMS: I Spy: Private Eyes. "'Ihe M3.ltese Falcon" (1941). Johri
Huston directs Pogey as San Spade, with F€ter U:>rre, Sydney
Greenstreet. N=e::1 v.e say rrore? "Blcde Runner" (1982) • Harrison
Ford, pre-Indiana Jones.
FEBR!".V\RY 23
'I\Es:Jay, 8 p.m.
SYME()LIC HIS'IDRY 'I'HRCU}f SIG-n' AND SOUND: "1500: Expolsive
Balance" (Renaissan::e, Protestantisn, the l.'BY w:>rld). Tutor
Emeritus 01arles Bell. Free. Junior Carmon Roan.
FEBR~ 26
Friday, 8 p.m.
LEI::'IURE:
FEBR~
27
Saturday, 7 & 9: 15 p .m.
*FILMS: 'Ihe All-American W?stern. "High t'-bon" (1952), Giry Coop?r
and an Q:;car • Alan Ladd in "Shane" (1953) , adapted fr an the novel
by Santa Fe's OW1 Jack Schaefer.
FEBRIJ!\RY 28
Sunday, 3 p.m.
CCN:ERT: "'lb Vienna with Love," Part II in a series of three
recitals by mezzo-soprano JEANNE ffiEALISH, canprising a Sf!ITlpling
fran tv..o rich centuries of Viennese lie::ler. Accanpanie::l by pianist
Peter F€3ic, Grealish will i;:erform songs by Brahns, w:>lf, and M:ihler
in this si;:ecial scholarship benefit concert. Canplete prcgran
available qxm request. Tickets at the door: $5 cdul ts, $3 senior
citiZEns. 'Ihe Great Hall.
GLENN OXJG-fLIN, professor at Tharas Aquinas College,
formerly tutor at St. John's: "Sane Considerations on Aristotelian
arrl N=wtonian Place." Frre. Tl"E Great Hall.
* * * ** * * ** *** * ****** *** **** *** **** **** ** ** *
MAfU--1 1
Tues:Jay, 7: 30 p .m.
RABBI Dl\VID RC6EN will si;:eak on "Jews and Jt.Daisn: 'The
Four-thousand Year Unbilical Cord." 'Ihis prcgran is sp:msore::1 by
the Anti-Defanation Lecgue of B'nai B'rith, Tanple Beth Shalon of
Santa Fe, and St. John's College. Ibsen is Director of
Interreligious Affairs of the Jerusalan office of ADL. Refreshnents
will be serve::1. Free. 'Ihe Great Hall.
LECI'URE:
St. ohn's
ollege
Address Correction Requested
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
U.S. Postage
PAID
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
�
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2 pages
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, Febuary 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, February 1988.
Publisher
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St. John’s College
Coverage
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Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1988-02
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pdf
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SF_Community_Calendar_1988_02
Calendar
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267c03206db43b04ada67ffad660b376
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St.John'~c----------------------------------------..~
C"ollege
~~c-:ommunity
Events
~
~
April 1988
APRIL 1
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: FRANK PAGANO, tutor at St. John's College, will
discuss "Homer and Austen on the Woman (and the Man)."
The Great Hall.
Free.
APRIL 2
Saturday
7 & 9:15 p.m.
*FILMS:
Tennessee Williams Lives!
"Suddenly, Last Sumner"
(1959) Elizabeth Taylor, Montgomery Clift and Katharine
Hepburn in this psychological drama, directed by Joseph
Mankiewicz. "A Streetcar Named Desire," directed by Elia
Kazan and starring Marlon Brando, Vivien Leigh, Kim Hunter
and Karl Malden.
Academy Award-winning film version of
Pulitzer Prize-winning play. One of the greatest, ever.
APRIL 3
Sunday, 8:30 p.m.
INDEPENDENT FILMS PROGRAM:
Animation.
$1.
The Great Hall.
APRIL 5
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND: "The 19th Century:
Voltaire's Smile"
(the shadow-haunted game of reason).
Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Corrrnon Room.
APRIL 8
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: RICHARD FERRIER, Thomas Aquinas College, will
discuss "Viete and Modern Mathematics." Free. The Great
Ha 11.
*FILMS: Ealing Studios, Alexander Mackendrick and Alec
Guiness. "The Man in the White Suit" (1952). This social
sa ire points up he a 1ding
y of r1tafn's class war.
"The Ladykillers" (1955), Sir Alec and Peter Sellers star,
but 77-year old Katie Johnson steals the show.
APRIL 10
Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: St. John's Student Art Show.
Multi and mixed media. Art Gallery, Peterson Student Center,
no admission charge.
Open Wednesday-Sunday, 1-5 p.m. or by
appointment. Exhibit from April 4-29.
APRIL 12
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND: "The 19th Century:
The Loaded Dream" (Romantic and Realist, Symbolist and
Socialist). Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior
Corrrnon Room.
APRIL 15
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: THOMAS HARRIS, tutor at St. John's College, will
discuss "Descartes: Trans it ion to Modernity." Free. The
Great Hall.
APRIL 16
Saturday
7 & 9:15 p.m.
*FILMS: Hitchcock Encore! "Rear Window" (1954),the
suspense-romance classic, starring James Stewart and Grace
Kelly.
"Vertigo" (1958), an eerie tale of passion. This
time it's hero Stewart trying to overcome both his fear of
heights and an obsession for Kim Novak.
APRIL 17
Sunday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: THE SANDIA QUARTET, a new quartet of musicians fro m
the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra.
Quartet members are
JOSEPH ZOECKLER and SOPHIA SILIVOS, violinists; RICHARD
WAUGH, viola; and JOAN ZUCKER, cello. They will perform
Mozart's Duo in G, K.423; Beethoven's Quartet, op. 18 No. 5;
Bartok's Duos; and will be joined by guitarist ROBERT
BLUESTONE for Boccerini's Guitar Quintet.
Tickets available
at the door:
$6 adults, $3 senior citizens/students. The
Great Ha 11.
*Film showings: 7 PM and 9:15 PM
Admission: $3, Double Feature $4
lDcation: The Great Hall
Box Office opens: 6:45 PM
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST
MINUTE CHANGES
Please Post
For more information, call
982-3691, ext. 288
�APRIL 19
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND: "The Baroque
Formulation (against exploratory Renaissance, Cartesian
consciousness}: Descartes." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Conmon Room.
APRIL 22
Friday, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: JOHN WHITE, tutor at St . John's College, Annapolis
campus, will discuss "On Imitation" (Plato).
Free. The
Great Ha 11.
APRIL 23
Saturday
7 & 9:15 p.m.
*FILMS:
Focus
on
Director Hal Ashby.
"Harold and Maude"
{1971). A wealthy, death-obsessed adolescent (Bud Cort)
f al ls in love with a free-spirited octogenarian (Ruth
Gordon }. "Being There" (1984), literally and figuratively, a
story of Chance. Peter Sellers in his last and possibly best
role.
APRIL 24
Sunday, 3 p.m.
CONCERT: "To Vienna with Love," the third and final part of
a recital series by mezzo-soprano JEANNE GREALISH and pianist
PETER PESIC. Comprising a sampling from two rich centuries
of Viennese lieder, this special scholarship benefit concert
will feature music by Mahler, Berg and Schonberg. Complete
program available upon request. Tickets at the door: $5
adults, $3 senior citizens/students. The Great Hall.
APRIL 24-25
Sunday, Monday
SPRING CAMPUS TOUR: For prospective students and parents.
For further information contact: Admission Office, ext. 231.
APRIL 26
Tuesday, 8 p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND: "The Atomic Age:
Post-War."
Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior
Conmen Room.
APRIL 29
Fr id ay , 8 p . m.
LECTURE: CARY STICKNEY, tutor at St. John's College, will
discuss "Euripides' Hippolytus." Free. The Great Hall.
APRIL 30
Saturday, 7 p.m.
*FILM: Closing Night. "Zorba the Greek" (1964). Alan Bates
and Anthony Qu i nn enact a real celebration of life. We hope
the spirit of this film will last you until our return next
fall. That's All, Folks!
St. John's fn
College Dlill
1160 Camino de la Cruz Blanca
Santa f.e, Nc-w Mexico 87501
Address Correction Requested
NON-PROFIT
OAGANIZATtON
U.S. Postage
PAID
Permit No 231
Santa Fe, N.M
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
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paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
2 pages
Dublin Core
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, April 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, April 1988.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-04
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1988_04
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/7af1252d32069e43a1e01c8c43da8115.pdf
39c044f2a0fd8835a8b9f57ffc1b19cf
PDF Text
Text
..
St. John'~----------------Ll>llege
mmunity Events
May 1988
MAY 3
Tuesday, 8p.m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND: "The Larger
Declaration" (American Revolution against European ferment).
Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Common
Room.
MAY 4
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
READING: MILLICENT DILLON, author of "A Little Original Sin:
The life and Work of Jane Bowles." Author of both novels
and short stories, Dillon has won the coveted 0. Henry Prize
for short story writing. She will read from her most recent
work. Free. Senior Common Room.
MAY 6
Fr id ay , 8 p • m.
CONCERT: Pianist MAYA HOFFMAN will be heard in recital, in a
program of works by Rameau, Beethoven, Schonberg, Chopin and
Lizt. Israeli-born, Hoffman made her debut in Town Hall and
subsequently appeared with the Boston Symphony and in Europe.
Now making her home in Santa Fe, she is often heard and much
admired for her artistry. The Great Hall. Admission is by
voluntary donation, proceeds to benefit St. John's College.
MAY 7
Saturday, 8 p.m.
PLAY: The Bacchae, by Euripides. Not your ordinary
production. Alexander Bellas directs a cast of St. John's
College students and tutors in a total theater work,
incorporating dance, original live music, special lighting,
poetry and the essential ecstatic nature of the human body to
bring about a katharsis for both actor and audience.
Outdoors, on the Placita of Peterson Student Center. Gate
admission charge, $5 (SJC students free).
MAY 8
Sunday, 5-7 p .m.
ART GALLERY: OPENING RECEPTION: NATALIE OWINGS, sepia-tone
Southwestern photography. This special show and sale will
benefit the National Parks and Conservation Association. Art
Gallery, Peterson Student Center. No admission charge. Open
Wednesday-Sunday, 1-5 p.m. or by appointment. Exhibit from
May 2-31.
MAY 10
Tuesday, 8 p .m.
SYMBOLIC HISTORY THROUGH SIGHT ANO SOUND: "1600: The Tragic
Divide" (Shakespeare, the vortex of transformation). Tutor
Emeritus CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Co1T111on Room.
*****************************
* COMMENCEMENT EVENTS
1988
*
*****************************
MAY 15, Sunday
1:00 p.m.
BACCALAUREATE SERVICE: Episcopal. Church of the Holy Faith.
Speaker: THE REVEREND PHILIP WAINWRIGHT, Rector.
3:00 p.m.
COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES: Campus Placita. Speakers:
E. BROWN, Tutor, STUART BOYD, Tutor and Resident
Psychologist.
4:00 P.M.
RECEPTION:
SAMUEL
The Great Hall, Peterson Student Center.
******************************
MAY 20-22
Friday-Sunday
MLAND OF ENCHANTMENT" WRITING CONFERENCE: Sponsored by the
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S WRITING GUILD, a 10-year old
organization providing the impetus for women writers to
publish. For further information on attendance or day
registration, telephone Hannelore Hahn: (212) 737-7536.
�MAY 21
Saturday,7:30 p.m.
LECTURE/RECEPTION: DOROTHY SPRUILL REDFORD, genealogist,
author, lecturer. Her work, "Somerset Homecoming Day," has
been compared to Alex Haley's Roots. Redford, a Somerset
Place slave descendant, researched the genealogy of the slave
population held on one of North Carolina's grand plantations.
The Gr eat Hall. Admission at the door: $6.
MAY 28
Saturday
CONCERT: Guitarist PIERRE BENSUSAN returns to Santa Fe fo r
2 perfonnances only. His influences range from cl assical
to modern jazz, to the trad i ti.onal music of Europe , Nort h
Africa, Brazil,· Argentina, India and beyond. His
compositions have been defined as orchestral music for
electracoustic guitar and voice. The Great Hall. Tickets
available at all Giant Outlets, 2 Downtown Subscriptions:
advance tickets $11, $12.50 at the door.
8 p.m~. 10 p.m.
PLEASE NOTE : This MAY CALENDAR OF EVENTS is the last to be issued until
September, 1988. Should you know of anyone who might enjoy receiving the
Calendar, please pass along this copy and encourage that person to contact t he
public relations office, extension 288, to have their name added to the mail ing
1i st.
*****************************
* SCHEDULE OF SUMMER EVENTS *
*****************************
JUNE 3
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: CLIFF GOFF, sculpture,
pottery, Southwest motif painting. Exhibit from June 1-30.
9 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
JUNE 6-10
HIGH COUNTRY SOCCER CAMP: Day Camp, open to boys and gi rl s
age 12 years or above. Instructors: TOM RENFRO, JIM
WIESEN, MIKE GRAY. Cost: $75, includes lunch, snacks. For
application information, phone SJC, extension 289.
JULY 8
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: SYLVIA GORMLEY, wa t ercolor
scenes of New Mexico. Exhibit from July 1-28.
JULY 15
Friday, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Pianists VITYA VRONSKY and PETER PESIC will pe rform
sonatas by J.S. Bac h, a rr ~n ged for 2 pianos by V. Babin.
Admission is free, donations are gratefully accepted to
benefit the SJC scholarship fund. The Great Hall.
JULY 31
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: MARTIN KIM, multi-dimensional
collages about language. Exhibit from July 29-August 12.
AUGUST 14
Sunday, 3-5 p.m.
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: NEW MEXICO COUNCIL ON
PHOTOGRAPHY, show and sale of works by photographers
attending this Annual Workshop. Exhibit from August 14-19.
1
;~:~;~.~~
US Postage
PAID
Permit o 231
Santa Fe NM
Address Correction Requested
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
2 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, May 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, May 1988.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-05
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1988_05
Calendar
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https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/df900d358d7884318c9738407eccf77a.pdf
d159abb0d361104655ee76ae96c1bac3
PDF Text
Text
Community Events Calendar
SEPlOOER 1988
August 26
Friday. 4 PM
OJNVOCATION: Welcare address
.
f.Orew students
by President Michael
P. Riccards. The Great Hall.
August 27
Saturday. 7 & 9 PM
*FILMS:-yrRepo Man" aoo "Blood Siill>Te:"' The Great Hall.
Septarber 2 .
Friday. 5-7 PM
AAT GM.LERY CJ>ENING RECEPTioN:' SN.LY ~INER, artist and
TITustrator of children's bOOks; oil paintings; about today's
i ssues inside and rut; spi ri tua 1 and aooti ora1 1andscapes that
take fonn throUgh animals, people and nature. Exhibit fran
Sept.arOer 2-30, Wednesday thrrugh Sunday, 1-5 PM.
t- Septarber 2
Friday, 8 PM
LECTURE: Tutor Rroert Bart
Free. The Great Ha 11.
wrirspeak
<Jl
"Art and tile Arts. II
*Film Shcwings: 7 PM & 9 PM+Adni ssion: $3, Druble Feature $4
The Great Hall opens at 6:45 PM.
~Ea<
SWIT0100AID FOO LAST MINUTE OWIJES.
�Septamer 3
Satllrday, 7 & 9:15 PM
*FIUi\S: "Local Hero" arid 'The cOCa."'Tc>TaKid."
The Great Ha11.
Septarber 10
Satllrday, 7 & 9::ll PM
*FIU'1S: ''ErNorte" and "Kiss or "The Spiderwanan."
The Great Ha11.
Septarber 13
Tuesday, 7:30 PM
Coocemea Citizens
Nuclear Safety
(COlS) is spoosoring a j:X.Jblic rreeting to disruss the Waste
Isolation Pilot Project. Dining Hall.
WIPP
tm1mr:
ror
* Sept.erOer
14
SPECI.AJ... LECTURE:
Wednesday. 8 PM
KENNE'ffi J. AAROW, N00el Prize
w·.nner and Professor of Econanics at Stanford University
will speak oo the tq:>ic "Ratiooality of Self and Others."
Part of the Santa Fe Institllte Lectllre Series. Free.
The Great Hall.
*
Septarber 16
Friday, 8PM
LECTURE: Tutor David Bolotin will speak rn 'The
Coocems of Odysseus: An Introduction to the Odyssey."
Free. The Great Hall.
�* SeptarDer
17
TRINITY
Saturday, 9 N+-5 PM
FoRiJ~ SYr..POSIUM: '1re Pat.fiHon Trinizy: Tre
Ctlallenge---of the Nuclear Age" Co-Spoosored by St. John's
College. Speakers include: John R. Bode, M.S., Vice
President for Strategic Architectures, !D1 Corporation; Dr.
Elise Brulding, Professor E:!Te-ita, DartTwth College, and a
Quaker theolO<Jian; Dr. RO<Jer Hagengruber, Vice President
for Exploratory Systens, Sandia National Laboratories; Dr.
RC9er Mcrris, author, fClt'1rer senior staff 11Bltler oo the
Na tiona 1 Seruri 1;Y Crunci 1 and a Reagan Ac:tni ni strati oo critic;
Matthew t'urphy, M.A., Public Infonmtioo Officer, U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmairent Agency, and a catholic lay scholar oo
war and 'ethics; and Dr. Rebert Nelsoo, Earth and Planetary
Scientist, Jet Prcpulsion Laboratory, Galifornia Institute of
Technology, and a Union of Concerned Scientists' Representative.
A reception and buffet dinner wi 11 foll°"' the syrrposi lJTI and be
reld at the Marilyn Butler Fine Arts Gallery, 225 Galisteo
Street, starting at 6 PM. Theodore Lockwood, President of the
Amand HCllT'll:?r United World College will be the dinner speaker.
Tickets are $25 per person. Call 986-07(.)<J for reservations.
Septarber 17
Saturday, 7 & 9:15 PM
*FIU'1S: "Charade" and "North by Nort:twe"St1'
Tre Great Hall.
~ Septart>er 23
Friday, 8 PM .
THE OEAN'S!V-JNUAL LECTURE: Dean Jcrres Garey will speak
on 'Hegel's Systen: A Synoptic Expositioo." Free. ·
The Great Hall.
�Sept.arber 24
Saturday, 7 & 9:15 PM
*FILMS: "Sugar Cane Alley" ariT ~heRedBa 11 oon/Spi ri t
of the Beehive." The Great Hall.
>
Septarber 28
Wednesday. 8 PM
SPECI/!J.. LECTURE: PJJPERT s-!ELDRME;° British biologist
and author, will discuss his rao1 book, The Presence of the
Past. Sheldrake prq>0ses that llBOOry iS'Tnherent m nature,
and that nature is not governed by changeless laws, but
rather by habits, aoo points tcwird a ~ and truly evolutionary
understanding of rurselves and of the world. Co-Spoosored by
International Synergy Institute and Sol Y Samra. $5 at the
door - St. John's students half price. The Great Hall.
~
Sept.arber 30
Friday, 8 PM
LEClllRE: Peter Widulsld, Professcr of HLJTBnities at
Fordham University will speak oo "An Introduction to Hegel 1 s
Philosq>hy of Right." Free. The Great Hall.
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
4 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, September 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, September 1988.
Publisher
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St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-09
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1988_09
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/13755e30541307fb9afd539d42bbff92.pdf
a62556688b583c68bb9a9f318d55c76e
PDF Text
Text
Sr JoHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
OCTOBER 1988
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
DON'T FORGET!
September 28
Wednesday, ~ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: DR. RUPERT SHELDRAKE,
British biologist and author, will discuss his
new book, The Presence of the Past. Co-Sponsored
by International synergy-Institute and Sol Y
Sombra. $5 at the door. Free to St. John's
students. The Great Hall.
September 30
. Friday, ! PM
LECTURE: Peter Widulski, Professor of Humanities
at Fordham University will speak on "An
Introduction to Hegel's Philosophy of Right."
Free. The Great Hall.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
October !
Saturday, starting l PM
*FILMS: Theme - Atomic Allegories
"La Jetee"
1962 - France - Directed by Chris Marker - 29 mins
black and white.
"Dr. Strangelove"
1964 - Directed by Stanley Kubrick - 1 hr 33 mins -
black and white.
"Insi9nificance"
1985 - Great Britain - Directed by Nicolas Roeg -
1 hr 50 mins - color.
�October 4
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Nature, the Perceptive Field: a Heraclitean
Celebration of the Modern Universe."
Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL. Free.
Junior Common Room.
October 9 ~
Sunday, 3-6 PM
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: JANET LIPPINCOTT,
owner of the Lippincott Studio-Gallery on Canyon
Road; participant in over 75 invitational and
juried exhibitions nationally; showing of large
paintings and mono-prints. Free. Exhibit from
October 4 - 31, Wednesday through Sunday, 1-5 PM.
October 11
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Cycles: Patterns-of History, Early Civilizations;
Where Are We Now?" Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
*
*
October 12
Wednesday, ~ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: JOHN H. HOLLAND, Professor
of Computer Science and Engineering at the
University of Michigan, will speak on the
topic "Learning in Machines and Man." Part of
the Santa Fe Institute Lecture Series.
Free. The Great Hall.
=
October 15
Saturday, ~ AM
! PM
COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SYMPOSIUM:
"The European Community: How Will It Affect the
United States?" Co-sponsored by St. John's College.
Speakers include: Congressman Bill Richardson,
Nancy Ballack, US State Dept., Steve Kramer, Ass't
Professor of History, UNM, Conrad Latour, Professor
Emeritus of History & Government at Beaver College
Center for Education Abroad, Vienna. The Great Hall.
Tickets are $5 to C.I.R. members with advance
reservations; $7.50 to members and the public at
the door. Luncheon at the College is $7.50 with
advance reservations required. Send reservations
and payment to:
C.I.R. PO Box 1223
Santa Fe, NM 87504 Telephone: 982-4931.
�October 15
Saturday, l ! ~ PM
FILMS: Theme - Ask Not What Your Country Can
Do For You •••
"Mr. Smith Goes To Washington"
1939 - Directed by Frank Capra - 2 hrs 5 mins black and white.
"The Manchurian Candidate"
1962 - Directed by John Frankenheimer - 2 hrs
5 mins - black and white.
October 18
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Greece: The Tragic Myth and Deed - Homer to
Plato, Fruit of the Fall." Tutor Emeritus
CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
October 22
Saturdayc l ! ~ PM
*FILMS: 'fheme - The Legalities of War
"A Soldier's Story"
1984 - Directed by Norman Jewison - 1 hr
42 mins
color.
"Breaker Morant"
1979 - Directed by Bruce Beresford - 1 hr 47 mins
color.
~
October 25
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC°JiISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"The Alexandrian Melt: East and West,
Backgrounds and Convergence." Tutor Emeritus
CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
~ October 28
Friday, ~ PM
ST. JOHN'S CONCERT SERIES: PTanist PETER PESIC,
the Musician-in-Residence at the College, will
play an all-Beethoven recital. Featured works
will include: Op. 2 No. 1, Beethoven's first
published sonata, OJ?. 81a "Les Adieux" sonata,
and the "Hammerklavier" sonata OJ?. 106. Admission
at the door is $6 and $3 for senior citizens and
non-st. John's students or by season pass to patrons
of the Music Series.
Film Showings: 7 PM & 9 PM+
Admissions: $3, Double Feature $4
The Great Hall opens at 6:45 PM.
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST MINUTE CHANGES.
�xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
UPCOMING EVENTS IN NOVEMBER
November 15
Tuesday, 4:30 - 6:30 PM
ANNUAL SEMINAR DAY: A Graduate Institute program.
More details in the November calendar.
~ November 15
Tuesday, ~ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: STEWART. BRAND,
Editor/Publisher of "The Last Whole Earth
Catalog" and "The Co-Evolution Quarterly,"
will speak on the topic "The Media Lab at MIT:
Neural Nets and Global Communication."
Part of the Santa Fe Institute Lecture Series.
Free. The Great Hall.
November 22
Tuesday, 7 PM
PRESIDENTIAL SEMINAR: DR. MICHAEL P. RICCARDS
will lead a seminar discussing The Snows of
Kilimanjaro by Ernest Hemingway.~o fee.
Limited to 25 people. Call 982-3691 ext. 289 for
, reservations. Santa Fe Hall Room 105.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
4 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, October 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, October 1988.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-10
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1988_10
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John’s College
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/691285b085287f413d8c0161c67fc5db.pdf
791ac94f5d19241dddd2e658939e9e17
PDF Text
Text
ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
NOVEMBER 1988
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
DON'T FORGET!
OCTOBER 28
Friday, 8 PM
ST. JOHNTS BENEFIT CONCERT SERIES:
Pianist PETER PESIC, the Musician-in-Residence
at the College, will play an all-Beethoven
recital. Featured works will include:
Op. 2 No. 1, Beethoven's first published sonata, .
Op. 8la "Les Adieux" sonata, and the
"Hammerklavier" sonata Op. 106. Admission at
the door is $6 and $3 for senior citizens and
non-st. John's students or by season pass to
patrons of the Music Series.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
NOVEMBER l
Tuesday, ! PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
''The Search for Rome: outward vaUit, Inner
Deepening." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
NOVEMBER 2
Wednesday, ! PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: STEWART BRAND,
.
Editor/Publisher of "The Last Whole Earth Catalog"
and "The co-Evolution Quarterly," will speak on
the topic "The Media Lab at MIT: Neural Nets and
Global Communication." Part of the Santa Fe
Institute Lecture Series. Free. The Great Hall.
Rescheduled from November 15.
NOVEMBER 4
Frid~
4-6 PM
ART GALLERY OPENING RECE foir:- liXRTIN KIM,
Santa Fe artist, will eXhiblt collage assemblages
entitled "Evidence." Mr. Kim's work represents
varied approaches to exploring literal and
allegorical meaning in visual imagery.
Free. Exhibit from November 2 - 30, Wednesday
through Sunday, 1-5 PM.
�NOVEMBER 5
Saturday, 7 ' 9 PM
•FtIJls: -"Witness in the Piosecutioil"
"The 39 Stepa"
NovmBR 8
Tue8day, 8 PM
SYlllOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGH1'AND SOUND:
*larly Chrlstlani~y: Proa The Origins to the Fall
of Roae." Tutor beritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior COJDlon Room.
NOVEMBER 12
*PIIJIS:
Saturday, 7 '
"The Dreaser"
"Mephisto"
~
PM
NOVBllBD 15
Tuesday, 4:30 - 6:30 PM
SEllYNAR DAY: Seminars Ol?ired--riiCl\iae:
XNNOXt
°fY
- Alexander Solzhenitayn, One
in the Life of
Ivan Denisovitch - Tutor Jro'6er Bart-;--!S'L!09~
=-liillace Stevens, Two Poems: "The Idea of Order
at Key West" and "The Course of a Particular" J>ean James Carey, SFH 106
· · Nicolai Gogol, Dead Souls - Tutor
~ana Densaore, sf'R'"lOs
- Franz Kafka, A Hunqerartist - Tutor
Timothy Guile, ~FR 1o9
- Wendell Berry, standiny !Y Words Tutor Jack Lincoln, SFH 10
- Plato, EuthyPhro - Tutor George Iannacone
ESL 111
- Epictetus, The Enchiridion - Tutor Peter
Pesic, ESL 122
- Flannery O'Connor, Revelation - Tutor
Randy Perazzini, ESL 123
- Isak Dinesen, "Balette's Feast" in Anecdotes of
Destiny - Tutor David Starr, SFH 210
- Herman Melville, The Confidence Man Tutor Cary Stickney-;-ISL 215
- St. Symeon, "Spirituality and the Spirit in the
Byzantine Tradition: A Short Text by St. Symeon,
The New Theologian" (11th century) - Tutor
Bruce Venable, SFH 209
A reception will follow the seminars. There is a
fee of $10 per person for seminar and reception.
See insert for reservation information.
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�ANNUAL SEMINAR DAY - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Enrollment is limited in these seminars so it is
important to register early.
Please detach and mail the form below, together
with the registration fee ($10 per person for
the seminar and following reception), payable
to St. John's College, to:
CONFERENCE CENTER
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
1160 CAMINO CRUZ BLANCA
SANTA FE, NM 87501-4599
REGISTRATION FORM
Please enroll me in:
(1) Solzhenitsyn
Stevens
Gogol
-(4) Kafka - (5) Berry - (6) P ate-·(7) Epictetus
(2)
(3)
( s)
o~ com:.ci> r
--
( 9) Dinesen
(10) Melville-(11) St. Symeo_n__
I enclose $
----
to reserve
place(s).
Please indicate first and second choices. You
will only be contacted if your first
choice is full or cancelled, and you are
enrolled in your second choice.
NAME
ADDRESS
DAYTIME PHONE
�.
NOVEMBER lS
Tuesday. 8 PM
SYMBOLIC iiISTORY - THROUGH SIGH'i'AND SOUND:
"The Dark Ages: LWninousl The Wor!Cr"Scene, Birth
of a culture." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
' NOVEMBER 16
Wednesday 8 PM
SPECIAL tr"CTURE: STEWART ROBiRTSMf, Music
Director of the Santa Fe Symphony will discuss a
particular work garnered from the Symphony
program to be performed the following week-end.
Free. The Great Hall.
*
NOVEMBER 18
Frida,. 8 PM
S!R!ES: The return
~the medieval music ensemble SEQUENTIA offering
their program "Singing Stones: Music for a
Romanesque Church." Free. At St. Francis Cathedral
under the auspices of st. J0hn 1 s College.
Donations welcome.
ST. JOHN'S-BENEFIT
CONCE~
NOVEMBER 19
Saturday, 7 PM
*FIUit:
~"Gandhi"
NOVEMBER 22
Tuesday. 1 PM
PRESIDENTIAL SEMINAR: DR. MICHAEL P.
RICCAROS will lead a seminar discussing The
Snows of Kilimanjaro by Ernest Hemingway. Free.
LimiteO-to 25 people. Call 982-3691 ext. 289 for
reservations. Santa Fe Hall Room 105.
NOVEMBER 22
Tuesday. ! PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
11 Gothic Prelude --The New Light: Romanesque to
Gothic, Suger, Abelard." Tutor Emeritus
CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
NOVEMBER 29
Tuesday, 8 PM
SYMBOLIC iiISTORY - THROUGH SIGHir-AND SOUND:
"Gothic Ground ana Vault: Raising-u\e Gothic
Roof, Thomas Aquinas." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES
BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
*Film Showings: 7 PM & 9 PM+
Admissions: $3, Double Feature $4
The Great Hall opens at 6:45 PM.
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST MINUTE CHANGES.
�xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
EVENTS IN DECEMBER
=
December l
Saturday, 11:30
4:30 PM
INTERNATIONAL BOOK AND AUTHOR FAIR: Over 20
authors will be present to s19n their works of an
international nature, which will be available for
purchase. Luncheon tickets are $8.00 per person.
For reservations, call 982-3691 ext. 289.
The Great Hall.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
UPCOMING EVENTS
FRIENDS OF ST. JOHN'S SPRING TOUR/CRUISE OF THE
GREEK ISLANDS, JUNE 9-20, 1989. FOR MORE
INFORMATION, CONTACT CHARLOTTE LOCKWOOD, RIO
GRANDE TRAVEL, 986-1555.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
6 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, November 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, November 1988.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John’s College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-11
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1988_11
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/8616be7620affd9647cda00a38e93976.pdf
43dc63d1b691e6ac9cb09c586ab9eac4
PDF Text
Text
ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
DECEMBER 1988
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
~ DECEMBER ~
Friday, ~ PM
LECTURE:
PETER PESIC, Tutor, St. John's
College, will speak on "Identicality and Modern
Physics." Free. The Great Hall.
=
DECEMBER l
Saturday, 1:00
5:00 PM
BOOK FAIR AND AUTOGRAPH PARTY: To be held at
Sanbusco Center to benefit the St. John's College·
Library Building Fund.
DECEMBER 3
Saturday, 2 ~ ~ PM
*FILMS:
"Stolen Kisses"
1969 - France - Directed by Francois Truf faut
1 hour, 30 minutes - Color - Subtitled
"Hannah and Her Sisters"
1986 - Written and Directed by Woody Allen
1 hour, 47 minutes - Color
DECEMBER 6
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"The Gothic Wave: - The Spread of Gothic over
Europe." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
~ DECEMBER 7
Wednesday, ~ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: STEWART ROBERTSON, Music
Director of the Santa Fe symphony will discuss
a particular work garnered from the Symphony
program to be performed the following week-end.
Free. The Great Hall.
�t
DECEMBER 9
Friday, ~ PM
LECTURE: ALAN WEBBER, Tutor, St. John's
College, will speak on "Plato's Republic:
Offspring of the Good." Free. The Great Hall.
DECEMBER 10
Saturday, 7 & 9 PM
*FILMS:
"You Can't Take It-withYou"
1938 - Directed by Frank Capra - 2 hours,
8 minutes - Black & White
"It's A Wonderful Life"
1947 - Directed by Frank Capra - 2 hours,
12 minutes - Black & White
~
DECEMBER 11
Sunday, ~ PM
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE CHORUS: A concert
of Russian sacred music commemorating the
lOOOth anniversary of Christianity in Russia.
CQnducted by Michael Ossorgin, St. John's
ur.or Emeritus. Free. St. Francis Cathedral.
DECEMBER 11
Sunday, ~ PM
Christmas-Party for all the children of
Santa Fe. Magic by Van Warren. Caroling.
Storytelling. Refreshments. Everybody is
welcome!! Junior Common Room. Celebrate!!
Please RSVP to 982-3691 ext. 289.
DECEMBER .!1.
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Dante - Threshold of 1300: Gothic Synthesis;
Revolt of the New Man." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES
BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
DECEMBER 20
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Ars Nova (14th century): Heroes InHell, Against
the Quietest East." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
�.
CONFERENCE CENTER
ST, JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE NM 87501
Ms. CHARLOTTE LocKwooD
AsK MR, FosTER/Rro GRANDE TRAVEL
333 MONTEZUMA
SANTA FE NM 87501
�.
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO
FRIENDS OF THE COLLEGE COMMUNITY SEMINAR
(RUISE TO THE GREEK ISLANDS,
JUNE
TUTOR: MR.
R.
9 - 20, 1989
THOMAS HARRIS
_ _ _ YES, I AM DEFINITELY INTERESTED IN GOING 't/ITH
THE SEMINAR GROUP TO THE GREEK ISLANDS IN JUNE,
PLEASE RUSH ME ALL INFORMATION,
PHONE #_ _ _ __
NAME
ADDRESS~~~~~~~~~~~~---------
CITY
STATE
•
ZIP~~
�Los Llanos Bookstore
Invites you to attend
its
Book Fair and Autograph Party
Benefiting the St. John's
College Library
Twenty New Mexico Authors will be Present
Los Llanos Bookstore at Sanbusco
Saturday, December 3
1:00-5:00 p.rri.
�~
11111111111111111
�ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
December 1988
Dear Friends:
As Chairman of the Board of Visitors and Governors, and as
an alumnus of the Graduate Institute, Class of 1979, it is my
pleasure to 9reet you this holiday season and to thank you for
your continuing support and interest in St. John's College in
Santa Fe.
This community events bulletin is mailed to friends
of St. John's College and, therefore, allows me the opportunity
to set the record straight concerning the Board of Visitors and
Governors perspective on the resignation of President Michael P.
Riccards.
Under the leadership of President Riccards,
relations
between the College and our neighbors in the region have
strengthened immeasurably.
Members of the Board of Visitors and
Governors are deeply grateful for the ~regress that he and other
members of the administration have achieved in the last two
years.
It was to this end that the Board appointed a resident
president in Santa Fe in 1986.
Our commitment to Santa Fe and the Southwest continues. A
Presidential Search Committee chaired by~ Dr. Irwin Hoffman, a
Santa Fe resident, is already in the process of finding a new
president who will build and strengthen the relationships that
have been established.
Other local members of that Committee
include Owen Lopez, Dean Hag9ard, and James Carey.
At this time
the Search Committee is receiving'nominations for the new
president and we encourage all of our friends, alumni, parents,
faculty and members of the Board to submit nominations of those
candidates they believe are particularly suited to lead the
Santa Fe campus of St. John's College.
Your involvement in St. John's College is valued by all of
the students, faculty, and staff.
On behalf of members of the
College community,
I would like to invite you to join us in the
numerous public events planned for the holiday season listed in
the enclosed calendar.
Wishing you a happy holiday season and with warm personal
regards,
Sincerely,
~v~~
A. Scott Kelso
Chairman of the Board
�DECEMBER 27
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"1400 - Pilgrim's-All (Chaucer's World): 'In the
Temple Playing'.'' Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
*Film Showings:
7 PM & 9 PM+
Admissions:
$3,
Double Feature $4
The Great Hall opens at 6:45 PM.
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST MINUTE CHANGES.
BEST WISHES FOR A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY
NEW YEAR FROM ST. JOHN'S FACULTY AND STAFF.
�xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
UPCOMING EVENTS
January ~
Sunday, 3-5 PM
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: MARK A. VIEIRA,
photographer, uses the same lighting, camera,
and technology as those used in the tradition of
the great Hollywood glamour photographers of the
1930's and 40's. A scholar and collector of the
great star photographs by George Hurrell, Clarence
Sinclair Bull, and Lee Garmes, among others,
Vieira has recently produced a book of prints from
his private collection, Hollywood Portraits,
illustrated with some of the 9reatest portraits
of this American genre. In this exhibition, a
group of Vieira's fine photographic prints,
a~ong with some of Vieira's contemporary
portraits in this style, will be for sale.
*xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
9 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, December 1988
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, December 1988.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John’s College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-12
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1988_12
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/4e254f042c76ca3c544065575ae4496a.pdf
8cadd7d4ce3700b4c6450fb879595a48
PDF Text
Text
ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, , EW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
JANUARY/FEBRUARY
1989
***~*********************************************
JANUARY 14
Saturday,
ANIMATION FESTIVAL -- PART
- -I
2 PM
"The Point"
1971 - Directed by Fred Wolf - 1 hour 15 minutes
Music by Nilsson, narration by Ringo.
"Allegro Non Troppo"
1977 - Italy - Directed by Bruzo Bozzetto
1 hour 15 minutes
A witty, adult spoof of Disney's Fantasia.
The Great Hall.
JANUARY 17
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"15th century: Early Renaissance - Gothic Grace,
Humanist Wedge." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
JANUARY 21
Saturday, 7 PM
ANIMATION FESTIVAL - PART
II
--WALT DISNEY
"Milestones in Animation" 40 minutes
This fascinating program of Disney shorts traces
the evolution of the cartoon medium.
"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" 1 hour 23 min.
Disney's adaptation of the Grimm tale was the
first full-length animated feature ever made.
'
"The Three Caballeros" 1 hour 12 minutes
Donald Duck goes to South America - a kaleidoscope
of sights and sounds with Latin music.
�"Donald Duck in Mathmagiclandtt 26 minutes
Donald meets proportion and number.
Assorted Disney Shorts
JANUARY 24
COMMUNITY SEMINARS BEGIN
See schedule and registration enclosed.
JANUARY 24
Tuesday, .!!. PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"1500: Explosive Balance - Renaissance,
Protestantism, the New World." Tutor Emeritus
CHARLES BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
~ JANUARY 25
Wednesday, .!!_ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: STEWART ROBERTSON, Music
Director of the Santa Fe Symphony will discuss
"Chopin: composer, performer and improviser."
Free. Junior Common Room.
; rANUARY 25
Wednesday .!!_ PM
_SPECIAL LECTURE: JAMES GLEICK, Author of
. "Chaos - The Making of a New Science" will speak
on the science of complexity. Part of the Santa
Fe Institute Lecture Series. Free. The Great Hall.
JANUARY 28
*FILMS:
Saturday, J_ PM
"Les Enfants du Paradis" 3 hours 8 minutes
"Cyrano de Bergerac" 1 hour 52 minutes
"Beauty and the Beast" 1 hour 30 minutes
=
JANUARY 29
Sunday, !
J_ PM
TEA DANCE: To benefit the St. John's College
Southwest Scholars' Program. Refreshments,
champagne and live music. Co-sponsored by and to
be held at the Hotel St. Francis. Reservations:
$7.50 per person, $10.00 per couple in advance.
$10.00 per person at the door. Call 982-3691,
ext. 289 for information and tickets.
JANUARY 31
Tuesday, 8 PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Giants in the Earth: 16th centurY,-Titanic
Enactments." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
�We hope you will join us for another series of Carm..mity Serrinars at St. John's College. These
saninars offer you an qJportunity to read a book you've always wanted to read, and then to
disruss it in a 9'1Bll group with others who enj~ good books and stirrulating conversation.
These saninars have gained so in popularity that I urge you to register ~ickly if the current
offerings interest you. The saninars are led by narbers of the St. John's College faculty and
only original works are chosen for the readings.
In certain cases, credit for teacher
recertification can be arranged. We look forward to your joining us.
For more information, call
Barbara Lewis
Conference Center
982-3691, ext. 289
Selected Works of William Faulkner
flert:>ers of the saninar will read Faulkner's Absalon, Absalon! and Light in August.
Tutor: Thanas Std<es
NtJTber of sessions: 8
Starts: January 24
Fee per Person: $75
Texts: no preference
First Assigrment: Absalon, Absalon! Ch. I-IV
Spring break will be arra~n March 4th -
Meeting Day: Tt.esday
Meeting Roan: SFH 109
Meeting Ti~: 6:30 PM
19th.
Plato's Republic ~ -..
Memers of the saninar will read and discuss Plato's Republic.
NtJTber of sessions: 10 Meeting Day: Tt.esday
Tutor: David Levine
Starts: January 24
Fee per person: $90
Meeting Roan: ESL 109
Texts: Basic Books (Bloan translation)
Meeting Ti~: 7:30 PM
First Assignnent: Book I
No classes during Spring break, March 4th -19th.
Selected Works of Aeschylus and Sq>hocles
Memers of the saninar will read and discuss Aeschylus' Oresteia and Sq>hocles' Theban Plays.
Meeting Day: Tt.esday
NtJTber of sessions: 8
Tutor: Jack Lincoln
Starts: January 24
Fee per person: $75
Meeting Roan: SFH 110
First Assignnent: Aeschylus, Agarramon
Meeting Ti~: 6:30 PM
Texts: no preference
Classes will be held during Spring break, March 4th - 19th.
�The Prani sed Land
The seninar 9l"Ol4> will discuss the history, politics and Gcx1 in Jostua, Judges and Sarruel.
Meeting Day: Wednesday
Tutor: Randy Perazzini Nll!'ber of sessions: 8
Meeting
Roan: SFH 109
Fee per Person: $75
Starts: Jaruary 25
Meeting
Ti~: 7:00 PM
Text: Arry edition of the Hebrew Bible
First Assi~nt: DeuteroncJl!( 31-34; Jostua
No classes during Spring break, March 4th - 19th.
Isak Dinesen, _Selected Stories
This seninar will be held in
two
parts.
PAAT I (Jaruary 31-February 21)
TutDr: David Starr
NIJl'Der of sessions: 4
Meeting Day: Tuesday
Starts: Jaruary 31
Fee per Person: $40
Meeting Roan: SFH 1CX5
Meeting Ti~: 8:00 PM
Texts: Stories fron Anecdotes of Destiny and Ehrengard and fron Winter's Tales.
These will i~ra. s~Acre. arid TE!!J?E?sts.
-PAAT II (March 28-April 18)
Tutor: David Starr
NIJl'Der of i{!SSiQ11S: 4
Meeting Day: Tuesday
Starts: March 28
Fee per Person: ~
Meeting Roan: SFH 1CX5
~~ting TinE: o:OO PM
Texts: Stories fran Winter's Tales and Seven Gothic Tales. These will incl~ The Mookey,
The Drearrers, arid Peter arid Rosa:--~ - If both sessions are taken, the total fee is $75.00.
Bod<s will be available in the College Bookstore, which is qJen Mooday-Friday, 8:45 AM to 4 PM.
The College Library hrurs are 9 N'1 to 5:30 PM. Monday-Friday; 6-8 PM on Mooday, Thursday and
Friday; 6:30-midnight on Tuesday and Wednesday; 10N+4PM on Saturday; 2-5 PM and 7PM-midnight
oo Slllday.
�..
lt4>(J{TMT:
To register, please detach aoo mail this CCJll>leted form, together with the
registratioo fee (payable to St. John's College), to:
~FERENCE
CENTER
Sf. J(}IN'S Cl.LEGE
1160 l»1IOO CRUZ BLANCA
SNITA FE, NM 87501-4599
IGISTRATI<Jt R»1
Please enroll rre in: (1) Willicrn Faulkner
(2) Plat.o's Republic
(3) Aeschylus and Sophocles
(4) The Pranised Land
--(5) Isak Dinesen - Part I
(6) Isak Dinesen - Part II
---
I enclose $
----
t.o reserve
----·
places( s).
Please iooicate ·first aoo secood choices. Yoo will only be contacted if yrur first choice is
full or cancelled, aoo yru are enrolled)n y$lllr secood choice.
--
NM(s)
----------------------------
.AOORESS:
DAYTit-E POONE:
----------------------------------------~
�FEBRUARY 4
*FILMS:
Saturday, l
~ ~
PM
"Dr. No"
1 hour 51 minutes
"Goldfinger" 1 hour 48 minutes
=
FEBRUARY 5 ~
Sunday, l
~ PM
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: ANN KARL exhibits
her series of recent collages: a combination of
acrylic paint and white tissue paper on stretched
linen canvas.
FEBRUARY l
Tuesday, ! PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Michaelangelo - Storm Center: Man,style,
Culture, World-Soul." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES
BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
FEBRUARY 14
Tuesday, ! PM
· SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"A Review of Period styles: Phases of the Western
Incarnation." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
~ Free.
Junior Common Room.
FEBRUARY 21
Tuesday, ! PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"1600: The Tragic-Divide (Shakespeare) - Vortex
of Transformation." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
~FEBRUARY
25
Saturday, 8 PM
CONCERT: -.:fhe Colorado String'Quartet,
"···technically awesome and brazenly passionate."
(Washington Post), will perform the Hayden Quartet
Op. 64 No. 6, Beethoven Quartet Op.95, Bartok
Fifth Quartet. Admission is $7, $3.50 for senior
citizens and non-SJC students, or by season
ticket. The Great Hall.
FEBRUARY 28
Tuesday, 8 PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"The Baroque Formulation: Quixotic Rebirth,
I
Cartesian Conciousness." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES
~ELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
�*************************************************
*Film Showings: 7 PM & 9 PM+
Admissions:
$3, Double Feature $4
The Great Hall opens at 6:45 PM.
CHECK SWITCHBOARD FOR LAST MINUTE CHANGES.
*************************************************
UPCOMING EVENTS
=
APRIL 4
Tuesday, !
6: 30 PM
COMMUNITY SEMINAR DAY schedules and classes will
be announced in next month's calendar.
~APRIL 12
Wednesday, ~ PM
SPECIAL LECTURE: Rabbi Leonard A. Helman of
Temple Beth Shalom will speak on "Martin Buber:
Tales of the Hasidim." This lecture is a part of
the continuing Jewish Heritage Series sponsored by
St. John's College.
·1\
JUNE 9 - 20
Friends-o~St. John's Spring Tour/Cruise of the
Greek Islands. For more information, contact
Charlotte Lockwood, Rio Grande Travel, 986-1555.
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
7 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, January 1989 - February 1989
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, January 1989 - February 1989.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989-01
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1989-01
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/b0466d34d1102f8e8369befed0115b82.pdf
4bbcf49faa6ee1d93a90e35c63528964
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Text
ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
MARCH/APRIL
1989
*************************************************
MARCH 1
Wednesday 2 PM
***FILMS*** Last in Japanese Film Series
Red Beard (1965) Directed by Akira Kurasawa
The Great Hall.
MARCH -3 -- -31
ART GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION: A three-man
photography show by Santa Fe photographers:
JOHN MATTSON, color photos of Las Vegas, NM,
and small Texas towns; DUANE MONCZEWSKI, urban
and architectural landscapes in Mexico and New
Mexico; ROBERT WIDDICOMBE, natural landscapes.
An opening reception will be held on Friday,
March 3rd, in the Gallery from 4 - 6 PM.
MARCH 7
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"The Baroque Formulation: Quixotic Rebirth,
Cartesian Conciousness." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES
BELL. Free. Junior Common Room.
MARCH 14
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Milton: Mind's Dark Glory: Tenebrist and
Classical Baroque."
Tutor Emeritus
CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room.
MARCH 15
Wednesday, ~ PM
SPECIAr:;-LECTURE: STEWART ROBERTSON, Music
Director of the Santa Fe Symphony will discuss
"Enigma: The Personalities Pictured Within."
Free. Junior Common Room.
�MARCH 21
Tuesday, ~ PM
SYMBOLIC HISTORY - THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND:
"Pascal's Reversal: Baroque Antimonies of Reason
and Faith." Tutor Emeritus CHARLES BELL.
Free. Junior Common Room. NOTE: Mr. Bell
will be interrupting his lecture schedule which
will not re-convene until May 9th.
MARCH 24
Friday, ~ PM
DEAN'S LECTURE SERIES: SAMUEL KUTLER,
of St. John's College in Annapolis, will speak o
"What is a Philosophic Question?" Free.
The Great Hall.
MARCH 25
Saturday, l ~ 2 PM
***FILMS***
"Medea" (1971) Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini
"Iphigenia" (1977) Directed by Michael Cacoyannis
, MARCH 31
Friday, ~ PM
DEAN'S LECTURE SERIES: NATHAN TARCOV, from The
University of Chicago, will speak on "War and Pe
in The Federalist." Free. The Great Hall.
Saturday, l ~ 2 PM
APRIL l
***FILMS***
"Sleeper"
(1973) Directed by Woody Allen
"Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl"
(1978) Directed by Terry Hughes & Monty Pytho
=
APRIL 2
Sunday, 4:30
l PM
SPRING-FLING! Come and enjoy the second Sunday
Afternoon Tea Dance to benefit the St. John's
Southwest Scholars Fund. Dance to live music of
the 30's and 40's and enjoy champagne and other
refreshments! Co-sponsored by The Hotel St.
Francis. $7.50 per person in advance or at the
door of the st. Francis. Call 982-3691, x289
for details and reservations.
=
APRIL 4
Tuesday, 4:30
6:30 PM
COMMUUITY SEMINAR DAY
See the enclosed information for St. John's
College one-day seminar offerings to the
community. A reception following the seminars
will be held in the Junior Common Room.
�+++++++++++++++!I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l++++++++++++++I I I I I I I I I!+++++++++++++++++++++-+~
APRIL FESTIVAL
APRIL 7
Friday, 8 PM
CONCERT JEANNE GREALISH, mezzo-soprano and pianist, PETER PESIC.
A program of French songs by Debussy, Ravel, Duparc, Poulenc,
Honegger, and Hahn.
APR! L 9
Sunday, 3 PM
Henry Purcell's opera, Dido ancrAeneas, will be perfonned
by the St. John's College Orchestra and Chorus with soloists. FREE ADMISSION.
~T
APRIL 14
Friday, 8 PM
CONCERr- PETER PESIC, pianist and Musician-in-Residence, will perform
Beethoven's Sonatas Op. 28 and Op. 31#2 and Debussy's Preludes Book I.
APRIL 21
Friday, 8 PM
CONCIRr- ALLYN MINER, sitar, in a prograiTlof classical Indian evening ragas.
APRIL 28
Fri day, 8 PM
AN'EVENING OF VOCAL CHAMBER MJSIC performed by JEANNE GREALISH, mezzo-soprano,
l"E'T"ER PES!C-and JANE SNOW, p1an1sts and other artists to be announced. The
program will include works by Schubert, Cage, Brahms and Orff.
Admission is $7 ($3.50 for senior citizens} at the door of The Great Hall.
All proceeds benefit St. John's College.
I I I I II I I I I I I I I
•++++I I I I I I I I 11 I I I I I I I 1++++++++++++++1 I I I I I I I I I I I I!+++++++++++++++
�'
.
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE ANNUAL SPRING SEMINAR DAY
Ment>ers of the St. John's College Comnunity are pleased to invite our friends to the Annual
Spring Seminar Day on Tuesday, April 4, 1989. Seminars will begin at 4:30 pm and will be
followed by a reception at 6:30 in Peterson Center.
Please select one of the follONing seminars and make your reservations early by sending in the
attached registration fonn. The deadline for enrolling is Friday, March 31, 1989. The fee for
- - the seminar and the reception is $10 per person.
==============================================================================================
The Memory of Old Jack, Wendell Berry
A heroic treatment of an old man's reliving in memory his attachment to his land, his family
and his little town near the Kentucky. Perhaps the most pONerful chapter is his courtship and
the cruel frustration of his marriage. Nevertheless the book is a celebration throughout.
Tutor:
Robert Bart
Meeting Ro()TJ:
FAB 109
==============================================================================================
"The Nonexistent Knight," Calvino
An empty suit of annor converses with Charlemagne. One of Calvino's fairy-tale meditations on
our own world.
Tutor: Cary Stickney
Meeting Room: Faculty Meeting Room, Weigle Hall, 2nd floor
==============================================================================================
"White Nights," Dostoevsky
Tutor: Janet Dougherty
Meeting Room:
SFH 110
==============================================================================================
The Bacchae, Euripides
Tutor: William Kerr
Meeting RO()TJ:
ESL 123
==============================================================================================
The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne
Tutor: Basia Miller
Meeting Room: ESL 122
==============================================================================================
"Of the Standard of Taste," David Hume
HlJTle's short essay attempts to account for aesthetic judgment.
Tutor: Th()Tlas Scally
Meeting Room: SFH 107
==============================================================================================
Beauty and Sadness, Kawabata
Tutor: R. Th()TlaS Harris
Meeting Room: SFH 105
====================================================--=========================================
Michael Kohlhaas, Kleist
In the context of the Gennan Refonnat1on and the attendant peasant wars and based on actual
events, this novella is a tragic story of an honest man's passionate response to the grave
abuse of political pONer.
Tutor: David Starr
Meeting Room: SFH 210
In:
The Marriage of Q and Other Stories
�==============================================================================================
The Wife of Martin Guerre, Janet Lewis
---------
A classic short novel by an outstanding American writer.
Tutor: Peter Pesi c
Meeting Room: ESL 215
==============================================================================================
The Abolition of Man, C.S. Lewis
The Western educational crisis, according to Lewis, has its roots in the "modern world."
Tutor: Frank Pagano
Meeting Roan: ESL 209
==============================================================================================
Phaedrus, Plato
Tutor: John Cornell
Meeting Room: ESL 109
==============================================================================================
Antony and Cleopatra, Shakespeare
Shakespeare's sunlit tragedy.
Tutor: William Darkey
Meeting Room: SFH 209
===============================================================================================
As You Like It, Shakespeare
Tutor: Jack Lincoln
Meeting Room: SFH 110
===================================================================:==========================
Twelfth Night, Shakespeare
Tutor: Joan Silver
Meeting Roan: SFH 106
=============================================================================================
"Sunday Morning, Wallace Stevens
11
"Sunday Morning" is considered by many the greatest poem of the 20th century.
Tutor: Jeffrey Goodman
Meeting Roan: ESL 211
==============================================================================================
"The Upright Posture," Erwin Strauss
A phenanenological interpretation of the psychological implications of upright posture.
Tutor: George Iannacone
Meeting Roan: ESL 111
=================-=============================================================================
Books will be available in the College Bookstore, which is open Monday-Friday, 8:45 AM to 4 PM.
The College Library hours are 9 AM to 5:30 PM, Monday-Friday; 6-8 PM on Monday, Thursday and
Friday; 6:30-midnight on Tuesday and Wednesday; 10AM-4PM on Saturday; 2-5 PM and ?PM-midnight
on Sunday.
--=:z·=·=================================================================================
�To register. please detach and mail this canpleted fonn. together with the
registration fee of $10.00 per person (payable to St. John's College). to:
If.l>ORTANT:
CONFERENCE CENTER
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
1160 CAMINO CRUZ BLANCA
SANTA FE. NM 87501-4599
REGISTRATION FORM
Please enroll me in:
(1) Wendell Berry
Calvino
Dostoevs....ky-Euripides
(5) Hawthorne
(2)
(3)
(4)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
--
Hlllle
--
Kawabata
Kleist
Janet Lewis
C. S. Lewis - Plato
(12) Antony and Cleopatra
(13) As You Like It
-(14) Twelfth Night
(15) Wallace Steven_s__
(16) Strauss
------
I enclose $
-----
to reserve
----
places(s).
Please indicate first and second choices. You will only be contacted if your first choice is
full or cancelled. and you are enrolled in your second choice.
NAME(s)
~----------------------------------
ADDRESS:
~----------------------------------~
DAYTIME PHONE:
�+++++++++++++++++II I I I I I I I l++++++++++++++++++++I II I II I I 11+11 I I I I!+++++++++++++++++
APRIL FESTIVAL
APRIL 7
Friday, 8 PM
CONCERT JEANNE GREALISH, mezzo-soprano and pianist, PETER PESIC.
Aprogram of French songs by Debussy, Ravel, Duparc, Poulenc,
Honegger, and Hahn.
APRIL 9
Sunday, 3 PM
CONCERT Henry Purcell's opera, Dido and""Aeneas, will be perfonned
by the St. John's College Orchestra ana-chorus with soloists. FREE ADMISSION.
APRIL 14
Friday, 8 PM
CO'NCERr- PETER PESIC, pianist and Musiciarl-in-Residence, will perform
Beethoven's Sonatas Op. 28 and Op. 31#2 and Debussy's Preludes Book I.
APRIL 21
Friday, 8 PM
CONCER;=- ALLYN MINER, sitar, in a prograiil"of classical Indian evening ragas.
APRIL 28
Friday, 8 PM
ANEYENlNG OF VOCAL CHAMBER M.JSIC performed by JEANNE GREALISH, mezzo-soprano,
lJE'T'ER PESIC-and JANE SNOW, pTaiii'Sts and other artists to be announced. The
program will include works by Schubert, Cage, Brahms and Orff.
Admission is $7 ($3.50 for senior citizens) at the door of The Great Hall.
All proceeds benefit St. John's College.
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ltl I I I I I I I I 1++1 I I I I I I l++++++++++++++I I I I I I I I I I I++++++++++++++++++
�**************************************************
**************************************************
GLASNOST FILM FESTIVAL
A Project of citizen Exchange council
Sponsored by st. John's College & Megavision
The Glasnost Film Festival is a festival of new
Soviet cinema highlighting documentary films to
be shown throughout the United states in April
and May 1989. The Festival is designed to give
international recognition to Soviet directors
whose recent work exemplifies an honest, complete,
and candid approach to the Soviet present. The
Festival will also inform American audiences
about the changes occurring in the USSR and
encourage understanding between our two countries
through documentary film.
On April 15th and 16th, St. John's College, in
cooperation with Megavision, will be hosting the
Glasnost Film Festival. Four Soviet filmmakers
will show and discuss documentary films in four
two-hour sessions over two days. Each session
will show a different set of films beginning at
12:00 Noon and 3:00 PM on each day. Admission
is $5 per session or $15 for an all-session
ticket ($3/$10 for St. John's students). All
showings will be held in The Great Hall with a
maximum capacity for 220 people per showing.
Film titles and more information will be
available in the April calendar. For details
and ticket reservations, call 982-3691, x289.
**************************************************
**************************************************
�>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>UPCOMING EVENTS<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
APRIL 20
BOOK AND AUTHOR LUNCHEON
12:00 Noon at the Albuquerque Country Club,
Mr. Howard Bryan will speak about his book
Wildest of the West. Tickets are $15.
Call 982-3691, x289 for reservations.
MAY -4
BOOK AND AUTHOR LUNCHEON
12: 00 Noon at the Albuquerque Country Club,
Mr. Peter White will speak on his research
and work on The Lore of New Mexico.
Mr. White co-authored~he book with Marta
Weigle. Tickets are $15. Call 982-3691, x289
for reservations.
~-
~~
~-
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
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paper
Page numeration
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9 pages
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Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, March 1989 - April 1989
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, March 1989 - April 1989.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1989-03
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1989_03
Calendar
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76616d153db6dfcd66bd2326adc4d663
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Sr JoHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
Community Events Calendar
MAY/JUNE 1989
*****************************************************
Tuesday, 7:30
™
RABBI ~ SOBEL will speak
on "F.a.nnenical Relations Between catholics an:i Jews
Un:ier the Crrrent Vatican." Sponsored by st. Jdm' s
College and the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith, 1-bJntain states Region.
Free.
'!he Great
SPECIAL IECIURE:
Hall.
May 2 - 31
ARI' GAIIERY
ARI' G\LI.ERY OPENING RECEPI'IOO:
SUrrlay, May 7, 3-5.
Works by well-Jan.Jn local artist Monica steinhoff.
Historical scenes of Santa Fe larrlmarks. 'llle µ.iblic
is welcane.
'lhursday, 12 Noon
BX)K AND AUlliOR ~:
'!he Foor Hills Country
Club, Alb.lquerque.
Mr. Peter White will speak oo
his research an:i TNOrk an 'lhe I.Dre of New Mexioo.
Mr. White oo-authored the tx:>ok with Marta Weigle.
Tickets are $15 at the dcx>r; call 982-3691, X289 for
reservations.
Tuesday, 8
SYMOOLIC HISTORY -
~
™
SIGH!' AND sa.JND:
11
1700:
'!he Comic Divide: Heroic an:i Mock-Heroic."
'lh.is
will be Tutor Erreritus OiARI..ES BEI.L'S last lecture
until fall, with a possiblity of an al:i:>reviated
schedule.
Junior cattoon Roan.
�MAY 14
SUOOay, 11:00 AM
GinJND BRFA1a:NG CERDDN RR 'IHE NEW
Brunch to follow.
MAY 14
rom
LIBRARY:
Please RSVP to 982-3691, x289.
SUOOay, 4:00
™
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE 2 STH COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES:
Professor Czeslaw Milosz, R:>lish poet,
essayist, novelist am N<ilel Laureate, will be the
guest speaker. '!he p..tblic is cordially invited.
MAY 19-21
Friday, 7 IM to SUnday, 12 Noon
INI'ERNATIONAL ~I 5 WRITn«; GUIID secorrl Annual r.am
of Enchantment calferenoe, "a literary meeti.rq of the
east am west."
'!he New York based Guild will offer
workshops by Southwestern authors am the latest
briefings on the New York marketplace.
For
infontation on atterrl.in:J the conference, call Barbara
Lewis at 982-3691, x289.
Saturday eveni.rq, May 20,
there will be q:>en ~ am an infonnal a<iiress by
Roberta Pryor I the New York literary agent wno
· marketed "Jaws." '!he presentation will be q>en to the
?Jblic, with contrib.rt:ioos accepted to the oon-profit
Guild. 7: 30 FM. '!he Great Hall.
MAY 21
surnay. J:oo
™
NEW MEXIOO ~ OOINI'E1' with guest artist Evelyn
Brancart at the piano.
Program:
?-t:>zart's Piano am
Woodwind Quintet; Poulec's Sextet; Ingol Dahl's
Quintet.
Admission: $6.00.
Stu:ients am Senior
Citizens: $4 • oo. '!he Great Hall.
MAY 23
'I\.lesday, 12 Noon
BX>K AND AUlliOR llJN~:
Dr. Ernest Anthony Mares,
New Mexico writer and historian, will be the guest
speaker.
He is the author of numerous books on New
Mexican history and lore, poetry, plays and fiction.
Featuring also, Padre Martinez: New Perspectives from
Taos and I returned and Saw Und e r th e Sun.
�Luncheon: 12 Noon; Presentation: 12:45; Book
Signing: 1:30.
Luncheon will feature quiche,
salads, rolls, fresh fruit, wine am other beverages
in the Great Hall. Reservations in advance. Rlone
982-3691, X289. $15.00 per person.
MAY 24
Wednesday. 8:00
™
SPECIAL LEC'IURE:
Dr. James Bower, California
Institute of Technology, will speak on "Scierx:ie in
the Elenentary Sdlools."
Sponsored by the College
am the Santa Fe Institute. Free. J\ll'lior Omoon
Roan.
MAY 31
Wednesday. 8:00
™
SPECIAL ~:
Professor Jdm Wheeler, Pri.rDeton
university, will speak on "Gravity am Its Place in
the Sd1eme of ~-" Sponsored by the College
am the santa Fe Institute. Free.
JUNE 2 - 30
ARI' GALimY
ARI' GALimY Ol"ENil«? REPWUCN:
S\.n'rlay, June 4 ; 3-5.
A two-man shcM of ~ presented by Harrison
Sheppard of San Francisco.
Joa< MCJXNAID .AND
MD<HAIL WiMI<HIN:
Rlotos of fann.is AJoorican am
Russian artists am plblic figures.
'!he plblic is
invited.
JUNE 27
'I\.leSday, 12 Noon
B:X>K .AND Al1IlDR llJN~:
Hc:Mard Bryan, rxrt.ed New
Mexico journalist, author of Wildest of the Wild
West, am Marcia Keegan, author of Mother Earth,
Father sun am rn..nrerrus books on Navajo cooking and
arts.
Luncheon: 12 Noon; Presentation: 12: 45, Book
Signing: 1: 30.
Luncheon will feature salads,
crepes, vegetarian lasagna, rolls and breads, awle
pie, wine and other beverages.
'Ihe Great Hall.
Reservations in advance.
R'lone 982-3691, x289.
$15.00 per person.
lo
�JUNE 28
Wednesday, 8:00 FM
SPF.CI.AL l.ECIURE:
Professor Brian Arthur, Stanford
University, will speak on econ:::mics.
Sponsored by
the College arrl the Santa Fe Institute.
Free. '!he
Great Hall.
Summer conferences beirg held at St. John's arrl
offerirg events open to the p.lblic will be annourre::i
in the local nmia.
�Jewisli !Heritage
Series
presentetl 6y
St. Jofin's Co{fege
anti
'Iempfe '13etfi Sfialom.
1989-90
�St. John's College ia pleased to announce the second year of the
Jewiah
8erita;e
leriea
presented
by
St.
Rabbi Leonard Helman of Temple Beth Shalom.
year's efforts,
Jewi~h
Life.
John' a
College
and
In recoqnition of last
the College was given an award from the National
During last year the Temple and St.
John's were
pleas~d
to boat Rabbi David Rosen from Jerusalem who came to Santa Fe under
the auspices of the Anti-Defamation League of B' nai B' rith .
college also sponsored the followin-.J
&e.
The
eve~ts:
The College boated a weeklong ser i es of seminars and lectures
on the book of Exodus.
These sessions were conducted by Earl Schwarz
....
and David Hawkinson of the City Gates,
based in Minneapolis .
an educational organization
The sessions were open to faculty,
students,
members of the Temple and visitors from neighboring colleges and
universities.
,.. The president of St. John's College,
Michael Riccards,
led a
seminar at the Temple on I.B. Singer's story, •Gimpel the Fool . "
For nearly a quarter of a century, St. John's College has operated
a campus in Santa Fe, New Mexico, one of the oldest cities in the New
World.
The College has received national recognition for its Great
Books curriculum,
a
program deeply committed to the
classics
of
Western thought, the arts of dialogue and the rigors of reason.
Over the years that program has covered the works of some major
Jewish writers and thinkers - from the texts of the Old Testament to
the novels of Jtafka,
explorations
programs, St.
of
Jewish
from the philosophy of Maimonides to Freud's
into human behavior.
Through
its
community seminar
John's ia able to focus, for example, on specific areas
heritage
and
culture:
literature, ethnic studies.
Talmudic
scholarship,
holocaust
Over the coming months, St. John's will
explore different aspects of the Jewish experience and show their
complex relationship to Western civilization and thought.
***********************************************
�Program
The following activities have
been scheduled or are planned for
1989-1990:
Lecture by Rabbi Leonard A.
Belman on "Martin Buber: Tales of
the Ha.,idim," St. John' a College,
April 12, 1989.
Lecture
by
Rabbi
Ronald
Sobel, Temple Emanuel, New York, on
Catholic-Jewish Relationships (cosponsored by the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith), St. John's
College, Hay 2, 1989.
Lecture•
on
Bio-Medical
Sthic• (co-sponsored by the BioEthics Committee of St. Vincent
Hospital), speakers and times to be
announced.
Seminar ••ri•• on the Study
' of Prophecy, including the Books
of Amoa and Jonah and the writings
of Benedict Spinoza and Abraham J.
Heschel, to be announced.
Lecture by Michael Riccard•
on "Daily Life in I"rael at the Time
of Je"u"," Temple Beth Shalom, May,
1989.
rila Preaentation:
"Lie"
Father Told Me," Fall, 1989.
My
One
aan
•how
on
Shalom
Aleichem and 19th century Jewish
literature, July, 1989.
Other
events
scheduled.
may
also
No charge for admission join us
be
please
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
7 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Santa Fe Community Calendar, May 1989 - June 1989
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, May 1989 - June 1989.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989-05
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SF_Community_Calendar_1989_05
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/7c70429c5b74ab4dafbbe95db43a88ec.pdf
5efa79b43b49fda0ded91fe458dbf319
PDF Text
Text
ST.
JOHN'S COLLEGE
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
19 N
89 D
FRI
Nov
3
SAT
Nov
4
TUE
Nov
7
0
E
V
C
E M B
E
M
B
E R
E R
An Gallery: Don Gidley; paints, modern figures.
Opening reception 5- 7pm. Show runs thru November
30th.
~~~
Films: Rope 7pmand Strangers on a Train 9pm. Tw
Alfred Hitchcock classics. The Great Hall, Peterson
Student Center• $3.25 or $4.25 double feature
•••
Charles Bell Lecture Series: 18th Century: Voltaire's
Smile: Shadow-Haunted Game of Reason. 8pm Junior
Common Room
FRI
Nov
10
25th Anniversary Concert Series: The Colorado
Quartet. Haydn: Quartet in D, Op. 50, No. 6; Bart6k:
Quartet No. 6; Beethoven: Quartet inc#, Op. 131. The
Great Hall at 8:00 pm.
i5 i5 i5
SAT
Nov
11
Films: The Drama of Love & War: Cal 7pm and
La Grande Illusion 9pm. The Great Hall, Peterson Student Center• $3.25 or $4.25 double feature
�TUESDAY
TUE
fourteen
novel\lber
MuJ -
th 14
Nov
S~fil!.!12!NWwda Y
1.
Art: Style and Value
Ch.cles C. Bell
A seriu of slide pairs to be freely disicu.ued.
2.
J01epb Coanul, Hwt of Darkpgs
Timothy Guile
ESL-109
3.
Euripides. The Rtqbu
Totrmce Kirby
FAB-206
SFH-110
Tunotby Miller
Glasgow, The Sbcltcml Life
An accomplished novel aboMt Vvginians
~ly in tJU.s centMrj
~· sun from two YiewpoUw. the granddal4ghlU's and the grandfarhu's.
S. Honce,Tbc Anof Poctn
W'illiamKm
SFH-209
A poem aboMt poetry.
6. Henry James, The EyrqpeH$
Peter Pesic
SFH-106
7. Czeslaw Mlloa,Nobcl Lgdpm
JmetDougberty
SFH-210
Reflections on Jsi.I role a.r a
twa11ietlt cDllllry pod from "the OtlvT WOf"" .
Slephen Van l..uchene
FAB-105
8. Mozart, P1apo Sopata, K, 1Al
Especially for ""'- wlto wondu /tow
St. John's lelJCltu 1'111.Jic to non-nw.ricituu. Not IUniud to score readers,
IJtoMglt ~oru aNl record.I wiU be on ruervc in IN St. Jolut' s MllSic Library.
9. Nlcmcbc, The Blltb ofTmgdy
Janes Carey
SFH-109
10. E.A. Robln5oa,
Jeffrey Goodman
SfH.205
Rembrandt 1p Rcmhrawlt
A poetic medjtation on Jsi.f art and life.
~.
11. Wallace Stevens,
RobatBut
Tbc World u Mntttatloo.
A Edwta Mair, Tglgpvhu Rcmcmhca
Two poans aboMt Pavlope a.r she awaiU Odyueus'
12. William Wordsworth,
The PrchMlc (mrpts)
SFH-206
All seminars begin at 4:30 pm
Following the seminars there will be a reception
in the Junior Common Room, Peterson Studelll Center
This cvcnl is pre-registered please send in auached f(Xlll by November 8
19
17
TUE
· Nov
1
SAT
Nov
18
8
Friday Night Lecture Series: Thomas Pangle,
University of Toronto: The Vindication of the
Philosophic Life in the Goreias. 8pm in the Great
Hall
Dec
1
NOVEMBER SEMINARS• SL John's College• Santa Fe, NM 87501-459')
Please enclose check made out to SL John's College for registtation fee.
Tm dollan for the 6nt penoo. Five dallan each addiriooal penm at same .sdial.
You will be noti.6cd if you do ngt receive your 6nt choice ol aeminan.
!'!IDie cl
Finl Penoo:
Name of
Scccod Penon: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Addreas:
Address:_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
r-ytimeTdcphooe:._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Daytime Telcphooe:, _ _ _ _ _ __
first Choice:
First Choice:
Seminar No.: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
~aninarN~:·---------~
TlllOr.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
f .c:cood Choice:
~'aninarNo.:
___________
Tutor. ___________
~
Tutor. ____________
~
Sccood Choice:
Seminar No.: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Tutor. ____________
The
Great Hall at 3:00 pm.
Charles Bell Lecture Series: The Larger Declaration: America against the ferment of Europe. 8pm
Junior Common Room
Charles Bell Lecture Series: Blake: The FireFugue of Delight: The Wine-press of Los ... War
on earth. 8pm Junior Common Room
Friday Night Lecture Series: Bruce Venable, St. John's
cdllege: Cosmos, Character, and Feeling: What Is
Music About, Anyhow? 8pm in the Great Hall
ttt
SAT
Dec
Return this registtation form by November 8 to
Ballade; Soriabin: Fifth Sonata; Poulenc: Sooata.
aaa
FRI
Films: That Far-Out British Humour!: The Bed ·•
Sitting Room 7pm and The Magic Christian
9pm. The Great Hall, Peterson Student Center •
$3.25 or $4.25 double feature
Brahms: Variations on a theme by Haydn; Chopin: Fourth
' e 'e 'e
Nov
ti ti ti
25th Anniversary Concert Series: Peggy Abbot
and Patrice Williams, Pianists. Barber. Souvenirs;
ccc
TUE
FAB-109
rdlU7l.
Krisbnm Vcnkalelh
FRI
Nov
No advance preparation..
4.
'. ,
Room No.
FMR
Nov
sion is FREE, but BY TICKET ONLY; Tickets may be obtained at: St. John's College Switchboard and Sama Fe Institute at 1120 Canyon Road. In the Great Hall at 8pm
Short ICXlJ for Scminan S, 10, 11 A: 12 will be ICllt to n:gillnmU. Saninar I lw oo laL
Malcriala for Seminar 8 will be avaiUble in lhc St. John'• Mallie Libruy.
All oda ICXlJ will be availalie for purchue in~ SL John'• 8ooblote in early Novanber.
Pollmarkl ol n:mmed applicatim1 will delcrminc priority ol cboica.
Tutor
----
Santa Fe Institute Lecture Series: Co-sponsored
by St John's presents Russell Minenneier, President, Conservation International, and Mark Plotkin,
Vice President for Plant Conservation, Conservation International: Conserving the Tropical
SUN
Forest; Global Imperative for the 90's Admis-
of ow .vw """'6 Olld ,,,....., "JO" ocqlllJiNaltc• witla , _ oldJilrvn.
Seminar
Charles Bell Lecture: Series: Mozart: Age of Critique and Imperative: Rococo to Revolution.
8pm Junior Common Room
Films: History in Cinema: Antigone 7pm and Danton
9pm. The Great Hall, Peterson Student Center• $3.25 or
$4.25 double feature
I::!~ ~
SUN
Dec
An Gallery: Mark Meadows; Student Show of photog-
3
raphy, sculpture, illustrations and paintings. Opening
reception 3-5pm. Show runs thru December 13th.
TUE
Dec
5
•••
Charles Bell Lecture Series: Faust: Creative War of
Spirit: peak of Goethe, Beethoven, Hegel. 8pm Junior
Common Room
�FRI
Friday Night Lecture Series: Robert Ban, St John's
College: The Call: Caravaggio's Painting of Matthew
Summoned by Jesus. 8pm in the Great Hall
Dec
8
000
SAT
Dec Films: Nihilistic Favorites: The Road Warrior 7pm and
A Clockwork Orange 9pm. The Great Hall, Peterson
9
Student Center • $3.25 or $4.25 double feature
{{{
SUN
Dec
10
TUE
Dec
12
WED
Dec
13
TUE
Dec
19
Music, Magic & Merriment. St John's invites the
children of Santa Fe to join us for holiday fun. Refreshments will be served. 3pm in the Dining Hall
Film: The Christmas Tradition: It's a Won~,erful
Life. The Great Hall, Peterson Student Center •
$3.25 at 7:00 pm.
--------
Charles Bell Lecture Series: 0 Western Star
(Whitman's America): Trial and the will to affirm. 8pm Junior Common Room
Stewan Robertson, Artistic Director of the Santa
Fe Symphony, will lecture on the All Beethoven
Concen. Fine Arts Building, 2nd Floor from 7 :308:30pm
,,,,,,
Charles Bell Lecture Series: 19th Century: The
Loaded Deam: Romantic, Realist, Symbolist 8pm
Junior Common Room
�St John's.C0Ue~e
Santa Fe, NM 87501-4599
Address Correction Requested
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
US Postage
PAID
PennitNo231
SaniaFe, NM
�
Text
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4 pages
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, November 1989 - December 1989
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, November 1989 - December 1989.
Publisher
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St. John's College
Coverage
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Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1989-11
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
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text
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1989_11
Calendar
-
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ff5400898e01eac20200fd4b95d93d4a
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Text
St. John's College
Community Events
Calendar
September 1990
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca • Santa Fe, New Mexico 98501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
SEMINAR LECTURE SERIES
St. John's College Seminar Lecture Series
are free of admission and the public is welcome.
Most of the series are held in the Great Hall of
Peterson Student Center and begin at 8 p.m. Do call
either the switchboard or the conference center at 289
to confirm time, location, topic and speaker.
September 14th
William Darkey-"Memoranda"
September 21
Cary Stickney-"The Death of Don Quixote"
September 28
Benjamin Bart-"Stendahl's The Red and the Black"
Odober3
Joan Almon, Santa Fe Waldorf School
Beginning in October: From Comrade to Citiz.en
The Ongoing Revolution in Eastern Europe
Times and locations to be announced
Charles Bell will be abroad September through October, but
will resume his Symbolic History through Sight and Sound in
November. CheckNovember's calendarforupoomingthemes.
�ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
TWENTY-SIXTH ANNUAL
CONCERT SERIES
St. John's College Concert Series are free of admission and are
held in the Great Hall of Peterson Student Center.
Sunday, September 9 at 3:00p.m.
Sergei Babayan, pianist
Works by Bach, Messiaen. Schu~ Otopin, and Ravel.
Mr. Babayan is the F'll'St Prize Winner of the 1989
Robert Casadesus International Piano Competition.
Friday, October 5 at 8:00p.m.
Allyn Miner, sitar, and Phillip Hollenbech, tabla
Classical Indian Music.
Friday, October 19 at 8:00p.m.
Maya Hoffman, piano
Works by Schubert, Partos, Scriabin, and Otopin
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE
St. John's College Student Activities Office will continue its
drawing and pottery classes in mid-September. Call 982-3691 ext.
213forfurtherinformationondates,times,feesandotherupcoming
classes open to the general public.
ART GALLERY
St. John's College Art Gallery is open Friday through Sunday
from l:OOp.m. to 5:00p.m. Upon request, a staff member will open
the gallery at other times. The Art Gallery is located upstairs in
Peterson Student Center over the Student Dining Hall.
September
NICHOLAS TROFIMUK, photography
Opening reception September 9th from 3 to 5p.m.
The show runs through September 30th
October
JAMES HAMILTON, sculpture
Opening reception October 7th &om 3 to 5 p.m.
The show runs through October 31st
�ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
FILM SOCIETY
St. John's College Film Society premieres the 1990-1991 lellllOn with
AMntie Minne and The Quid Man. A brochure of the eeuon's selections is
available to the public. The films are !fhown in the Great Hall of Peterson
Student Center. Admission is $3.00 per feature or $4.00 for both. Refreshments are available including freshly ground, freshly brewed Ohori's
coffee, popcorn with real butter, cookies, natural sodas and herbal teas. The
Ftlm Society is an autonomous part of the college community run entirely
by students.
Septemberl Opening Night-Nadine's Faooritesl
7:00p.m. nm QUIET MAN
John Wayne in Ireland
9:30p.m. AUNTIE MAME
A cheery reminisctna of the DtprtSSion
September 7
7:00p.m.
9:30p.m.
FREE! Sponsored by the Dean-Japanese Zmobra?
FLOATING WEEDS
TOKYO STORY
Septanber 8
7:00p.m.
nm ENTERTAINER
Tribute to Olivier
With Albert Finney and Alan Bates
9:15p.m.
THAT HAMILTON WOMAN
With Vivien Leigh as Emma Hamilton
v
September 15 Stress and Suspense
7:00p.m. WAGES OF FEAR (La Salalre de la Peur)
YvtS Montand strmulttl in South America with nitro
9:30p.m.
DAS BOOT (The Boat)
WWII German suspmu
September 22 Gmit Hollywood Musiatls
7:00p.m. SINGING IN nm RAIN
Gene Kelly, Cyd Charisse, Donald O'COnnor, Debbie Reynolds
9:15p.m. WFST SIDE S'IORY
Stephen Sondheim's lyrics, Leonard Bernstein's sam,
Jerome Robbin's choreography--winnerof10 Aaldmry Awards
September 29 The Inimitable Orson Welles
7:00p.m. MR. ARI<ADIN
Orson as sleuth
9:15p.m.
nm TRIAL
Existential Welles
Coming in October: Double-Barreled Duke, Romance from Britain
and Halloween Horror Triple Feature!
�St. John's Colleg~
U.S.~
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599
~Prgfl
BUkRU
PAID
~~~1
SarUFe,t&t
Mr. James Benefiel
campus mail
St. John's College
Santa Fe, NM 87501
�
Text
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Original Format
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paper
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Number of pages in the original item.
4 pages
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, September 1990
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, September 1990.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1990-09
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1990-09
Calendar
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/513850f8bd18e1df0da2d88c983ac705.pdf
0cd1c1f9c2e41571328cca9e75a2d6a9
PDF Text
Text
St. John's
College
Community Events
Calendar
November 1990
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca • Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
CONCERT SERIES
TWENTY-SIXTH SEASON
Admission is free
Friday, November 9
8:00 p.m.
Great Hall
Peter Pesic, piano
Beethoven Sona ta Cycle I
Opp. 79, 49/1, 14/2, 31/3,
53 ("Waldstein"), And an te, Wo 57
SYMBOLIC HISTORY
THROUGH SIGHT AND SOUND
Charles Bell
Tuesday Evenings
8:00 p.m.
Junior Common Room
November 20
Nature: The Perspective Field
A Heraclitea11 Celebration
November 27
Cycles:
Patterns of History, Early Civilizations;
Where Are We Now?
December 4
Greece: The Tragic Myth and Deed:
Homer to Plato, Fruit of the Fall
�Community Events Calendar------ ST. JOHN'~
LECTURES
Admission is free.
Great Hall
Friday Evening Lectures are presented by the Dean as part of the
College program.
Friday, November 2
8p.m.,
John Verdi, Tutor, St. John's College, Annapolis
"Conversations and Arguments"
Friday, November 16
Ed Sparrow, Tutor, St. John's College, Annapolis
"Erasing and Redrawing the Number Line:
An Exercise in Rationality"
8p.m.
Friday, November 30
8 p.m.
Robert Sacks, Tutor, St. John's College, Santa Fe
"Leo Strauss's Readings of the Bible and Its Implications"
The Santa Fe Institute sponsors this lecture. For more information,
please call 989-8800.
Wednesday, November 28
8 p.m.
James Pelkey, Investor and Venture Capitalist
"Entrepreneurs, Venture Capital and
Technological Innovation: The Emergence of New Industry"
Presented as part of From Comrade ... to Citizen, a program of
lectures, seminars and films addressing recent events in Eastern
Europe, through a grant from the New Mexico Endowment for the
Humanities.
Wednesday, November 14
Richard Schifter, Assistant Secretary of State for
Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs
"The Fall of Leninism"
8 p.m.
Friday, December 7
Adam Ulam, Director of the Russian Research Center
at Harvard University
"Why the Empire Fell"
8 p.m.
�COLLEGE - - - - - - - - - - - N o v e m b e r 1990
FILM SOCIETY
Films are shown in the Great Hall of Peterson Student Center. Admission is $3.00 per feature or $4.00 for both. Refreshments are available,
including freshly-ground, freshly-brewed Ohori' s coffee, popcorn with real
butter, cookies, natural sodas and herbal teas. The Film Society is an
independent organization run entirely by students. Call the College
switchboard to receive a current catalog.
Saturday, November 3
7:00 p.m. The Scarlet Empress
Baroque Mystery and Mayhem
The inimitable Marlene Dietrich as Catherine the Great
9:15 p.m. The Draughtsman's Contract
An Evening with Hitchcock
Saturday, November 10
7:00 p.m. The Lady Vanishes
9:15 p.m. To Catch a Thief
Kelly and Grant classic
Saturday, November 17
7:00 p.m. Stella Dallas
9:15 p.m. The Little Foxes
Great Ladies of the Screen
ART GALLERY
Gallery hours are Friday through Sunday, 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., and
by appointment with Ginger Roherty at 982-3691 ext. 211. The Art
Gallery is located on the second floor of Peterson Student Center.
November 5-29
Marietta Leis, paintings
Opening reception Friday, November 9th, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
December 9-15 and January 15-31
Kathleen Harms, watercolors and sculpture
Opening reception Sunday, December 9th, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.
POETRY READING
Sunday, November 18
3:00 p.m.
Junior Common Room
Alyce Eden will read and discuss her work.
�St. John's
Colleg~
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599
THE
FAITH
AND
JOHN
MEEM
Bulk Rate
U.S. Postage
PAID
Non-Profit
Organization
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
LIBRARY
The Board ofVisirors and Gcwemors and Presideni John Agresw
of Sc. John's College cordcally en we 1he people of Sania Fe
ro rhe ded1cauon of The Fa11h and John Meem Lcbrary
Saiurday, Nl>l'ember 10, /990 at two o'clock en
the afternoon a1 Si. John's College.
Recep11on will follow en the library .
//WComm11Crut Blanca • Sanw Ft· NL>u Me.\1cu • 982-369/
Published nine times each year by the Public Relations Office.
Please call 982-3691 ext. 288 to be placed on the mailing list.
�
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paper
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4 pages
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, November 1990
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, November 1990.
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St. John's College
Coverage
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Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1990-11
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
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text
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pdf
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English
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SF_Community_Calendar_1990-11
Calendar
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bf1b795a221783c09f7d6fcb3258e7f0
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Text
St. John's
College
Community Events
Calendar
July-August 1991
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca • Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
SUMMER SEMINARS
June 30-July 20
Week-long seminar programs
for adults on classic texts of the Western tradition.
Participants may choose from works by
Homer, Nietzsche, Dante, Shakespeare, Plato and Heidegger,
and may register for one, two or three weeks.
For reservations and information,
call Barbara Lewis at (505) 982-3691 ext. 288.
SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK
in Residence at St. John's College
presents
TWELFTH NIGHT
a comedy
Friday, Saturday,
and Sunday Evenings
July 12, 13, 14
July 19, 20, 21
July 26, 27, 28
Meem Library Courtyard
August 2, 3, 4
August 9, 10, 11
August 16, 17, 18
Performances begin at 7 p.m.
Music and refreshments at 6 p.m.
Doors open at 5 p.m.
Admission is free. Tickets 986-8222.
�Community Events Calendar
ST. JOHN'S
SYMBOLIC HISTORY
Through Sight and Sound
Charles Bell
Admission is free
Junior Common Room
8p.m.
Tuesday, July 2
Bach, Fort of Post-Baroque:
German extension of sacred pomp
Wednesday, July 10
Tuesday, July 16
18th Century: Voltaire's Smile:
Shadow-haunted game of reason.
Mozart: Age of Critique and Imperative:
Rococo to Revolution.
Wednesday, July 24
The Larger Declaration:
America against the ferment of Europe.
Tuesday, July 30
Blake: Fire - fugue of Delight:
The Wineos ... War on earth.
Tuesday, August 6
Faust: Creative War of Spirit:
Peak of Goethe, Beethoven, Hegel.
LECTURE
Admission is free
Great Hall
8p.m.
In cooperation with the Santa Fe Institute:
Wednesday, July 24
Edward Knapp
President-elect, Santa Fe Institute
Santa Fe Institute as a model for the fuJure of science.
�July-August 1991
OLLEGE
ART GALLERY
JULY
Summer Odyssey:
Paintings by
Dorothy Harroun and Renata Lewis
Opening reception Friday, July 12, 5:00 to 7:00 p.rn.
AUGUST
Beth Kiyosaki-Snyder
paintings and drawings
William Murray
paintings
Opening reception
Friday, August 9
5:00 to 7:00 p.m.
Gallery hours are Friday 4:30-8 p.m.,
Saturday 3-7 p.rn., Sunday 1-5 p.rn.,
and by appointment with Ginger Roherty at 982-3691 ext. 211.
�-St. John's College1160 Camino Cruz Blanca
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-4599
Bulk Rate
U.S. Postage
PAID
Non-Profit
Organization
Permit No. 231
Santa Fe, NM
Address Correction
Requested
Published nine times each year by the Public Relations Office. Please call 982-3691 ext. 288 to be placed on the mailing list.
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
4 pages
Dublin Core
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, June 1991 - July 1991
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, June 1991 - July 1991.
Publisher
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St. John's College
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Santa Fe, NM
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1991-06
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1991-06
Calendar
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https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/edede7e2d23f29562f979229fa967fda.pdf
ff5400898e01eac20200fd4b95d93d4a
PDF Text
Text
St. John's College
Community Events
Calendar
September 1990
1160 Camino Cruz Blanca • Santa Fe, New Mexico 98501-4599 • (505) 982-3691
SEMINAR LECTURE SERIES
St. John's College Seminar Lecture Series
are free of admission and the public is welcome.
Most of the series are held in the Great Hall of
Peterson Student Center and begin at 8 p.m. Do call
either the switchboard or the conference center at 289
to confirm time, location, topic and speaker.
September 14th
William Darkey-"Memoranda"
September 21
Cary Stickney-"The Death of Don Quixote"
September 28
Benjamin Bart-"Stendahl's The Red and the Black"
Odober3
Joan Almon, Santa Fe Waldorf School
Beginning in October: From Comrade to Citiz.en
The Ongoing Revolution in Eastern Europe
Times and locations to be announced
Charles Bell will be abroad September through October, but
will resume his Symbolic History through Sight and Sound in
November. CheckNovember's calendarforupoomingthemes.
�ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
TWENTY-SIXTH ANNUAL
CONCERT SERIES
St. John's College Concert Series are free of admission and are
held in the Great Hall of Peterson Student Center.
Sunday, September 9 at 3:00p.m.
Sergei Babayan, pianist
Works by Bach, Messiaen. Schu~ Otopin, and Ravel.
Mr. Babayan is the F'll'St Prize Winner of the 1989
Robert Casadesus International Piano Competition.
Friday, October 5 at 8:00p.m.
Allyn Miner, sitar, and Phillip Hollenbech, tabla
Classical Indian Music.
Friday, October 19 at 8:00p.m.
Maya Hoffman, piano
Works by Schubert, Partos, Scriabin, and Otopin
STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE
St. John's College Student Activities Office will continue its
drawing and pottery classes in mid-September. Call 982-3691 ext.
213forfurtherinformationondates,times,feesandotherupcoming
classes open to the general public.
ART GALLERY
St. John's College Art Gallery is open Friday through Sunday
from l:OOp.m. to 5:00p.m. Upon request, a staff member will open
the gallery at other times. The Art Gallery is located upstairs in
Peterson Student Center over the Student Dining Hall.
September
NICHOLAS TROFIMUK, photography
Opening reception September 9th from 3 to 5p.m.
The show runs through September 30th
October
JAMES HAMILTON, sculpture
Opening reception October 7th &om 3 to 5 p.m.
The show runs through October 31st
�ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
FILM SOCIETY
St. John's College Film Society premieres the 1990-1991 lellllOn with
AMntie Minne and The Quid Man. A brochure of the eeuon's selections is
available to the public. The films are !fhown in the Great Hall of Peterson
Student Center. Admission is $3.00 per feature or $4.00 for both. Refreshments are available including freshly ground, freshly brewed Ohori's
coffee, popcorn with real butter, cookies, natural sodas and herbal teas. The
Ftlm Society is an autonomous part of the college community run entirely
by students.
Septemberl Opening Night-Nadine's Faooritesl
7:00p.m. nm QUIET MAN
John Wayne in Ireland
9:30p.m. AUNTIE MAME
A cheery reminisctna of the DtprtSSion
September 7
7:00p.m.
9:30p.m.
FREE! Sponsored by the Dean-Japanese Zmobra?
FLOATING WEEDS
TOKYO STORY
Septanber 8
7:00p.m.
nm ENTERTAINER
Tribute to Olivier
With Albert Finney and Alan Bates
9:15p.m.
THAT HAMILTON WOMAN
With Vivien Leigh as Emma Hamilton
v
September 15 Stress and Suspense
7:00p.m. WAGES OF FEAR (La Salalre de la Peur)
YvtS Montand strmulttl in South America with nitro
9:30p.m.
DAS BOOT (The Boat)
WWII German suspmu
September 22 Gmit Hollywood Musiatls
7:00p.m. SINGING IN nm RAIN
Gene Kelly, Cyd Charisse, Donald O'COnnor, Debbie Reynolds
9:15p.m. WFST SIDE S'IORY
Stephen Sondheim's lyrics, Leonard Bernstein's sam,
Jerome Robbin's choreography--winnerof10 Aaldmry Awards
September 29 The Inimitable Orson Welles
7:00p.m. MR. ARI<ADIN
Orson as sleuth
9:15p.m.
nm TRIAL
Existential Welles
Coming in October: Double-Barreled Duke, Romance from Britain
and Halloween Horror Triple Feature!
�St. John's Colleg~
U.S.~
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO 87501-4599
~Prgfl
BUkRU
PAID
~~~1
SarUFe,t&t
Mr. James Benefiel
campus mail
St. John's College
Santa Fe, NM 87501
�
Text
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paper
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5 pages
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Title
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Santa Fe Community Calendar, October 1991
Description
An account of the resource
Event calendar for the Santa Fe campus community, October 1991.
Publisher
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St. John's College
Coverage
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Santa Fe, NM
Date
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1991-10
Rights
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St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
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text
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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SF_Community_Calendar_1991-10
Calendar
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