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Plans for the future Memorial Garden sit in the corner of Rogal Chapel. Students and Faculty gathered in the Chapel Thursday, January 22nd for the dedication of the garden.
Despite a small attendance, Spirit Week kicked off on Monday January 28,2008 in Rogal Chapel. The spirituality forum, lead by Pastor Sam Jampetro (middle), was attended by four local pastors and three students.
This site was originally designed by the company's former Web Architect. I came in and took over the project and implemented this in the Drupal CMS and integrated about fifty offices into this single site.
Key Features
Limited to 2,500 copies
Features gold gilt page edges and enclosed in a black slip case
Written by Gav Thorpe
Key Features
Limited to 2,500 copies
Features gold gilt page edges and enclosed in a black slip case
Written by Gav Thorpe
On Monday February Fourth, the ESP Workshop took place in the Rogal Chapel. The ESP workshop is to help freshman cope with their new college life. They get to talk to other students and faculty about problems and other things on their mind. Their topic of the day was how to make optimistic decisions
Shakespeare in Love
Based on the Screenplay by Marc Norman & Tom Stoppard, adapted for the stage by Lee Hall
Directed by Jodi Rilot and Barney Hart-Dyke
MainStage, Putney Arts Theatre: 12-16 November, 7.45pm
16 November, 3pm
Young Will Shakespeare has writer's block... the deadline for his new play is fast approaching but he's in desperate need of inspiration. That is, until he finds his muse – the courtly Viola de Lesseps. This beautiful young woman is Will’s greatest admirer and will stop at nothing (including breaking the law) to appear in his next play, disguising herself as boy-player Thomas Kemp. Against a bustling background of mistaken identity, ruthless scheming and backstage theatrics, Will’s love for Viola quickly blossoms and inspires him to write his greatest masterpiece.
The story is, at heart, a romantic comedy but it is also about the glorious world of show-business - nothing much changes in theatre and that London's Bankside in 1593 was much like commercial theatre today. Money men assert their power, scripts get rewritten, egos have to be massaged, rivalries develop and last-minute crises intervene. Yet, by the magic that is theatre - somehow Shakespeare manages to turn the distinctly unpromising Romeo and Ethel the Pirate’s Daughter into the masterpiece that is Romeo and Juliet.