Calendar
May 2, 2024
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Come Play Bridge (On Campus)
This study group is for people who already know how to play bridge. Join us if you would like to meet other ICL members who play and want to have more opportunities to play the game. We welcome those who have recently learned the game as well as intermediate and advanced players. We will be playing for FUN, not cutthroat! Hopefully we can all learn from one another.
NOTE: This is an ongoing study group, but new participants are always welcome.
Coordinator: Andrea Zietlow
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The Complete Thin Man Collection (On Campus)
The Thin Man was a series of six movies which were produced between 1934 and 1947. The movies starred William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora Charles. The plot for these films centered around Nick and Nora's relationship as high society detectives. The films are full of laughs and mystery as Nick and Nora toast each other with champagne cocktails as they solve the latest "who done it"! The seventh class we will show two documentaries, one each on the lives of William Powell and Myrna Loy.
Coordinator: Bob Hartnett
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Variety: The Spice of Life: The Real Charlie Chaplin (On Campus)
Description: This contemporary take on cinema’s most iconic figure blends newly-unearthed audio recordings and dramatic reconstructions to trace Chaplain’s meteoric rise from the slums of Victorian London to the heights of Hollywood superstardom, before his scandalous fall from grace. The film sheds new light on the many sides of a groundbreaking, controversial and visionary artist. For decades he was the most famous man in the world – but who was "The Real Charlie Chaplain?"
Coordinators: Mike and Marilyn Glass
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Book Discussion: 'Thomas Jefferson Dreams of Sally Hemings'
The third president and his enslaved mistress had a decades-long relationship. Thomas Jefferson Dreams of Sally Hemings is historical fiction that imagines what that relationship might have been like. But it goes beyond other historical fiction in its creative take, shifting between history and fantasy, imagining Jefferson and Hemings in other time periods and places. As good fiction does, it makes us ask questions we had not thought to ask and presents possibilities we had not considered. This is a book discussion about Thomas Jefferson Dreams of Sally Hemings which will be held over two sessions and will work most beautifully if those attending have read the book. Session #1 will consider the first half of the book, and Session #2 will focus on how its various themes resolve. Discussion will be led by American historian Joyce Haworth.
Coordinator: Joyce Haworth