What kind of entertainment for a Masquerade party?
For my 16th birthday party I want to have a Masquerade party.I'm going to have a DJ and everything but I really want to know what kind of music and entertainment I should have. Should I start the night our with 'Phantom of the Opera' like music and then put on some popular music or should I just start it off with popular music and then add some slow 'Phantom of the Opera' like music for slow songs? Also,for entertainment purposes,I want to have a palm/tarot card reader but what else could I have for entertainment?
Best answer:
Answer by Little Star This is an awesome idea. Beads,Benjoits (I don't know how to spell it, those fried donut treats) Shrimp, crawfish, brass band songs.
from, Between, Work, Inc., Generations, Boomers, friction, LinkstersManaging Generations, Inc.: From Boomers to Linksters--Managing the Friction Between Generations at Work
ISBN13: 9780814415733
Condition: New
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Members of each generation share special signposts: collective experiences that influence our expectations, actions, and mind-sets. They also mold our ideas about company loyalty, work ethic, and the definition of a job well done. And now that five different generations are working together simultaneously from Traditionals to Generation Y and beyond it's even more important to understand where every one's coming from. Written by two generational experts who happen to be father and daughter, "Generations, Inc." offers the perspectives of people of different eras, eliciting practical insights on wrestling with generational issues in the workplace. The book provides Baby Boomers and Linksters alike with practical techniques. "Generations, Inc." provides realistic strategies for all those managers, executives, and employees seeking to coexist, flourish, and thrive together! at the same time.
Entertaining, Memoirs, from, Volume, Country, Present, French, Being, Celebrated, Maid, fortunate, Chevalier, L.V., Marchioness, Mouhy. The fortunate country maid. Being the entertaining memoirs of the present celebrated Marchioness of L.V. ... From the French of the Chevalier de Mouhy. Volume 2 of 2
The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own: digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries, undergraduate students, and independent scholars. Western literary study flows out of eighteenth-century works by Alexander Pope, Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, Frances Burney, Denis Diderot, Johann Gottfried Herder, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and others. Experience the birth of the modern novel, or compare the development of language using dictionaries and grammar discourses. ++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition identification: ++++ British Library
T107664
Published in parts.
London : printed for and sold by F. Needham, 1740. 2v. ; 12°
Architecture, Contemporary, Reviews, long, Future, Dilemmas, distant, loneliness The Loneliness of a Long Distant Future: Dilemmas of Contemporary Architecture
This book is about the passing of global events and conflicts in some geographical spaces seen through the window of contemporary architecture. It is about the obliteration of existing contexts [in Kosovo, Jerusalem, Samarkand, Tibet] and the formation of new architectural identities in the 21 first century.
NYC - Metropolitan Museum of Art - Bronze head of a sacred bull
Image by wallyg
Bronze head of a sacred bull Roman, ca. 1st century A.D. From Octodurus (modern Martigny, Switzerland)
This bull's head belongs to a group of monumental bronze statues found in 1883 in the forum basilica of the Roman city founded by the emperor Claudius. The three statues had been cut up for recasting as scrap. The other fragments comrise parts of a draped figure, possibly an emperor, the right leg and left arm of a naked figure, possibly Mercury, and the right foreleg of the bull.
The bull is a sacred animal with three horns--the one at the front is now missing. Many votive statuettes of three-horned bulls have been found in central and eastern Gaul. This head--the finest Roman bronze found in switzerland--must have bene an impressive sight in a sanctuary dedicated to a romanized form of Gallic worship.
Lent by Musee gall-romain d'Octodure, Fondation Pierre Gianadda Martigny (inv. MCA 0092) (L.2007.15)
** The April 20, 2007 unveiling of the 30,000 square foot Greek and Roman Galleries concluded a 15-year project and returned thousands of works from the Museums permanent collection to public view. Over 5,300 objects, created between about 900 B.C. and the early fourth century A.D., are displayed, tracing the parallel stories of the evolution of Greek art in the Hellenistic period and the arts of southern Italy and Etruria and culminating in the rich and varied world of the Roman Empire from from the Late Republican period and the Golden Age of Augustuss Principate to the conversion of Constantine the Great in A.D. 312. The centerpiece of the new installation is the Leon Levy and Shelby White Court, a monumental, peristyle cour court with a soaring two-story atrium that links the various galleries and themes.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art's permanent collection contains more than two million works of art from around the world. It opened its doors on February 20, 1872, housed in a building located at 681 Fifth Avenue in New York City. Under their guidance of John Taylor Johnston and George Palmer Putnam, the Met's holdings, initially consisting of a Roman stone sarcophagus and 174 mostly European paintings, quickly outgrew the available space. In 1873, occasioned by the Met's purchase of the Cesnola Collection of Cypriot antiquities, the museum decamped from Fifth Avenue and took up residence at the Douglas Mansion on West 14th Street. However, these new accommodations were temporary; after negotiations with the city of New York, the Met acquired land on the east side of Central Park, where it built its permanent home, a red-brick Gothic Revival stone "mausoleum" designed by American architects Calvert Vaux and Jacob Wrey Mold. As of 2006, the Met measures almost a quarter mile long and occupies more than two million square feet, more than 20 times the size of the original 1880 building.
In 2007, the Metropolitan Museum of Art was ranked #17 on the AIA 150 America's Favorite Architecture list.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1967. The interior was designated in 1977.
The Genet Translations: Poetry and Posthumous Plays
The most accurate and sophisticated study of Jean Genet's poetry to date, with a never-before-translated poem. This book also contains the first American translations of the plays Splendid's Hotel and The Pope (Elle).