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College news, January 14, 1966
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1966-01-14
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 52, No. 11
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol52-no11
.
COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
January 14, 1965
The Oberlin College Wind Ensemble.
Oberlin Wind Ensemble Plans
To Perform Here in February
The Oberlin Wind Ensemble will
give a concert in Goodhart Hall
February 3,- 8:30 p.m. .They will
also hold a workshop for. students
and Friends of Music at 4:10
p.m, in the Music Room. Kenneth
Moore is director of the 30 mem-
ber student group.
The ensemble of woodwind,
krass, and percussion players will
present a program of music com-
posed for wind ~ instruments.
Pianist John Perry: will be the
featured soloist. Both he and Mr.
Moore are faculty members at the
Oberlin College Conservatory of
Music.
The program will include Rieg-
ger’s Dance Rhythms, Opus 58a;
Mozart’s Serenade in C Minor, K.
387; Hindemith’s. Concert Music
for Piano, and Two Harps; Stravin-
sky’s Octour pour Instruments a
vent; and Ernst Krenek’s Symphony
for Wind Instruments, Opus 34.
By employing various combina-
tions of instruments, the Oberlin
larship at Mozarteum in Salzburg,
Austria. Before joining Oberlin’s
faculty last year Mr. Perry taught
for four years at the University
of Kansas.
The Wind Ensemble will visit
five other colleges in Pennsyl-
vania and one in New York as
- part of their annual concert tour.
Entertainment in Philly
Over Exams, Intersession
ensemble is able to perform the .
major works of wind literature
from the serenades and diverti-
menti of classical composers to
large wind compositions by con-
temporary composers.
Kenneth Moore, a member of.
the Oberlin Faculty for 10 years,
also directs the college band and
organized the Wind Ensemble in
1958. He received his master of
science degree tn music from
the Juilliard School of Music. Pro-
fessionally he has been associated
with the Berkshire Music Center
at Tanglewood, the New Orleans
Philharmonic Orchestra, and the
Cleveland Symphony Orchestra.
In 1959 John Perry received top
prize in the Busoni Competition
at Bolzano, Italy and in the Vio-
tti Competition in Vercelli. In
1957-58 he held a Fulbright scho-
Mrs. Broughton
Dean at Duke
Mrse Annie Leigh Brough-
ton, former Dean of Fresh-
men and Director of
Admissions at Bryn Mawr
College, has recently been
appointed to the staff of the
Duke University Women’s
College. ‘As of February 1,
she will become the Acting
Assistant Dean of Instruce
tion in the Women’s College.
Mrse Broughton received
her A.B. from Bryn Mawr in
1930 and an MeA. in 1936.
Before assuming her posi-
tion in the administration
at Bryn Mawr, she had in-
structed in Latin for several
years.
Her husband, T. Robert S.
Broughton, has been named
Paddison Professor of Clas-
sics at the University of
— Carolina at Chapel
tile
|
For those students whowill be in
the Philadelphia area over the
exam. pertod ‘and who don’t know the
city well, the following is a list
of entertaining suggestions to help
reduce the post-exam letdown,
THE FLYING DUTCHMAN by
Wagner is being produced by the
Philadelphia Lyric Opera Company
at the Academy of Music January
18, at 8. Call PE-5-7572 for tic-
kets. Eugene Ormandy is conduct-
ing the Philadelphia Orchestra
in Haydn’s Symphony 102 and Mah-
ler’s ‘Das Lied von der Erde,
with Richard Lewis and Lili Choot-
kasian as’ soloists, January 28
and 29. :
ANTIGONE by Anouilh is being
put on by the Bryn Mawr Reper-
tory Theatre at the Annenberg
School of Communications at the
U of P, 3620 Walnut Street, Jan-
uary 22, 23, 28, and 29.
THE CRITIC, arestorationfarce
by the author of THE SCHOOL
FOR SCANDAL, is at 334 South
St. The production is presénted
by the Theatre of the Living Arts.
Call WA-2-6010 for tickets.
The Society Hill Playhouse-East
is producing LITTLE MARY SUN-
SHINE by Rick Besoyan, which ran
off-Broadway for almost as long
as THREE PENNY OPERA, It
runs until February 5, Wed-Sat.
evenings at 507 S. 8th at 8:30,
Jobs in English
(Continued from page 1)
tial teacher for Shipley, Mrs. Epes
said that she will hire an English
major with a B.A. degree if she
shows sufficient interest in her
field to plan advanced studies.
A master’s degree is, however,
an asset and eventually anecessity
for anyone who plans a career of
teaching on the secondary school
‘level. Mrs. Epes finds graduate
work in the teacher’s own field
more valuable than a degree in
education, but requirements for
public school systems vary.
Valentines — Come Early {
for the Best Selection!
Richard Stockton
851 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr
Gifts - Social Stationery e Cards
ae sscoseereanas mar eames: = Ay
“Juliet of the Spirits’ Skirts Edge
Ot Reality, Fantasy Symbolically
by Fern Hunt, 69
Federico Fellini’s *‘Juliet of the
' Spirits’’ examines the real world
through the eyes of the wife of'a
_ successful but unfaithful Italian
businessman..
The viewer. is_seated. onthe
boundary line between Juliet’s
mind and the outside world so that
he sees wha‘ happens in both her
mind and in the real world
separately and sometimes simul-
taneously. The most significant
events, however, occur in Juliet’s
mind. S
The film therefore turns the
mind and the real world inside-
out so that the world of the mind
is clearly exposed while reality
is not at all clear.
Juliet’s mind is inhabited by
spirits, who are the shades of
Juliet’s past and present acquaint-
ances. In her = mind, these
acquaintances become symbols or
personifications of religion, sex,
psychiatry, and various related
Freudian symbols. The world of:
the spirits becomes, in effect, the
THE DEPUTY opens January
17 at the New Locust Theatre for
‘two weeks, THEATRE MAGAZINE
calls it an ‘‘extra-ordinary emo-
tional experience.’’
David Merrick’s production of
the new play PHILADELPHIA,
HERE I COME opens January 17
and runs until the 29th at the Wal-
nut Theatre on 9th and Walnut.
Doc Watson is at the 2nd Fret
until January 27.
The Footlighters of Wayne are
putting on CYRANO DE BERG-
ERAC by Edmund Rostand at the
Saturday _Club_in Wayne’ Wed.,
Thurs., Fri., and Saturday nights,
Jariuary 26 through the 29 at
8:30. :
MARY, MARY by Jean Kerr
is at the Main Line Playhouse
at 106 Ardmore Avenue, in Ard-
more, January 28 and 29. Students
are admitted for $1.00.
The Philadelphia Coffee Con-
certs Committee presents cham-
bermusic. by Die Kammermusiker
from Switzerland.
_ They will be doing pieces from
Bach, Mozart, Honegger, and Abi-
castro. The date is January 30
in the Grand Ballroom at the
Hotel Philadelphia,
The Philadelphia Grand Opera
Company is putting on Mascagni’s
CAVILLERIA RUSTICANA and
Leoncaullo’s PAGLIACCI J
uary 20. The production wil
at the Academy of Music.
Continuing through January 31
at the Philadelphia Museum of
Art is a showing of ‘‘Man and the
Horse’’: a Marino Marini theme.
The American Museum of Photo-
graphy, first of its kind, is open
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and
Friday at 388 S. 15th, It is free.
Swarthmore College is having
a showing of Arnold Schoenberg
paintings through January 28. —
The Philadelphia 76er’s have
home games in Convention Hall
at 4 p.m. on January 18, 21, 28,
and 30.
“MADS~*|
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DISCQUNT RECORDS F
9W. Lancaster Ave. ;
Ardmore |
Mi 2-0764
Largest Selection Folk Music
“Pop - Classics - Jozz
MAGASIN DE LINGE
LAwrence 5-5802
825 Lencoster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Po.
School,
symbolic representation of the real
world as Juliet sees it.
Juliet’s problem symbolically
is a conflict between two spirits.
One, her former headmaster at
was in reality a stern,
authoritarian figure. Now, as a
spirit, he represents religion. The
other spirit is her grandfather
who ran away with a circus bare-
back rider when Juliet was a
child. He perhaps represents free-
dom and irresponsibility.
Both spirits are fighting over
Juliet, who is represented among
the spirits by aninnocent, ignorant
martyr bound to a burning wooden
raft. The grandfather wants to set
her free but the headmaster does
not.
Juliet is constantly devoting her -
self to others, yet there is a con-
flict between self-sacrifice and
religious orthodoxy on “the one
hand and freedom on the other.
Juliet’s devotion to her family
makes her blind to the fact that
they do not love her. In fact,
Juliet is not even conscious of
the conflict until she discovers
her husband’s infidelity. Her com-
fortable world now crumbling, Ju-
liet tries to protect herself by
seeking righteous revenge, but she
is not vengeful by nature and fails;
then she considers adultery and
sex, but her ethics run contrary
to debauchery. Finally, she tries
psychiatry but it is too trivial and
superficial.
When Juliet’s husband finally
leaves her, it is clear that the
remedies of the world -- religion,
psychiatry or sex -- are useless.
Juliet resolves the conflict by
freeing the spiritual child bound
over the flames, thereby freeing
herself from blind and ignorant de-
votion to her family. She sees
the truth about them, i.e. that
they are cold and false. She there-
fore discovers the truth about the
real world. Ironically, Juliet does
not see the truth until she re-
moves herself from the world
and becomes involved in the world
of the spirits (a place which by the
real world’s standards does not
exist)!
Fellini also uses colors and
clothes as symbols. For example,
he employs reds and whites and
other primary colors to denote
_ cheapness or purity. In effect, he
tries to .integrate every part of
the film to his various themes and -
symbols. The symbolism is rigid
so that there is a fair amount of
preaching.
Nevertheless, the world of *‘Ju-
liet of the Spirits’? is certainly
worth visiting.
Hford Presents Choice Films
To Celebrate Examination Time
Walt Reuben has issued the Hav-
erford film schedule for the exam
period. Programs will all begin at
8 in Stokes Auditorium unless
otherwise noted. Bryn Mawr stu-
dents are encouraged tc drop ap-
propriate hints to their friends at
Haverford that these movies are a
perfect time to rest up after a
hard day’s studying.
DISHONORED, directed by Josef
von Sternberg with Marlene Diet-
rich, will be shown January 17.
With it is a short, NIGHT ON
BEAR MOUNTAIN,
THE LOWER DEPTHS, present -
ed on January 18,directed by Re-
noir (1936), is an adaption of Gor-
_ky’s play. EYEWASH and SHORT
CIRCUIT are the shorts.
The British film (1953) MAN
BETWEEN with James Mason in
a Graham Greene.story is :to be
January 19. The short is THE
HOLE,
James Cagney stars on January
20 in a gangster movie, WHITE
HEAT, made in 1949. LOST AND
FOUND and HIS MARRIAGE VOW
are the shorts.
A color and cinemascope movie
to be shown in Roberts is RIDE
THE HIGH COUNTRY with Ran-
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Sweaters
Suede Clothing
Handbags
Friday, Jan. 21 —Saturday, Feb. 5
868 LANCASTER AVE.
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La)
dolf Scott, directed by Peckinpah.
According to Reuben, this is a
**beautiful western.’’ The shorts
are THE ASTRONAUTS and
SMOKE, and will, be shown Jan-
uary 21.
The January 22 feature is the
Camp-pop Marathon, featuring
Flash Gordon in ROCKET SHIP.
There will also be four Laurel
and Hardy films and chapters 1,
2, and 3 of THE PHANTOM EM-
PIRE with the singing cowboy,
Gene Autry. This will be in Rob-
erts, at 7:30.
CITY STREETS, directed by
Mamoulin (1931), stars Gary
Cooper in a wild gangster film.
The shorts are HURRAH FOR
SOLDIERS and THE GYMNASTS,
This will be shown January 24.
A Rossellini film, FLOWERS
OF ST, FRANCIS, made in 1950
has a script by Fellini, and will
. be shown January 25. JERRY and
NIGHTSPRING, DAYSTAR are the
shorts.
~ Even the * 4¢ most inaccessible
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when you can offer a college
education plus practical
secretarial skills.
In the upper echelons you may
find that being an executive
assistant is your forte—or you may
work up to becoming an executive
yourself. Others have done it.
Gibbs graduates have done it—
women who have the
key combination of college and
training in office skills
and business procedures.
Gibbs offers a Special Course
for College Women—
8% months. Write College Dean
for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK.
KATHARINE
GIBBS”.
SECRETARIAL
21 Marlborough St., BOSTON, MASS. 02116
200 Park Ave., NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017
33 Plymouth St., MONTCLAIR, N. J. 07042
77 S. Angell St., PROVIDENCE, R. 1. 02906
3