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%ht Cardnmra VOI.IMK XXXVII Z53I Woman's College of the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, N C . March 1-. 1957 Ni MI'.ER 17 Greensb'o Symphony Features Paul Berry In Second Concert Paul Berry Will be featured as I soloist with the Greensboro Sym- i phony Orchestra in its second con-cert of the 1956-57 season to be held in Aycock Auditorium, Sun-day, March 17 at 8:15 p. m. The orchestra entering its 18th year, will be under the baton of George Dickieson, a member of the faculty of the WC School of Music, This concert, to be televised by Station WUNC-TV. will open with the Overture to "Titus" by Mo-zart, to be followed by another Mozart work. "II mio Tesoro in Tanto" from Don Juan. With Mr. Berry as soloist, the program will continue with Gaet-ano Donizetti's "Una Purtiva La-grtma"" from L' Elisir D'Amore. The final and major work of the evening will be Cesar Franck's Symphony in D Minor. The next performance to be given by this organization will be on Saturday. June 1, at 8:30 p. m in Aycock. Festival Features Contemporary Arts With a strong emphasis on I Dr. Townsend said that he be-palnting and sculpture, the 1957[lleved the collaboration between Woman's College Arts Festival has (the State Art Museum and Wom- IRKAM LASSAW CRACK HARTIGAN SGA Election Candidates Hale, Frost, Speak At Mass Meeting And Jenkins Spears, Nauss Lead Festival At a meeting of candidates and present time, no one group should campaign managers held in Elliott exist in orwr to create a bloc and Hall March 5 by the Elections thereby control the voting. A Board, it was decided that no po- candidate for any one office should litical rally would be held this be directly responsible for con-rear, but that each opposed cand- ducting her respective campaign idate would speak at the Mass and must, therefore, assume com- | Meeting to be held in Aycock plete responsibility for all action March 19. taken by those pei-sons whom she Members of Hie Election Board ha.s appointed to manage her briefed the candidates and niana- campaign and who have express-gcrs on their duties, emphasizing ed a desire to give her their sup-the following points port, She should make it known 1 If you spend more than $3. '" ,n"sl" Persons that she must you will automatically be disqual- approve whatever publicity stunts ificii. they Intend t<> use in the Fresh- 7 N" <"and:,l.,te !,„■ an SGA man , ns will be hel i Wed- """'' ■sll""ul 1""1"'"'""" ■*» ""'■ nesdaj and Thursday, March 13- ■ m . for all cand- Informal-si hool clothes socks ■ 3. Official pub:. Mon-daj March 11, after 7:30 p. m Poster per candidate In El-linti Hall ground-floor lobby. 4. No publicity through the lo- < .ii mall In the ;> >-' ofl: sod.i shop grounds or in the li-brary. I • ■ •\!1 candid il the effect that they would 'run together" in OT-to control mi 8. If a Student, at any tlmi ■ he BOA t .mi;].!:, n I the standards are being violated, by any one person, it should be reported to the Elections B Chairman who m turn will with the President of I hi1 SGA in order to determine the validity of such assusatlona ami to : mined what action is I" be I 9. It should be understood that E be put on any mem- ROBERT FROST be Introd d formally to the stu- ber of the Elections Board or any. dents Candidates please be back one connected with it to relate : the outcome of an election, other arrangement D el than the announced wlnnei ,: Bt ause the parts i xtremely donger-nol used on tins campus al the oua to all concerned. (lass Of '59 Elects Show Co-Chairmen Leslie And Shipwash New Playwrights Members ol thi wphomon I i omposed of Ann IWore and is 1 Band. Orchestra, and the trump '. N'ani v Hale JEANNIE LESLIE w\ SHIPWASH ' i i writers for the festival will ncy Hale, David clay jen- Monroe spec .. M Nauai and Rol Nancy Bale, nov-elist h a s done editorial work for both Vogue and Pair, on Which she was leu s h e hi been a n rime Herator- ■ II published in the New Hei in- • rorks Include "Tl i I Farm " pi ' Events For Week March 12-19 March 14 i Lounge, 3:30 p. m. Prench Movie: "Norn "all. 3. 7:00 p. m. Movie: "La Mom 81 Mil hel' Library Hall, 3. 7:00 p. m. Katharine Anno Porter, Ball-room 800 p. m. 8:30 p m. Cone. \ k, |:15 p, m. '■'■ M "i p. m. Pei m. ins Phi) from Princeton, lie ha derbllt, Wisconsin and Princeton David Clay Jen- Jenkina Is a poet, shorl and professor. He ' Idled at the •! Ala-bama and nt the • wltjf ofDavid C Jenkln towa ii. al o -1 ii ii: ed for two 1 ■ ■•'. Wall ■ on a Pulbright study ol Welsh Literature I •""I in the New Yorki r Hi :s now professor t>l ol William : :t>. ,i by Murray ib- looks like n romantic pot ■ WC Music Teacher Composes Number For Arts Festival By FAY MOORE Elliott Weisgarber, teacher of theory, composition, and wood-wind instruments here at Woman's College, will have one of his own comimsitloas played at the Art.. Festival. "In Country Bleep," writ-ten especially for the 1957 Arts al. Is a nocturne on the poem by Oylon Tunis It Is to be performed by a chamber ensemble with Robert Mums singing tenor and Sara Holroyd conducting. Mr. Weisgarber is a native of Pittsfield, M is. and a graduate of Eastman School of Mi' "i ti.. Uhlvi i jlty of Ro-lei lie haa studied with the late Oustave Langenus, notted Bel- ■mm clarinetist, ,,i d Nadia Bou- M '.'.'■ . opinion, "one of the greal shap- 1 i MI Amerli an music " Mi : maintains that nol a "Sunday composer." bul that he composi - lh< : • ctlon that (red in the Arts PI ■ lied »»'i Pnnr Three o . Dr. Welton Marquis Receives Fulbright Lectureship 1957-58 begun. Running from March 7 through 21. the festival is bringing to the campus men and women who are leaders In the fields of Iwriting, painting and sculpting, and dance. Dr. Benjamin Townsend, facul-jty head of this year's festival. | explained that the decision to em-phasize painting and sculpture this year is not meant to discrim-inate aualnst the other arts. In a faculty meeting concerning the festival, it was decided that em-phasizing one art phase each year and allotlng It the most money while other departments relied on their own resources would de-crease mounting •tcpenses, Dr. Townsend also stated that the exhibition of art that is being shown In Elliott all is an extreme-ly representative and varied col-lection of the best contemporary art available. The unusual feature about this exhibition is the way in which It was selected. Officially entllled "Panal's Choice", the paintings and sculpture were In-dividually chosen by Dr. Town-send and Mr. James Burns, the assistant director of the North Carolina Museum of Art. from nominations submitted by the fes-tival's art panel. The panelists wen asked to nominate artists whom they wished to discuss and whom they believed to be prom-ising and significant. Dr. Town-seiiii and Mr. Burns collected the puces on separate trips to New York from galleries and museums. an's College to be "a unique educa-tional venture"-, since both are state institutions. Grace Hartigan. Thomas B. Hess, and Ibram Lassaw will hold a panel discussion on the paintings in Elliott Hall, March 8-27. Peter Kahn studied painting and graphics in the Art Students Lea-gue and painting under Hans Hofmann. Since 1953. he has been chairman of the art department at Hampton Institute. Comment-ing on the speech he will make, The University as Patron". Mr. Kahn said, "The subject Is not only ambiguously entitled, but de. mauds, if honestly dealt with. (Continued on Page Four! Anna Sokolow Gives Forum Dance Section The dance will be represented this year by Anna .Sokolow, known I teacher m Europe, Mexico, I, the United Slates. Her ex- I r has been in ii,,. theatre, in the opera, ami on the concert lags She has l|lin 'ia ' ' eographer at the Connecticut College Dane Festi-val, the Julllard School of the Dance, and the American Dance d at the ANTA Playhouse. Sokolo* will conduct a uss-ier class in moiicin dance on March i i :n .in a in m Col Gymnasium At :. p m . she mil evaluate -indent choreography from Southern colleges in the tudlo. Exhibition On Dance Displayed This Week In Library Showcases An exhibition on dance is on display this week in the lobby of the horary In connec!;in with the Arts Festival. Each of the glass exhibition contains material from the WC library Illustrating the devel-opment of nutating movement in the art of dancing by pictorlcal techniques and by choregraphic script. The big case has a dance nota-tion. Little dancers show the start-ing movement of the "Spanish Prelude" choreographed by Vir-ginia Moomaw and performed or. WCUNC-TV In 1956. Dean Katherlnc Taylor has sup-plied a translation and interpre-tation of certain obscure French works In one case. There is also Russian translations supplied by Dr. Jordan Kurland. Books on dance movement and orchesography fill the third igraphy is dance oj md 16th century thai become our social dance today. This is one of several di-, . in tl». library for the Arts Pi val. Dr. Tuw-nsrnd announces that faculty me,i,|„ i, w||| be admlt-ted to all events of the festival Without paying admission. The coffee hours scheduled for 4 p. m. on March 15 ha.s been changed to follow the panel discusHion on art that evening. ARTS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE I RNI IT KWIT7, i): I aposer ami louth- Dr o Welton Ma 'of Hie School Ol Mil ill will ' 1 for the ti. I Kin in Norwa, to which he i. - •■veil an appointment ' Lecturer lr l . it I . 58. ii. .a. Marqula Is the only An I p in Europe Whlli a' ly of Oslo irch in Although ly related to tin • lang-ua c be • In English "' i ich of his own material to use in his work at the University This piii!- ireahip I that offered Dean \i II down a post-doctorate i ward In Paris In i>' an M irqul formi riy head of tment at North nilno '.light to WC in 1954 to be dean of the leave "' ■'! ;n August. unnamed person or pi :. | head Of i taool of M . uar. from FRIDAY MARCH B TO WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 l'""'1 Cl ' •'" exhlbitloi ntemporary American "'""' ■''"'' sculpture -elected b> Grace Hartigan, Thomas it Hess, and Ibram Laaaaw, EUiotl Hall, Wl DNI sun M Micil 13 Afternoon Peter Kahn. lecture, The Universltj aa ration", Llbrarj Auditorium :t 00 p, in. 1'" '"" ' " "' bio a program ol contemporary music and drama School ol Music and Department of Drama, featuring "■'' chambei music com| d for the Festival Ernest Concertino foi Five Players" and EUiotl Wei bert "Nocturne" on the poem "In Countrj Bleep bj Dylan Thomai and dramatic readings of "Homa Burial", 'The House-keepei and 'Death ol the lined Man bj Robert Frost. Hei ital liaii Music Building 8 mi p m, mi R8DAY, MARCH 14 Uternoon Gallerj Vlsll Miaa Hartigan Mr Lassaw Mr Hesa EUiotl Hall, 9:00 p. m. Coffee Hour for itudents, faculty, and guests, EUiotl Hall Lounge, 4 00 p. in Evening: Panel Discussion ol exhlMUon, "Paael'a Choke", by Mi-~ Hartigan, Mr Hei Mr Lassaw; Mr Kahn. moderator, EUiotl Hail Ballr n, 1 00 p m, FRIDAY, MARCH 18 Morning Master clan In modern dance with Anna Sokolow, ( nli man (i\ iniia-iiiin. Ill .ill ,, in Uternoon: Student choreography from Southern colleges evaluated bj Urns Sokolow, Dance Studio, 1 00 p Evening Nancj Hale, lecture, "The rerritorj n notion", I.ibi.m \inhK.rmm. H till p m. s\ll RDAY, \l \IICil 18 Morning Writing Panel with Nanq Hale, Monroe Stu David Claj Jenkina Murraj Nauss, moderator, Virginia Dare Room, Alumnae House, lo on a. m Afternoon Coffee Hour for students facult) and [uesti El- Imtl Hall I.inn m. I e Dam e Croup of the Woman'a Col-ludltorium H 00 p m THI RSDAY M \U(TI 21 liege
Object Description
Title | The Carolinian [March 12, 1957] |
Date | 1957-03-12 |
Editor/creator | Peters, Beryl |
Subject headings |
University of North Carolina at Greensboro--Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals-- North Carolina--Greensboro Student publications--North Carolina--Greensboro Student activities--North Carolina--History |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The March 12, 1957, issue of The Carolinian, the student newspaper of the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina (now The University of North Carolina at Greensboro). |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : Woman's College of the University of North Carolina |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries |
Publication | The Carolinian |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | 1957-03-12-carolinian |
Date digitized | 2011 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries |
Digitized by | Creekside Digital |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871557753 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text | %ht Cardnmra VOI.IMK XXXVII Z53I Woman's College of the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, N C . March 1-. 1957 Ni MI'.ER 17 Greensb'o Symphony Features Paul Berry In Second Concert Paul Berry Will be featured as I soloist with the Greensboro Sym- i phony Orchestra in its second con-cert of the 1956-57 season to be held in Aycock Auditorium, Sun-day, March 17 at 8:15 p. m. The orchestra entering its 18th year, will be under the baton of George Dickieson, a member of the faculty of the WC School of Music, This concert, to be televised by Station WUNC-TV. will open with the Overture to "Titus" by Mo-zart, to be followed by another Mozart work. "II mio Tesoro in Tanto" from Don Juan. With Mr. Berry as soloist, the program will continue with Gaet-ano Donizetti's "Una Purtiva La-grtma"" from L' Elisir D'Amore. The final and major work of the evening will be Cesar Franck's Symphony in D Minor. The next performance to be given by this organization will be on Saturday. June 1, at 8:30 p. m in Aycock. Festival Features Contemporary Arts With a strong emphasis on I Dr. Townsend said that he be-palnting and sculpture, the 1957[lleved the collaboration between Woman's College Arts Festival has (the State Art Museum and Wom- IRKAM LASSAW CRACK HARTIGAN SGA Election Candidates Hale, Frost, Speak At Mass Meeting And Jenkins Spears, Nauss Lead Festival At a meeting of candidates and present time, no one group should campaign managers held in Elliott exist in orwr to create a bloc and Hall March 5 by the Elections thereby control the voting. A Board, it was decided that no po- candidate for any one office should litical rally would be held this be directly responsible for con-rear, but that each opposed cand- ducting her respective campaign idate would speak at the Mass and must, therefore, assume com- | Meeting to be held in Aycock plete responsibility for all action March 19. taken by those pei-sons whom she Members of Hie Election Board ha.s appointed to manage her briefed the candidates and niana- campaign and who have express-gcrs on their duties, emphasizing ed a desire to give her their sup-the following points port, She should make it known 1 If you spend more than $3. '" ,n"sl" Persons that she must you will automatically be disqual- approve whatever publicity stunts ificii. they Intend t<> use in the Fresh- 7 N" <"and:,l.,te !,„■ an SGA man , ns will be hel i Wed- """'' ■sll""ul 1""1"'"'""" ■*» ""'■ nesdaj and Thursday, March 13- ■ m . for all cand- Informal-si hool clothes socks ■ 3. Official pub:. Mon-daj March 11, after 7:30 p. m Poster per candidate In El-linti Hall ground-floor lobby. 4. No publicity through the lo- < .ii mall In the ;> >-' ofl: sod.i shop grounds or in the li-brary. I • ■ •\!1 candid il the effect that they would 'run together" in OT-to control mi 8. If a Student, at any tlmi ■ he BOA t .mi;].!:, n I the standards are being violated, by any one person, it should be reported to the Elections B Chairman who m turn will with the President of I hi1 SGA in order to determine the validity of such assusatlona ami to : mined what action is I" be I 9. It should be understood that E be put on any mem- ROBERT FROST be Introd d formally to the stu- ber of the Elections Board or any. dents Candidates please be back one connected with it to relate : the outcome of an election, other arrangement D el than the announced wlnnei ,: Bt ause the parts i xtremely donger-nol used on tins campus al the oua to all concerned. (lass Of '59 Elects Show Co-Chairmen Leslie And Shipwash New Playwrights Members ol thi wphomon I i omposed of Ann IWore and is 1 Band. Orchestra, and the trump '. N'ani v Hale JEANNIE LESLIE w\ SHIPWASH ' i i writers for the festival will ncy Hale, David clay jen- Monroe spec .. M Nauai and Rol Nancy Bale, nov-elist h a s done editorial work for both Vogue and Pair, on Which she was leu s h e hi been a n rime Herator- ■ II published in the New Hei in- • rorks Include "Tl i I Farm " pi ' Events For Week March 12-19 March 14 i Lounge, 3:30 p. m. Prench Movie: "Norn "all. 3. 7:00 p. m. Movie: "La Mom 81 Mil hel' Library Hall, 3. 7:00 p. m. Katharine Anno Porter, Ball-room 800 p. m. 8:30 p m. Cone. \ k, |:15 p, m. '■'■ M "i p. m. Pei m. ins Phi) from Princeton, lie ha derbllt, Wisconsin and Princeton David Clay Jen- Jenkina Is a poet, shorl and professor. He ' Idled at the •! Ala-bama and nt the • wltjf ofDavid C Jenkln towa ii. al o -1 ii ii: ed for two 1 ■ ■•'. Wall ■ on a Pulbright study ol Welsh Literature I •""I in the New Yorki r Hi :s now professor t>l ol William : :t>. ,i by Murray ib- looks like n romantic pot ■ WC Music Teacher Composes Number For Arts Festival By FAY MOORE Elliott Weisgarber, teacher of theory, composition, and wood-wind instruments here at Woman's College, will have one of his own comimsitloas played at the Art.. Festival. "In Country Bleep," writ-ten especially for the 1957 Arts al. Is a nocturne on the poem by Oylon Tunis It Is to be performed by a chamber ensemble with Robert Mums singing tenor and Sara Holroyd conducting. Mr. Weisgarber is a native of Pittsfield, M is. and a graduate of Eastman School of Mi' "i ti.. Uhlvi i jlty of Ro-lei lie haa studied with the late Oustave Langenus, notted Bel- ■mm clarinetist, ,,i d Nadia Bou- M '.'.'■ . opinion, "one of the greal shap- 1 i MI Amerli an music " Mi : maintains that nol a "Sunday composer." bul that he composi - lh< : • ctlon that (red in the Arts PI ■ lied »»'i Pnnr Three o . Dr. Welton Marquis Receives Fulbright Lectureship 1957-58 begun. Running from March 7 through 21. the festival is bringing to the campus men and women who are leaders In the fields of Iwriting, painting and sculpting, and dance. Dr. Benjamin Townsend, facul-jty head of this year's festival. | explained that the decision to em-phasize painting and sculpture this year is not meant to discrim-inate aualnst the other arts. In a faculty meeting concerning the festival, it was decided that em-phasizing one art phase each year and allotlng It the most money while other departments relied on their own resources would de-crease mounting •tcpenses, Dr. Townsend also stated that the exhibition of art that is being shown In Elliott all is an extreme-ly representative and varied col-lection of the best contemporary art available. The unusual feature about this exhibition is the way in which It was selected. Officially entllled "Panal's Choice", the paintings and sculpture were In-dividually chosen by Dr. Town-send and Mr. James Burns, the assistant director of the North Carolina Museum of Art. from nominations submitted by the fes-tival's art panel. The panelists wen asked to nominate artists whom they wished to discuss and whom they believed to be prom-ising and significant. Dr. Town-seiiii and Mr. Burns collected the puces on separate trips to New York from galleries and museums. an's College to be "a unique educa-tional venture"-, since both are state institutions. Grace Hartigan. Thomas B. Hess, and Ibram Lassaw will hold a panel discussion on the paintings in Elliott Hall, March 8-27. Peter Kahn studied painting and graphics in the Art Students Lea-gue and painting under Hans Hofmann. Since 1953. he has been chairman of the art department at Hampton Institute. Comment-ing on the speech he will make, The University as Patron". Mr. Kahn said, "The subject Is not only ambiguously entitled, but de. mauds, if honestly dealt with. (Continued on Page Four! Anna Sokolow Gives Forum Dance Section The dance will be represented this year by Anna .Sokolow, known I teacher m Europe, Mexico, I, the United Slates. Her ex- I r has been in ii,,. theatre, in the opera, ami on the concert lags She has l|lin 'ia ' ' eographer at the Connecticut College Dane Festi-val, the Julllard School of the Dance, and the American Dance d at the ANTA Playhouse. Sokolo* will conduct a uss-ier class in moiicin dance on March i i :n .in a in m Col Gymnasium At :. p m . she mil evaluate -indent choreography from Southern colleges in the tudlo. Exhibition On Dance Displayed This Week In Library Showcases An exhibition on dance is on display this week in the lobby of the horary In connec!;in with the Arts Festival. Each of the glass exhibition contains material from the WC library Illustrating the devel-opment of nutating movement in the art of dancing by pictorlcal techniques and by choregraphic script. The big case has a dance nota-tion. Little dancers show the start-ing movement of the "Spanish Prelude" choreographed by Vir-ginia Moomaw and performed or. WCUNC-TV In 1956. Dean Katherlnc Taylor has sup-plied a translation and interpre-tation of certain obscure French works In one case. There is also Russian translations supplied by Dr. Jordan Kurland. Books on dance movement and orchesography fill the third igraphy is dance oj md 16th century thai become our social dance today. This is one of several di-, . in tl». library for the Arts Pi val. Dr. Tuw-nsrnd announces that faculty me,i,|„ i, w||| be admlt-ted to all events of the festival Without paying admission. The coffee hours scheduled for 4 p. m. on March 15 ha.s been changed to follow the panel discusHion on art that evening. ARTS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE I RNI IT KWIT7, i): I aposer ami louth- Dr o Welton Ma 'of Hie School Ol Mil ill will ' 1 for the ti. I Kin in Norwa, to which he i. - •■veil an appointment ' Lecturer lr l . it I . 58. ii. .a. Marqula Is the only An I p in Europe Whlli a' ly of Oslo irch in Although ly related to tin • lang-ua c be • In English "' i ich of his own material to use in his work at the University This piii!- ireahip I that offered Dean \i II down a post-doctorate i ward In Paris In i>' an M irqul formi riy head of tment at North nilno '.light to WC in 1954 to be dean of the leave "' ■'! ;n August. unnamed person or pi :. | head Of i taool of M . uar. from FRIDAY MARCH B TO WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 l'""'1 Cl ' •'" exhlbitloi ntemporary American "'""' ■''"'' sculpture -elected b> Grace Hartigan, Thomas it Hess, and Ibram Laaaaw, EUiotl Hall, Wl DNI sun M Micil 13 Afternoon Peter Kahn. lecture, The Universltj aa ration", Llbrarj Auditorium :t 00 p, in. 1'" '"" ' " "' bio a program ol contemporary music and drama School ol Music and Department of Drama, featuring "■'' chambei music com| d for the Festival Ernest Concertino foi Five Players" and EUiotl Wei bert "Nocturne" on the poem "In Countrj Bleep bj Dylan Thomai and dramatic readings of "Homa Burial", 'The House-keepei and 'Death ol the lined Man bj Robert Frost. Hei ital liaii Music Building 8 mi p m, mi R8DAY, MARCH 14 Uternoon Gallerj Vlsll Miaa Hartigan Mr Lassaw Mr Hesa EUiotl Hall, 9:00 p. m. Coffee Hour for itudents, faculty, and guests, EUiotl Hall Lounge, 4 00 p. in Evening: Panel Discussion ol exhlMUon, "Paael'a Choke", by Mi-~ Hartigan, Mr Hei Mr Lassaw; Mr Kahn. moderator, EUiotl Hail Ballr n, 1 00 p m, FRIDAY, MARCH 18 Morning Master clan In modern dance with Anna Sokolow, ( nli man (i\ iniia-iiiin. Ill .ill ,, in Uternoon: Student choreography from Southern colleges evaluated bj Urns Sokolow, Dance Studio, 1 00 p Evening Nancj Hale, lecture, "The rerritorj n notion", I.ibi.m \inhK.rmm. H till p m. s\ll RDAY, \l \IICil 18 Morning Writing Panel with Nanq Hale, Monroe Stu David Claj Jenkina Murraj Nauss, moderator, Virginia Dare Room, Alumnae House, lo on a. m Afternoon Coffee Hour for students facult) and [uesti El- Imtl Hall I.inn m. I e Dam e Croup of the Woman'a Col-ludltorium H 00 p m THI RSDAY M \U(TI 21 liege |