Maine Campus July 18 1969 Maine Campus Staff

Maine Campus July 18 1969 Maine Campus Staff

The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Maine Campus Archives University of Maine Publications Summer 7-18-1969 Maine Campus July 18 1969 Maine Campus Staff Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus Repository Citation Staff, Maine Campus, "Maine Campus July 18 1969" (1969). Maine Campus Archives. 492. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus/492 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine Campus Archives by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • • • 11, 1969 12-). • ; 74-1_71es nom Fletcher brought the maine summer Orono Shaw to UM Bramwell Fletcher, the star of After his dramatic portrait of some 32 Broadway plays as well Shaw was a smash hit in New as television and motion pic- York and Dublin, Fletcher felt tures, appeared in a University that more Americans should of Maine Summer Arts Festival have a chance to meet Shaw and been presenting the show CANIPU Wednesday at 8 he has presentation Maine, July 18, 1969 Vol. LXXII p.m. in the Hauck Auditorium. on college and university stages Number 6 Orono, Fletcher presented his na- all over the country in recent tionally acclaimed characteriza- months. tion of George Bernard Shaw, The first man authorized by Augusta campus whom he met while he was a Shaw Estate to impersonate the New young beginner in the theatre. great playwright, Fletcher had access to all of Shaw's un- published writings, including his Ground breaking scheduled letters. a lecture room seating are per- The first step toward its own Church, Augusta, will give the containing "Shaw's views very 300. Acquisition of land and says. permanent campus will be taken opening prayer, and the Rev. tinent today," Fletcher construction of the first building "He's very up-to-date—really Monday, July 21 at 10 a.m. by John J. Curran of St. Augustin's the is expected to cost $1,500,000. has something to say to the the University of Maine at Catholic Church will deliver Augusta at a ground breaking benediction. The public is in- Francis S. McGuire, U. M. youth of today. College students director of physical plant, says especially appreciate his re- ceremony at the new site off the vited to attend the ceremony. Belgrade exit of Interstate 95. September, 1970, has been set the new site is perfect for a col- marks on education." lege campus with rolling land Shaw" U.M. Chancellor Donald R. as the completion date for the Fletcher's "Bernard where the main campus build- by New York McNeil will be the principal building which was designed by has been ranked ings are planned, and a flatter critics with Hal Holbrook's speaker at the ceremony at Bunker and Savage, Augusta in a section which could be used in recreation of Mark Twain which which Lloyd J. Jewett, UMA di- architectural firm. Located rector, will preside Repre- triangle bounded by the Bel- the future for an athletic field. Holbrook presented at the uni- Two pine groves, one of them a of years ago. senting other groups will grade, Townsend and Bond versity number Bel- near the site of the first building, Fletcher was last seen on be Alfred H e n ds bee of Brook roads just off the the will be incorporated in the land- Broadway as Henry Higgins in Madison, UMA student or- grade exit of Interstate 95, ganizations; Francis T. Fin- new campus will include some scape design. "My Fair Lady," playing op- A plan for develop- Sally negan of Augusta, Citizens' Ad- 250 acres. master posite Julie Andrews and ment of the site was produced then has visory Group; Herbert R. Brown The first building, actually Ann Howes. Since he has by landscape architects Sasaki, away from the increasing- of Brunswick, U. M. Board of three connecting structures, turned administra- Dawson and DeMay of Water- New theatre Trustees; and State Senator Ben- a central section for ly commercial York and town, Mass, a per- nett D. Katz of Augusta, educa- tive offices, student lounge Bramwell and created new career class- The Augusta campus is now one-man shows of his tion committee of the Maine faculty offices, a two-story forming 150-seat housed in rented quarters at 99 Fletcher own devising. Legislature. room wing including a The Rev. Kenneth Brookes of lecture hall and 10 classrooms, Western Avenue. the South Parish Congregational and a second one-story wing Grape strikers desire N.Y. String Quartet better livingconditions Concert heard at Lord July 17 en- mis- ally, what we can accomplish in .tours with the Greenwich Symphony. After teaching Marcos Munos has a Three Lotd Hall Thursday of it, he has California in terms of organiza- Quartet and has been soloist gagements at the University sion. To help achieve evening concerts during July Wilmington College last four years of his tion can be used by the apple with the Esterhaz Orchestra. Texas and spent the and August have been scheduled he accepted his present s public New England living out pickers in Maine or the cran- Since 1960 he has taken an in Ohio, life in by the New York String Quartet, position with the Metropolitan sex. of the back of a pickup truck. berry pickers of Massachusetts." who are in residence at the Uni- active part in the Casals Festi- ly News Marcos has a philosophy. val of Puerto Rico and the Marl- Opera Orchestra, Marcos Munos is Mexican- versity of Maine's Orono campus Barbara Stein Mallow, the House, one of Cesar "When you're breaking a horse, this summer. boro Festival in Vermont. American. He was can daughter of Lillian Fuch s. Some of recruits. His mis- you must tame it before you The quartet, an ensemble of Chavels first you're trying Second Violin Marc Ginsberg violist, and niece of Joseph id Start He says,"Do not rick it. So, when solo performers based in New earned his and mas- sion is simple. labor, you must bachelor's Fuchs, violinist, who are both , a Bas- not eat grapes to organize farm York City who are also on the ter's degree at Juilliard and is buy grapes, do victory that will members of the Chamber Music are offered to you, have the initial faculty of the University's Sum- currently working toward his when they large farm owners. School faculty, is the Quartet's finding the supermarket man- tame the mer Chamber Music School, doctorate there. He is a pupil and tell That victory will be in the Cali- cellist. She received her training purpose you will not stop in their presented their first Lord Hall of Ivan Galamian and has had agers fornia grape fields." in piano, composition and cello stores if they do not remove concert this Thursday, July 17, intensive study in chamber and at an early age won several ire, ex- shelves. Munos explained that al- at 8 p.m. The program included grapes from their believe that music with the Juilliard String composition awards including hich do though many people Hayden's Quartet in G Minor During he been preaching his the goal of the Quartet. 1967-68 the Young Composer's Contest ,,ht high He has better wages are ("The Rider"), Walter Piston's studied in Paris under a Ful- since he arrived in Massa- is not true. "Our of the New York Philharmonic time or cause strikers, this Quartet No. Three, and Brahms' bright Grant. elves. chusetts 4 years ago with only primary purpose is to uplift the Young People's Concerts. Her Removing Quartet No. One in C Minor. violist, is a cello and composition studies dents a $8 in his pocket. degradation that has existed in concerts will Arnold Magnes, California Other Lord Hall Juilliard, where he were continued at the Yale feel are himself from the the workers living conditions." 28. graduate of Marcos' be August 14 and with Galamian. In School of Music where she re- partici- fields has not changed He pointed out that since the will also ap- also studied only his head The ensemble the National Fed- ceived her bachelor's and mas- life style. Moving strike, wages for women and Art Festival 1955 he won sits with el- pear in a Summer Music Clubs Chamber ter's degrees. After graduation s. have when he talks, he juveniles has risen from $45-50 one of six concerts eration of nearby furni- performance, Award, which included a she was awarded the Adenauer a in an bows resting on per week to approximately $70, Chamber Music Music stubby fingers by Summer Hall recital and solo ap- Fellowship for study in Germany applied ture, his short but has remained at the low level in the Hauck Audi- Town an expanded faculty, pearances with the Cincinnati and in Fontainebleau, France. ast year folded across for men."More money can come Tuesday, July 29. Artur Occasionally swinging torium in Bar middle. later, but first we must help our pianist, will make a to maintain cir- Balsam, h loga- his feet, as if people to live in something be- guest appearance with the 1. Some culation, one's attention is drawn sides a filthy shack." bootstraps. His quartet for this program. Penob- to his untied At present, Marcos Munos During their stay on campus form, and rounded Muskie short square and others like him are living out of the quartet also remind one the New members stomach of the backs of trucks and eating present weekly seminars in ible for England worker who files out of on $5 a week.

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