The College News, 1966-04-08, Vol. 52, No. 18 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1966)

The College News, 1966-04-08, Vol. 52, No. 18 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1966)

Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Bryn Mawr College News Collections, Digitized Books 1966 The olC lege News, 1966-04-08, Vol. 52, No. 18 Students of Bryn Mawr College Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1966-04-08, Vol. 52, No. 18 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1966). This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/1248 For more information, please contact [email protected]. } Vol. Lt. MAW�, PA:: Ap;il 8, T�lt••• of BrynM ....... Colle,I, I No. 18 BRY� 1966 - 25 Cenb OrcheStra Concert Will Featur Haydn, Hindemith, Copland MusIc Eudora W.lty The Bryn Mawr-Haverrord er(ord '66. as oboe soloist. names certainly not as famillar Visiting Writer Eudora Welty Orcbestra, under the direction d Three modern pieces have been as the others. This Emerson Is • Robert K. Goss, will present a chosen to complete the concert. fDUIlI American composer who concert 01 works ranging(rom late The earliest Is a base ensemble studied music aLXale under the Declines Role Of 'Advice Giver' Baroque to very recent music by Paul Hlndemlth who was com­ composer Quincy Porter, and now Saturday, AprU 9, at 8:30 p.m. missioned In 1932 to write enoush studles'lnd teaches iD New Haven. Miss Eudora Welty, guest spoke at Wellesley andthe Univer­ music for an alt·da,y music festl- both In Roberts Hall at Haverford. Ad­ o. He works as a percussfonlst sity of North Carolina. On her wrlter-in-residence whose vlslt mission Is free. val in Pion, Austria. Thlspartlcu- wltb the Nj:w Hlven Symphony and ends Frld� declined the role of way home to MiSSissippi, Miss y Leading the program Is Josef la.r bass ensemble, described by a.s a jazz musician. Welty will stop .. at Agnes Scott "advlce-gwer" to prospective Haydn's Symphony No. 101 In 0 Bryn Mawr Orchestra pre-sldent Mr. Emerson will In fact be In writers. Interviewed Monday at the College and the Unl versity of maJor, better known as liThe Barbara Hurwitz as III. good­ the audience at the Orchestra'5 Deanery, Miss Welty maintained Alabama. Clock" Symphcny, especially from morning plecell--she calls it very P,8rformance Saturday 01 his work, that ilt shouldn't be a teller." She describes the topiC of her the "Uek-tock" motU developedIn sultable (or May Day, for a cantata (for one soprano voice She enjoys meeting students and talks as -the problems In writing the second {movement. It Is one instance--Is taken from the very and oich.estra) set to e••. IInds In" $lCb encounters the that she has worked out to her at the lates of Haydn's symphon­ opening of the day's mush:. cummlnes' poem "All In Ireen Ies which has retained the great Aaron "mutual stimulus" 01. discussion, si.�lsfact1on. I Copland's "Outdoor went my love riding." was but Insists that there her counsel­ A DonnelleyFellow at the college popularity It achieved immediately Overture" also composed Director Robert Goes bas ap­ Its Ing must end. i'Nobody gave me In 1958, Miss Welty Is pleased fOllowing premiere in England under somewhat specialized cir­ parently chosen all these pieces 1'94. advice." she remarked. "Nobody by the chance to re-visit friends In cumstances, as It was wrttten for their contrutlnl Qualltle3, and The program then moves back just before World War II for per­ po­ can advise a writer." at Bryn Mawr , speakwith students, to demonstrate the range and and read samples of their writing. to the early eighteenth-century formance at the H.lgh SChool of tentialiUes of the relatively small Realllng that she alwayswanted Italian composer of mainly small Music and Art In New York City. (about 50 pieces) Orche8tra. ThIs to write. Miss Welty called her­ A reluctant advice-giver but an ensemble pieces, Benedetto Mar­ The poster now being circulated coocert wUl mark the first under self "temperamentally suited" to eager and Interested visitor, Miss ceJlo. The Orchestra will perform adverttslng the concert, lists the Orcbestra'. new co-chairmen, short stories rather than novels. Welty seems as happy about her his Concerto in C minor (or Oboe IIWorks by Emerson, Copland, and Barbara Hurwitz and MUte Klm­ "Some people." she ezplalned. stay as are her hosts. and Strings, with Ed Hazzard, Hav- the IIrst of !be< three b"n. "are suited to both, but I prefer stories." When at work, lhe author finds Revision Of C ominittees that a story begins to prepare Itself before she starts to write Discussed at Undergrad It. II All wrltlng comes from inside. Since .most Hall Reps: from a feeling," she said. "Then had not cussed. Membership could con­ been ejected by the time of Mon­ something in the outside world sist of the Big Six representatives day's Undergrad meeting the only sets you off, and you put the two from both campuS8s, those working people present were the oUicers, thl,ngs together." on camw.s events, or simply the presHlents of ·{he Big SiX, volunteers. Someone to organlze Asked by Mr. Leach to read one the Class PreSidents, and visitors. the Meal EJ:change Is urgently of her stories to his writing class. The main buSiness oHhe meettng needed, Mtss Welty confessed that shewlS was the dtscussloriof various com­ pieasantly surprised to learn a mittees associated with Under. few years ago that her stories rrad. DIscussion centered around Halls End Voting; could be read aloud successfully. their functions, the po$slblllties Campus Fini,�h;ftg of combined committees, and the 3h.! had always considered elimination of committees wht'.. � stories written rather than oral, purposes are no longer c'':..u". '!'hP Class Election, but the new discovery "gives me committees ctl�1 Iesed WAre; TIM! vdrlous hlis, -.r1!i tI,·'\ d­ pleasure." Although she enJoys ••• student Exc� Com,.,Ulu, cepUoll uI �\/ntI:w.m, !.:: now readj.ng atoue, MiS8 Welty feels Finance, Ubrary l.(,l,Ir.. U, P'!ettrd nnishE>d tlw c�e�'oc .,: tilclr OI9w that "all stories belong to be Ubrary, Inn Committee, Tnve! pres1dent.s. The ro.. u! ts of the;;e read to yourself, quietly, sUently." Bureau, Furniture Sale, and elections are. Kitty Taylor. Den­ bllb; ADdrea Stark, Erthna.n. Sue As part of ber trip, the author Vocation Committee. Tbe pos­ BiShop, Merion; Per Heston, Pem Practicing for this w"k.nd', Bryn Mawr.Haverford Orchestra has also delivered lectures at sible formation of a BI-Collel8 Committee was also East; Bella Usook, Pem West; •• colleges In a busy schedule that considered. conc.rt or., from I.ft, Hora CI"rman, .Ed Hauard, Gnd Morgar The new presldent ofUnderrrad, Bltsy Badal, Radnor; AllceBeadle, Bul •• she terms hunusual" for her. Margaret Edwards, explalDed the Rhoads: Ann Platt, Rockefeller: Before coming to Bryn Mawr, she purpose of each committee, and Sandy GllIuly, Batten House; and Karen Heckman, Spanisb House. suggestiOns were made for pes_. 1966 Commencement Speaker sible changes. Senior and Junior class ottlcers Mrs. Wheeler have also been chosen. senior It was deel(8d tbat the Library class president Is Bev Lange; Council will remain separatefrom ttrst SeDlor to seu-Gov, Claudia of Princeton Dies March 26 the Art Llbrarlan and tbe Record Is Pres. Goheen Mancum. lJbrarlan as In tbe put. TIle Robert Goheen, PresIdent of The 08W Junior class omeers Mr. Gobeeo's prlm&rJ iDter.sts Mrs. Arthur L. WbMler, proCes­ Ubrary Council (ooe person) Is of are: CaOOl Vultaalo,. preSident; Pr1ncetoo University and fatber at Prlncetoa lnclude .� 01 sor emeritus or mathemaUcs at iD charge of orpn1zq llbrary '66 SUe Noseo, vice-presIdent; Boonie Trudi. Gobeen. has been named lacmUes, tlndI.nc quailty (aculty Bryn Mawr, died Saturday, March tours lDd tbe I1brary aum, aDd CUnol ncb&m, secretary: RuthGals, this year's commencement 1IpeIk_ members, and rala:tnc warte. 26, 10 tbe Bryn Mawr Hospital. receives 00 pay.Jt wualsodeelded treasurer; Mary Uttle, social ... whU. teeptnc classestairl,small • There wtll be a memorial servtce that tbe Travel Bureau, atso one cbalrmao of !be coll.: and Llz Bon to 1Dd1a, Mr. Gobeen wu ae was named by Tim. MscuJne April 16 at 4:00 p.m. iD theMusic person, will rem.a1D. tbe same, and 'I'baeber and L)'DD AweU,ftrstaml Ibe .. 01 medical mlsstoaaries. as (me 01 the outslaMlrw college Room iD Goodhart, to wblcb both tbat the bol4er of this paidjob be aecorxlJW\ l ors to SeU-Got'. At 15 be cam. to tbeUnited State, presidents 01 Amerlea In a Usl students and faculty are welcome. a seoolarshlp studeDf.. Freshmen btpn ¥'OtlIIc lJltbe for Coocl. that 1Dcluded MIN McBride. Mrs. Wheeler was 83, and was The Vocational Committee will primaries (or Sopbomoan clul After atteod.lnc LawreDCevlll., The admIDlstratiYe aDd fund­ the widow of a professor of LaUn be aba.odoDed stnce It bas not officers .after bmc.b WeclDesday. be rraduated from Princeton wlib nls:tnc reepoaslblUUes 01 the at Bryn Mawr who died In 1932. tunettODild In tbe put (ew years. They w111 votetor Soc*MN r. clua Many oflt8 former tunctlone bave a cll.SSles major. Followtn( his office 01 Presidlat ba.... reduced A faculty member herseU for 30 vice-preSident, ereec.d Sopbomore fallen under the Curriculum Com­ army saniee �Inc World War Mr. Gobeea'. dinet coatact witll years, she reUred In 1948. She to Self-Gov, tradlUoos tbaJrrna.n, was oae mittee.

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