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Page 18 text:
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Michael Tree, Violinist I yr , , x lk , Harrison E. Salisbury, Lecturer .Qian Jeffrey Hollander, Pianist vc- g, 2' 'T vw,- - - 7,-..1,--,..,. Antou Kuerti, Pianist : 3' i ' 5 : 5:- if Y 'gi 2 . : - - 6 we 51:1 hi W J-ii '92 XY f. XM?-C, U Wen, I ., ,,i4f' f' Alfie J, sa- , 4 Margaret Webster, Lecturer
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Page 17 text:
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THE DICKI N COLLEGE ARTS AW RD . Li ff' gui 1 Fi I Z P A -L' flx Leonard Baskin, center, with President Rubendall and Dr. Gordon, Chairman of the Department of Fine Arts. The Dickinson College Arts Award is presented to a person who has made an outstanding contribution in the arts of humanities. Recipients are chosen by a select committee of faculty and trustee members. The Arts Award, one of the most distinguished awards presented by Dickinson College, was instituted in 1958. Previous recipients include Robert Frost, Eero Saarinen and Dame Judith Anderson. The receiver of this year's award was the noted Leonard Baskin, presently a professor, of printmaking and sculpture at Smith College. Mr. Baskin received a Wedgwood medallion and gift of 351000 for his reputable achievements in the fine arts. This famous American artist has received degrees from various institutions of fine arts in New York, Paris and Florence, and has been honored with numerous prizes and fellowships. Mr. Baskin has had 21 one-man shows in America and Europe, and his works are presently in the permanent collections of more than 25 museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. II
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Page 19 text:
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fi LJ Lecturers, musicians, dramatists, and performers of the many arts visit Dickinson College throughout the year, widening student and faculty experience and of- fering new viewpoints on well-known subjects. These guests are usually international or national figures, but several rising young artists also offer new talent. Many times the programs coincide with topics cur- rently being discussed in classes at the college, and they are always worthwhile entertainment in the interest of a full and rich liberal arts education. Several organizations cooperate in bringing these guests to Dickinson: the Social Committee of the Student Senateg the Chapel Committeeg the Religious Affairs Councilg and the Cultural Affairs Committee of the Stu- dent Senate, with its chairman Professor Heber Harper. Student and faculty work together to plan this rewarding and enlightening program for Dickinson. nv A DLLE GE GI ESTS l Search of an Author Walter Carringer, Tenor
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