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Page 31 text:
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After lunch he had Id rush Id an ajIrryiDou clnss. ] ' lirn the doss luas over he tried to ring her up. But she kv .v not iit her dorm. Sd he walked oxwr to the library and sat studying in the loinige for about an hour, .-is he (tune out of tlie library and walked over toward W ' ibler Hall to attend a uieeling. he thought oj how niuili smoother the leork of students back home would be if all colleges tliere had libraries of the same quality us this one. As he Kline out of Wilder Hall, after the nieeti)ig. he mamelled again, for the nth time, at the manner in which American students managed so many college affairs on their oien. He looked at his xeatcli. It was almost time for that party for foreign students. By the lime the f arl -was over, il was time for supper. After supper he had a seminar to attend. And immediatelx after the seminar there was a radio-program on the college radio-station in -which lie was scheduled to participate. From the radio-station lie strolled o er to the Snat k Bar. Still she was no- where to be .seen. He smoked a cigarette oi ' er a cup of coffee and -was preparing to leave when Ernie came up and suggested a game of table tennis. He was half- way through the second game -when she -walked in leilli a friend. He played a game -with lier also and then suggested a beer at Don ' s. She hesilated for ii moment anil then said. All right. On the way to Don ' s, they chatted iiiKJUsequentially of this and thai. She said something about his smoking too much, and he tried to be -witty by remark- ing that It was better to smoke here than in the hereafter. And . . . and it luas disturbing, the manner in which her hair, done into a pony-tail, shook with her laughter. He -was reminded of Henrik Finne ' s painting . . . Long ago he had once given her a fyainting of his oimi. a painting done in a purely Oriental style. He wondered if she remembered it. But even if site didn ' t -what did it matter. Greater —to use only a mild comparative— greater u ' orks than that had been ignored by the people for whom they were originally meant. Christian Ludwig never gave a second thought to the Brandenburg Concerti. Bits of the fifth concerto in D Major suddenly sioept through his mind. He -wondered if it -was possible to think of a suitable adjective for the Brandenburg Concerti. I liked your review in the paper yesterday. she .said, as they sat dcrwn at Don ' s. Oil. tliaiik you, he .said. You lia-i ' e a nice scientific appiom li to i riticism. Scientific approach? he said -with a slight fro-wn. You remind me of C. Day Le-wis ' lecture. I mean, the one he gax ' e here at the auditorium. Remember hoic lie established a relation between science and poetry as means of kncrwing. a relation -which exists despite the fact of the former ' s prime concern -with -what is generalisable as contrasted with the concern in poetry for the unicjue? I mean, it seems to me r-erv typical of you fVestei tiers, the -way anything whidi can be re- lated to science seems to groie in prestige in your eyes. Rightly or -wrongly, an Easterner would never think of relating poetry to science, because for him the establishment of such a relationship -wouldn ' t necessarily enhance the validity of poetry as a means of kncnuing. But talking of criticism, scientific or otherwise, that reminds me. Do you remember that poem of yours wliich you slurwcd me for my criticism? 27
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Page 30 text:
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7V( ( l tiil ill Rir Hall ira.s otic of the many social events fentiiiiug liidciU builds mnl singers. Feverish preparation inevitably fills the afternoon before a dance, and this crew had better find that D ! Princeton won the traditional race to ring the bell, but contrary to tradition, lost the basket- liall game. . iglitl hull (■. f ' ? iiiuki- liul iiig ill liarroivs ' lounge I ' irtniillx impossible. One of llie few opjiorl unities for students to enjoy a quiet evening in n lioine is afforded b that maiuelous institution , baby-sitting. 26
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Page 32 text:
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A}H)tlu ' r assenihh requiremeyit completed! Dr. Mehta, Indian Ambassador to the I ' nilcd Stales, meets with students after his speech in first Church. Sitidetits linger after a Meade-Sieing lecture lo meet I. inns Panling, obel Prize winner in rheiniytrv. Arthur F. Burns, Chairman of the Board of Economic Advisors to the President, and his u ' ife I ' isit teith their son Dax ' e after Mr. Rums ' speech in a Thursday assembly. 28
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