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Page 16 text:
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Page 17 text:
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NOVEMBER Politics and music shared the spotlight in No- vember. Locally, Mayor Richard Lee was returned to ofiice by a substantial, but reduced majority. Two Chubb Fellows, former Attorney-General Herbert Brownell and Senator Edmund S. Mus- kie were at Yale for visits of a few days. The Yale-for-Rockefeller organization, which apparw ently had fewer counterparts around the country than was then thought, sponsored a talk by Rep- resentative Stuyvesant Wainwright. President Tsiranana of Madagascar also spoke. The Kingston Trio led the musical events of the month off with a concert at the New Haven Arena. Another appearance of interest to folk music enthusiasts was that of Josh White at the Jewish Community Center. Jazz buffs had their best month in several years, for in addition to a Woolsey Hall performance of Teddy Charles and company, there was a show at the Arena that in- cluded the Dave Brubeck Quartet, Lambert, Hend- ricks, and Ross, Chris Conner, and Chico Hamil- ton. The Boston Symphony and the Juilliard Quartet catered to classical music fanciers, and a group of voice students from the Music School sang madrigals to the Elizabethan Club as it con- cluded celebrations marking the 400th anniver- sary of its namesake's accession to the throne. Yale produced plenty of news of its ownM for instance the announcement that Kingman Brewster, a professor in the Harvard Law School, would succeed Norman S. Buck as university provost. The publication of the plans for the new residential colleges was also news, bad news for those upperclassmen who had hoped to park their cars on the site all winter tthe steel strike even- tually reprieved theml. The first volume of the Franklin papers was published by the Yale Press in November, an event of considerable impor- tance, inspiring even a story in Life. The Art Gallery received a gift of thirty-three Renais- sance paintings from Mr. and Mrs. Louis Meyer Rabinowitz, which, when taken in connection with the earlier gift of a statue by Henry Moore, illustrated Yale's quiet rise to preeminence among college art galleries. The evcr-present spirit of Abraham Pierson exerted itself through the ad- administration, and the Rheingold Girls were not encouraged to pay their annual visit. Both Penn and Yale were beaten the week before they met, but the game still figured to be the best game of the year in the Ivy League. And 15 it was. Although Penn won 28-12, the game was really very close, and it was an exhibition of skillful and hard-nosed football that com- pared favorably with that played anywhere in the country. The next week saw Yale and Princeton exchange touchdowns until the Blue defense caught hold and made the scoring one-sided, 38-20. Yale teams won ten of the twelve football games played with Harvard teams, including a 28-24 victory climaxing an undefeated season for the Bullpups; but one of the two losses was a 35-6 one to the Harvard varsity. Alto: Rev. Elfas Rees . Rev. William C. Pollard, Executive Director of the Oak Ridge Project . Sir Hugh Casson, architect to the Queens . . . Professors Walter Berns and Samuel Eliot Morison . . . Willard E. Uphaus . . . Janet Gaynor in The Midnight Sun, Shirley Booth in A Loss of Roses, Eartha Kitt and Wendell Corey in iiJolly's Progress, and Henry Fonda and Barbara Bel Geddes in Silent Night, Lonely Night . . . Gretta Thyssen in the Hesh. Rederr'clolmlelzl wulimm m1 schedule
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