Washington University Record, November 13, 1980

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1 Washington University School of Medicine Digital Washington University Record Washington University Publications Washington University Record, November 13, 1980 Follow this and additional works at: Recommended Citation "Washington University Record, November 13, 1980" (1980). Washington University Record. Book This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Washington University Publications at Digital It has been accepted for inclusion in Washington University Record by an authorized administrator of Digital For more information, please contact

2 WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY i IN ST LOUIS Published for the Washington University Community Property of ft**! u * rsit * NOV 1 ^ '80 Medical Ubrary November 13,1980 ARCfrVES W.U Sartre's Impact on Art, Society Honored During WU Colloquium Philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre whose revolutionary ideas and all-pervasive influence exceeded academia and fired the imagination of millions will be honored at WU next week. Just as his impact transcended rigid, artificial boundaries, so will the colloquium, Nov , on this campus. Entitled "The Legacy of Jean-Paul Sartre ( )," it is an interdisciplinary tribute to his memory by the WU departments of history, philosophy and Romance languages. Regarded as one of the most important philosophers of the 20th century, Sartre, who died on April 15, 1980, will be the subject of one of the most comprehensive symposia held in this country or abroad to examine his views on the broad range of humanistic problems to which he devoted his life. At this assembly, WU scholars and students will join three visiting academicians to present and debate Sartre's ideas. Organized by seven WU humanists, all of whom have written on Sartre, the program is under the direction of professors Gerald N. Izenberg, a historian trained in psychoanalysis, and Michel Rybalka, a specialist in contemporary French literature. Rybalka is coeditor with Michel Contat of the classic, two-volume bibliography, The Writings of Jean-Paul Sartre. Free and open to the public, this unusual colloquium is funded by the Missouri Committee for the Humanities, Inc., the state-based branch of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Through discussion, films, an exhibit and a play (No Exit, one of Sartre's most famous contributions to the theatre), this symposium will explore Sartre's role as a developer of existentialism, whose main doctrine, as a St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial eulogizing his passing observed "is that existence precedes essence." Sartre wrote in Being and Nothingness, "Man can will nothing unless he has understood that he must count on no one but himself; that he is alone... in the midst of his infinite responsibilities, without help... with no other destiny than the one he forges for himself on this earth." This view, as the planners of this colloquium have noted, "touched on the most personal and central concerns of individual life aloneness and anxiety, freedom, choice and responsibility." It also accounts, they have stated, "for Sartre's many-sidedness. He was a brilliant creative writer who had a gift for dramatizing complex ideas in provocative and accessible novels, short stories and plays, work which earned him the Nobel Prize for literature... His characteristic refusal of that prize illustrates yet another dimension of his life the political commitment and activism which he believed to be necessary to a full engagement with the world." The New York Times, in a cogent commentary on his life, credited his existentialism with "such diverse manifestations as the anti-novel and the anti-hero, the New Wave cinema and the notion of man's anguished consciousness. Also, implicit in it, was a call to action, in which man could vindicate his freedom and assume some control of his destiny." Sartre was one of France's reigning intellectuals, but his social consciousness moved the hearts of the so-called "comcontinued on p. 3 A seedy shorefront bar is the setting for Williams's Small Craft Warnings, the next production of the Performing Arts Area. Above, the shiftless Bill (Nicholes Ghnouly) woos Violet (Debi Sinclair), a frail streetwalker, into a commitment of food and shelter. Social Outcasts Find Rough Seas In Williams's Small Craft Warnings A production of the rarely performed Small Craft Warnings, one of Tennessee Williams's later, experimental plays, will be presented by the WU Performing Arts Area (PAA) at 8 p.m. Nov and in Edison Theatre. (See Calendar, page 4, for ticket information.) Is the PAA production a "first" for St. Louis, where the playwright lived for several years and briefly attended WU? A telephone call to the New York office of the Dramatists Play Services, holders of the play's copyright, revealed that Small Craft Warnings, which opened off-broadway in 1972, has also been staged on the West Coast and in London. "You can say it's seldom been shown in the Midwest," said one of the firm's representatives, who begged off locating more specific information. Small Craft Warnings is, admittedly, a difficult work, said director Herbert E. Metz, WU associate professor of drama. Fragmented with nine soliloquies, and without the usual storyline, the play is "more like a mass or requiem than an opera," he remarked. The play's religious symbolism is elusive. More striking is the seaminess of the world that Williams portrays. "I'm expecting an exodus by some theatregoers at intermission," said the director with a smile, "but then people have walked out on great plays like Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" The play's characters are some of society's outcasts who frequent a seedy, shorefront bar, seeking an outlet for their continued on p. 2

3 Stix House: Vibrant with Activity, Haven for International Students When headlines scream of revolution, military conflict and political strife abroad, the WU international community remains unperturbed, observed William S. Stone, director of the WU International Office. "Instead of seeing hostility among foreign students, I find that they're talking; there's dialogue," Stone said. "That's what makes WU such a special place for international students." Stone believes this congeniality is more apparent at WU than at other college campuses. His two years as an international advisor at WU, and his work in international education at Boston, Harvard, Tulane and Loyola universities make his remarks particularly insightful. "The type of international student selected by WU accounts for this goodwill," Stone noted. "They have to demonstrate great academic strengths. They're thinkers, not radicals." Stone predicts an increase in international students on American college campuses. The number of international students enrolled at WU increased from 490 in to 552 this year. "Demographic projections point to a decrease nationally of enrollment by American students," Stone said. "Ideally, qualified international students will take up the slack." Stone said that Stix House, 6470 Forsyth Blvd., the scene of international activity on campus, is ready for this predicted increase. "Stix House can accommodate more than the 12,000 people who used the house last year," he said. Janet Mendelson and William S. Stone review the International Office budget. Stone directs the diverse International Office functions, including student recruitment and admissions, advising visa applicants, and supervision of the physical facilities of Stix House. His office also helps with the many intricacies of travel abroad by Americans. Eight WU year-abroad programs are administered by Stone's staff. Applications for Fulbright- Hayes, Marshall, Rhodes and other traveling scholarships, the Sussex, England, exchange program, and the Taiwan WU Alumni Scholarship are processed here. Information on work, travel and study abroad is available to the entire campus. When emergencies arise, Stone often finds himself in the role of a crisis counselor. He refuses to be regarded as a father figure by students, although in the past, he has attended weddings, memorial services and paid hospital visits. "I have many warm and compassionate people working for me," he said.. "Generally, Janet, Diane, Abbie or Cathy play emotionally supportive roles for students." Greeting Stix House newcomers with a warm smile and a lively curiosity for every new face is Janet Mendelson, administrative secretary, who has been working for the International Office since M. Diane Hasty, international student advisor, has been with the International Office since Abigail H. Tom, overseas program advisor and coordinator of English as a second language programs, has been working full time here since The newest member of the Stix administration is Catherine C. Steiner, overseas admissions coordinator, who joined the staff this fall. Kotler Opens Lecture Series On Marketing Philip Kotler, who was chosen as the "Leader in Marketing Thought" by the academic members of the American Marketing Association in a 1975 survey, will be the featured speaker at a special event planned by the marketing faculty at WU's School of Business. Kotler will speak on "Creating a Market-Oriented Organization for the 1980s," at a 6:45 p.m. dinner on Monday, Nov. 17, in the Whittemore House. His address is the first in an annual series of informal lectures on "Strategic Issues on Marketing" by some of the country's leading practitioners and academics in marketing. It is supported by a grant from the Kellwood Co. of St. Louis. The noted marketing authority will also address students at 1:30 p.m. that day in the Moot Courtroom of Mudd Hall. He will speak on "Marketing Warfare: Moving from the Boardroom to the War Room." Kotler, Harold T. Martin Professor of Marketing at the Philip Kotler J. L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University, has had significant impact on marketing management through his writings, lectures and employment as a consultant. He has pioneered in the introduction of marketing concepts applicable to nonprofit organizations, and is the author of the only book on this subject, Marketing for Nonprofit Organizations. Another of his books, Marketing Management, is the most widely used marketing text in MBA programs around the country. WamingS continuedfrom p. 1 dreams in drink. Besides the bar's good-natured proprietor (played by Philip Setnik), there is a rowdy beautician (Jessica Maria Goldstein), who supports a loafer (Nicholes Ghnouly) skilled in exploiting women, a frail streetwalker (Debi Sinclair), a short-order cook (Paul Larson), two homosexuals (Scott J. Scudder and Jim Doherty), and an unlicensed doctor who still practices medicine between brandies (Trip Bates, a WU alumnus). Todd Daniels and Danny Matalon portray a cop and a watchman. Before rehearsals began, Metz met at length with his cast to discuss the work's complexities. Together they traced its motifs of religiosity which, Metz said, theatregoers may perceive "subliminally, consciously or not at all. Audiences come in various stages of sophistication," he added. They examined Williams's themes loneliness, aging, death and beauty and his statement, a lament for mankind's lost ability to feel surprise or a sense of wonder. To immerse his actors in their roles, the director asked them to predict how Williams's "vulnerable human vessels" would fare beyond the final curtain of the play. The consensus? For most, rough waters or even shipwreck lay ahead. Only one of the characters might find safe passage. 'Networks' for Women in Academia is Program Topic The Women's Program Council of the Higher Education Center will sponsor a three-hour program on "Networking for Women in Higher Education", at 4:30 p.m. in the Sesquicentennial Room, Busch Student Center, St. Louis University. The program, for women faculty and staff at St. Louis area institutions, will include a presentation by Karen Coburn, coordinator of career planning at WU. Discussions and dinner will follow. The cost is $4.75 per person. For reservations, call Mary Bruemmer, dean of student affairs at St. Louis University, , by Nov. 14.

4 &QY\TG^^ continued from p. 1 mon man." Some 50,000 followed his funeral cortege to express their sorrow. It was a moving testimony to a man who attempted to live his ideas, often at the cost of ridicule. Sartre declared fervently, "I have put myself on the line in various actions... Commitment is an act, not a word." All events in Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall, except where noted. 1 p.m. "Introduction to Sartre," Michel Rybalka, WU prof, of French. Steinberg Hall Aud. 1:30 p.m. "Sartre and the Sixties," Frederic Jameson, prof, of French, Yale U. Steinberg Hall Aud. Discussion with Jameson and students follows in Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall. 4:15 p.m. "Sartre and the Form of the Novel," William H. Gass, WU David May Distinguished University Professor in Humanities. 7:30 p.m. Film, "Les Jeux Sont Faits" (Chips Are Down). French with English subtitles. 204 Crow. 9:30 p.m. Film, "Les Mains Sales" (Dirty Hands). French with English subtitles. 204 Crow. Thursday, Nov. 20 2:30 p.m. "Sartre's Last Word on Ethics: 'Hope' and Failures," Herbert Spiegelberg, WU prof, emeritus of philosophy. Discussion with Albert William Levi, WU David May Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in the Humanities, follows. 4 p.m. Philosophy Colloquium, "Sartre: Metaphors for the Mind," Frithjof Bergmann, prof, of philosophy, U. of Mich. 8 p.m. "Sartre and the Intellectuals," Alvin Gouldner, WU Max Weber Research Professor of Social Theory. 9 p.m. "Sartre on Jews," Steven S. Schwarzschild, WU prof, of philosophy and Judaic studies. Discussion with Joseph Schraibman, WU prof, of Romance languages, follows. Friday, Nov p.m. Student Round Table, "On Reading Sartre." 2 p.m. "Sartre and Literature: A Lover's Quarrel," Hazel E. Barnes, prof, of humanities, U. of Colo.; translator of Sartre's Being and Nothingness, and author of several critical studies on Sartre. 3:30 p.m. "Existential Psychoanalysis," Gerald N. Izenberg, WU assoc. prof, of history. 4:30 p.m. Reception. All invited. 8 p.m. No Exit, produced by students Steven Beer and Colleen Griffin. Gargoyle, Mallinckrodt Center. Admission $1. (Also Sat., Nov. 22, 8 p.m., Gargoyle). "Exhibit of Sartreana." Olin Library, level three. Hours: 8 a.m.-12 midnight, Mon.-Thurs.; 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Fridays; 9 a.m.-10 p.m., Saturdays; 11 a.m.-12 midnight Sundays. Nov WU Soccer Bears Win Tournament Bid The WU Bears soccer team will play Pomona Pitzer College of Claremont, Calif., at 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 15, at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville in the opening round of the NCAA Division III Midwest-Far West regional tournament. The Bears, sporting a 16-5 record, will play a team with a record. If the Bears win on Saturday, they will play the winner of the MacMurray College-Lake Forest College game at Mac- Murray in Jacksonville, 111., on Nov. 15. The final will be played on Saturday, Nov. 22, at a location to be announced. MacMurray, which beat the Bears 1-1, on Nov. 1, has an record. Lake Forest of Lake Forest, 111., has a record of Publishing Professionals Discuss Career Opportunities Professionals from Whitney Olin Women's Build- McGraw-Hill Inc., Book Company Division, Manchester, Mo., will take part in a panel discussion on career opportunities in publishing during an afternoon seminar beginning at 2 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20, at the Ann The WU Record is published weekly during the academic year by the Information Office. Editor: Charlotte Boman (Ext. 5251). Calendar Editor: Marcia Neuman (Ext. 5254). Address communications to Box ing Lounge. An overview of the field's various professional areas editing, production and design, distribution and sales, publicity and customer services will be presented, and methods of entry and career paths for experienced professionals will be discussed. The panel will then disperse to allow questioning by individual participants. The event is sponsored by the WU Bookstore and Career Planning and Placement Service. Further information is given in brochures available at the bookstore. "The Eyes Have It," by William Quinn, WU professor of art. Faculty Art Show Opens Sunday The WU Faculty Show, presented by the University's School of Fine Arts, will open in the Gallery of Art, Steinberg Hall, on Sunday, Nov. 16. It will run through Jan. 11, On the opening afternoon of the show, the Women's Society of WU will sponsor a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. More than 40 exhibitors, most of them members of the School of Fine Arts at WU, will display their work. Nine faculty in other parts of the University will be represented in this annual art exhibition. They are: James R. Harris, affiliate assistant professor of architecture; Marilyn E. Heldman, parttime lecturer in art history; Sheldon S. Helfman, professor of architecture; Robert Jordan, professor of art history; Leslie J. Laskey, professor of architecture; Joseph Murphy, affiliate professor of architecture; William Patrick Schuchard, part-time lecturer in architecture; Lawrence D. Steefel, Jr., Steinberg Professor of art history; and Nelson I. Wu, Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor of Art and Chinese Studies. Emeritus members of the School of Fine Arts faculty participating in the show are: Werner Drewes, former dean Kenneth E. Hudson, Ethel G. Metelman and Charles F. Quest. Election Outcomes Discussed at Seminar An all-day public affairs seminar on "National Elections 1980: Continuity and Change in American Politics" will be held Thursday, Nov. 20, at the courtroom in Mudd Hall. The program, which begins at 9:30 a.m., is sponsored by the Center for the Study of Public Affairs in the political science department. Some questions which will be raised during the seminar are: What were the major issues in the campaign, and what impact did they have on the outcome? What kind of people voted? What about women, blacks, and other minorities? What impact will the 1980 national elections have on their opportunities, goals and strategies? What is the future of the American twoparty system? Can it survive? Should it? The speakers' are Walter Dean Burnham, professor of political science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Warren E. Miller, director of the Center for Political Studies, Institute of Social Research, University of Michigan. Comments and discussion will be led by Jeanne J. Kirkpatrick, resident scholar, American Enterprise Institute, and Eddie N. Williams, president, Joint Center for Political Studies, both of Washington, D.C. There is a $4.40 charge for an optional lunch. To make luncheon reservations and for more information, call Ext St. Louisans Collaborate on Book on Folk Hero The adventures of Gilga- of Hungarian sculptor Anmesh, a daring king of drew Osze, the book was writ- Sumerian folklore, is the sub- ten by St. Louis authors Lesject of a new paperback lie Konnyu and Jean Shirley, volume published by the administrative assistant in the American Hungarian Re- WU Office of Information. view. Illustrated with the The book is available for $10 bold, cubist pencil drawings in the WU Bookstore.

5 Calendar November noon. Department of Physiology and Biophysics Seminar, "The Autonomic Innervation of Receptors and Muscle Fibres in Cat Skeletonal Muscle," David Barker, U. of Durham, England South Bldg., 4577 McKinley. 2 p.m. Department of Technology and Human Affairs Seminar, "Current Research at CBNS: Biomass Energy Project, Carcinogen Information Project," David L. Freedman, David Kriebel and Holly G. Winger, WU research associates, CBNS. 202 Eads. 3 p.m. Graduate Institute of Education Colloquium, "Reforming NCATE: Using Scholarship to Change Educational Policy," Alan R. Tom, WU assoc. prof, of education. 217 McMillan. 3 p.m. Women's Studies Lecture, "Women and Revolution in Iran," Lois Beck, WU asst. prof, of anthropology. 110 January. 4 p.m. Center for Basic Cancer Research Seminar, "Glycoproteins Specified by Herpes Simplex Virus: Their Roles in Infections," Patricia Spear, prof, of viral oncology, U. of Chicago. Erlanger, 4750 McKinley. 4 p.m. Department of Physiology and Biophysics Seminar, "Recent Observations on the Skeletofusimotor Innervation of Cat Spindles," Yves Laporte, College de France-Paris South Bldg., 4577 McKinley. 4 p.m. Department of Chemistry Seminar, "Laser Photochemistry at Chalk River," Keith Evans, Chalk River Nuclear Laboratory, Canada. 311 McMillen Lab. Monday, Nov p.m. School of Social Work Colloquium, "Distinctions Between Treatment Outcomes: Implications for Treatment Planning and Evaluation," Enola E. Proctor, WU asst. prof, of social work, and Aaron Rosen, WU prof, of social work. Brown Hall Lounge. 4 p.m. Neural Sciences Program Lecture, "Cholinergic Retrophins," Ian Hendry, dept. of pharmacology, John Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian National U. 928 McDonnell Medical Sciences Building, 4750 McKinley. 4 p.m. Department of Biology Seminar, "How I Spent My Summer Vacation," Alan R. Templeton, WU assoc. prof, of biology. 322 Rebstock. 8:30 p.m. Harris Armstrong Memorial Lecture, "Architecture: Beyond the Seventies," Vincent Scully, prof, of architectural history, Yale U. Steinberg Hall Aud. Tuesday, Nov a.m. Pathology Research Seminar, "Peptide Antigens: Lessons for Genetic Control of Immune Responses," David W. Thomas, WU asst. prof, of pathology. Third Floor, West Bldg., 606 S. Euclid. 12 noon. Department of Biomedical Engineering Seminar, "Computer Applications to ECG Processing," Lewis J. Thomas, director, WU Biomedical Computer Lab. 405 Bryan. 2 p.m. Department of Music Lecture, "Musical Vienna Between the World Wars," Walter Robert, prof, emeritus of piano, Indiana U. 4 p.m. Cellular and Molecular Programs Lecture, "Roles of T Lymphocyte Subsets and Soluble Factors in Specific Immune Suppression," Ronald Germain, Harvard Medical School. Erlanger Aud., 4750 McKinley. 8 p.m. Art of the 1970s Lecture, "Artists in the Marketplace A Dealer's Viewpoint," Barbara Okun, co-owner, Okun-Thomas Gallery. Steinberg Hall Aud. $ p.m. Department of Music Lecture, "2500 Years of Pythagoras and Music," Walter Robert, prof, emeritus of piano, Indiana U. 8 p.m., History of Medicine Club Lecture, "Magendie: Discoverer or Disrupter?" Richard M. Torack, WU prof, of pathology. Rare Book Annex, 615 S. Taylor. 8 p.m. Department of Anthropology Colloquium, "Sacred and Profane: Islamic Law and Islamic Courts," Brinkley M. Messick, WU visiting asst. prof, of anthropology. 101 McMillan. 11 a.m. Assembly Series Lecture, "Faith After the Holocaust: Ethical Survivalism," Edward Feld, director of Hillel, Princeton U. Graham Chapel. Discussion at 2 p.m., Women's Bldg. Lounge 4 p.m. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology Seminar, "Projection of the Carotid Sinus Nerve to Suprabulbar Levels," B. Delbarre, Faculty of Medicine, Tours, France. 928 McDonnell Medical Sciences Bldg., 4750 McKinley. 4 p.m. Department of Microbiology Research Seminar, "Sources of Energy in Vertebrate Cells and Growth in the Absence of Sugar," Burton M. Wice, WU technical asst. in microbiology; Jolanta A. Stanisz, WU research assoc. in microbiology; and David E. Kennell, WU prof, of microbiology. 509 McDonnell Medical Sciences Bldg., 4750 McKinley. 4 p.m. Department of Physics Lecture, "The Newest Quantum Fluid: Spin-Polarized Hydrogen," William C. Stwalley, depts. of physics and chemistry, U. of Iowa. 201 Crow. 8 p.m. Dorothy Dubinsky Lecture with Audrey Flack, WU visiting artist, discussing her work. Steinberg Hall Aud. Sponsored by the School of Fine Arts. 8 p.m. Department of English Writers' Program, "More Poems and Stories from the Writers' Program," with WU student writers. Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall. Thursday, Nov. 20 9:30 a.m. "Public Affairs Seminar, "National Elections 1980: Continuity and Change in American Politics," with Lucius J. Barker, director, WU Center for the Study of Public Affairs; Walter Dean Burnham, prof. of political science, M.I.T.; Warren E. Miller, director, Center for Political Studies, U. of Mich.; Jeanne J. Kirkpatrick, resident scholar, American Enterprise Institute; and Eddie N. Williams, president, Joint Center for Political Studies. Court Room, Mudd. Lunch, $4.40. Call Ext for reservations. 3 p.m. George Warren Brown School of Social Work Colloquium, "Energy/Environment and the Profession of Social Work," Frederick Smith, WU asst. prof, of social work. Brown Hall Lounge. 4 p.m. Department of Chemistry Seminar, "Conformational Dynamics of Tropomyosin," Sherwin Lehrer, Boston Biomedical Research Institute. 311 McMillen. 4 p.m. Department of Microbiology and Immunology Seminar, "Immunoglobulin Heavy Chain v. Genes," Henry V. Huang, California Institute of Technology. 509 McDonnell Medical Sciences Bldg., 4750 McKinley. 8 p.m. Society for International Development Discussion, "China in the 1980s," Stanley Spector, WU director of International Studies, and William C. Kirby, WU asst. prof, of history. 115 Busch. 8:10 p.m. Departments of Germanic Languages and Literatures and Comparative Literature Lecture, "Literary Criticism and its Institutional Situation," Herbert S. Lindenberger, prof, of comparative literature, Stanford U. Stix International House, 6470 Forsyth. 8:15 p.m. Asian Art Society Slide Lecture, "Buddhist Paintings from the Dunhuang at the British Museum" Roderick Whitfield, asst. keeper, Oriental Antiquities, The British Museum. Steinberg Aud. Performing Arts 8 p.m. Performing Arts Area Production, Small Craft Warnings, by Tennessee Williams, directed by Herbert E. Metz, WU assoc. prof, of drama. Edison Theatre. General admission $4.50; $2.75 for WU faculty, staff and all students. Tickets available at Edison Theatre Box Office. (Also Nov. 15, 21 and 22.) Films 7:30 and 9:45 WU Filmboard Series, "10." Brown. $1.75. (Also Sat., Nov. 15, same times, Brown.) 8 p.m. Classic American Cinema Series, "The Student Prince" and "We Live Again." Rebstock. $2. 12 midnight. WU Filmboard Series, "Is There Sex After Death?" Brown. $1. (Also Sat., Nov. 15, same times, Brown.) Saturday, Nov p.m. Classic American Cinema Series, "La Boheme" and "Back Street." Rebstock. $2. 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. WU Filmboard Series, "Death in Venice." Brown. $1.75. (Also Thurs., Nov. 20, same times, Brown.) Music 8:30 p.m. St. Louis Classical Guitar Society Recital with Eliot Fisk, internationally known guitar performer. Graham Chapel. General admission $5; students $3. Saturday, Nov p.m. Department of Music Classical Guitar Master Class with Eliot Fisk, WU guest artist. Tietjens Hall. Admission free. Eliot Fisk Sunday, Nov p.m. Department of Music Student Recital. Karen Laubengayer, piano. Women's Building Lounge. Admission free. Monday, Nov p.m. Department of Music Master Class with Walter Robert, prof, emeritus of piano at Indiana U. 8 p.m. WU Civic Chorus Concert, directed by Orland W. Johnson, WU professor of music. Graham Chapel. Admission free. Exhibitions "The Faculty Show," an exhibit of WU faculty art work in all media. Upper gallery. Nov. 16 through Jan 11. "Greek Vases and Roman Glass." Print Gallery. Through Nov. 23. "American Art." Lower gallery. Through Feb. 1. All in the WU Gallery of Art, Steinberg Hall. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., weekdays; 1-5 p.m., weekends. "James S. McDonnell Exhibit." Olin Library, main floor. Hours: 8 a.m.- 12 midnight, Mon.-Thurs.; 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Fridays; 9 a.m.-10 p.m., Saturdays; 11 a.m.-12 midnight, Sundays. Through Dec. 4. "St. Louis Children's Hospital, " WU Medical Library Annex, 615 S. Taylor. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m., weekdays. Through Dec. 12. "William Jay Smith, Man of Letters." Rare Books and Special Collections, 5th level, Olin Library. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays. Through Dec. 30.

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