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Summer School Calendar

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Monday, July 3

Summer School Registration, Memorial Hall, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Wednesday, July 5

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle. All students and faculty members are invited. There will be a Yard Punch every Wednesday until August 16.

8 p.m.: Summer School Convocation in Sanders Theatre. Guest Speaker is Howard Mumford Jones, Abbott Lawrence Lowell Professor of humanities, Emeritus.

Thursday, July 6

8:30 p.m.: Peace, a new musical version based on Aristophanes, produced by the Harvard Dramatic Club Summer Players, opens at Agassiz Theatre, Radcliffe. There will also be performances on July 7, 8, 11-15.

Sunday, July 9

9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room. Sunday papers available. Coffee will be served every Sunday until August 13.

10 a.m.: Sunday Services, Memorial Church.

Monday, July 10

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: Leonard Shure, pianist, at Sanders Theatre. Tickets available at Loeb Drama Center. There will be a concert every Monday until August 17.

8:30 p.m.: The Lady's Not For Burning by Christopher Fry, opens at Loeb Drama Center. It will be the first of four productions by Harvard Summer School Repertory Theatre. There will also be performances on July 11, 14, 17, 19, 22, 27, and August 1, 4, 10, 19, 21.

Tuesday, July 11

8:30 p.m.: Literary Series: James Merrill, poet, reading from his own work. Emerson Hall 105.

9 p.m.: Lecture Series, Man and the Visual Environment: Dr. Humphry Osmond, psychiatrist, on "A Psychiatrist's View of Man's Relationship to the Architectural Environment."

Wednesday, July 12

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle.

8:30 p.m.: Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky opens at the Loeb. There will also be performances on July 13, 15, 18, 20, 25, 28, 31, and August 9, 16, 25.

8 p.m.: International Seminar Open Forum, Emerson 105. The Forums will be held every Wednesday until August 16.

Thursday, July 13

Thirty-Ninth Annual Harvard Summer School Conference on Educational Administration opens.

4 p.m.: Thursday Afternoon Lecture Series: James S. Ackerman, Professor of Fine Arts, on "Leonardo's Light. An Encounter of Renaissance Art and Science." Emerson Hall 105.

Friday, July 14

Mixer: Memorial Hall. Music by the Catharsis.

Sunday, July 16

9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room.

Monday, July 17

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Cultural Revolutions in East Asia. First Lecture by John K. Fairbank, Francis Lee Higginson Professor of History, on "China and the Cultural Revolution." Emerson Hall 201.

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: Jaime and Ruth Laredo, violin and piano. Sanders Theatre.

Tuesday, July 18

4 p.m.: Lecture Series, Man and the Visual Environment: Dr. Donald A. Kennedy, Cultural Anthropologist, Tufts University, on "Man-made Environments Express Cultural Values."

8:30 p.m.: Literary Series: Irving Howe, critic, professor of English, Hunter College, on "Anarchy and Authority in American Literature."

Wednesday, July 19

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle.

Thursday, July 20

4 p.m.: Thursday Afternoon Lecture Series: Albert V. Baez, Division of Science Teaching, Department for the Advancement of Science, UNESCO, on "My Love Affair with UNESCO." Emerson Hall 105.

8:30 p.m.: The Trojan Women by Europides opens at Agassiz Theatre. There will also be performances on July 21, 22, 25-29.

Friday, July 21

8:30 p.m.: Knock by Jules Romains opens at the Loeb. There will also be performances on July 21, 24, 26, 29, and August 2, 3, 5, 11, 14, 22.

Sunday, July 23

9:30 to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room.

Monday, July 24

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Cultural Revolutions in East Asia: Albert Morton Craig, associate professor of Japanese history, on "The Meiji Change as a Cultural Revolution." Emerson Hall 201.

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: Felix Galimir and Chamber Ensemble. Sanders Theatre.

Tuesday, July 25

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Man and the Visual Environment: Jerzy Soltan, professor of architecture, on "Proportion and Scale: A Means to an End." Emerson Hall 105.

8:30 p.m.: Literary Series Lecture: Robert Lowell, poet, reading from his own work. Sanders Theatre.

Wednesday, July 26

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in Widener Quadrangle.

Thursday, July 27

4 p.m.: Thursday Afternoon Lecture Series: Norton E. Long, James Gordon Professor of Community Government, Brandeis University, on "A National Urban Policy? The Model City." Emerson Hall 105.

Sunday, July 30

9:30 to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room.

Monday, July 31

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Cultural Revolutions in East Asia: Howard S. Hibbett on "Japanese Novelists and the West."

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: Leon Kirchner and Chamber Ensemble. Sanders Theatre.

Tuesday, August 1

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Man and the Visual Environment: Robert Gutman, professor of sociology, Rutgers University, on "The Social Function of the Built Environment." Emerson Hall 105.

8:30 p.m.: Literary Series Lecture: Robert Brustein, Dean, School of Drama, Yale University, on "No More Masterpieces." Emerson Hall 105.

Wednesday, August 2

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle.

Thursday, August 3

4 p.m.: Thursday Afternoon Lecture Series: Wolfram Fischer, professor of economics and social history, Free University of West Berlin, on "Germany and the Great Depression." Emerson Hall 105.

8:30 p.m.: Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare opens at Agassiz Theatre. There will also be performances on August 4, 5, 8-12.

Sunday, August 6

9:30 to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room.

Monday, August 7

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Cultural Revolutions in East Asia: Alexander Woodside, Doctoral Candidate in History and Far Eastern Languages, on "Cultural Revolution in Viet Nam." Emerson Hall 201.

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: Jacques-Louis Monod and Chamber Ensemble. Sanders Theatre.

8:30 p.m.: White House Happening by Lincoln Kirstein opens at the Loeb. There will be also be performances on August 8, 12, 15, 17, 18, 23, 24, 26.

Tuesday, August 8

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Man and the Visual Environment: Ian McHarg, chairman, School of Fine Arts, University of Pennsylvania, on "Man and his Environment." Emerson Hall 105.

Wednesday, August 9

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle.

Thursday, August 10

4 p.m.: Thursday Afternoon Lecture Series: Gideon Bachman, film critic and film historian, Rome, Italy, on "The Personal World of Federico Fellini." Emerson Hall 105.

8:30 p.m.: Cantagribia Orchestra. Sanders Theatre.

Sunday, August 13

9:30 to 11:30 a.m.: Sunday morning coffee in Matthews 6 and Ames Common Room.

Monday, August 14

4 p.m.: Lecture Series on Cultural Revolutions in East Asia: Ezra F. Vogel, lecturer on Social Relations, on "Social Change in Communist China." Emerson Hall 201.

8:30 p.m.: Monday Night Concert Series: David Pizarro, organist, Busch Reisinger Museum.

Tuesday, August 15

8:30 p.m.: Literary Series Lecture: John Barth, novelist, reading from his new work. Emerson Hall 105.

Wednesday, August 16

3 p.m.: Yard Punch in the Widener Quadrangle.

Thursday, August 17

8:30 p.m.: In the Jungle of the Cities opens at Agassiz Theatre. There will also be performances on August 18, 19, 22-26.

8:30 p.m.: Concert by Harvard Summer School Chorus. Sanders Theatre.

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