If you can't get tickets to the Jimmy Fund extravaganza, you can always go see the fencing show Friday night at the Academy of Fencing in Watertown; but if you really want to see it give me a call at 495-7890 and I'll give you directions in person.
Also on Friday--I have the awful feeling that the number of Friday night activities does not bode well for Saturday since this looks like a dead weekend, but there are always movies and plays and all--the Women's Community Health Center is showing a film about sterilization abuse called "Blood of the Condor" at 7:30 p.m. in the Science Center, followed by a speaker from--you got it--the Committee to End Sterilization Abuse. Donation is $2.00.
Did I say Saturday looks bleak? It still does. Either I've lost half the listings, or there is nother happening--or, most likely, both.
On the other hand, Monday looks good for lectures and so on, if you're interested in Medici tombs or Micronesia. If not, stop reading.
Creighton Gilbert, professor of Art at Queens College, will describe the project to install proper tombs in the newly erected family church San Lorenzo. "The problem," according to the notice, "will be presented in all its puzzling aspects." 3 p.m. Monday in Room 402 in B.U.'s College of Liberal Arts.
Monday night, the Cultural Survival Group is showing Margaret Mead's "New Guinea Journal," with a discussion afterward, at Lesley's Welch Auditorium at 7 p.m., $2.00, all inclusive.