Advertisement

At Harvard

Thursday, 13 Feb.

Art

Georg Baselitz--works of one of the leading post-War German artists. Through Feb. 16. Fogg Art Museum, Werner Otto Hall, 32 Quincy St.

The Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery, London--by Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates. Through March 6. Graduate School of Design, Gund Hall Gallery, 48 Quincy St., Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Works by Pamela Gorgone--Through March 14. Hilles Library.

Five Masters of Persian And Indian Painting: Sultan-Muhammed, Mir Sayyid Ali, Basawan, Payag And the Kotar Mastert--Through March 8. Sackler Museum. Whatever.

Advertisement

Juxtapositions II: Paint And Print Expressions--by ten women artists from the Boston area. Through Feb. 28. Schlesinger Library.

The Bow and Arrow Press: Recent Work--Through Feb. 29. Widener Library, Rotunda.

Women of Courage: Portraits of African American Women Who Have Improved the Lives of African-American People and Society at Large--Through Feb. 28. Bunting Institute, 34 Concord Ave., Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 495-8631.

Concerts

The Sounds of Blackness--jazz, African, reggae, black musicals, contemporary, soul and rap. Through Feb. 20. Medical Education Center, Atrium, Medical Area, noon-I p.m.

Film

Through African Eyes: Recent Works by African Filmmakers--Ousmane Sembene and Thiemo Faty Sow's Camp de Thiaroye will be presented by the Committee on African Studies. Science Center A, 7:30 p.m. Free.

Lectures

Allen Tate And the Bifurcated Historiography of Southern Agrarianism: Thoughts on the Limits of the New Historicism--Thomas Underwood, history and literature lecturer. Room 102, Sever Hall, 4:15 p.m.

Kant, Foucault and Three Women--Carla Hesses, associate professor of history, Dept. of History, University of California at Berkeley. Auditorium, Boylston Hall, 4:30 p.m. Bring your pendulum.

Adjustment With a Human Face for the 1990s--Richard Jolly. Lower Conference Room, Center for European Studies, 4:15 p.m.

Sources of Acoustic Energy in the Solar Atmosphere--Timothy Brown. Phillips Auditorium, 60 Garden St., 4 p.m.

Theatre

Fete Amusante Pour Monsieur de Gaulle--written and directed by Elijah Aron '93. Loeb Experimental Theatre, 64 Brattle Street, 7:30 p.m. Free tickets are available at the box office. 547-8300. Pretentious but try at your own risk. Friday, 14 Feb.

Concerts

Krokodiloes Valentine's Day Jamboree--a capella concert including performance by all-female Princeton Tigerlilies. Portion of proceeds to be donated to Cambridge After School Center, Phillips Brooks House program. Sanders Theatre, 8 p.m. $10 and $12; $5 and $6 for students. Buy tickets at the door or through the box office, 496-2222.

Dance

Third Annual Valentine's Day AIDS Benefit Ball--sponsored by the AIDS Education and Outreach. Proceeds benefit AIDS hospice patients. Union, 9 p.m.-I a.m. $12; $10 for groups of three or more. Tickets are available at the Holyoke Center Ticket Office, 495-2663.

Lectures

Ethics in Public Policy, Public Health and Health Issues Addressing the Poor--by Dr. Louis Sullivan, secretary of the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services. Andover Hall, Sperry Room, 45 Francis Ave., noon.

Initiation at Cellular Origins of DNA Replication--by Bruce Stillman, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories, New York. Fairchild Biochemistry Building, 7 Divinity Ave., Lecture Hall, noon.

Designing And Defining Death--by Everett Mendelsohn, professor of the history of science. Science Center, History of Science Dept., Room 226, 3 p.m.

Xiaoqing's Literary Legacy And the Role of the Woman in Late Imperial China--by Ellen Widmer, Dept. of Asian Languages and Literatures, Wesleyan University. Coolidge Hall, room 3, 3:30 p.m.

Same Texts, Different Contexts: Japanese Uses of the K'ang-hsi Emperor's Teachings, 1721-1943--by De-Min Tao, postdoctoral fellow, Reischauer Institute. Coolidge Hall, room 2, 4 p.m. Come and gain the secrets of Japanese economic dominance.

Miscellaneous

School of Public Health Third Annual Career Day--Kresge Building. To register, call the Career Services Office, 432-1036.

Performing Arts

Milestones: Perspectives on Careers of African-American Performing Artists--performance and panel discussion with William Warfield and Mel Tomlinson presented by the Boston Conservatory. African-American Meeting House, 8 Smith Court, Boston. Free. For more information, call 536-6340.

Theatre

The Anniversary--with Jennifer Davidson and Tanya Selvaratnam '93. Written and directed by David R. Gammons '92. Adams House Kronauer Space, 8 p.m. $1.90.

Fete Amusante Pour Monsieur de Gaulle--written and directed by Elijah Aron '93. Loeb Experimental Theatre, 64 Brattle Street, 7:30 p.m. Free tickets are available at the box office. 547-8300.

Seagull--by Anton Chekhov, directed by Ron Daniels. Loeb Drama Center, 64 Brattle St. at 8 p.m. Through Saturday, March 21. $17-$38. Box office Phone is 547-8300.

Misalliance--by George Bernard Shaw. American Repertory Theatre, 64 Brattle Street, 8 p.m. Through March 7. Call 547-8300 for tickets. Saturday, 15 Feb.

Film

Black Health Organization Film Festival--Medical Education Center, Medical Area, Amphitheatre E, I-10 p.m.

Theatre

The Anniversary--with Jennifer Davidson and Tanya Selvaratnam '93. Written and directed by David R. Gammons '92. Adams House Kronauer Space, 8 p.m. $1.90.

Fete Amusante Pour Monsieur de Gaulle--written and directed by Elijah Aron '93. Loeb Experimental Theatre, 64 Brattle Street, 7:30 p.m. Free tickets are available at the box office. 547-8300. Sunday, 16 Feb.

Concerts

Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra--conducted by guest conductor Leon Bolstein, will perform Haydn's Symphony No. 100 "Military," Stravinsky's Pulcinella Suite and Richard Wilson's Piano concerto. Sanders Theatre, 3 p.m. $22, $15 and $8; $20, $13 and $6 for students. Tickets available at BOSTIX/ Ticketmaster outlets, at the door, or through the box office, 496-2222.

Theatre

The Anniversary--with Jennifer Davidson and Tanya Selvaratnam '93. Written and directed by David R. Gammons '92. Adams House Kronauer Space, 8 p.m. $1.90. Monday, 17 Feb.

Films

Harvard Film Archive--J'Accuse directed by Abel Gance at 4:30 p.m. $5; $4 for students. Tuesday, 18 Feb.

Films

Harvard Film Archive--Othello directed by Orson Welles at 5:15 p.m. Eagle's Cry directed by Mario Volpe at 7 p.m. $5; $4 for students.

Lectures

Elsa Triolet: Left-Wing Writer And Heroine for the French Resistance--by Helena Lewis, Bunting fellow '84-'85. Bunting Institute, Colloquium Room, 34 Concord Ave. For more information, call 495-8212.

Black Women's Health Issues--by Byllye Avery, founding president of the National Black Women's Health Project and visiting scholar in health and social behavior, School of Public Health. Murray Research Center, Conference Room, Radcliffe Yard, noon.

Conflict of Interest--by John Hart, former anchor for World Monitor News. Kennedy School of Government, Taubman 275, noon.

Taking the Pulse of the Publishing Profession: Is There a Career in Publishing?--by Alan Andres, editor, Houghton Mifflin Company; and Lindy Hess, director, Publishing Course, Radcliffe. Agassiz House, Radcliffe Yard, 4 p.m. $5; free for Harvard University students with I.D. Call 495-8631 or 496-1855 to preregister.

Franklin D. Roosevelt And Working Class America--by Ronald Edsforth, visiting scholar, History Dept., MIT. Sever Hall, room 102, 4:15 p.m.

Continuity And Change of the Greek Language as Traced in Medieval Vocabulary--by Erich Trapp, professor of Byzantine studies, University of Bonn. Boylston Hall, auditorium, 5 p.m.

What Can We Make of Mozart? A Post-Bicentenary Survey--by Christopher Hogwood, artistic director, Handel and Haydn society. Mather House, Senior Common Room, 8 p.m. More than we can make of Chris Hogwood.

Theatre

Up Your Ante!--presented by Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Hasty Pudding Theatre, 12 Holyoke St., 8 p.m. except on Saturdays, 5 and 9 p.m. $17; $19 on Friday and Saturday nights. Call 495-5205 for tickets. Yeah, up this. Wednesday, 19 Feb.

Films

Harvard Film Archive--The Kid and One A.M. directed by Charles Chaplin at 5:30 p.m. Sounder directed by Martin Ritt at 7 p.m. $5; $4 for students.

Lectures

Foreign Sector Managers And China's Civil Society--by Margaret Pearson, assistant professor, Dept. of Government, Dartmouth College, and fellow in political science. Bunting Institute, 34 Concord Ave., 4 p.m.

A Talk With Michael Graves--by Michael Graves, architect, Princeton. Gund Hall, Piper Auditorium, 6 p.m.

An Introduction to Longitudinal And Qualitative Data Sets Housed in the Murray Research Center Archive--by the Murray Research Center Workshop for undergraduate concentrators in the social sciences. Advance registration is requested. 495-8140. Direction for those with none.

Advertisement