The Chronicle

October 6, 1995: Volume 35, Number 3

The Chronicle

Jump to Story:

Coming events

Schaffer Library will celebrate National Archives Week with a seminar on "Planning for the Library of the Future: Books and the Digital Age" on Tuesday, Oct. 10, at 2 p.m. in the Reamer Campus Center Auditorium. The session will include a tour of the World Wide Web, scanning of archival documents, a review of Union's archives, and the vision for the 21st century library. It will conclude with a tour of the Nott Memorial and the Da Vinci models exhibit (see listing below).

The Raphael Ensemble String Sextet will open the 24th International Festival of Chamber Music on Thursday, Oct. 12, at 8 p.m. in Memorial Chapel. The 12-concert series, sponsored by Schenectady Museum and the College, will feature performances by the popular Emerson String Quartet in all-Bartok programs.

The play God Delivers: A Graveside Meditation on the Life and Times of Eliphalet Nott will be performed in four shows, Oct. 13 through 16, at 8 p.m. in the Yulman Theater. Tickets are $5 with Union ID, $7 for public. For information, call the Yulman Box Office at ext. 6545.

Mump & Smoot, the Canadian "clowns of horror," will open the revived Proctor's Too at its new home in the Yulman Theater with performances on Oct. 20 and 21, at 8:02 p.m. For more information, call the Yulman Theater Box Office at ext. 6545.

Prof. of Chemistry Charles Scaife, whose "science roadshows" to elementary schools drew national attention, will deliver a faculty colloquium titled "Hands on Science For Elementary Students" on Tuesday, Oct. 24, at 4:30 p.m. in the Reamer Campus Center Auditorium. Elementary and middle school aged children are welcome.

Sweet Honey in the Rock, a popular African American a capella gospel group, will perform on Friday, Oct. 27, at 8 p.m. in Memorial Chapel. The concert, free to the public as part of the College's Bicentennial Series, will feature the quintet and a sign language interpreter.

The Machines of Leonardo da Vinci, an exhibition on display in the Nott Memorial through Nov. 25, features 15 contemporary models of mechanical devices conceived and designed by Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci. The models, commissioned by Thomas Watson, founder of IBM, have been fabricated from Leonardo's own drawings in notebooks he kept until his death in 1519.

<< Previous Story
Herman Haus '49 receives...
Next Story >>
Radio station WRUC...