Word: wellesley
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Oxford's Sir Kenneth Clark respects and admires the faceless art of abstract expressionism, but he does not think it will be around forever. At Wellesley last week, he prophesied: "The imitation of external reality is a fundamental human instinct which is bound to reassert itself." To prove his point. Sir Kenneth talked about two kinds of painters-apes and children-whom the crudest of critics like to lump with the abstract expressionists...
There were five recipients from Radcliffe. Smith and Wellesley had seven and six winners respectively...
Real comedy is never written in the spirit of good, clean fun (whatever that is), and the author of Roses is properly merciless in showing people living up to their personal and national stereotypes. But Susan Levine, a Wellesley senior, issues no bitter, damning statement on the nature of prejudice; in fact, she knows it can work two ways...
Obviously, Roses has its thorns. Several jokes are self-consciously coarse (every Wellesley girl has her own way of announcing that she isn't a typical product of that place), and at times the author seems only to be getting some philosophy off her chest. But this is a young playwright's prerogative, and Miss Levine certainly doesn't abuse...
...transplanted Wellesley production takes in new soil, the Loeb will be offering a bouquet tomorrow...