Rome-based jazz quartet Cyclo to play at Steinberg Nov. 19
They will perform a concert of original compositions and improvisations at 8 p.m. Nov. 19 in Steinberg Auditorium.
Noche Flamenca to take the Edison stage Nov. 18-20
The fiery, internationally renowned dance company was founded in Madrid in 1993 by artistic director Martin Santangelo and his wife, Soledad Barrio.
Acclaimed poet Arthur Sze to read at Washington University Nov. 10 and 17
Courtesy photoArthur SzeAcclaimed poet Arthur Sze, the visiting Fannie Hurst Professor of Creative Literature in Washington University’s Writing Program in Arts & Sciences, will read from his work at 8 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 10. In addition, Sze will speak on the craft of poetry at 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 17.
Renowned soloist Clea Galhano joins Kingsbury Ensemble for Virtuoso Recorder Music of the Baroque Nov. 12
Courtesy photoClea GalhanoRenowned recorder soloist Clea Galhano will join Washington University’s Kingsbury Ensemble for a concert of “Virtuoso Recorder Music of the Baroque” at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 12. The recorder – a wind instrument similar to the flute – was frequently included in ensembles of the Baroque era. Galhano, a Brazilian player now living in the United States, has performed widely with early music ensembles.
SITI Company to stage Death and the Ploughman at Edison
Theatrical pioneer Anne Bogart will bring the first American stage production of this early German Renaissance classic to WUSTL Nov. 11-12.
Author, editor Silvey to examine ‘100 Best Books for Children’
The illustrated lecture stems from her recent book, 100 Best Books for Children, an in-depth survey of children’s literature.
Performing Arts Department to present Escape From Happiness
The darkly comic portrait of a highly idiosyncratic family by Canadian playwright George Walker is directed by Senior Lecturer William Whitaker.
Naomi Iizuka to host playwriting festival: public readings Nov. 14-15
Each spring, four student plays — two full-length works and two shorts — are selected by blind jury and work-shopped the following fall.
Obituary: Haydon, lecturer in music; 73
She died of complications stemming from leukemia at Barnes-Jewish Hospital on Oct. 29; she had taught at the University since 1974.
New Orleans-style disaster could happen again in California
Courtesy photo*Delta Primer*Is California vulnerable to a New Orleans-style levee break? The land in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, where California’s two great rivers drain into San Francisco Bay, lies as much as 20 feet below sea level, warns Jane Wolff, author of Delta Primer: A Field Guide to the California Delta (2003). A breach on the scale of that in New Orleans would prove catastrophic for California — the world’s sixth-largest economy, home to approximately 10 percent of the U.S. population. In addition to property destruction, salt water from San Francisco Bay would migrate upstream, contaminating the water supply for much of Southern California, including major cities such as Los Angeles and San Diego.
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