eature photo by Paul Duda Ontario Theatre trip offered Roundtable and The Behrend Winter's Tale." In the Avon deposit for the bus trip. Round- Players are sponsoring a trip to the Theatre the performance will be table will provide bag lunches for Stratford Theatre in Stratford, On- "Rozencrantz and Guildenstern three dollars. bario on Saturday, Oct. 18. are Dead" by Tom Stoppard, a tale The bus will leave Behrend at of power and victimization._ 7:30 a.m. on Saturday and will Students will have the opportuni- The estimated cost of the return at 11:30 p.m. Any interested ty to see one of two plays. The package will be thirty dollars, ten students are invited to contact Festival Theatre will present dollars for the theatre ticket and Dean Baldwin, Diana George or Shakespeare's dark comedy, "The twenty dollars for ano nrefundable Tony Elliot for more information. Douglas Murdock Magic of Broadway THE MAGIC OF BROADWAY touched the Behrend campus on the night of Saturday, Sept. 13. Reed 117 was filled with songs from the "Vintage Years" on Broadway. Soprano Nancy Fox- Hoover and tenor Douglas -Mur dock, relived the musicals we all know so well. Their talent and music made it a night to remember. The show opened up with selec tions from Oklahoma, one of Rogers and Hammerstein's most popular creations. douglas Mur dock sauntered down the aisle as he sang "Oh What A Beautiful Morn ing," giving the evening a nice start. Nancy Fox-Hoover then photo by Kurt After ZA. . . never seem to be large enough for this familiar casts a spell over the Behrend audience by Lisa Hahn Collegian Staff Writer Those little trash cans serving tray. The followed with "Out of My Dreams" and the two ended the set together with "Surrey with the -*.r inge on Top." They then proceed ed to review some scenes from Oklahoma, telling the audience about the typical boy meets girl scenario. — The MAGIC - OF BROADWAY continued with Carousel, Showboat and many other classics. Altogether the presentation includ ed songs and scenes from twenty one musicals. Accompanist Clark Bedford supplied the music on piano that made for an exciting show. The audience was engrossed in the performance and awarded the gifted trio with enthusiastic applause. Writer Charles Bedunan to read his fiction works by Chip Susol Collegian News Editor The, first reading in the Behrend ege Ali-Poetry and Fiction Series will be a fiction reading by Behrend Alumnus Charles Beckman. Poetry Corner If you have any of your own poetry that you would like published in the Collegian, please drop it in an envelope, put "Feature" on the outside, and leave it in the newspaper off-i-e-c)rJ:ilailbox on the first floor of the RUB. Beckman graduated from Behrend with a degree in English. He then went on to graduate from the Johns Hopkins University Writing Seminars where he studied under John Barth, novelist - and— ----The_sries is bein_ _ winner of the National Book Roundtable and theNfiffßehrena Award. Cultural Fund. "He and She" by Kim Krynock is dancing on the lawn swinging his brown bottle (always half full) to the moon and she is standing with the cats by the overflowing sink her belly wet with work and soap and he hums a working song (knows the tune but not the words) being sixty two on his last birthday and not through with life just yet and she thinks him a fool and she broods about the neighbors and she loves him like a fool. SEPTEMBER 25, 1986 Collegian PAGE 7 Nancy Fox-Hoover Mr. Beckman will be reading from his own works on October 9 at 7:30 pm in the Behrend Studio Theater. photo by Kurt Rexford onsored b