AGGIELIFE iursday, Marcli 30, 2000 THE BATTALION Page 3 } "RHA named School(| ould have been identified j ction science major, lef on's budget should hae; )0; it will be increased. , Josh Kaylor presented! e Year along with Jr'”* id James Wells. fhursday Week 2000 Commit! II be having a Women| Art Expo at 11 a.m. hristian Fellowship of lit hristian Fellowship (Gi J students meet at l, dy, prayer, fellowship,ari ;ase see our Website | ;amu.edu/~inlow/ivcfjjf ns and more informatioi| ' Mark at 7641552. ' Fuesday :y Society: There meeting with a _ m a surrounding Texa|i :y in MSC 205 at 7 p.m )RE POSSIBILITIES! :R ireak! al Exam • June 2nd 5 - June 2 can complete in be transferred be n streamlined for visitinj )urse schedule. RLINGTON admissions@uta.edo (ON Min, Editor in Chief Managing Editor Community Editor iampus Editor iggielif'e Editor i, Aggielife Editor , Opinion Editor tinion Editor it News Editor ports Editor Radio Producer Web Master Graphics Editor Graphics Editor to Editor Editor nice and Technology Editor 5-4726) is published daily, Monday tlwf d spring semesters and Monday 111# net session (except University holidays aid &M University Periodicals Postage Paid t ). POSTMASTER: Send address clranjes# McDonald Building, Texas A4M tinnrt ■1111, department is managed by students at W ■ivision of Student Media, a unit ol t* News offices are in 013 Reed Md®| ne: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647: f# Web site: http://battalion.tamu.edir ^ advertising does not imply sponsorship th ion. For campus, local, and national dW . For classified advertising, call 84501®' 15 Reed McDonald, and office hornsaeS nigh Friday. Fax: 845-2678. e Student Services Fee entitles each W ringle copy pf The Battalion. First copy *■ subscriptions are $60 per school year, ter and $17.50 for the summer, To (MS 1 BY MELISSA PANTANO The Battalion fan once described the essence of the ^American Radio Chamber Orchestra as hat of a Texas-based chamber orchestra tK a national presence and the promise of inter national reputation. The American Radio Chamber Orchestra is a professional chamber orchestra consisting of 25 different instruments. The group’s mission is to promote musically-oriented entertainment across the country. The program, American Sounds, allows the or chestra to accomplish its goals as they tour, per- forming popular American pieces from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The American Radio Chamber Orchestra is the product of American conductor Mark Powell. Powell is a musician who says his self-proclaimed priority is to the “inner spirit of music” and “what [the music] makes you see and feel.” Powell’s music is written from the standpoint of the “musical statement as the vehicle for per sonal enrichment and further listening.” Powell has had the honor of participating in many overseas competitions. In the summer of 1998, Powell was one of 30 conductors world wide invited to the 12th International Nicolai Malko Competition in Copenhagen, Denmark. He also led perfonnances with the Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and performed at the Korsholm Music Festival in Vaasa, Finland. Powell led the American Radio Chamber Or chestra in its inaugural concert at the Festival Con cert Hall at Round Top in December 1998. The American concert pianist and Festival founder James Dick called the performance one of the mu sical highlights of the season and immediately re engaged the group for an appearance later this year. American Sounds will also feature Katherine Ciesinski, a soloist who has been called “a singer of rare communicative presence and a musician of discrimination and intelligence” by the New York Times. Ciesinski has appeared in two Metropolitan Opera productions, the Scottish Opera and the San Francisco Opera. She has also perfonued with many of the world’s leading orchestras including the Cleveland, Minnesota, and Philadelphia Or chestras, the Symphonies of Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Houston and Toronto, and in Europe with the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonics. The program for Thursday’s performance in cludes such pieces as “Chester” by William Billings and “Adagio for Strings” by Samuel Bar ber. Among the most popular are “Appalachian Spring” by Aaron Copland and “After Long Si lence” by Ned Rorem. The orchestra will make its broadcast debut in the summer of2000, with “See What You Hear,” a radio program that will fulfill part of the origi nal the mission of the orchestra. It will give the listener an insider’s view not only of the orches tra, but of its rehearsals, concerts, recording ses sions and “daily life.” The program will be broad cast over National Public Radio satellite system. This concert will be presented as part of the In timate Gatherings series brought to campus by MSC OPAS. Through OPAS’s Intimate Gatherings pro gram, musicians participate in an open discussion with audience members following their perfor mance. This forum will be hosted by Peter Lewen, the interim head of the Texas A&M Department of Performance Studies. During the forum, the audience will have the opportunity to ask the performers about anything from the music itself to the inspiration of the Chamber Orchestra. Emily Keappock, a member of MSC OPAS and a sophomore general studies major, said this is a truly unique experience. The American Radio Chamber Orchestra is great because you get to hear music by American composers played by American musicians and get your questions answered by the performers them selves,” Keappock said. The American Radio Chamber Orchestra will be performing tonight at 8 at the George Bush Pres idential Conference Center in Auditorium A. APRIL 6TH RING DELIVERY DAY DEGINS AT 3:00PM WITH CARNIVAL GAMES, FREE FOOD AND LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Plus a chance to win hundreds of prizes, including free diamonds for your Aggie Ring! Delivery of Rings will begin at 4:00pm. Festivities will continue until 7:00pm. SO SLEEP IN, AND WE LL SEE YOU AT THE CLAYTON W. WILLIAMS, JR. ALUMNI CENTER SPONSORED BY you have access to over three million job listings online. That’s more than you’ll find anywhere else on the Net. All in one place and only at careerbuilder.com. Then there’s the On Campus channel a massive resource designed specifically for college students, where you’ll find a resume database. company research. pane1 discussions and advice from recent grads. It’s everything you need to find the right career. Regardless. The Association — 4) OF FORMER STUDENTS TTte, Aggie, NetuJonJc!