Page 37 - TheGoldBug1945-46
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Reporter Says Sophomore Follies "Feast Of Fun---Just Wo,.,cJerfu/" By JAN GANZ Wally after the curtain comes down on her Beautiful Dreamer. We've all A least of fun ... A romantic treat. ... It's entertainment that can't be laughed at Wymer and her wit. She's "pardner-" now--Ruby got a Stein. beat-that's the sophomore show, With Wymer as "Topsy" and Stein as Thanks [or the MemoriM, to be given "Aunt Carmie," along with their this Saturday night, March 16. Be- chicken, you'll have many a laugh! Vol. 23 No, 10 WESTERN MARYLAND COLLEGE March 14, 1946 hind the swinging doors of Alumni Hall at 8 P. M., the curtain goes up Mary, Jo ("Bangs") 'Lyo~s makes on a bevy of entertainment. Your as beautiful a da rky as one can find. Four Fraternities Hans Kindler see-all, know-all reporter sneaked a She sings of her man cheating her, Glee Club To Sing MUrph will be there, On Hill Resume preview which came forth ~ith the but she doesn't care, (Note: Apolo- The Girls' Glee Club of Western following result-it's just plain, won- gies to Joe.) Maryland College will present a pro- To Conduct Summer- with best derful! too, giving her and Rogers have noth- Full Activities gram of religious ·music at the West- time. Astaire It was raining the night I sew it, minster Reformed Church, at 4 P. when it but the "stars" were shining brightly. ing on Neville and Patterson way. They M., on Sunday, April 7. C~mposi- Symphony comes to the light fantastic The incomparable "Jake" proves dance well together, showing their Western Maryland College fratAr- tions by Bach, Mozart, Mendelssohn, that he can not only holler to a ref- talent in all types of dancing. And nity life has started anew after three and Ippolitof-Ivanof, and several folk Tenth Annual Concert ~ee but also holler a mighty purty of course, there's BerbHar-riscn, lend- years of wartime restriction. songs will be-Included. The girls will love song-and oh, those legs! The ing his humor and acting ability to The Inter-Fraternity Council has be accompanied by their director, To Be On March 15 Gay Nineties "lovelies" are none other that World War I song, Down on the suceeded in regaining the privilege of Miss Grace Cordia Murray, and Edna than a group of our veterans. And Farm. having fraternities on the Hill, and Haller will play two organ solos. The National Symphony, under the their costumes-well .. Enough said! The sophs have the talent, the the individual groups have already Vocal soloists will be Frances Bart- direction of Hans Kindler, will re- Oh, you kids! started their planning for this semes- ley, Evelyn Benson, Jane Dudderar, turn to Western Maryland College spirit-in fact, they've got everything for its tenth annual performance The show is reminiscent of the good needed to make Thanks for the Mem- ter's schedule. and Marjorie Little. cl' days, beginning with the time ories one of the greatest shows ever Rooms in Alumni Hall have been' when the nationally known orchestra Hall at 8 :15 on in Alumni when kisses were stolen behind punch occupied once again and are now be- appears March 15, 1946. Friday, bowls and garden swings to Earl's ~:U~l~t: ;!r:~~~ ~jrgU;:::~~: ing arranged and furnished. Archives Dr. Kindler, who has brought this and" seventh green." worth-it's the one treat that can't ~~:~c~:~n ~:~:~s o~~~~dst:~~: ~~!~rogram To Feature orchestr-a to its present place of lead- With the end of the war, Wally be beat! ership among the major symphony west came marching home, and we're a::~~~te ~~!~f:;~~~~~rs, Royer I Spangler orchestras of this country, in four- surely glad, because his renditions of ::~h;i~:~ teen short years of untiring effort, Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair Juniors Practice For With the beginning of this semes- was born in Rotterdam, Holland. At and A lice are definite additions to the ter, the Council, Roy Carter and Joe Philip S. Royer, violinist, and Oli- the height of his reputation as one of show. We have another WallY' whom Wilson of Alpha Gamma Tau, Ken ver Spangler, pianist, both of the the great virtuoso cellists, he chose Miss Evening Of Plays we didn't know could sing--one Volk and DOUg"Beakes of Gamma Western Maryland College music de- to abandon that career and under- Wally Haile. And if I don'e miss my, Beta Chi, Bob 'Beglin and Nelson partment, will present a violin sonata took the hazardous challenge of or- guess, we'll be hearing more of Miss The' junior class of W.M.C. will Wolfsheimer of Delta Pi Alpha, and .. recital on April 5, at 8 P. M., in ganizing and conducting the National present three one-act plays on March Don Burroughs and Bill Sires of Phi Alumni Hall. Mr. Royer, who studied 20, 1946, at 8.15 P. M. from the stage Alpha Alpha, presented a petition to for ten years with Hemberger, a stu- Symphony Orchestra for the Nation's Aside from his regular po- Biology Student~ of "The Florist Hall. The three plays. the Administration requesting per- dent of Joseph Joachim, is now in his Capital. as conductor of the National Alumni sition Shop", "Pink and Patch- mission to take up fraternities year as member of the mu- and sixteenth offer es", "Undertow" Win Awards variety and of moods to the will audience. a fraternity ago. life where it ended three sic faculty of Western Maryland Col- Symphony, he each year makes at least one-half dozen appearances with Permission Sym- WMC'B Little lege and directs was granted years "The Florist Shop" is a view of the and the rooms on the lower floor of phony Orchestra. Mr. Spangler re- other orchestras. The Alpha Mu Chapter of Tri-Beta lighter side of life as it passes Alumni which had previously be- turned to Western Maryland in Feb- Recently, Dr. Kindler conducted a fraternity announces the award of through the shop door. The semi-com- large symphony orchestra in a series t of concerts in Mexico City at the in- the Milton Humphreys Hendrickson edy of "Pink and Patches" will be a ~~~~;~edtob:h~t:::ste~~~~:; :h: d:;:~ ~euaa::o:f th~b:ee::e a~~:h a t~eemPao;~:~ vitation scholarships to Miss Betty Miller and shade more serious, a middle road be- tion, were restored to them. Each forces. of the National University Miss Ann Fullerton. tween the accompanying plays. The of Mexico. A steady demand for ap- Milton Hendrickson, the eldest son third play, "Undertow", which is a !~:t~r:;::Yfe~S ~!:k~r~:~a~er:~n:~~ The musical themes of the concert pearances of the Nationa1 Symphony of Prof. Dean Hendrickson, was killed straight tragedy, presents to its lis- arranging them and making plans for will alternate between the two 'in- under the baton of Hans Kindler has in a flying mission over China early teners one act of subtle drama and bidding, dancing, inter-fraternity struments and present an interesting been answered by an ever-widening in the war. A former member of the suspense. sports, banquets, teas with sister succession of musical periods. The scope of its tours. The ~ational local chapter of Tri-Beta, he received The three plays. will ably comple- sororities and other events. heavy Bach sonata is typical of the Symphony now finds itself in ~~e his A. B. degree in 1938 and his M. A. ment one another, fqr what one play If bidding is started this semester, polyphonic period, while the light and enviable position of being the one or- in 1939, both from Western Mary- fails to offer one of the others readily the fraternities will follow their usual gay Muza.rt work is completely classic. chesta-a in the country supported by a land. During two intervening sum- supplies. The comedy, "The Florist procedure of initiation with smokers, Franck's sonata follows suit by intr-o, cross-section of the .country's popula- mers he had attended the Chesapeake Shop" radiates with the kindnesses of informal initiation, formal initiation ducing the mysticality of the Roman- tion in very large number. Biological Laboratory on Gibraltar the omni-benevolent Maude, the shop's and regular activit1es. tic Period. Last season when the Symphony Island in Lake Erie. sympathetic bookkeeper, who believes performed here there were seventeen Since he was the first war casualty in planting an orchid where it will do women ill the orchestra; this year from this chapter, the Tri-Beta of the most good, and isn't averse to Dr. Dika Newlin, Composer Of Opera there are nineteen women musicians, W. M. C. established two summer playing the role of a flower-surround- almost a record for a major sym- scholarships in his memory. These ed Cupid, if the occasion demands it. phony orchestra in this country. The scholarships, awarded to Alice Kuhn The sober notes of the tragicomedy To Give Piano Recital On March 10 war gave the women their chance, and and Marie Wilson in 1945, are sup- "Pink and Patches"; are evenly tem- the women in turn have inspired the ported by contributions from alumni pered by the hearty laughs of unsus- Dr. Dika Newlin will present her men to do their best as a result of who are former Tri-Beta members. pected moments. With the involved first piano recital at 8 P. M., in Al- their excellent performances. Any full member of the fraternity is action of the plot of "Undertow", the umni Hall, on Tuesday, March 19. Conductor Hans Kindler has chosen eligible to apply for the scholarships reeders of psychological fiction will Dr. Newlin received her M. A. at the Jan Tomasow, a brilliant violinist to a committee appointed from the be thoroughly entertained. The main University of California in Los An- from Argentina, as concert-master. chapter itself. adtion takes place in a group of gos- geles in 1941. Here Dr. Newlin In occupying this vital position, next The scholarships amount to $100 siping women, one of whom wishes to studied under Arnold Schoenberg, the in importance to that of the con- apiece. have her sister out of the way. outstanding representative of the ul- ductor, I'IIr. Tomasow has the respon- Both Betty Miller and Ann Fuller- tra-modernist field in music. By 1945 sibility of transmitting the conduct- ton hope to attend Marine Biological Dr. Newlin earned her Ph. D. in mu- or's indications to the string and oth- Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachu- Art Museum Lends sicology at Columbia University. er sections of the orchestra. setts, this summer. During this work she studied inde- Exhibi,t To College pendently with Roger Sessions, Ru- McCorkel To Speak dolf Serkin, and Artur Schnabel. "Her An exhibit illustrating the elements thesis- upon 19th- and 20th- Betty Miller To Present of design is now on display in the doctoral Viennese music is scheduled In Sunday School, century Selective Program Of art laboratory of Western Maryland for publication Schoenberg late in this Evening Vespers under the title Bruck- twenty- College. It is composed of ner, Mahler, an outstanding Roy lent Organ Music April 9 four posters, using photographs institu- year. speaker McCorkel, organizations, will to youth art by twenj;y-six different tions. Talented as well with her pen, Dr. be on the Western Maryland College An organ recital will be presented Newlin, when nine years old, com- campus for the week-end of March 16 by Betty Miller, junior organ student, Two of the posters serve to illus- posed her Cradle Song for piano, and 17. He will speak in Baker in Alumni Hall, on Tuesday, April 9, trate the part materials and textures which has been subsequently orches- DR. D1KA NEWLIN Chapel at 2 P. M. Saturday, March at 4:25 P. M. play in our daily life. A supplement- trated and played by the Cincinnati 16. He will also address the Sunday ary poster, compiled by the art divi- Miss Miller, who is majoring in Symphony, the Los Angeles Philhar- The So.nata in B Minor by Berg, School and Sunday evening chapel on biology and minoring in mathematics, sion of the Baltimore Museum of Art, monic, and the N. B. C. Summer Sym- included on Dr. Newlin's program, the following day. has been studying organ since her shows numerous materials from vel- ph'tmy. Some of her chamber music illustrates Berg's early work under From November 9 to 11, 1945, sev- freshman year. She now holds the vet to tin, and adds to the attractive- and songs also have been played in the ultra-modernist Schoenberg. For eral students from this college at- The next element ness of the display. position of organist at the Brethren New York by the International So- this concert it ought to be kept in tended a conference for college-age Church here in Westminster. of design, which is line, is illustrated ciety for Contemporary Music. mind that the ultra-modernist move- youth held at Franklin and Marshall on two posters, and the photographs ment can be traced back through Betty is a member of 'I'r-i-Beta, range from such classic examples as At present Dr. Newlin is working College. Mr. McCorkel was one of Iota Gamma Chi, Glee Club, and or- the Parthenon to the most extreme of toward the completion of her second Schubert to Beethoven, Haydn, and the speakers at this conference, and chestra, in which she plays the drums. modern homes designed by Frank opera, The Scarlet Lett~T, in broadly Mozart. Dr. Newlin's program is the representatives enjoyed his mes- The program for Miss Miller's re- Lloyd Wright. Other elementary chromatic style based upon the novel representative of this; and Berg, an sage and think that he is an excellent cital is as follows: principles of design-contours, space, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. A previous offshoot of late Wagnerian style, has speaker. of the been introduced Mr. McCorkel is a graduate of an opera, Feathertop, 'is also based upon as something Prelude in E MinoT J. S. Bach planes, and light or tone--are repre- a story by Hawthorne, and won the iconoclast to show wherein the transi- College of Worchester and Yale Di- Choral Preludes . J. S. Bach sented. The posters illustrating the Seidl Prire for outstanding musical tion is taking place. vinity School and later taught col- o Thou of God the Father element of color have reproductions accomplishment at Columbia Uni- Dr. Newlin's program will include: lege i.n India. He traveled in Eng- Jesu, Priceless Treasure of famous paintings by modern ar- versity. Upon the completion of ber I. Four Impromptus land, on the continent, and into Rus- I Call to Thee, LaTd Jetrt1.8 CltriBt tists. present work, Dr. Newlin will not im- Schubert, Op. 90 sia in 1936. The following year he Lord God, Now Open Wide Tlty This exhibit attempts to define pic- mediately begin another operatic II. Sonata ilt B MiJWr Alban Berg attended the Oxford Conference, and Heaven torially the elements of design, and Op.1 Cantabile _. ._.._. Franck to show the use of design in all fields. project, hut she will continue with the Amsterdam Conference in 1939. Gaudeamus L Titcomb It is a new experiment in visual ed- her chamber for music and songs while III. Sonata No. is in B fiat Major He is chairman of the Philadelphia Mozart composing and As- Area Cooperative Federation local organizations-- Landscape in Mist Karg-Elert ucation, prepared by the Museum of the cho_ir,the orchestra, and the Glee IV. Soltata in C Mi7l.01" Piece H6roique _.__. . ..._ Franck: Modern Art in .New York. Club. Beethoven, Op. 111 sociate Secretary of the American Friends. Service Committee.·
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