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Libr~ry Western Maryland College ]ld. BASEBALL SHORT STORY SCHEDULE PAGE 2 PAGE 3 Z2•• Vol. 27, No. 10 WESTERN MARYLAND COLLEGE, WESTMINSTER, MD. ROTC To Present Mr. William Liggett Philip M. Burnell Speaks Cornelia Otis Skinner To Present Annual Cadet Ball; Added To Ed. Dept. In Assembly About UN on Solo Play Program Friday Night a specialist Philip M. Burnett, A. Liggett has been Mr. William As part of thc college concert program Phil Lester To Play. added to Western Maryland's faculty international organization a ff a irs, as tration, Cornelia Otis Skinner will present under the auspices of the Adminis- Nations Today selected The United of solo plays this Fri- a program of education. professor as associate Previous to his February arrival, his topic for the assembly program day evening in Alumni Hall at 8: 15 p. m. this _morning. Mr. Liggett served as the principal Miss Skinner's performances arc not recitations but complete dramatic pro- Officer, Date Promenade of Bridgeville Junior-Senior High borough, Burnett was born in Peter- ductions. They are written (by the actress herself), rehearsed, costumed, and Mr. New received Hampshire, play. To Highlite Sat. Dance School, located in the suburban ~ec- his A.B. at Yale University and his produced with all the cure of a conventional Born in Chicago and educated at At Pennsylvania. tion of Pittsburgh, A.M. and Ph.D. at Columbia Univer- Sponsored by the ROTC Or- present, he is finishing his thesis pre- in sity. He has been an instructor of Club News 1 Baldwin School and Bryn Mawr, Cor- to left college Skinner nelia to securing Otis a doctorate paratory fleet-s' Club, the annual Milital'Y Ball education from the University of history at City College in New York, I will be held Saturday night in Gill Pittsburgh. The thesis concerns public of social science at Bennett Jr. Col- Inter-Fraternity Council Gymnasium from 8:30 to 11:45 p. m. school administration. lege, and worked as research assistant Approximately ten members of the Phil Lester and his orchestra with for the Carnegie Endowment for in- Inter-Fraternity Council attended the Betty Bachtell, '51, as soloist will Born In Ohio ternational peace from 1933 to 1939. Inter-Fraternity Conference held at furnish the music. The highlight of At the present time, he is associated Gettysburg College, March 10, 11, and the evening will be a promenade of Born in Quaker City, Ohio, Mr. Lig- with the Office of United Nations 12, where they were the guests of the the cadet officers with their escorts. gett has spent most of his life in the Economic and Social Affairs and has Gettysburg fraternities. Contrary to former years, it is a Pittsburgh_.area. He received his AB been the U. S. advisor to numerous Plans are being made for an inter- semi-formal, non corsage dance. degree from Wooster College where international conferences in London, fraternity banquet to be held at the he .majored in history and education. Geneva, New York and Washington. David Jones has been appointed by Union Mills Methodist Church. the Officers' Club as general chairman He then continued his studies at the a Another Music Recital Camera Club for the dance. Jack Roberts, decora- University of Pittsburgh earning Plans are being made for a hlke tion committee chairman, stated that master's degree in his college ma- Presented Sy Pupils the decorations were a secret but jors. When not observing practice and the pictures to be taken on this would be up to the fine tradition of teachers, the professor can be found Musi~ students ~resented another trip will be criticized by the group at previous Military Balls. in Vetville, romping with his two in the series of student recitals, to- a subsequent meeting. month old son, or reminiscing about day at 4 :25 in Levine Hall. The club is working to develop the Roberts Heads Decorations his service experience. Marion Martin, a freshman, played pictures that were taken ~t the WSSF Mr. Liggett served the first year of Bazaar on March 4 and they will be Members of the decoration com- his military career as an enlisted man a group of minuets: Minuet in G Ma- available soon. mittec are Jack Roberts, chairman; jor, a Provencal melody; Minuet in Jack Fritz; Joe Culotta; Lloyd F Major, by Mozart; Minuet in. G Eight ~~r;am~~~~s A\~~a be irriti- _ Miss Cornelia Otis Skinner Owens; Charles Kidd; and Charles Major, by Vanhall; and Minuet in F ated into Alpha Kappa Alpha this study in Paris. Besides studying at Hammer. The refreshment committee Majo)", by Hiller. month. The persons who have been the Comedic F'r-ancaise and attending includes Ray Dow, chairman; Bill Harriet Kahn played the French: elected to the fraternity are Donald' lectures at the Sorbonne, she was a Porter; Ernie Burch; Al Grimes; and Suite in G minor - Prelude, by Bach. Clarke, William Gilmartin, H. Thomp- student in Jacques Copeau's school K 310, Andante Vance Hale. The publicity co'mmittee Sonata in A minor, by Mozart was pre- son Lang, Jay Lockman, Norman Sla- at his 'I'hcatre du Vieux Colombier. Presto, Cantabile consists of Ed Nordby, chairman; Al sented by Martha Schaeffer. mecka, Daniel Welliver, Norma Jean In these schools she was able to i-e- Mar-ilyn Bright; Bill Davis; Jerry Ginsberg; Hardester sang Tw /0 Soi by Gor rell i Moore, and H. L. Scarborough. ceive training in both classical and Chuck Williams; and Dick Diene~. and I Love Thee by Grieg. Moment modern acting. Ticket committee members are J. Musical in A Flat Majo1' by Schubert 'r-t-aete After her return to the United On Monday, March 13, at 7:00 p. m. C. Higgins, chairman; Guy Smith; was played by Shirley Bankert and tbe initiation of new members into States it was only natural that she John Dorgan; Bill Monroe; and Bill the Sonata Op. lrlon Wednesday, March 22. by JURe McLeod Church in Westminster on March 20 Methodist Student Moyement A few weeks ago just as some of at 8 p. m. - Libby Schubert was chosen general the cold weather haters had sent in His program will consist of the chairman of the Central Committee applications to the U. of Mia.mi, Prelude and Fugue in E MiW)T by of the newly-formed Methodist Stu- balmy breezes desccnded upon WMC Bruhns; Chorale - prelude, How dent Movement at the elections at the and it was spring in February. It Bl'ightly Shines the Morning Star, by March 8 monthly meeting. Other was time for jackets and shirt Buptehade; Bach's Five Chorale-Pre- committee members elected were sleeves, and a tcrrific epidemic of tudes; Prelude and Fugue in A Minor Ruth 'Lee, Rogel' White, Bill Scheder spring fever. by Bach; Andante in F by Mo)';art; and r.,firiam Simmons. This was short-livcd, llOwever, be- Fi!'st Sonatn by Hindemith; and the The Methodist Studcnt Movement cause then the rains came. It rained third movement from The Ascension of the Chesapeake Region will hold for weeks and weeks and weeks! Onc by Messiaen. its second annual conference at Mor- knew instinctively to wear boots and gan State College in Baltimore on a raincoat. Variety is the spicc of life, Directs Music At Princeton March 18 and 19. and 'so now the rainy-weather garb Lutheran Students has been replaced by arctic weather At present, Mr. Weinrich is director coats and ear muffs. The 100 mile of music in the chapel at Princeton Five )'epresentatives of the Lu- gale makes it hazardous for the light- University where he conducts a choir theran Students from Western Mary- er members of the student body. One of male voices, which speciali'les in land College attended the North At- expects to see them soaring through the choral music of the fifteenth and lantic Regional Conference at Buck the air any time. Just ask Dean sixteenth centuries. He also teaches Hill Falls, Pennsylvania, which was Howery about the wind 1 The leading organ at Columbia University. held March 3, 4, and 5. Members at- question is-What happened to her car tending were Martha the conference In tIle early 1930's, while still young, Schaeffer, Norma Avers, Fred Keefer, door when she opened it and a huge Carl Weinrich gave recitals in New . . Charles Hammer and Ruth Marsden. puff of wind came alang at the same York. Even at this time, he attracted Organist _ Mr. Ca1'l WeinJ"il:h Will Give A Recital At The Refo1'1ned ChU1'ch Canterbury Club time? But as Mark Twain said, "Ev- a large following and earned praise During his visit to the campus on erybody complains about the weather, from the critic of Nation which is as scribed by Time magazine as one of before the war was hailed as having May 10, the Rt. Rev. NobJe C. Powell, but nobody does anything about it." follows: "There is no other series of the three greatest living players of made "phonographic history." The Bishop of Maryland, will speak to a So the triple pneumonia, ~w__et toes and concerts in New York, except per- Bach's organ music. He shares this organist has also given first perfor- joint assembly of the Canterbury frozen noses must be endured until haps those of the Friends of Music honor with Mariel Dupre and Albert mances of nla-ny modern works, and Club and the Lutheran Students As- the days of swimming parties and on which one can rely so surely for Schweitzer. recently' edited tIle Variations for sociation. painful sunburnS'. music at its best." He has been de- An rhum of records which he made Org,an by SctJ0enberg.,
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