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Top row, left to right: B. Ellwein, M. Packwood, H. Willard, E. Ritchie, H. LeCompte, B. Allnut, R. Cummins, R. Field, M. Fowler, G. Salisbury, G. Morris. Third row, left to right: P. Eobbitt, C. Pickett, K. Foltz, J. Lankford, K. Souder, T. Weaver, A. Williams, K. RUdolph, J. Lang, M. Greenwood. Second TOW, left to right: G. Coppage, M. Yocum, M. Clemson, G. Heemann, V. Karow, A. Stevenson, N. Keyser, D. Smith. Bottom row, Jeft to right: V. Younger, D. Mulvey, H. Armacost, R. Zentz, A. Coffren. J~aU(J.na' Gwendolyn Heemann President Treasurer ReJaU(J.H~eLuIJ. Mary Jane Honemann Vice-President Mary Clemson Secretary' Interest in international affairs is the only requisite for membership in the International Relations Club. Its formation grew out of this interest, and its continuation is dependent upon it. The unusually large membership this year indicated that Western Maryland College students were interested in world affairs. This year, upon the resignation of Dr. T. M. Whitfield as faculty advisor, the club elected Professor F. B. Hurt to fill the vacancy. At the first-semester meetings of the club, faculty members were the guest speakers. Dr. Schempp, Professor Hurt, and Professor Willen interpreted phases of world affairs in the light of their experiences and from ideas obtained from study in their particular fields. Dean Adkins and Miss MacDowell spoke to the club on their trips to Europe during the previous summer. During the second semester, the programs were varied by having some outside speakers as guests. Meetings were held in McDaniel Hall Lounge on the evenings of the second and fourth Mondays of each month. Questions from the audience, which were always encouraged, made the meetings both more profitable and more interesting. Eighty-seven
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