1961-11-10; Central Michigan Life |
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.CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1961
NUMBER
1© lots! L®:
__H«_S^IP^F'W'!:'' ':;'--:./v',: .'.'. #4l^Bi_'3i_KHK^'^i&^^^
A SCENii -Ai^M "THE MATCHMAKEE," the Thornton time is 8 p.m. Admission is by season osr individiscsl play
Wilder play, being presented by the Drama Department. The ticket. Robert Carlson, Louise Horowitz and Fran Spencer
play opened Wednesday night and closes tonight. Curtain take lead roles in the light-hearted comedy.
' J P'_i nar
yuu
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"You've heard of the medical
ship Hope? This project is Central's ship of (Hope) and (Help)
across the Pacific Ocean to our
59 children," Neil Kirwan says
of the Korean Orphanage project.
He said that next Friday and
Saturday have been set aside as
days dedicated to helping the
Korean Orphanage Project.
Activities taking place on
these two days include an all-
university dance Friday night
in the Gynm at which 75 cents
a couple will be. charged. Ronan
and Sloan will hold a mixer
Saturday evening and admission
will be 35 cents.
A car wash is being planned
by the drill team for all day
Saturday at the Mt. Pleasant
Tire Service. Sweeney Hall has
arranged for a continuous drive
throughout the semester. If
a girl is locked out of her
room, she can have her door
opened by the student assistant
for 10 cents.
Committee members are
showing a movie, "Give Them
1ms Day," in the dormitories
this week. The film is narrated
bi" Dean Rusk, secretary of
state, and various movie stars.
Donations can be accepted at
any time, but general activities
just be limited to these two
toys. Barnard has made a donation of $70.
Kirwan who was in Korea
worn February 1953 to Febru-
fry of 1954 became interested
in Korean orphans. "You can't
see people going without and
jot want to help," he said. To-
rj, there are 70,000 Korean
"fPhans who are not in an orphanage.
n,J history of the Korean
yiphanage Project dates back
L^ 1959 when Neil pterin? his idea to the Vet's
wub and asked for support.
lie «fy were willing to help so
and •* Went t0 the local, state
thA o+ ,national committee of
wa* iUd.ent Senate, of which he
for ,°hairman> and again asked
gav* ?P°,rt' which they readily
enoii«k ur months there was
ugn support for the-project
to take it out of the Senate and-
make it a separate committee.
Three groups, the Vet's, Inter-Faith Council and the Senate, all endorsed the new group,
but then the new organization
had to have its constitution approved by the Senate, faculty
senate and Dr. N. C. Bovee.
This was done.
The group received information about an orphanage in
Mun-San, Korea, from Col.
Burns, former ROTC commander at Central, who was stationed in Korea.
a .
All money received at Central for the orphanage is sent
to the American Korean Foundation in New York, and they
forward it. At the present time
they have a man over in Mun-
San who is making another report on the orphanage and Neil
says he should be hearing from
him soon.
Kirwan hopes to spread the
organization to other schools.
He said "Central has responded
so enthusiastically, interest-wise
and financially, that we believe
we could do it."
Neil says that the organization's constitution has two purposes. "One is to increase international awareness among students and faculty, and secondly
to support the orphanage. The
fact that we are helping these
kids gives them the only hope
they have. "Without us, there is
no hope," he said.
Membership on the committee is open to any student who
is interested in helping. Meetings are held every Tuesday at
8:00 in the Gold Room of the
University Center.
ment and the necessity of stu-
deni motivation.
Moore will also discuss the
power of the student newspaper
people in
Marjorie Heath, Milan junior,
has been accepted as a delegate
to the Aims of "Education Conference to be held Nov. 17, 18,
19 in Racine, Wis.
The Aims of Education Conference will provide an opportunity for the evaluation of student participation in the specific £lFE and "those
context of education aims. Miss Warriner Hall
Heath wrote an essay regarding Also at the meeting, -the
educational aims as a part of chairmen of the standing com-
her admission requirements, mittees of the Senate will give
The essay was presented to the comprehensive reports of their
Senate Oct. 23. w™he meeting wiU be held
. The Educational Awareness <§—, __
commi-See of -he SenaSe is
sending letters to all campus
organisations .urging them _ to
have a follow-up discussion D
on the -Human Relations"Con- ^|p(oI(](R)IUlS Hf(6)(0][f|_!
A "Program of Sacred Music"
will be presented at 8:15 p.m.
Wednesday in St. Mary's
Chapel.
Participating will be the
cathedral choir and Joseph Sullivan, organist, of St. Andrew's
Cathedral, Grand Rapids, and
members of the Grand Rapids
Symphony Orchestra.
The recital, which is open to
University student^ faculty and
townspeople of the Mt. Pleasant
area, will include compositions
by Flor Peeters and Josef Gabriel Rheinberger.
mand," Moore will relate. Monday at 6:45 p.m. in the Ball-
whai Student Government room and will be broadcast over
has done and plans io do in WCRG, campus radio 6:45-8:30.
the future. He will point out f-
the faults of Student Govern'
IjyUmkd (Pi
Mimeographed copies of the
points brought out and discussed in the panel discussions
are available for use by organizations. Tapes of Dr. Weaver's
addresses are also available.
Both the tapes and the discussion minutes may be obtained
in the Dean of Women's office.
The State of the Campus address, by Student Body President Dennis Moore will be the
Highlight of next Monday
night's radio broadcast meeting.
In his address, "The Challenge -off I_.__ia-ave and -Be-
c
Mm
Lucille Hazekamp, of the Music Department, will present a
recital Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
Warriner Auditorium.
Mrs. Hazekamp, a soprano,
will sing three groups of selections. The first group will be
an oratiorio . from "The Creation" by Joseph Hayden.
Selections from this will be
"And God Said: Let the Waters," "On Mighty Pens," and a
duet by Eric Steg and Mrs.
Hazekamp entitled "Graceful
Consort."
The second group will include
"Birds of the Wilderness" by
Paul Creston, "Wild Swans" by
John Duke and three songs for
soprano arid clarinet by Gordon
Jacob. Included in these will be
"Of All The Birds That I
Know," "Flow My Tears," and
"Ho, Who Comes Here?"
In the third group she will
sing "De Reve," and "De
Fleurs" which are Songs from
"Proses Lyriques" by Debussy.
The recital will end with "II est
doux, II est bon" from "Mero-
diade" by Massenet.
By James Lee Ramsey
Too many cooks.. .Too /many
chiefs.. .Well, you know the
adage.- All in all, there were
eight people formally listed as
directors. They had directors;
they had technical directors;
they had associate directors. But
did they have direction?
.. .Well, you know the adage.
First of all it was difficult for
me to believe that Thornton
Wilder, author of the novel THE
BRIDGE of SAH LUIS REY.
would labor in such an abortive
realm as light comedy. One of
the lines at the end of the play
goes, ".. .no more gingerbread."
And I'm afraid that is the only
place where the gingerbread
does end.
"The Matchmaker" climbs
off its haunches In She third
act with a slapstick, bui lively, cafe scene and ends—just
short of "deus ess machina"—
one act later. So much for
Wilder.
<§> The majority of the cast, suffering from apparent stage
fright, seemed to concentrate
more on remembering their
lines rather than placing the
proper emotion in them. Robert
Carlson, who is to portray a
cantankerous s i x t y-year-old,
seems more a bellowing madman of forty-five. . (Geritol?)
Louise Horowitz looked the part
of an old maid, and could have
turned the play in a better direction, but she did not. Charles
Martin was a most unconvincing drunk, (there's a remedy for
that) as was Sue Grannis whose
performance was colorless and
pedestrian.
Yet, it was not a total loss.
A nod of approval to Fsa__
Spencer, th® Matc-tmak©-*.
who seemed well-east, wad
who added spark of life to _.e_r
role. To Clarence Weaver and
to James Cowie. the mice-like
Yorkersian Mcks, co__g_>a_ula=
tions on a fine salvage Job.
(Cowie was the Image of Ben
Turpin.)
And of Mary Sue Brigham, I
say a good performance in a
subordinate role. It's too bad the
rest of the smaller people were
interested only in the five
hours' credit.
I hope in the future the
Drama Department wiH give
presentations to bolster the fine
name it has established in the
past with'"The Solid Sold Cad=
"Carousel," and "L^oh
[omewaifd. AngeL"
litate Ti HM
Ht f IStiB ffifefc
. The Forensic-Meet of 'Tri-
College Debate will foe 'held at
Eastern Michigan University
Sat., Nov. 11. Students will participate in oratory and-the'-discussion topic will be, "What procedures should the Federal
Government follow in protecting the civil rights of all people?"
Students participating in the
meet will be Vernon Albrecht,
Calvin Carey, Robert Carlson,
Rusch Dees, William' Deckman,
Frank Manning, Robert Miller-
Pete Newell, John. Osier, Jack
Reams and David Williams,,. .
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Object Description
| Title | 1961-11-10; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1961-11-10 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, November 10, 1961 issue of the student newspaper of Central Michigan University. Also known as CM-Life. Originally published biweekly. Later published three times a week during the academic year and once a week during the summer. Began publication in 1941. Previously known as Central State Life. Issues from 1999 to the present are available online at the CMLife website. |
| Subject/Keywords | Central Michigan University - Newspapers; Mount Pleasant (Mich.) - Newspapers; Isabella County (Mich.) - Newspapers; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
| Copyright Permission | Copyright 1961 by Central Michigan University. This material is copyrighted and any further reproduction or distribution is prohibited. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
