Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1964 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Lutheran University Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas Lutheran University.
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Trout to Discuss
Church Involvement
Rev. Nelson Trout, Associate
Jfouth Director in Evangelism for
M:he American Lutheran Church,
will be on campus April 13-14 to
speak on the topic “Why should
the church speak?” He is fourth
in a series of five speakers to be
brought to campus by the Reli-
Bill*
I
REV. NELSON TROUT
gious Activities Committee. The
following week will bring Dr.
Richard Caemerer of Valparaiso
University to campus for Religious
Arts Week.
Rev. Trout is a graduate of
Capital University and the Evan-
gelical Theological Seminary, Col-
umbus, Ohio. He served several
congregations as pastor before ac-
cepting his present position.
Rev. Trout will be on campus
Sunday night through Tuesday. He
will speak in convo Monday morn-
ing. A panel discussion will be
held Monday evening at 7:00 in
Wupperman which will feature Dr
Sally Gearhart, moderator, and
Bernard Baumbach, Peter An-
sorge, Chuck Nowlin, and Barbara
Lorfing'.
Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m..
Rev. . Trout will preside at a Fire-
side Chat in the Clifton Lounge.
Rev. Trout will be staying on
campus as Seguin motels are se-
gregated. Students are strongly
urged by the Religious Activities
Committee to take part in the
stimulating presentations.
Lone Star Lutheran
Student Publication of Texas Lutheran College
Volume XLV
SEGUIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964
Number 19
Two FySbrsght Scholars
New Profs Appointed
Shakespearean Festival
Honors Quadracentennial
Mr. W. W. Christiansen’s! Shake-
speare 333 class is sponsoring a
Shakespearean Festival Sunday,
April 12. The celebration will
honor the quadracentennial year
of the dramatist’s birth. Students
participating in the festival will
4 jj^play original art, sculpture,
and handicrafts depicting authen-
tic life in England’s Golden Age
of world power and high artistic
achievement. The program begins
„ in Wupperman Little Theater at
3 p.m. The public is cordially in-
cited.
“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”
< a Shakespearean comedy, will be
featured at 7:00 p.m. and will con-
clude the day’s schedule at 9:00
p.m. Also included is a film on
- Elizabethan. England, staging of
dramatic readings, displays of
Elizabethan manuscripts, litho-
graphs of major characters in
Shakespeare’s plays, and demon-
strations of the Elizabethan stage.
At 5:00 p.m. begins the Eliza-
bethan Banquet in the commons.
E. B. Everitt will discuss
original Shakespearean manus-
cripts.
The theme is “Shakespeare in
1964.” Gloria Woods and Kathy
Doerfler are presenting a modern-
ized skit from the famed tragedy,
- Religious Arts
Deadline April 15
The deadline for entries in Re-
ligious Arts Week is next week,
miDNESDAY, APRIL 15. By this
date, students are asked to have
their interpretations of the Reli-
gious Arts Week theme, The
Cross: Vertical or Horizontal,
turned in to Donn Rosenauer,
chairman of the Student Religious
TOhivities Committee. Interpreta-
tions of the theme can be in any
of the fine arts forms — painting,
sculpture, music, drama, prose, or
poetry.
Religious Arts Week will be held
on campus April 20-25. Student
works will be exhibited throughout
the week. The Wing Art Gallery
will display interpretations of the
i theme through the visual arts
The presentation of a drama is
planned as is- the recognition of
musical contributions. Literary
v&rks will also be recognized.
The main speaker for the week’s
activities will be Richard Caemer-
er of Valparaiso University, Indi-
ana. Complete plans for Religious
Arts Week will be included in
next week’s LSL.
“King Lear.” Their duet conveys
the ageless appeal of Shakespeare
works as they portray actual
people and human problems.
Art students Dan Baumgartner
and Alva Calmbach will exhibit a
bust of William Shakespeare and
an abstract painting, respectively.
Gabriele Luthardt will display em-
broidered scenes from such plays
as “Macbeth,” “Richard III,”
“’Romeo and Juliet,” and “Ham-
let.” She. also features plaster of
paris masks of chief persons in
Shakespeare’s prominent roles.
Channel 9-TV, KLRN, will fea-
ture at I:CO p.m. the milestones
of Shakespeare and his literary
works.
ill
i .
||
_ . .....
Slump Speaking
©pen to fill
“Stump speaking,” TLC’s ver-
| sion of old-fashioned soap box
oratory, is scheduled to begin
Monday.. The Student Senate "is
sponsoring the project.
A wooden box will be placed
outside of the Kennel each eve-
ning next week from 7:00-8:00
p.m. Any student can step up on
the box and gripe, laud, praise,
oi rant about any campus issues,
national issues, or even complain
about the weather.
Next week, speaking will be
held on Monday through Friday
in order that political candidates
can take advantage cf the oppor-
tunity.
“This will give TLC students
a really great chance to air
their opinions and gripes publicly.
It has been tried on a large num-
ber of other colleges with rous-
ing success,” said Chuck Nowlin,
senator in charge of ‘.‘stump
speaking.”
DR. THOMAS LOSA-HARO
TLC’s dean, William E. King,
has announced the appointment of
four new professors to the TLC
faculty for the academic year
3964-65.
Dr. Thomas Losa-Haro, foreign
languages; David Schawe, mathe-
matics; Harold Bier, chemistry;
and Miss Mary Esther Orth,
music are the new appointments.
These are in addition to Bill
Ray Barrington, profesor in psy-
chology, and Richard Ylvisaker.
returning to the TLC Philosophy
Department, both of whom were
announced previously in the LSL.
FOREIGN LANGUAGES
Dr. Losa-Haro has been ap-
pointed assistant professor of the
Foreign Language Department and
will teach Spanish and French.
Dr. Losa, who holds a degree in
Mil \
DAVID SCHAWE
law and earned a doctorate of
languages at Salamanca, Spain,
came to the United States on a
Fulbright Scholarship. The 30-
year-old professor has studied in
Paris, Portugal, Belgium, Eng-
land, Holland and at the Conser-
vatory of Music at Salamanca,
Spain. He was given a scholarship
by the Italian government to study
in Florence, Italy.
Dr. Losa has taught at South-
west Essex Technical College in
England, at Texas Tech in Lub-
bock and is now teachnig at Mid-
western University in Wichita
Falls.
MATHEMATICS
David Schawe, 31 years old,
has been appointed chairman of
the Mathematics Department. He
earned his B.A. from TLC, M.A.
Spring Concert Tonight
The spring choral presentation
of the TLC Concert Choir will
commence at 8:15 p.m. this eve-
ning in Wupperman Little Theater.
The choir will perform pieces
ranging from melismatic chant, an
early fourteenth century form of
music, to the modern and con-
temporary pieces of the twentieth
Views Find Heme
Another advancement in student
and faculty expression has been
established cn the TLC campus.
The bulletin board on the south
wall of the Kennel has been con-
verted to the Editoral Bulletin
Board.
Anyone wishing to express their
opinion on any topic, local or
world-wide-, a burning controver-
sial issue cr a pet p~eve, is in-
vited to post their comments..
The board, under the super-
vision of Stevie Sagebiel, is an
innovation of the Student Senate.
TLC’s Madrigal Singers
Twe Chin-Wags
Held This Week
The Student Senate continued its
series of guest speakers with two
chin-wags held- this week. The
featured speakers were Mrs. Rose
Bruestedt and Dr. Sally Gearhart.
The first of the two chin-wags
was held last Tuesday night on
the subject of “The European Stu
dent.” The speaker for the eve-
ning was Mrs. Bruestedt. Speaking
from personal experience, she gave
a comparison between American
and European college youth.
The following night Dr. Gear-
hart spoke on the subject of cen-
sorship at TLC. The lecture v/as
presented in the form cf a debate
giving the pros and the cons of
censorship in such areas as reli-
gion, politics, and drama.
century.
The pieces encompass secular,
farcical, and serious fields, as well
as the traditional sacred selec-
tions. Several of the offerings will
be accompanied. A contemporary
and often dissonant piece by Jan
Bender will be accompanied by a
brass quintet and organ. The
Schlicker pipe or-
gan has been
moved to the au-
ditorium for this
purpose.
The program will
be the premier
performance of the
Madrigals, a group
of 13 singers who
sit around a din-
ner table and sing. The concert,
the first on-campus concert of the
1963-1964 year, will feature a
number of soloists. Among these
are Anne Glaske, John Braulick,
and Karen Aasen.
There are many new pieces
which will be performed for the
first time by the choir. One such
piece is a modern composition by
Aaron Copland, a composer of
several pianc and orchestra works.
Eilene Bauch and Barbara Dan-
ker will accompany the Copland
number on the piano. Eugene
Oehler is the organist who ac-
companies three of the pieces.
The French carol, “II est ne” is
enhanced by two flutes. Wayne
Schultz and Tim Sherer are the
flutists. Karon Aasen, will sing
the solo in F. M. Christiansen’s
“Beautiful Savior,” which will
close the program.
Students are urged to arrive
early in order to get good seats.
MARY ESTHER ORTH
from the University of Texas, and
will complete his Ph.D. there this
summer.
He has also studied at SWTSC
and in a National Science Founda-
tion Academic Year Institute at
the University of Texas. He has
taught at Midland High School,
Midland, Texas, and in the math
department at the University of
Texas.
He will replace Douglas Riddle,
who is going to Utah State.
CHEMISTRY
Harold Bier, 29 years old, has
been appointed assistant professor
in chemistry. He received his B.S.
from West Texas State, M.S. from
A&M, and will receive his Ph.D.
from A&M this August.
Bier, who has publications in
the Journal of American Chemi-
cal Society, is a member of the
American Chemical Society, Alpha
Chi, and the Graduate Chemical
Honor Society. He was also listed
in Who’s Who In American Col-
leges and Universities.
MUSIC
Miss Mary Esther Orth has
been appointed as instructor in
music and as college organist.
Miss Orth graduated with depart-
mental honors from St. Olaf in
1961, receiving a Bachelor in
Music degree.
She received a Master in Music
from the University of Redlands,
Calif., in 1962, after which she
received a Fulbright Scholarship
for private study with Flor Peeters
in Antwerp, Belgium.
Miss Orth received first prize
in organ in 1963 from the Royal
Flemish Conservatory in Antwerp,
Belgium.
Profs Accept
! Other Positions
Douglas F. Riddle and Galen
J. Eiben, presently members of
the TLC faculty, will not be re-
turning to TLC next fall, it was
announced by William E. King,
dean of the college.
Riddle, an assistant professor
of mathematics at TLC since 1960,
will be taking a position at Utah
; State University of Agriculture
and Applied Science at Logan,
j Utah. He will teach in the depart-
ment cf mathematics there.
Eiben, an instructor in biology
j at TLC since 1962, will be retur.-
ing to Iowa State University in
Ames, Iowa, to work and study
toward completion of his Ph.D, in
biology. Earlier he received his
M.S. from the same school.
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Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1964, newspaper, April 10, 1964; Seguin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073724/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Lutheran University.