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The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 47

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE POST-STAND ID, Syracuse, N. Sunday, August 21, 1955 15 Rollicking 'Wonderful Town 7 pens on Tuesday at 41' 'Wonderful Town," the girls battle the wolf at the happy comedy saga of two sisters and the wolves at the win- who storm New York to carve.dows of their Greenwich Village success the cement jungle, ibaseroent apartment, will open at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at! Jean Sincere, understudy the Lyric Circus, 'Skaneateles. joi Rosalind Russell in the part "Countess Marit.za" will play its of Ruth on Broadway, will play i a performance at 7:30 p.m.;the role at the Lyric. Recently today.

she was featured in the hit "Wonderful Town" was dubbedimuskal "By the Beautiful Sea" "Wonderful Tune" by Shirley Booth. Besides these because of the appeared in "Briga- ing music written by Leonard'doon and "Arsenic and Old Bernstein. jLace" in New York. Based on Ruth Kenny's "My, Anne Jones, who starred in the Sister Eileen" stories and the play of the same name, "Town," includes the funniest lines from both previous forms of the story. With a touch of amiable insanity, it generates laughs the Lyric's production of "Wish You Were Here." will play Miss theatrically inclined sister, Kileen, Another newcomer to the tent, Goss, starred in Overtones lire chool lire By WILIJAM I ITEMING Last Sunday wit i the heroic strains of Bcetho 'en's Choral Anne Jones Town" on Broadway opposite Carol Channing.

He will play the same role at the Lyric Circus next week. George Martin, who played in the. Lyric's opener. "South Pacific," returns for Wonderful Town" as do Allan fiale and William Forester. "Wonderful Town" will open Tuesday and run through Sunday, A'ug.

28. The matinee is at 2:30 p.m. Saturday with an early performance at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are a 1 ailable at the Lyric Circus in Skaneateles, at the Syracuse boxoffice at Wilsons Jewelers or at local boxoffices in A Cortland, Geneva, Ithaca, Seneca Falls and Waterloo.

Tho Lyric Circus present I two more season besides Town." Next week, Aug. 3U. will.o ibe "The Student Prince." The; Mrs i a week i open Sept. 6 with' a "'Anything Goes." Jean Sincere Miss Schuyler, Mr. Coty Take Nuptial Vows Symphony ringing air of the Berkshires, the 13th annual Tanglewood Festival at Lenox, came to a close.

Att i the sessions of Berkshire ic Center, the only school in tho world sponsored by a a m- phony orches- in, the open William Fleming 18 tra, were some 405 students who gathered from 08 and foreign, 'his total represents a gain I grants from th Rockefeller Foundation. i this period the fund will donai 3 sums match- 30 odd over Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Schuy- lagt ai golid scpport for the ler" of Marcellus announce the; school's immediate future is as- marriage of their daughter, Missjsured through a fi -c-yefir series Helen Louise Schuyler, to William E. Coty, son of Mrs.

Hazel G. Coty of Watertown and the late Thomas E. Coty. The double ring ceremony was performed Thursday, Aug. -31, by the Rev.

Orson M. Case, uncle of the bride, at South Butler. Attending the couple were Miss SMary N. Schnyler, sister compressed venion of Shakespeare's classic, was- the first major production of the season. Blacher, director of Berlin's Hochschule fuer Musik, taught on the faculty of Tanglewood this summer.

"Ariana Abandoned," a humorous opus by Darius Milhaud and "Comedy on the Bridge" by Bohuslav Martinu completed this summer's operatic novelties. The Boston Symphony now looks forward to its 75th anniversary season during which it will' feature the premieres of 15 i a commissioned new works by the most eminent contemporary composers. The country at large will hear most of them on the regular Saturday night radio broadcasts over NBC. The orchestra plans to participate in the 1956 Edinburgh Festival and has indicated its receptivity to an invitation to tour the Soviet Union. If'this comes off, it will be the.first American orchestra ever to play in Eussia.

Arts i ilhouette "MAU MAU" The violence of the Mau Mau cult in Kenya Color.y, British East Africa, is pictured in "Mau Mau," coming Thursday to the Ecknl Theater. It was filmed in. color at that colony. phitheater and stage will be soon MOVA SCOTIA, "the land of contrasts 1 always a thrilling vacationland, pays trib ite to an important segment of its heratige this summer, as observes the bicentennial of tho expulsion of the Acadians from tht island. Descendants of the Acadians from all over the continent gathered last week 'at the village of Grand Pre as a series of events which comprised the commemorative program reached a climax.

The first permanent European settlement north of the Gulf of Mexico was made at Pori. Royal, Nova Scotia, by Pierre tin Guast, Sieur de Monts. who accompanied by Samuel de Champlain, had sailed from France the preceding year to explore the area. In 1632, forty families of French 3'armers, from that country's marsh west coast, came to tlu province. They soon began to move to the marshy section of Xheir new land, which thev Botli the English and the French, meanwhile, claimed island.

When the treaty of Virecht, in 1713, ceded the territory England, the descendants of these emigrants from France, who had prospered marvelously from the fertile fields and vast of the place, refused steadfastly to take an oath of allegiance to the British King. British government the territory sought for many years to solve the problem, whic i had become increasingly serious. The Acadians, in 1747, were ncld responsible for the slaughter of a company of soldiers from the Massachusetts Colony, who had been quartered in 1 constructed as a shrine to music I Their presence had been leported to the authorities at Quebec in the Empire State. Opera Series One of the founders I by Acadians. and the attacking force.

by one Coulon de Villiers Quebec, was guided in a fo 'cod march to Grand Pre by members Johnlof the group. This event hac much to do with the fate of thesa Browniee, Metropolitan Opera baritone, who is producing the weekly opera series. Sticking this year to the 1 ried-and-true reperatory, B-ownlee explained that future seasons will hear less- frequently heard works. Jose Limon and his Spanish dancers Reassuring Response appearing this year, and the i 4 I 4 4 1 i 4 4 1 M. ing equally the Money rajsea.

Meanwhilef the respopse to the dance is expected to increase in musical shows this i and Hichard Coty of dairies i Hrnilw nf iho i from other source? The school also benefits from individual donors as well as from -scholarships established '-y RCA Victor and other corp'-rations. Fare Tradi iional While the eonc rt Care this summor was main of the tra- Empire State Music Festival, New York's challenge to Tanglewood, has been so reassuring that it seems destined for a permanent place in. the summer. scheme of things. Built on a.

mountainside farm on a pine and hemlock t'imbered lertowu, brother of the bride-'ditional Bach-Beet loven-Brahms slope of the Shawangunk range i importance in cor.ung seasons, seasons. The Toscanini-trained Symphony of the Air is currently providing the orchestral fare. nlduard van Beiuum, the distinguished Dutch conductor who inaugurated the summer symphony concerts at Sllenville, has a I type, tho opera )rkshop man- in the near Ellenville just been offered the baton of a a tc of Mar- 'aged to get in a Ii tie contempo-j (Ulster County), the 'heart of the the Los Angeles Symphony. At 55. unfortunate people.

Eight years afterward, i 1755, the English summoned tlin Acadians to the little church of St. Chr.rles at Grand Pre (a replica the edifice stands on thr site of the original church in the Memorial Park, Grand and proclaimed that "Your lands and tenements, cattle of all kinds and livestock of all sorts arc forfeited to the Crown, with all your other effects saving your money and household good." and you yourselves to be removed from this During the autumn of 1755, 6,000 Acadians were driven on board transports and conveyed to Massachusetts, Louisiana and other places. 4,000 of these people went to French Louisiana, their descendants are known as Many, homesick for Nora, Scotia, returned to join those who had remained behind. The progenies of these people today comprise a vital part of the political, economic and spiritual life of Nova Scotia. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, in his epic poem the Acadian expulsion an event in history known to ever American and Canadian school child, although it was only oi rr.any unfortunate incidents which befell those who came parly to Central School and a variety.

The group a i Van Winkle country, the State University Teachers 1 trio of modem -ne-act is estimated to cost 1 i i i a prophetic work by one A superlative performance of of the I a i a baroque composers takes precedence" over many noteworthy releases this as a new pressing of Vivaldi's The Seasons, Op. 8, joins the recorded repertoire. One of the "tours de force" of past concert season in New Tn addition to a 2,000 seat lege, Oswego. She will teach kin- by composers wit): Tanglewood 000. dergarten at LaFargcville Cen- associations.

is Blacher's; tral School in the fall. "Rpmco and i a upwards oC 4,000 more the leader of Amsterdam's Con-1 the New World. There is no however, thai ho visileH certgebouw Orchestra is one of the scene of the poem, a Pre. the top European conductors. has been suggested -hat lie became acquainted is Blacher's 1 tent theater, there will be room! Van Beirium, who toured with his story of the Acadians and n-hom he called on 'own orchestra last fall and ap- while dining witli Nathaniel Hawthorne at the home nee (Concluded from Page 9) 'sister's maid oE horor and brides- Imaids will be Mis? Gratia and benches and chairs around the peared in the HoMywood Many Longfellow descriptions, nevertheless, said tent.

Ground had to be leveled this summer, hn? MX months in to he accurate enough to sen as a practical ffuidc to the area. for new roads leading into the which to make his decision. The fcstivl site area to hold Among the visitors wlv are i i the pilgrimage to ana for a parking announcement a will Acadian country i summer arc srnups from Louisiana some 2,000 automo- when he re-turns to Los I and from other parts of the U.S. and Canada where the Acadinns wr i wt an the 'home the latter, 862 Ack- JJ 153 a i. a i I'rink.

Pam 2 a erman Ave. biles. The stage, tent and grounds were designed by Frederick noted architect from the Line, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. invited Mrs, i a i mlius, will be Bradway of Baldwinsvillc, er i T.

Graves, Mrs. LeRoy Casper, i Dcl CTlas stolz of Rochester will Mrs. Walter Papwortn, Mrs. Enrl'. be be a a ishers Hathaway, Mrs.

C. J. "Wells a be music, especiaily coming as it from a Lip Miss rtficld. N. a bride-to-be.

Angeles to conduct four when they were ousted from original The bi- next January. The post is tennial is being sponsored by the National Assumption frociety. organization of the Acadians, who are members of tho group birth. ing vacated by Alfred alien-j Vienna Opera. It is hoped by who is at the enri i founders that a permanent the coming season.

ctivities Slow wiH be soloist. penod of strict Skaneateles. Guests were Mr. a A Cazenovla ummer Draws to By PRISCILLA JENNEY DAYS ARE "WARM in but summer seems Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, formerly Port Royal, the earliest white settlement on the American Continent, has just completed a four day celebration, in hnnnr of its 350th birthday. Fort Anne, with its museum, an old British officers' quarters built by Victoria's father, tho Duke of Kent, and the exact replica, nearby, of Champlain's Habitation, built on the original site of iport Royal, are high points nf a visit to this historic spot, once one the most beseiged points on the-Continent.

Many Nova Scotkins, th of iends of Miss Adherence to patterns. The i vitality, i texture and Mrs j. Campbell Butler, Mr. and! Ave hav enlu cained in her honor and a buff -t supper will be given following the rehearsal Friday night by and Mrs. Kennc-th 'Austin i i Manlius.

A three centuries of pioneer life br- "nld inventiveness of those forerunners of the tone poem. "Spring" "Summer." "Autumn" and "Winter." set them apart. They have boen meticulously keyed by the which accompany them and which Vivaldi penned to suit his purpose. The listene composer to the four sonnets can't Walter Matz. is thought to have help but wonder at i i a i and skill of this man i his ability to build musical imagery i -sounds from nature, anticipated by so long such giants as Beethoven and Mend.ilssohn.

It seems hardly possible that Vivaldi could have remained ob- siruvp, Tor the" most part through the transcriptions of i contemporary and admirer. Bach and others, until his fairly recent "discovery." The "red priest," as the Venetian ecclesiastic a known, not Cor radical, tendencies, but rather because of his 3. Alvin J. Grabau, Mr, and 3. Robert J.

Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hogan, Dr. and Mrs. Thurstcn Keese and Mr.

and Mrs. luncheon was plai ned yesterday LcMnync Mar.o by the bride- A family partv was given ago Thursday at the Belle-1elect she e- iterfcained. ub by Mr. and of 216 Fellows Miss WHinc-yer hostess cit Ave. when they had as their and daughter in-law.

and Mrs. Douglas B. 1 to be vanishing on the calendar. With one weekend left hind them, are proficient craftsmen, another aspect of this in August, fall is pushing forward in our thoughts a before TMrld'' island thai it a tourist'sparadise ai j.aij. IB the anvil, the potter's wneel, a'.

rushookmg, basketry, leather. long children will return from camp in time to be washed. ironed, and away to school. Many of the villagers have taken short Among them are Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Hutching, who spent a Jew at Kitchens Park, as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Victor Jr. Mr.

and Mrs. Theodore E. Simon ton and son, Midshipman Bennet Sirr.onton, have returned from a week at Chatham. Mass. and Mrs.

John W. Norton spent a week in Boston, calling nnd ruddy coloring, was conMdered an eccentric. He was fuffa 10 so Car ahead of his i a he was misunderstood, i music 1 1 5 ins criticized extravagant and Fortunately lor us a vast a Vivaldi's manuscripts has been uncovered and is gradu- being made a a i a Cor performance. This Cine disc is a "must" lor the complete basic musical anthology. MANTOVANI PLAYS GERSHWIN Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; Concerto in (Mantovani and his orchestra with Katchon, London).

Brilliant, sophisticated performances of these ever-popular favprilcs by Mantovani, with hi orchestra considerably enlarged for the effort by means of recruits Eloanor Jefi'ers. Mrs. Harold Susan Avery, Koussac oC Montreal, F.Q., mother Miss-Priscilhi Ha vey and Miss Frink. oC Mrs. Keller, Jr.

An opportunity to relax in informal attire after a humid week- was given members of lhe University Club when the August Shirtsleeve Soiree took place Mrs. Ambal he aored her day to their guests of Dudley Harmon has returned to New York after a week's visit with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas bot. Miss Harmon is at present doing public relations work lor Sarah Lawrence College where she has been since February.

Aiter graduating from Smith College, Miss Harmon began her metal and woodwork. forbears came from five European countries or were Indians of lhe Micriac tribe, which first occupied area, have brorght natn skills held to traditional designs, crafts of Nova Scotia, as a result, are unusually imaginative and varied, as well as i i i i wromht. The inauguration, this 'jmmer. daily ferry service between Bnr Harbor, Maine, and a ir Nova Scotia, snd the opening of the now $23,000.000 Canso Causewry. i i Cape Broton Islar.d the a i a are adtirional for visiting Nova Scotia i.his year.

lure daughter-in-1 iw at a luncheon Monday at he: home in Rochester and a bathrc shower was there last night. Among those reserving for par- tram top London dance and jazz ban-Is, make this dynamic repord- tie cre and Mrs. Robert ing a sure candidate for best-seller lists. Gehm who had as their guests i Katchen does an admirable job with these demanding i Mr and Mrs Bernard Schmitt of scores, playing with wit and style, while the clarinet passage which' Ycrlc Cit Mr a Mrs introduces the Rhapsody and the trumpet work in the Con- C. Jordan, Mr.

i a Lou enball. soror- f-ai-tn i -K Howard F. Smith of i A given Thursday, ng. 11, by Miss! Frink and Miss "lith Noble. Mrs.

Deloros I owe and Miss Lowe were bostes es at a kitchen shower and a miscellaneous was Sivcr by Miss Mnrv num. Miss White an.cii career on The Washir Post at the time when Alexander F. Jones was managing editor. For nine years she was a foreign correspondent with The United Press in London and Paris, the last four years of which she was chief Syra'cusc University a i is h.ivinpr an Institute on Japan. An exhibition, somewhat srnailf than at the Lowe Gallery during Ia.it, summer's institute, slso i eing heki i year, in the Musnum in a Hail.

Materials on display hnvc been lont to the Institute by Uie Peabody Museum, Salem, which owns ihe best ethnological collection from Japan in the U.S. Many items of cxceptioi al value, entirely different in character from those shown last sunnier, arc included. The museum Is open week days--Monday throujrh Friday, from 2 to 4 p.m. nnd immediately following the Institute's hnur-Ionp: public i and slide programs which begin at 7:45 each Tuesday evening. correspondent covering United Nations European headquarters iu Geneva, Miss Harmon has written, for The Christian Science Monitor and The Providence Journal and since her return to New York has been a consultant for the Ford Foundation.

Dr. and Pierre Johannct and family have returned to their Syracuse Museum Fine A according home in r.fess., after spending a week with Mrs. Johannet's TMTM- and Be rca urcr '3 1 ,1 i 4 A 14 I 1 and A pre-Christmas Art M.irl. sponsored by members nf local nrt craft organizations, ha- been sclinduled for Nov. and Ifi the certo are carried off i a flourish.

TENMNCH BONANZA London's release, this month, of 27 10-inch LP's should help to bring this practical size into its own. The trend has been, for small scale efforts, to slip i a or even to a shorter work to fit 12-inch tiimentkms, when, actually, the 10-inch Howard Smith of Willi burs, Va. axid Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ity sisters of the 1 ride-to-be.

father, Martin ICnapp. Guest of Mr. and Mrs, Arts and Crafts i Associated A Lists. Ceramic i the Cummins. Mrs.

Ernest Da te and Mr. and. i Stefan Gaensiclc of Ber Philip Glassey for the next few weeks Daubers. Onondaga Arts ild and Me Print a i Germany, who will attend Syracuse! painting prints, weaving printed fabr nbers reserving TIarr Hoa of South University School of Journalism this fall. Stefan IF the son of a a na klns Jsxyclo- lf reramic Maurice Hard a S' a entertain zd Wednesday: architect and comes from a family i i cards disc is bettor-suited economically (and storage-wise) nnd collections of to mar.y bles were Robert E.

Dr. D.wight rieedham, Jnmes Sullivan, Everett Hatch, L. A. Henson. John London's imoressive and varied selection, available now on Swindling, Jvan Hayes, i i a I I A PIT.all LP's, leaves no doubt about the need for more top-quality Trimble, Hobart Davis, Avery discs of i size.

The company's usual clean-cut, concert hall sound and fine performances distinguish the four records from this issue selected, more or less at random, for review at this time. Meanwhile, music from i a i to supper club vocal a had from this Sinclair, Perry Ranch and Smart Johnson. Among; late August weddings will be that of Miss Judith Ann Avery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of six, and six doss.

naments, wrappings, packned foods, small sculpture, mosaics nr- and niglu in honor oj their grandson After graduating from high school Stefan took an lra i -m. feu- of the i items hy the committee to and son. Pvt. tarles Hoag or hip in industry for two and a half years following which he at-' who wil1 Participate. Puerto Rico and his bride, the tended the Freie University in Berlin.

i Miss nn Macdor.ald.i xhis good looking young man speaks English fluently and was daughldi- of Mr, nd Mrs. i a interpreter for Philip Glassey when the latter was in Berlin Macdonald of Cneonta, whose! attending the five weeks' seminar of the Technical Assistance Pro- Wagner: Die Meistevsinpcr (Anton Dcrmota. tenor; Paul 'Austin F. Avery of Buckley wedding took pla yesterday in the Presbyterian Church of One- or.ta. Guests were Mi and Mrs.

Mac-, dona Id gram under the Foreign Operations Administration. Mr. Glassey was one of the four experts representing large industry in the United States and lectured to Berlin managers on Design. Stefan will live on the University campus for the year and hopes Schoeffler. bass-baritone; Vienna State Opera Corns and Vienna will become the bride ot Gla Philharmonic with Knappei-tsbusch).

"Dance of the Wellar Ambal. son- "Entry of the Mastersingers," "Waeh air!" and "Verachtet mir dir Mrs. Fred N. Anibal of Rochester aid Mrs. Doi aid a a do radio work when he returns to his home in Germany He is Scot and.

Mrs. Sally the recipient of the Charles F. Mather Memorial Fund established nf Fort Km Lt. Don- cdonald, a- home.on leave Mcister Tucht" comprise the excerpts heard here. The performances at 2:30 p.m.

Saturday in Japan, the Misses Caroline are highly satisfactory. A too-abrupt cut-off on Side One, of this Church. A reception and Betty Jo Sn nh of Camaen, disc, is, however, an unfortunate drawback. Mendelssohn: Ciipriccio for Piano and Orchestra; Hondo Brilliant for Piano and Orchestra CPeler Katin, piano, with London i a i and Jean Martinon). This sparkling duo, coupled with "TodUintanz" on an earlier London 12-Inch recording i tne same combination, is spectacular fare, handled effortlessly, i precision and taste.

Katin's lucid piano and the Philharmonic's sumptuous quality combine with a stunning effect. Bach: I a i a Concerto in Major; Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue in I Minor (George Malcolm, harpsichord). This also is nn excellent pairing. Mr. Malcolm is an accomplished artist.

His "Chromatic Fantasy." particularly, is lustrous and buoyant, no mean accomplishment on so unyielding an instrument. A Jimmy Shand Dance Party (Jimmy Shand and his band). Tliis disc is strictly for the folk dance set. altho it's engaging listening, too, in small doses, being a collection of Scottish reels. will follow in the family gardens.

S. and Mrs. Ruth Rogers of by Mr. Glassey for the benefit of foreign students, in memory of his father-in-law. REPEAT RESCUE ht water i a rate rcgalta BEAUFORT, S.

C. he He reported that he i George saved in iho same way at reached over the side and Hilled.same age while watching a ro- a drowning 8-year-old boy fromlgaUa. Miss Susan Avery will be her 1 Soulh. Onondaga. Theater Week On Friday evening, members of St.

Peter's Guild gave a fare-, well reception for the Rev. Lawrence Mills and his family, who 1 will leave Cazenovia at the end of August'to take residence in i Baltimore, where Rev. Mills will be associate rector of David's Episcopal Church. Mrs. Hunt Knox, who has been spending the summer in the' village, left on Tuesday for Washington, where she attended 1 the wedding of her Rulison, on Saturday.

Al? 0 attending the i wedding were Mr. and Mrs. George W. Thompson and Mrs Smith-! Read. Atreus VonShrader of Washington.

arrived Friday to spend the weekend with his family. 3rd Annual win It comes complete with the directions for dancing on the package. Miss I Is Engaged Herbert C. Walker of 811 South' jcountry this most ambitious is prol.ably youth-j i Pon ac Hotels FMio Piay-jAve. the engagement; By WILLIAM GLOVER WELLESLEY, Aug.

20 several hundred lven "MISTRESS" TOMORROW Mistress Mine" will be Amulet Productions, he back of summer theater troupes which have worked out across the at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at Club to Play Cards After Luncheon card party will follow the'members of Ka-Na-Te-Nah Club covered dish -luncheon which i attend at 12:30 p. m. tomor in tho clubrooms at band which holds forth here every night at.the Theater on the Green.

in Oswego. The comedy by Terrance Rattigan concern? the lovely and unconventional They call themselves the near capacity sver since. This 1 widow, Olivia Brown, who is of his sister, Kiss Grace Ella "Walker, daughter of the late'Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.

Walker of Kirkville, to Sgt. Willard Ashley Returned from the Berkshire Music Festival at Tanglewood, Mass, If you have thought of buying a Spinet or Grand, here's your chance to save on the world's finest pianos. Ours Exclusively! Your Best- Piano Buy! SINCE 1908 HOUSE OF QUALITY 755 North Salina St. Ph. 2-0700 n-s.

Richard 'Conn el nr 20 Players and, after eight years season the troupe estimates it wUl'suddenly startled out of herjThorpe son of Mr. and Mrs.jiH business, they've run oft somcjhavr garnered total of about complacency to find that she hasjWillard A. Thorp Sr. of Kirkville. 1 Cf 71? QT A NTJ A i Dio productions, including at the bo office.

0 explain to her son of 17 ai ijjg S1.1 LJ M.L tiling from Euripedes to Eugene! But, though intend to main-n rr M-'P i. i i wifh ra chairman, assisted by plain TO ner son 01 it 5 from Eunpeoes to Eugene! But, though intend to mam-- tha she jiving with a nnd Clhristnnhpr Frv. Wpllrdnv hw5p i t. husband bu'' nnp 0 Neill and Christopher Fry. It all started'back in 1948.

when troupe one' jverriding Mrs. George B. Becker, 2 undergraduates from Wellesley, tion to make the big time on Caleb Candee Brown. Yale. Amherst, this coming season.

loves H. Mahoney. Different luncheon salad: add finely chopped ham and mayonnaise "to moisten to mashed bard-cooked eggs. Mold the mix- lure in small custard cups and salad a little paprika garnish tops with tiny sprigs of parsley. If desired, a little turn out on Sprinkle with School in London got together and "These things have been fore-j put up $150 each to launch their! most in our min Is from the very own company.

beginning," Mrs. Alison Rid- For its first five years the groupjley Evans, managing diz'ector played at Town Hall in Union-i" "Repertory a usually ville, then reached just Sh; kespeare," says agreement with Wellesley CoMegejDorothy Stempf, official spokes- under which a for Group 20. "But despite were provided i success of Shakespeare, shutdowns. jhave wanted to create a repertory In.an outdoor setting here, -with 1 of both and new classics and pickle relish may be added to ja nearby alumni hall available in to have a com) any playing all the egg mixture. of rain, Group 20 has playedjforms and style of drama." SLIGHTLY USED! Hammond Organs Several Models FULLY GUARANTEED Traded In on Latest Models REAL BARGAINS! A MUSIC CO.

415 S. Salina St. ith Music Play Whethe STA TOMORROW MUSIC New Piano Ciuarani-ee! Trade-in allowance on your present piano! As little as $25 down Low Monthly Payments Russell 20 Short Steps North of Edwards Clinfon St. 74-2461.

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About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978