The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 5, 1981 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Megaphone and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Southwestern University.
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8
Sextet to open musician series
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Groceries, Magazines, Keys,
Ice Cold Beverages, Ice Money Orders, Cas
Free steamers Attendant always on duty
Open 6:30 R.M.-1:00 P.M. Daily
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602 E. University Rve. Georgetown
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DAIRY HIE
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5 Chopped beef sandwiches $2 79
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4 THE MEGAPHONE February 5, 1981
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IELEPHONE,
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The Flower Nook
608 E. University
7:30-10:00 p.m.
7 days a week
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(PAN) — The Western Wind, an a
cappella vocal sextet, will open the
University of Texas Spring Great
Musicians Series with a performance
at 8 p.m Tuesday, Feb. 10, in the New
Recital Hall, located in the Perform-
ing Arts Center, 23rd and Trinity.
Principally performing music from
the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Baro-
que and early American periods, The
Western Wind also introduces contem-
porary pieces written especially for the
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Wag-R-Bag
Your College Converience Store
Localjounalist
gives students,
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600.
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HAMBURGER • DRINKS • MALTS • PIES • SANDWIOHES
• TOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE •
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JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS
available through governr ent
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$200.00. Call 602-941-8014 Ext. 67 for
your directory on how to purchase.
Next to
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(24 hrs.) 512/231-2079.
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Specializing in Delicious Oak and Hickory
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Beef Brisket-Ham-Sausage-Chicken-Spare Ribs
TELEPHONE BOOTH stuffing returns to Southwestern University as the cast
for "Grease" gets in the 1950s mood for the Feb. 12-15 run of the popular
musical. Booth leaners are Kathy Truman; left, and Cheryl White. Inside, top to
bottom, John Buchanan, Phil Brandes, Nicki Phillips, Ken Wilson and John
Lamb. On top of the booth is Malcolm McQuoid.
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FAMILY PACK
1 lb. sliced beef, pint beans potato salad, cole slaw pickles. onions,
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Coin Laundry
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ON WASH-DRY-FOLD
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3333:
A local reporter for the Williamson
County Sun newspaper visited the
Southwestern University journalism
class last week.
Deborah Barr, a Southwestern
alumnnae, discussed her professional
newswriting experience with the class
of-beginning journalists.
While first hired by the Sun's adver-
tising department, Barr worked her-
way through layout design and general
typesetting work .before becoming a
newsreporter for the paper.
Miss Barr believes that local con-
troversial news is her biggest
challenge while writing stories for the
bi-weekly Sun. "Stating the facts and
attributing the correct sources to these
stories is a must for accurate new-
sreporting," according to Miss Barr.
The relatively small news reporting
staff of the Sun is beneficial to the in-
dividual reporter, Barr says. She says
that this allows her to work on various
aspects of the news rather than having
to concentrate on just one fixture of the
newspaper.
Miss Barr also offered some tips to
aspiring journalists in the field of
newspaper work. She recommends that
a background in photography, layout,
typesetting, as well as newswriting can
help career possibilities in the field of
journalism.
1103 Main Street;
863-6451,
V9 30-1
* group. Formed 12 years ago, the six- ,
voiceensemble features two sopranos,
two tenors, a counter tenor and a
baritone The Western Wind offers light
chamber music integrated with
dramatic interpretation for an enter-
taining recital.
The concert opens with a collection of
various Sharkers' hymns, followed by
three contemporary duets set to the
text of e.e. cummings' poems, several
Latin American pieces, and a light-
50 *s Style Sock-Hop in
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FULL CA TERING SERVICE
Tom Palmar, Owner Opan II am -8pm CLOSED MONDAYS
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Fabulous
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67
13H #72
hearted, gentle satire collection. The
second portion of the concert features
three 20th-Century Brazilian pieces
and an enthusiastic collecrion of
spirituals.
The Western Wind has performed
across the nation at many dis-
tinguished institutions — The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Library
of Congress, UCLA, Dartmouth
College The Washington Post review-
ed the group as "one of the most ver-
satile ensembles on the concert cir-
cuit," and Opera News calls the ensem-
ble; "light, supple, immensely funny in
slapstick and caricature, soulful in
moments of pathos."
The Great Musicians Series is co-
sponsored by the UT College of Fine
Arts and the Cultural Entertainment
Committee. Single admission is $5 for
the general public and $3.50 for CEC
subscribers.
For further information, call 471-
1444
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The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 5, 1981, newspaper, February 5, 1981; Georgetown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1560101/m1/4/?q=%22Education+-+Colleges+and+Universities+-+Southwestern+University%22: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Southwestern University.