The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1985 Page: 3 of 8
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. 1
Megaphone
3
Stahl and Burke
You Need
Adessa
More
performs
reach U/RTA Finals
Bach
A
1
A
Vote, cont.
+ (-)
A
+
GRE
i
I
I
I
1
I
»
I
A 1984 - 85 Artist Series Prcsejitatwn
A ( + )
+ (-)
All January workshops are 8-9 PM,
McCullough Living Room. All
February workshops are 8-9 PM,
Moody-Shearn Lounge. You can call
X1953 and sign up for one or both, or
just drop into a workshop.
Stahl, who presently lives in
Georgetown, and Burke participated in
preliminary screening auditions
January 11 through 13 in Austin.
U/RTA is an organization of profes-
sionally oriented university and resi-
dent theatres. These theatres offer
several hundred postions to talented
young theatre workers qualified to
bridge the gap from advanced student
With bass
accompaniment.
Tickets: $5.00,
available at the door.
Events: The Birkman Test will be of-
fered again this semester. It is an exten-
sive personality/work environment in-
strument which costs $50 and involves
3 evenings. The test will be given Tues-
day January 29 (it takes about an hour)
and interpreted Tuesday and Wednes-
day, February 12 & 13, 6-9 PM. Mark
and Mary Francis Henry, management
consultants from Houston, do the in-
terpretation. Call X1953 to sign up and
get more information.
TEXAS
Senators
John G. Tower (R)
Lloyd Bentsen (D)
On-Campus Interviews: Info and
sign-up in the Office of Career
Development.
A ( + )
+ )
+ )
+ )
1. Sam B. Hall, Jr. (D)
2. Charles Wilson (D)
3. Steve Bartlett (R)
4. Ralph M.Hall(D)
5. John Bryant (D)
6. Phil Gramm (R)
7. Bill Archer (R)
8. Jack Fields (R)
9. Jack Brooks (D)
10. J. J. Pickle (D)
11. Marvin Leath (D)
12. James C. Wright, Jr. (D)
13. Jack E. Hightower (D)
14. William N. Patman (D)
15. E (Kika) de la Garza (D)
16. Ronald Coleman (D)
17. Charles W. Stenholm (D)
18. Mickey Leland (D)
19. Kent Hance (D)
20. Henry B. Gonzalez (D)
21. Tom Loeffler (R)
22. Ronald E. Paul (R)
23. Abraham Kazen, Jr. (D)
24. Martin Frost (D)
25. Michael A. Andrews (D)
26. Tom J. Vandergriff (D)
27. Solomon P. Ortiz (D)
Monday, February 4 — Northside ISD
(public school teaching)
Tuesday, February 12 — Allied Bank
(management trainees)
Wednesday, February 13 — Electronic
Data Systems (trainees)
Friday, February 15 — CAMP DAY
Thursday, March 28 — Ysleta ISD
Wednesday, April 17 — Houston ISD
Tuesday, May 7 — North East ISD
- (A)
A ( + )
- (A)
Key: + indicates a vote for HR 6028;
— indicates an opposite vote; A in-
dicates that the Senator or Represen-
tative did not vote; A+ indicates that
the Senator or Representative did not
vote but announced against the bill.
(Where a Representative’s action on
initial passage differed from the posi-
tion he or she took on the subsequent
vote to pass the Conference Report,
the later action is indicated in paren-
theses.)
presented by
School of Fine Arts
Southwestern
University
at Georgetown
8:00 p.m.
Friday, January 25
Alma Thomas Theatre
2V/
the House by a vote of 329-91 on
August 1, 1984. The compromise Con-
ference Report was passed by both
chambers on October 10 and signed by
the President on November 8, 1984
(PL 98-619).
to aspiring professional.
The positions include graduate
school assistantships and salaried work
with Shakespeare festivals, resident
theatre companies on and off campus
and other opportunities in 1985-86.
Stahl is interested in an acting
career, while Burke is studying for a
career in theatre production and stage
management. Stahl is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles R. Stahl Jr., of San
Antonio, and Burke is the daughter of
Margaret Burke of Houston.
Both students held off-Broadway
theatre apprenticeships from January
to April 1984.
“We’re very proud of them,”
Hossalla said. “This was the first time
Southwestern had students audition.
We’re thrilled that both were named
finalists. Their successes reflect well on
our theatre program here, in which
both have been very active.”
i
Representatives
Camp Day will be held in the Union
Main Lounge, Friday, February 15, 9
AM-3 PM. Once again 15-20 camps
will be present to offer summer
counseling jobs to our students.
/2o. fhe Piano Artistry
P0"Q4 of Marian McPartland
Kk.\ ■ a..
G.R.E. February 2, 1985: S.U.’s
Learning Assistance Program pre-
sents a workshop, “Doing your best on
the Graduate Record Examination”
Thursday, January 31 at 6:30 p.m. in
the McCullough Conference Room.
For more information call Dr. Fred
Dooley at 863-0952.
avid Stahl of San Antonio,
December graduate of Southwestern
University, and Colleen Burke,
Houston senior, have been chosen as
finalists in the 15th annual national
auditions of the University/Resident
Theatre Association in New York.
The two theatre majors will audition
March 6 through 10 in New York, said
Richard Hossalla, their professor and
chairman of the Department of
Theatre and Speech Communication.
Anthony T. Adessa, violinist, will
perform a program of J. S. Bach in
faculty recital January 30, at
Southwestern University.
The free recital, set for 8 p.m. in
Alma Thomas Theatre, is open to the
public.
This year marks the tricentennial of
the German organist and composer’s
birth.
Adessa is assistant professor of
music in the School of Fine Arts,
where he conducts the Southwestern
Symphony, teaches violin and viola,
and performs in solo and chamber
recitals. He also teaches courses in
freshman theory and string methods.
Adessa and Drusilla Huffmaster,
another music faculty member, will
perform piano and violin music by
Benjamin Britten during the February
20 through 22 Brown Symposium on
the English composer-pianist.
For his faculty recital January 30,
Adessa has chosen Bach’s “Sonata
No. 1 in G minor,” “Partita No. 3 in E
Major” and “Partita No. 2 in D
minor.”
Adessa joined the Southwestern
faculty in fall 1983.
He came from Purdue University in
Fort Wayne, Indiana, where from
1979-83 he carried a load of similar
teaching and performing respon-
sibilities. He taught at Connecticut
College in New London from 1975-77.
At Indiana University Adessa earned
all three degrees in applied violin: the
bachelor’s with honors and distinction
in 1973; the master’s with highest
distinction in 1975, and the doctorate
with distinction in 1981.
In summer 1981 Adessa won the
privilege of participating in a master
class of only eight students, given by
eminent violinist Arthur Grumiaux in
Namur, Belgium.
Adessa’s biography was selected for
inclusion,in the 10th edition of The In-
ternational Who’s Who in Music
released in spring 1984.
Than a Degree
“It Takes More Than A Degree”
In the December 3, 1984 issue of
FORBES magazine, an article ap-
peared by this title relating the woes of
recent graduates who thought that just
having a degree in a particular field or
from a particular field would make fin-
ding a job easy. They were wrong.
In consulting with career experts, the
graduates and current students were
advised to take the following advice:
— choose a field you are interested
in, not a field that is just a “safe bet"
for a job.
— intern in companies you want to
work for after graduation. (You can
often arrange these internships
yourself, you know.)
— research companies before you
interview them; decide where you want
to work.
— apply at the plant, not the cor-
porate level; your competition is less.
— present your interest in the
organization to the decision-makers,
not just personnel.
— use alumni in companies where
you want to work to give you advice on
how to get in.
As you contemplate this advice, you
might also want to take advantage of
workshops and interviews on campus
this semester, whether you are
graduating in May or later.
Workshops:
Resume Workshops — Tuesdays,
February 5; 12
Interview Workshops — Tuesdays,
January 29, February 19
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The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1985, newspaper, January 25, 1985; Georgetown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1560203/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Southwestern University.