THE DMLC MESSENGER VOL. 70
SEPT./OCT., i979
DR. MARTIN LUTHER COLLEGE, NEW ~M. MN 56073
NEW FACES SEEN IN FACULTY LOUNGE By Eric Bernhardt The openine of a new school year always brings with it the welcomed (?) end of a long carefree summer. For many there is the chance to greet old friends and to meet many new friends. The doors are opened to the myriad waves of new faces wandering down the halls, somt• with very lost looks on their faces. This year. five new faces belong to brand new members of the DMLC faculty. Let's meet these new instructors of the Dock.
c;tudents of D~LC. Kurt, who was born in Wayne, Michigan, and graduated from Michigan Lutheran Seminary, will have to ~o to school here an extra year, and thus will not be able to graduate with his classmates. Ile feels it is worth it, though. He says it is a great experience. He gets to see his professors in a totally different perspective. Besides, not f!verybody gets a chance to practice before his practice teaching is graded. Yes, that's right, he will have to still practice teach Cor one quarter of his senior year. Oh, well, after this, it won 't seem all that strange.
a member of the OMLC class of 73, was born in New Ulm and attended high school in Waynata, Minn., a suburb or Minneapolis. She says the whole thing is quite a trip to now find herself on the other side of the desk, so to speak. It is quite a feeling to be on the same side as the professors, where you arc the teacher, not vicl.'•vcrsa. So far the year has been an enjoyable one for Mrs. Bases.
R. Klockziem Roger Klockziem is also a new faculty member of the education department here al the college. Prof. Roger Klock• ziem grew up in Saginaw, Mu:h., where he attended the Seminary there. He graduated from 0'1LC in 1966, and has been teaching elsewhetc for the past 13 years. He will be on campus the 1st and 3rd quarters, where he will teach Elementary Curriculum. The 2nd and 4th quarters, Prof. Klockziem will travel to the Appleton, Saginaw, and Lake Michigan areas to supervise those practice teachers there. He en• joys working where the ~rd has called him, and is largely impressed with the college stu• dents beinc so mature and willing to train for the work of the Lord.
E. Bartel
K. Heyer How would you like to have the decision to put off your senior year for one whole school y1•ar? Furthermore, if you take thaL year off, it will be spent instructing your peers in the liner aspects of piano and organ wchnique!>, This is the decision that faced Kurt Heyer two weeks before the end of his junior year. Kurt accepted the call and is now giving keyboard lessons to
Ci)fllcli by Xancy Brei:
"The Salem Wilch Trials Are Coming to the OMLC Stage. Sign Up Now And Become A 1-igure In History." These words are probably very familiar to studen ts and professors alike right now. They are emblazoned on the Orama Club bulletin board and foretell the 1979 fall event. On Friday and Saturday, October 26 and 27, the OMLC Drama Club will present The Crucible by Arthur Miller. The choice of play for this fall was made in the spring of 1979. Miller's work will bl' the first serious drama to tw pre• sented at the college in several years. Tht• Director is Nancy Beck. Julie Kalbus is the Pro• ducer, and Kathy Stein the Co·Director, Co-Producer. All three are sophomores. Tht--se positions were filled last spring so that preliminary work could be done over the summer. The cast was chosen during the week of September 17. Over fifty people auditioned for the twenty• one available parts. The setting or the play is the Salem witch trials. .\1iller focuses on the young girls who are the accusers and the effect their lies have on the lives of the townspeople. He deals especially
G. Bases Another recent graduate of DMLC to join the faculty here is Grace Bases. You may not have seen her much on campus, because, as a member of the education department.she is sup• ervising practice teachen; at St. Paul's in New Ulm. Mrs. Bases,
al with the conflict John Prodor has when his wife Elizabeth is accused of witchery by Abigail. a young girl with whom he has had an affair. John must eventually choose between telling the truth and 1.;a\ing his own life. Miller use~ some of the actual words from the transcripts of the trials to bring the drama to life. He has a distinct comment on contemporary America by the parallels thal are to be seen between the witch trials and other phases of hyst1,1ria in American history.
The third member or the education department is Mrs. Elaine Bartel, wife of Prof~or Bartel. Mrs. Bartd was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and at• ten~ed Milwauke.,. Lutheran High School. She attended DMLC and graduated in 1950. Before moving to New Ulm after her husband received his call here. she had been teaching at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Mrs. Bartel teaches Ii rst grade at St. Paul's in New Ulm along with supervising her prac· tice teachers each quarter. The practice teacher first spends a period just obsen:ini:: ~rs. Bartel in action, and gradually slips into the role of teacher. So far for Mrs. Bartel. the year has been in her O\\O words, "Just wonderful!"
P. Mischke (For biography, see p. 3)
The Or. Martin Luther CoD•g• Drama Cub Presents
The cast and their roles: John Proct or ................ Sam Keith Ab193li W1ll1am s .••.••. V1v1an Moelle1 Eil1abeth Proc1or .. Laurie Beckmann Rev. Samuel Parris ••.• John Kanter Rev. John Hale. ... Albert Goodenough Ocp.-Gov Danforth . Clarence Ca~ey Ju doe Hathorne •....••.•••• Peter L1e$ke Rebecca Nurse ............ Carrie Melcher M.Jry Warren .•......•••••• Renet- Rt-uer Be11v Parrn .•••••...• Ruth Hackbarth Mercy Lewis ........... .. Cindy Hammer Susanna Wallco11 .•••. 8eth Sch,bbelhut T1tuba ......- . .... .............. KorriMey1ir Ann Putnam ..•.•.•...• Doris Kuskl' Thomas Putnam ....... Randy Cochr.in Giles Corey •..•..•.••. Pc1ul Griepentrog Sarah Good ..................... Dawn Baer Francis Nurse ............ Nolan Marshall John Willard .................... Joel Welke E1ek1el Cheever..•.••.•..•..•• Poul Hough Martha Corey ..•..•.••.••••• •••.• Peggy 099
Tickets:
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Auditorium
Adults $2.00 Children $.75 Students FREE
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