The Mail-Journal, Volume 10, Number 24, Milford, Kosciusko County, 11 July 1973 — Page 7
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- n ibmhmj ■■ g3| ■M \ Kp‘ C Z 1E» « — ~" :• ■ VS. • ’Ci V ~ y I St &- ■ i r t -z< I ’ f —~F REHEARSAL AT ENCHANTED HILLS — Dan Bannell, an Indiana university theater major from Mishawaka, and Roxann Hagemeyer, an IU theater-music major from Bloomington, portray a blind young man and the “girl next door” in a.rehearsal of the Enchanted Hills Playhouse production of “Butterflies Are Free.” In this scene Roxann, playing the part of Jill Tanner, is drinking coffee with her neighbor, Don Baker (Bannell), who she has just met. She has not yet discovered he is blind. “Butterflies Are Free,” opens tonight, July 11, at 8 p.m. at the Enchanted Hills Playhouse, and runs through Saturday, July 14.
Enchanted Hills Playhouse sails through third week
By BILL SPURGEON Off to a good start with a successful two-week end production of “Promises, Promises,” the company at the Enchanted Hills Playhouse, east of Lake Wawasee, sailed through its third week with a four-night stand of “Star Spangled Girl.” A Neil Simon comedy set in San Francisco, “Star Spangled Girl” has a cast of three, two young men putting out an underground magazine and a young feminine superpatriot who virtually invades them. Although the show is far from being one of Simon’s funniest, Doug Stark, Rick and Barb Gossett did a heads-up job of keeping the audiences laughing last week. Stark; the artistic director of the current Enchanted Hills company, the Thunder Bay players, is a big man who moves well. His sense of timing paid off in “Star Spangled Girl,” which has some moments of nearslapstick. Barb Gossett came off well as the engaged-to-a-Marine-officer--but attracted-to-the-
underground-editor-who was not-attracted-to-her girl from the south. Rick Gossett worked equally well as the other writer and his presence provided Stark the balance to which he could play for the laughs. We look forward to the organization’s third 1973 production, /‘Butterflies Are Free,” whicN opens at 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 11, at the barn theater, east of Lake Wawasee. Major roles in “Butterflies Are Free” are to be carried by Dan Bannell, an Indiana university theater major from Mishawaka; Roxanne Hagemeyer, an IU theater-music major from Bloomington; Mary Bosk, a Fort Wayne theater veteran; and Mark Carmichael, another IU theater major. Miss Hagemeyer, who showed a good bit of talent and enthusiasm in “Promises, Promises,” plays a young actress who moves next to the apartment of a blind young man (Bannell) in New York. Mary Bosk plays the blind youth’s mother, ami Carmichael plays a theatrical producer. As an added attraction this
week, paintings by Joanne Bannell of IU will be on display in the theater lobby. Curtain times for “Butterflies Are Free” are at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, July 1113, and 8:30 Saturday, July 14. It promises to be one of the local players’ best one-week efforts of the season. tX I ACTOR PORTRAYS BUND MAN — In the Enchanted Hills Playhouse production of “Butterflies Are Free,” Don Baker, a blind man, speaks with his mother on the telephone. Dan Bannell portrays Baker, with his mother being played by Mary Bosk. Other Thunder Bay Players in the performance are Roxann Hagemeyer as Jill Tanner, the girl next door and Mark Carmichael as a theatrical producer.
Noble county Junior leaders attend confab Debbie Reynolds, Roger Sherer, Geralyn Riecke, Richard Simon and Chris Hague, Noble county junior leaders, attended the Junidr Leader conference last week. The event was held at the Hoosier 4-H Leadership center near Purdue university, Lafayette. The theme for the conference was “Pass it on”. The 4-H’ers attended classes, general assemblies, recreational activities and a talent show in which they could also participate. Indiana District of Kiwanis International and the Indiana Cooperative Extension service are co-sponsors for thfe conference.
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Crosier priests throughout world to visit Wawasee
Nearly 50 Crosier priests from Europe, Africa, Asia and North and South America will visit Wawasee Preparatory school July 16, it was announced today. They will spend the day on the campus of the Crosier boarding school at nearby Lake Wawasee on the eve of the opening of their 1973 general chapter meeting at the Crosier house of studies in Fort Wayne. It makes the first time in the more than 700-year history of the Crosier order that it has held its general chapter outside of Europe. The purpose of the general chapter, held every six years, is unity tor the more than 1,000 Crosier priests and brothers who work in missions in Africa, Asia and South America and operate schools and seminaries and do parish work in Europe and the U.S. Rev. Stan Grabowicz, a member of the Crosier community at Wawasee, said the delegates and other officials of the general chapter will come to Wawasee for a tour of the school and a briefing on the work the Crosier priests and brothers here are doing with youth. In addition to the high school boarding school, Wawasee Prep also conducts summer sports and recreation camps that are attended by nearly 1,000 children and youth every summer. The master general of the Crosier order — the Rt. Rev. William Van Hess, 0.5. C., of Amersfoort, the Netherlands — will lead the general chapter delegates on their visit to Wawasee. He has been master general of the Crosier order since 1946 when he was elected to that
IU School of medicine receives grant The Indiana Heart association has awarded $110,085 in grants to support research into heart disease by 17 members of the Indiana University School of Medicine faculty. Dr. Doris H. Merritt, dean for sponsored programs at Indiana university-Purdue university at Indianapolis, said the grants come “... at a critical time when federal agencies are cutting back the support we must have to begin and continue highly promising research projects at the Medical Center.” Although federal funding is shifting from research support, said Dr. Merritt, the “ . . . need and promise are not shifting. In heart research, particularly, there is more that needs done and more that ought to be done.” The heart association grants, representing contributions of thousands of Hoosiers, will support basic research in heart disease and clinical research programs to improve the care for victims of heart disease. Dr. Merritt said the school of medicine and the Medical Center have established a national rep’itation for excellence in research, patient care, and education in cardiology. “The support of this reputation is important not just in Indianapolis, but in Lake county, South Bend, Fort Wayne, West Lafayette, Muncie, Terre Haute, and Bloomington, the seven centers for medical education which are developing under the Indiana Program for Statewide Medical Education,” said Dr. Merritt. Skylab is ready for next crew When the Skylab crew returned to earth, they left the space station in a “solar inertial attitude” with instruments pointed toward the sun. This will keep Skylab in a position for recording solar activity until the new crew arrives to take over operations. -CNS
Wed., July 11,1973— THE MAIL-JOURNAL
position for life. Also on hand will be the Very Rev. Richard John 0.5. C., the order’s ranking American, who served as prior at Wawasee for four years during the 1960’5. He has been superior of the Crosier order’s U.S. province since 1969 and is currently serving his second four-year term. In addition to Wawasee and the Crosier house of studies at Fort Wayne, the Crosiers also have a seminary at Onamia, Minn., and monasteries at Hastings, Neb., and New Rochelle, N.Y., Beallsville, Md., and Crosier priests are in charge of parishes in several states. Theme of the two-week general chapter will be “Justice in the World Today,’’ according to Father Suelzer who is one of 12 delegates that were elected to attend the general chapter. The American Crosier Province also staffs a mission diocese among the Asmat people in Irian Jaya (formerly New Guinea), Indonesia. There are 15 Crosiers
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serving this mission diocese: one bishop, eight priests, five brothers and one deacon. Founded in 1210 in what is now Belgium, the Crosier order prospered for nearly six centuries in Europe until the late 1700’s. Like many other Catholic Orders during that period, its influence and membership declined as a result of Catholic persecution in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Holland. At one time it operated 90 monasteries throughout Europe but by 1840 there were only four Crosier priests living in two monasteries in the Netherlands. Crosier priests first came to the U.S. in 1850 to work among settlers in Wisconsin but that effort ended in 1879 when the last Crosier priest in the U.S. died. Crosier returned to the U.S. in 1910 and have been here ever since. Today, there are 210 Crosier priests and brothers in the U.S., which is now the order’s second largest province.
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