Choir Performs in Tyrone
As a part of their 1948 tour, the College Choir performed at 8:15pm in the First Methodist Church in Tyrone, Pennsylvania.

As a part of their 1948 tour, the College Choir performed at 8:15pm in the First Methodist Church in Tyrone, Pennsylvania.
Sarah Revelle, soprano, and Guthrie Frye, tenor, performed a program of seventeen songs in Bosler Hall. Revelle and Frye were accompanied by Harrison Walker on piano.
The Dickinson Follies presented a variety show featuring talent from across the student body in the Carlisle High School Auditorium. The program was to benefit the International Relations Club and the Inter-Collegiate Conference on Government.
Jacqueline Marcault gave a piano recital at 8:15pm in Bosler Hall. Presented by the Cultural Affairs Committee, Marcault performed a program of five pieces.
The College Choir, under the direction of John Steckbeck, performed a program of fourteen songs for their Christmas Concert at 8:00pm in Bosler Hall. The program opened and closed with Mendelssohn's "Hark the Herald Angels Sing". In between, they sang Bach's "Break Forth O Beauteous and Heavenly Light", Bortniansky's "Cherubim Song No.
Lee Cronican gave a piano concert of eight pieces at 8:15pm in Bosler Hall. The first half of the performance featured pieces by classical composers while the pieces after intermission were written by contemporary composers.
The College Choir, accompanied by pianist Jean Eshbach, performed for its spring concert at 8:15pm in Bosler Hall. They sang a program of eighteen songs: Sibelius' "Onward Ye People", Waring's "Onward Christian Soldiers", De Falla's "El Pano Moruno", Speaks' "Morning", Bortiansky's "Cherubim Song No.
Pianist Ozan Marsh performed a program of five pieces at 8:00pm in Bosler Hall.
The College Choir, under the direction of John Steckbeck, performed a carol service during Chapel Hour. They sang a program of thirteen songs: Bortiansky's "Cherubim No. 7", Leontovich's "Carol of the Bells", "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear", "Hark the Herald Angels Sing", "Joy to the World", Krone's "Go, Tell it on the Mountains", Palostrina's "Adoremus Te", Christiansen's "Beautiful Savior", Neildlinger's "Birth Day of a King", Lvovsky's "Hospodi Pomilui", "Silent Night", "We Wish You a Merry Christmas", and Lutkin's "Sevenfold Amen".
Baritone singer Nelson Magill performed at 10:30am in Bosler Hall. Magill was accompanied by Ruth Bailey on the piano for his four-part program.
Osan Marsh performed a piano recital during Chapel Hour at 10:30am in Bosler Hall. Marsh played an assortment of pieces by Chopin and Liszt.
The college music clubs combined to perform in a concert at 8:00pm in Bosler Hall. The combined choirs opened the show, singing Stainer's "God So Loved the World" and Sibelius' "Onward Ye Peoples". Wayne Wolford then sang Handel's "Honor and Amen" and Bury's "There is a Ladye". The "Varsity Quartet" sang the next two songs: Hewitt's "Teach Me to Play" and Huntley's "It's Me". Then the Choral Club took the stage to sing Praetious' "Lo How a Rose Ere Blooming", Gaul's "List the Cherubic Hosts", and Christiansen's "Lost in the Night".
The College Orchestra, under the direction of Professor Robert Schecter, played during a chapel service on October 11. They played the prelude and postlude of the service.
The Dickinson Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Ralph Schecter, performed a program of five pieces for their winter concert at 8:30pm in the Old Gymnasium. They began their program with Mozart's "Overture ('Impressario')", then playing Schubert's "Symphony No. 5", Shostakovich's "Satirical Dance" from The Bolt, and Ravel's "Pavane for a Dead Princess", closing the show with Sibelius' "Finlandia".
The Dickinson Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Ralph Schecter, performed a program of six pieces for their spring concert at 8:15pm in the Old Gymnasium. The musicians played Gluck's "Overture ('Iphigenia in Aulis')", Schubert's "Symphony No. 8 ('Unfinished')", Dvorak's "Slavonic Dance No. 8", Smetana's "Moldau" from Ma Vlast, Bizet's "Romance from the Opera" from Pearl Fishers, and Scott's "Power House".
The Women's Choral Club performed A Musical Vesper Service at 8:30pm in the Allison Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church during commencement weekend.
The Dickinson Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Ralph Schecter, performed a program of seven pieces for their spring concert at 8:15pm in Bosler Hall. The featured attraction of the show was flautist Harry Houdeshell playing Bizet's "Minuet" from L'Arlesienne. In addition to Houdeshell's solo performance, the orchestra played Haydn's "Symphony No.
The Women's Choral Club joined the Allison Memorial Church Choir in a performance of George Frederick Handel's The Messiah at 3:30pm in the Allison Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church.
The Women's Choral Club performed A Musical Vesper Service at 8:30pm in the Allison Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church during commencement weekend. Their program included such pieces as St.
The Women's Choral Club performed A Musical Vesper Service at 8:15pm in the Allison Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church during commencement weekend. For the first part of the program, they sang Rosselli's "Adoramus Te", Thompson's "A Ballad of the Stork", Bach's "My Heart Ever Faithful", and Debussy's "Clair de Lune". Part two of the program featured "music of the colonization period of America": "Let People That on Earth Do Dwell", "Nymphs and Shepherds", "Trip a Trop", "Preguntale a las Estrallas", "Ladira", and "Evening Prayer".
The Westminster Chorus, conducted by John Finley Williamson, performed a program of thirteen songs. Presented by Dickinson College, the show was at 8:15pm in Lamberton Auditorium.
The Shakespeare Players performed Macbeth in a packed-to-capacity Bosler Hall as part of their tour of colleges.
Dickinson joined the world celebration of the two-thousandth anniversary of the birth of the Roman poet Publius Virgilius Maro with a two-day program of lectures and exhibits.
The Men's Glee Club performed a program of fourteen songs for the 1934 commencement concert at 8:30pm in Bosler Hall. The concert featured the reunion of the famed 1914 Glee Club. The men sang pieces such as an old English hunting song called "John Peel", Protheroe's "De Sandman", Wolfe's "Short'nin' Bread", Dvorak's "Goin' Home", Friml's "Giannina Mia", Speaks' "Morning", Rasbach's "Trees", Romber's "Auf Wiedersehn", and the Dickinson Alma Mater.
The Sequi-Centennial Pageant: Scenes from Dickinson's First Fifty Years by Josephine B. Meredith, '01 was performed in the Alumni Gymnasium.