Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Universities qv Colleges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Universities qv Colleges. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

20070409 Helen Thomas to speak at McDaniel


Helen Thomas to speak at McDaniel College in Westminster Maryland.

April 9th, 2007

The McDaniel College web site calls to our attention that “Author and veteran White House journalist Helen Thomas… Dean of the White House press corps … will speak at 7:30 p.m. April 12 in McDaniel College’s Forum, located in Decker Center.

The lecture, "From JFK to George W.: Holding their feet to the fire, Helen-style," is free and open to the public.

For more information click here: http://www.mcdaniel.edu/6629.htm

No doubt the “queen of combativeness and irrationality” will certainly enlighten us with “the Hezbollah view” of the Middle East and the presidency of George W. Bush.

If you are considering going, for sheer entertainment please watch the video posted on July 18th, 2006 on the web site “Outside the Beltway” by Greg Tinti: “Snow To Thomas: “Thank You For The Hezbollah View” (Video)

Mr. Tinti writes, “Although that’s the quotable moment of this exchange between Tony Snow and Helen Thomas, the entire thing is worth watching simply for its entertainment value alone. It’s old school Helen Thomas, trying to ‘Scott McClellan’ Tony Snow. And somehow Tony has already mastered the art of dealing with the queen of combativeness and irrationality. It’s really quite impressive.”

The entertainment is also featured on YouTube: “Tony Snow Making Helen Thomas Look Like A Fool.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICq2AuxYTTE

_____

For a glimpse of perhaps we will hear from Ms. Thomas can be found here: “Helen Thomas on the Media's Failure.” One of the interesting quotes is when she pronounces condescendingly, “everybody with a laptop thinks they’re journalists - that’s a problem…”

Posted May 12th, 2006: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl5qv6U2AQo

“Journalist Helen Thomas discusses the failure of the media in covering the Iraq war and its aftermath during the Why Media Matters panel hosted by Media Matters for America

_____

Want more?

Posted April 06, 2006: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWNf0lmuRcc

Fox Watch: Media Matters for America host a discussion panel moderated by MMFA's David Brock with Al Franken, White House Press Corp. reporter Helen Thomas and Newsweek's Eleanor Clift.

______

As one can quickly and easily see, Ms. Thomas will probably be a hit at McDaniel College.

Liberals love her. Conservatives find her cringe worthy at best. To understand why; perhaps Ms. Thomas said it best in a November 6, 2002 account of her presentation at the Massachusetts’s Institute of Technology (MIT):

“‘I censored myself for 50 years when I was a reporter,’ said Thomas, who is now a columnist for Hearst News Service. ‘Now I wake up and ask myself, “Who do I hate today?”’ Her short list of answers seems not to vary from war, President Bush, timid office-holders, a muffled press and cowed citizens, pretty much in that order.”

[…]

"Helen Thomas offered a very powerful indictment of the current behavior of the Bush presidency in her comments on the incoherence and inconsistency of Bush's policies and the danger to civil liberties of Bush's rhetoric," said (MacVicar Faculty Fellows David) Thorburn, (professor of literature.)

[…]

Read the rest here: “Journalist Helen Thomas condemns Bush administration.”

Arin Gencer, writing for the Baltimore Sun, essentially gave her a pass in an article about Ms Thomas’ visit and lecture published March 8th, 2007, entitled: “A history of tough questions.”

Terry A. Dalton, an English and journalism professor at McDaniel, had originally called Thomas "out of the blue" to see if she would visit his media and politics class, he said.

[…]

Thomas is known for her persistent and pointed questions in news briefings, particularly with respect to the war in Iraq

As a columnist for Hearst Newspapers, she spends her days not only speaking but writing what's on her mind.

Or, as Thomas puts it in her book, Thanks for the Memories, Mr. President: "After all those years of telling it like it is, now I can tell it how I want it to be."

At McDaniel, she is expected to do just that.

Read the rest of the Baltimore Sun article here: “A history of tough questions.”

Professor Dalton remarked in the Arin Gencer piece:

… a book he recently started having students read brought Thomas to mind.

That book was former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer's Taking Heat: The President, the Press, and My Years in the White House, which details his encounters with White House reporters.

"He mentioned Helen far more by name than any other reporter. ... He gave her a pretty hard time," Dalton said, citing questions she had asked.

Dalton said he wondered whether Thomas would be willing to come and give students her side of the story.

He was delighted when she agreed, he said.

In a March 12, 2003 article in Slate by Jack Shafer, entitled, “Screw You, Mr. President,” it is noted:

… Her loathing for Bush is palpable. "This is the worst president ever," she told the Torrance, Calif., Daily Breeze in January. "He is the worst president in all of American history."

Though Thomas never masked her crush on Democrats when she worked as a news writer, she comes completely out of the closet in her columns, ripping "Bush's headlong drive into war, his favor-the-rich economic policy and his campaign to put right-wing ideologues on the Supreme Court." As the child of Lebanese immigrants, Thomas knows exactly which religious button she's pushing when she repeatedly condemns Bush's plans for war on Iraq as a "crusade."

Some insight as to Mr. Fleischer’s point of view can be found in Mr. Shafer’s 2003 Slate article:

But Thomas' opinion columns are a model of restraint when compared with the snarky speeches she delivers in lieu of asking questions at White House briefings. In the past, Ari Fleischer usually gave Thomas first shot, and in recent weeks she rode a constant theme:

Thomas to Fleischer: Will you state for the record, for the historical record, why [Bush] wants to bomb Iraqi people? March 5, 2003

Thomas to Fleischer: [W]hy is [Bush] going to bomb them? I mean, how do you bomb people back to democracy? This is a question of conquest. They didn't ask to be "liberated" by the United States. This is our self-imposed political solution for them. Feb. 26, 2003

Mr. Shafer concluded:

“We could applaud her for stripping the varnish off standard-issue White House lies with her acerbic questions, but rarely are her questions tailored to produce an intelligent response from Fleischer. When you repeatedly ask the question, "Why does he want to drop bombs on innocent Iraqis?" you're mostly venting your spleen.”

[…]

“Which brings us to the saddest part of Thomas' decline: She often raises serious questions that are on lots of people's minds—questions that other critical journalists in the press corps might want to pose. But when spoken by Thomas' lecturing lips first, the questions sound absurd. She ends up taking the air out of the room for intelligent criticism of the president and helps make the press corps look like a Saturday Night Live skit. You can almost hear Fleischer squealing behind closed doors after the briefings: Thank God for Helen Thomas!

If Professor Dalton is bringing Ms. Thomas to McDaniel so that she may give McDaniel journalism students advice; insight as to what she will say can be found in her November 2002 MIT presentation:

“Asked to advise young journalists, Thomas pounced. ‘Remind the politicians you interview that you pay them, that they are public servants. Remember every question is legitimate. And don't give up. There's always a leak. There's always someone who's trying to save the country,’ she said.”

_____

For additional background, the AEI Speaker’s Bureau says:

Commonly referred to as "The First Lady of the Press," former White House Bureau Chief Helen Thomas is a trailblazer, breaking through barriers for women reporters while covering every President since John F. Kennedy. For 57 years, Helen also served as White House correspondent for United Press International. She recently left this post and joined Hearst Newspapers as a syndicated columnist.

Born in Winchester, Kentucky, Helen Thomas was raised in Detroit, Michigan where she attended public schools and later graduated from Wayne State University. Upon leaving college,Helen served as a copy girl on the old, now defunct Washington Daily News. In 1943, Ms. Thomas joined United Press International and the Washington Press Corps.

For 12 years, Helen wrote radio news for UPI, her work day beginning at 5:30am. Eventually she covered the news of the Federal government, including the FBI and Capitol Hill.

In November, 1960, Helen Thomas began covering then President elect John F. Kennedy, following him to the White House in January, 1961 as a member of the UPI team. It was during this first White House assignment that Thomas began closing presidential press conferences with "Thank you, Mr. President."

In September, 1971, Pat Nixon scooped Helen by announcing her engagement to Associated Press' retiring White House correspondent, Douglas B. Cornell at a White house party hosted by then President Nixon in honor of Cornell.

Thomas was the only woman print journalist traveling with then President Nixon to China during his breakthrough trip in January, 1972. She has the distinction of having traveled around the world several times with Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton, during the course of which she covered every Economic Summit. The World Almanac has cited her as one of the 25 Most Influential Women in America.

Helen Thomas has written three books, including her latest, Thanks for the Memories Mr. President: Wit and Wisdom from the Front Row at the White House.

####

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

20061210 CCC Gala features Moscow Symphony

December 13th, 2006


Later this evening, I’m looking forward to attending a Gala for the benefit of Carroll Community College featuring the Moscow Symphony Orchestra.

Ellie Baublitz penned an excellent piece on this evening’s event the other day in the Baltimore Sun.


Carroll Community College Gala features Moscow Symphony


Orchestra to play holiday concert; members will offer classes


By Ellie Baublitz, Sun Reporter, Originally published December 10, 2006

The Russians are coming, and they will be bringing musical instruments.

The Moscow Symphony Orchestra will take the stage Wednesday at Carroll Community College's Scott Center Theater for the CCC Foundation's Partners Campaign Starry Night gala.

"The college is very excited to be bringing this cultural experience here because it is part of the strategic plan to bring cultural offerings to the college for the whole community," said Sylvia Blair, Carroll's community relations coordinator.

Billed as "an elegant, festive event," the fundraiser will begin at 6:30 p.m. with a black tie optional cocktail reception in the Great Hall, then continue with the 40-piece symphony performance at 8 p.m., Blair said.

The performance will feature a 45-minute set of selections from The Nutcracker, an intermission, then a Holiday Pops set, including the "Harry Potter Concert Suite," "Christmas Festival," "Celebrate Christmas," "Sleigh Ride," "Russian Sailors Dance from the Red," "Fantasia on Green Sleeves" and "Phantom of the Opera."

Read the rest here.

####

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

20061120 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program article on McDaniel College web site

4-H Therapeutic Riding Program article on McDaniel College web site

What the article does not mention is how this is just another good example of all the positives that come out of partnering with McDaniel College. The school is a huge asset for Carroll County and Westminster. Up on “The Hill,” there are many great future leaders available who would love to pitch –in and help in the community – all ya have to do is ask.

The McDaniel college students who have helped with the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program have been a big help for a great program that helps many folks…

It is nice to see them get some recognition…

Erin Wilson ’07 and Amanda Eubank ’08 wake up at the crack of dawn to feed horses in the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program at the Carroll County Agricultural Center. In addition to twice-daily feedings, they check the horses for any changes in behavior, cuts, or scratches.

[…]

More than 2,000 riders have benefited over the program’s 28 years. McDaniel alumni who help run the program include Caroline Babylon ’76 B.A., ’96 M.L.A., Brian Lockard ’69 M.Ed, and Karen Scott ’80 M.Ed.

[…]


For more information about the 4-H Therapeutic riding program, click here. http://www.trp4h.org/index.html

Read the rest of the article here.

####

Saturday, November 04, 2006

20061104 Muhlenberg McDaniel Football Game




Muhlenberg McDaniel Football Game

November 4th, 2006

Above: The bottom picture is a “mural” of the college campus from West Main Street, from approximately 1906. The middle picture is from approximately the 1920s and depicts the Geiman farm buildings that used to exist just to the north- northwest side of what we now know as the grandstand. The top photo is of the football field as viewed looking west from the main campus. This photo is also, maybe, from the 1920s.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9X04kIm9aFM





This afternoon, Nov. 4, 2006, we enjoyed a McDaniel College versus Muhlenberg College football game on the beautiful campus of McDaniel College in Westminster Maryland. For more information about this beautiful private liberal arts college, please go to: http://www.mcdaniel.edu/ or “McDaniel College October 2002 information post.”

For previous posts about McDaniel College go here: “McDaniel College October 2002 information post.”

####

UPDATE UPDATE

McDaniel College

From the McDaniel College web site.

McDaniel College Athletics

11/04/2006 McDaniel 22, Muhlenberg 19 Westminster, Md. ---

McDaniel tops Muhlenberg 22-19 in home finale

Box Score

WESTMINSTER, Md.Brad Baer (Westminster, MD/Westminster) completed 18 of 28 passes for 194 yards, including a pair of touchdowns, to lead McDaniel to a 22-19 victory over Muhlenberg in Centennial Conference (CC) football action on Saturday.

Baer also ran for a team-high 80 yards for the Green Terror (4-5, 2-3 CC), who got scoring catches from three different receivers.

Eric Santagato completed 21 of 33 passes and ran for both scores for the Mules (4-5, 2-4 CC), who lost to McDaniel for the 11th consecutive season.

Trailing 19-14 at the end of the third quarter after Santagato capped a nine-play, 42-yard drive with a three-yard touchdown run, the two teams traded three-and-outs before the Green Terror put together a methodical game-winning drive.

Taking over at its own 27, Baer completed a six-yard out pattern to Matt Gingrich (Rockville, MD/Magruder) and used his feet to scramble for another nine, setting up first down at the McDaniel 42.

After a seven-yard completion to Christian Turner (Baltimore, MD/St. Paul’s) and the sixth Muhlenberg sack gave the Green Terror a third-and-8 from its own 44, Baer took off for an 18-yard run to set up first down at the Muhlenberg 38.

After four straight completions moved McDaniel inside the 20 and facing fourth-and-1, the Green Terror elected to go for it.

Tom Develin (Boyertown, PA/Boyertown Area) went for three yards off the right tackle to move the chains.

After a one-yard completion to Gingrich and timeouts by each team, Baer found Matt Bergbauer (Westminster, MD/Westminster), who caught five passes for a career-high 110 yards,for a 15-yard touchdown to put McDaniel on top, 20-19.

Baer hit Gingrich for the two-point conversion for a 22-19 lead with 5:46 to play.

On the ensuing kickoff, Jay Leonard’s (Westminster, MD/Westminster) squib kick went off the foot of one of the Muhlenberg front-line players, allowing Ryan Sheahin (Frederick, MD/Frederick) to jump on the ball and give the Green Terror possession once again.

After three runs netted just six yards but chewed up 2 minutes, 18 seconds, Tom Wenrich’s (Wernersville, PA/Conrad Weiser) 43-yard punt pinned the Mules at their own 2.

Muhlenberg used the seven plays to move the ball out to its own 27 before Bobby Waugh (Hagerstown, MD/North Hagerstown) picked off Santagato to seal the victory.

On the Green Terror’s second play from scrimmage, Baer broke a 59-yard run to move his squad deep into Mule territory.

After two more Baer rushes and a four-yard pass to Turner moved the ball from the 27 to 11.

On first down, Baer lateralled the ball wide to Brett Gibson (Felton, DE/Dover), who found Chris Martin (Clarksville, PA/River Hill) in the back corner of the end zone for the senior’s first reception of the season.

Pinned deep its own territory on its next possession, Joel Haddock broke through the line to block the punt, which rolled out of the back of the end zone for a safety to pull Muhlenberg within 7-2.

The Mules opened the second quarter with a 13-play, 56-yard drive that Timothy Hughes capped with a season-long 42-yard field goal to pull his team within 7-5.

A Drew Abbamonte (Damascus, MD/Damascus) interception and 24-yard return gave McDaniel possession on Muhlenberg side of the field.

On third-and-6 from the 43, Baer hooked up with Bergbauer for a 42-yard gain, setting up first-and-goal from the one-yard line.

On second down, a 20-yard sack pushed the Green Terror back to the 21.

On the next play, McDaniel sent the field-goal team on the field, forcing Muhlenberg to take a timeout.

Out of the timeout and with 15 seconds on the clock, the Green Terror elected to send the offense back onto the field. After an encroachment penalty moved McDaniel to the 16, Baer found Gingrich on the fade to put the hosts on top 14-5 entering the break.

Santagato engineered a 13-play, 72-yard drive to open the second half, calling his own number to cap the march with a four-yard run.

In addition to his fourth interception of the season, Abbamonte led the McDaniel defense with 18 tackles and a pass breakup. Anthony Catucci (Davidson, MD/Archbishop Spalding) also reached double figures with 10 stops.

Matt Johnson led the Mules on the ground with 92 yards rushing. David Mazzola, Matt Rathbun and Billy Moates each had eight tackles to pace the defense. Tom Tarsitano added seven stops, including two for loss and 1.5 sacks.

The Green Terror, who will look to record its 500th all-time victory and avoid its first losing season since 1996, wraps up the 2006 season at Johns Hopkins on Saturday. Game time is 1 p.m.

For more information on McDaniel College athletics – go here: http://www.mcdaniel.edu/athletics/

####


Monday, December 12, 2005

20051209 Is Curry ready to jump ship

Is Curry grinding an old ax or ready to jump ship?

Wayne Curry – 1971 Western Maryland College, now McDaniel College, graduate.

Friday, Dec. 9, 2005

Former Prince George’s county exec Wayne Curry has had a famously rocky relationship with Senate President Mike Miller.

The two have bloodied each another in the boxing ring that is Prince George’s County politics for more than a decade. Miller supported Curry’s opponent in 1994. Curry has recruited candidates to run against Miller.

Curry even told us during the redistricting debacle of 2000 that he wanted Miller out of the county altogether.

So when Curry took an on-the-record shot at Miller on Monday after a legislative breakfast hosted by Annapolis lobbying firm, Rifkin, Livingston, Levitan and Silver, it could be seen as not that big of a deal.

But Curry, a Dem, is being considered as a running mate for Gov. Bob Ehrlich, and when he decides to weigh in on Democratic Party politics or one of the party leaders like Miller, we take note.

Read the rest here: Is Curry grinding an old ax or ready to jump ship?

####

Tuesday, July 06, 2004

20040706 McDaniel College and Westminster Good Partners for Over 137 Years

McDaniel College and Westminster – Good Partners for Over 137 Years

The long version of my Westminster Advocate column for July 6th, 2004
by Kevin Dayhoff, Westminster Mayor (1,262 words)


Some time ago, about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, approximately 90 campers dashed down College Hill and headed east on Main Street.

Several friends joined them, over at Westminster Mayor Michael Baughman’s shop, as they galloped through Westminster, across the railroad tracks, charging to the other end of town - only soon to be seen, retreating back through town shortly later.

In the ensuing melee that followed, the Carroll County State’s Attorney, C. W. Webster, was among several local prominent citizens that were captured and released the next day.

This experience on June 29th, 1863 perhaps marked the first foray into Westminster from our good neighbors on The Hill, McDaniel College.

Of course, over time the event has been called “The Battle of Westminster” or otherwise known as: “Corbit’s Charge”. With some help from my friend and historian, Tom LeGore, perhaps I need to tell the rest of the story.

It’s a good story about a partnership that has been enormously beneficial to everyone in Westminster and McDaniel College for over 137 years. A relationship that got off to an exciting start and continues to be exciting many years later.

Around 12 noon, on June 28th, 1863, The First Delaware Calvary arrived in Westminster where they were immediately directed to the highest elevation in and around Westminster - a hill just outside the western end of Westminster, known then as “The Commons”.

The Commons was a 12 acre patch of land which had a commanding view of Westminster’s Main Street, and all the roads which led to New Windsor, Taneytown, Uniontown and Gettysburg.

The 1860s were an exciting time for Westminster, then a small rural farming community of approximately 1,900 residents and about 40 businesses.

The 1860s saw the Western Maryland Railroad come to town June 15th, 1961 when the railway line from Owings Mills was completed to Westminster.

According to “Carroll County Maryland – A History 1837-1976” by Nancy Warner; F. R. Buell, who later founded McDaniel College (then known as Western Maryland College) in 1866, opened the “Westminster Male and Female School” in April 1860.

The first library in the County, the Westminster Library, was incorporated in September 1863 and was open to the public every Friday afternoon at the Odd Fellow’s Hall and several circuses visited town at Fairground Hill – “charging the “huge” sum of 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children…”.

In the 1860s, The Commons or “Old Common” as it is referred to in “The Formative Years” written in 1982 by Samuel Biggs Schofield and Marjorie Cowls Crain; commanded – as it does today, a logistical presence over the local community. It looms on the horizon from most any vantage point in Westminster.

According to “The Formative Years” which referred to James W. Reese’s history of the college: it was the west end playground of Westminster. Political meetings were held on The Hill, as were the Annual Independence Day Ceremonies.

It is also where the great questions of the day such as preservation of the union, free trade, protective tariffs and internal infrastructure improvements in the community, were discussed by local citizens eager to learn more about their responsibilities as the local community and the nation grew.

It is only fitting that Western Maryland College was founded on The Commons in 1866 by Fayette Buell. On May 1st, 1866 Fayette Buell received a deed for eight acres of The Commons” from Edward and Margaret Lynch and William and Matilda Miller for $4,580.00. Over 137 years later, the College on the Hill still commands a inspiring presence, teaching and debating the great questions of the day.

According to a short history posted on McDaniel College’s web site in October 2002: as with many new ventures, financing was slow to materialize, but Fayette Buell did receive generous financial support from several of Westminster’s community leaders including: Isaac Baile; the Reverend James T. Ward, of the Methodist Protestant Church, who would become the College’s first president; and John Smith, president of the thriving Western Maryland Railroad and a resident of nearby Wakefield Valley, who became the first president of the College’s Board of Trustees.

The College was named after the Western Maryland Railroad, perhaps at the suggestion of one of its benefactors, John Smith. This was the first of many collaborations between Westminster’s community leadership and the College on the Hill.

Westminster Mayor Michael Baughman later became a member of the Western Maryland College Board of Trustees.

“The Formative Years” reports that the first foundation stone of “Old Main”, the first building on campus, was laid on August 27, 1866. Upon its completion, “Old Main” joined other prominent buildings in town such as the Odd Fellow’s Hall, built in 1854 in the middle of town at 140 East Main Street and the Carroll County Courthouse, built in 1838, which formed the bookend to the college at the other end of town.

On June 29th, 1863, approximately 100 soldiers of the First Delaware Calvary were camped at the Commons on the Hill. 90 of those soldiers engaged General J. E. B. Stuart’s Confederate Calvary totaling over 6,000 men, in Corbit’s Charge, and changed the course of history.

Today, compared to the 17,000 citizens of the city of Westminster, McDaniel College’s 400 employees and 2,700 undergraduate and graduate students continue to change the course of history with about the same odds.

Now, in 2004, students, employees and faculty are usually the ones galloping down the Hill and the charging is done with a credit card. The employment exchange works in both up and down the Hill, as the college is an excellent employer, with close to 400 employees and a payroll of over $24 million per year.

In a presentation by Dr. Ethan Seidel on March 7, 2002, concerning the economic impact of McDaniel College on Carroll County, he estimated that students at McDaniel College spend over $4 million a year on and off campus. Dr. Seidel further elaborated that it is estimated that McDaniel attracts over 100,000 visitors per year to Westminster, many who come to attend the Raven’s summer camp during August.

These visitors are estimated to pump over $1 million into the local economy. In the last decade, McDaniel College has spent approximately $5 million a year in capital improvements.

In addition to McDaniel College’s contribution to the economic vitality of the City of Westminster, the College provides a pool of students for employment and as interns for many businesses and governments.

The students, faculty and staff venture off the hill regularly, providing expertise to businesses, non-profit organizations and to government boards and commissions. Their volunteer time has added greatly to the quality of life for the residents of Westminster and Carroll County.

Many members of the community regularly retreat up to the College on The Hill, for educational and cultural activities, such as Common Ground on the Hill, Theater on the Hill, and an on-going program of concerts, speakers and of course, college classes.

This cultural contribution adds greatly to the soul and quality of life we know as the City of Westminster.

So, by now I hope you understand how important the charging and retreating is to the City of Westminster,

So by now I hope you understand how much we approve of today’s charging and retreating by campers on The Hill, - however; please bear in mind we still don’t approve of any “catch and release” of the Carroll County State’s Attorney.

© Kevin Dayhoff, Westminster Mayor

Friday, October 17, 2003

20031013 Westminster Choir College by The Daily Princetonian

http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/archives/2003/10/13/page3/

Westminster Choir College

By Zack Surak, Princetonian Senior Writer

Imagine walking on to one of the smallest campuses you've ever seen. As you walk into a dramatic hall — similar in beauty and presence to Princeton's Nassau Hall — images of venerated men and women stare at you from the depths of the canvases that line the walls. History resonates from the soul of the building.

The rest of the interior is reminiscent of the elegant beauty of Prospect House with antique artifacts indicating a rich history. But the setting is not that of Prospect House or Nassau Hall.

As you ascend to the main lobby up a story from the entrance, a wall of singing suspends you in your tracks. Peering into the room awash with late afternoon sunlight, you see a woman — no more than 25 years old — standing adjacent to a black grand piano. She is sweetly singing an aria from an opera that this writer never had the privilege of hearing. The notes range at least three octaves and the emotions of the lyrics are played out on the singer's face.

Then, the surreal scene is interrupted. A member of the small audience calls out, "More legato . . . suspend . . . suspend . . . and release."

[…]

Westminster is a small music college with an undergraduate program of roughly 330 students pursuing scholarship in music. Classes include music education, organ performance, piano, sacred music, theory and composition, voice performance and music theater.

At the graduate level, Westminster also has about 110 students who are working towards a Master of Music degree.

The story of Westminster began in 1920 when John Finley Williamson established the Westminster Choir at the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Dayton, Ohio. Within a few short years, Williamson had his volunteer choir singing at a professional level at national venues.

The early success motivated Williamson to start the Westminster Choir School in 1926 to professionally train musicians. The school moved to Ithaca, New York, in 1929 and became part of Ithaca College.

Then, in 1932, the institution moved to be close to major cities with symphonic orchestras and to a seminary that would complement the school's study of sacred music. With the help of Charles Erdman, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church and professor at the Princeton Theological Seminary, the Westminster Choir School moved to Princeton and was renamed Westminster Choir College.

At the time, Princeton President John Hibben helped Westminster's move as he lobbied the New Jersey governor for approval of college's charter. In those first years, Hibben also made the University chapel available for choral services and allowed the college to use University grounds for Westminster's annual spring festival. Close ties were forged between the University and Westminster.

Westminster continued to expand its renown during the 20th century, attracting many prominent musicians to its conservatory and faculty.

Then, in 1992, Westminster merged with Rider University.

Today, Westminster continues to attract topflight musicians. The school is home to musicians from 40 states and 18 countries.

[…]

Read the entire article here: Higher Education in Princeton — The other institutions

####

Westminster Choir College Princeton New Jersey, New Jersey,

Tuesday, October 01, 2002

20021000 About McDaniel College

1871 Graduating class of McDaniel College

About McDaniel College

October 2002

This material is from the web site of McDaniel College.


McDaniel College 2 College Hill Westminster, Maryland 21157 USA

410-848-7000
Site Map

For more information, please go to: http://www.mcdaniel.edu/

About McDaniel Updated November 1st, 2006:

McDaniel College is a private, selective college of the liberal arts and sciences offering a life-changing education to undergraduate and graduate students. One of the first things you'll notice is the sense of community that defines McDaniel. Professors are first and foremost teachers and mentors: you'll see them cheering from the sidelines of a soccer match or chatting with students over lunch in the Pub...

Other life-changing opportunities: classes that average 17 students; more than 100 clubs, organizations, and athletics teams; and the opportunity to study at the only U.S. college campus in Budapest, Hungary.

Just wait until you see our campus in Maryland: a spectacular hilltop setting with a view of the Catoctin Mountains, yet close to the vast resources of the nation's capital in D.C. and the city of Baltimore.

Questions? Please contact us.

About McDaniel College

October 2002

McDaniel College is a private, selective college of the liberal arts and sciences offering a life-changing education to undergraduate and graduate students. One of the first things you'll notice is the sense of community that defines McDaniel. Professors are first and foremost teachers and mentors: you'll see them cheering from the sidelines of a soccer match or chatting with students over lunch in the Pub...

Other life-changing opportunities: classes that average 17 students; more than 100 clubs, organizations, and athletics teams; and the opportunity to study at the only U.S. college campus in Budapest, Hungary.

Just wait until you see our campus in Maryland: a spectacular hilltop setting with a view of the Catoctin Mountains, yet close to the vast resources of the nation's capital in D.C. and the city of Baltimore.

Questions? Please contact us.

McDaniel College is a private, selective college of the liberal arts and sciences where students from 23 states and 19 countries prepare for lives of leadership and service. Flexible programs of study at both undergraduate and master’s degree levels, strong teaching, and ideal location—near Baltimore and Washington, D.C.—provides students with an outstanding learning experience. A two-year branch campus in Budapest, Hungary, gives McDaniel College a unique, global perspective.

The First Principles

McDaniel College believes that liberally educated men and women think and act critically, creatively, and humanely. They take charge of their lives and develop their unique potentials with reason, imagination, and human concern.

McDaniel College accepts the challenge to provide an academic and social environment that promotes liberal learning. We strive to place students at the center of a humane environment so that they may see and work toward their personal goals while respecting others and sharing responsibility for the common good. We provide a foundation of knowledge about the past and present so that students may be informed about the world. We provide various approaches to knowledge and personal achievement so that students can think critically about, respond creatively to, and form sensitive, intelligent decisions concerning the world and its future. We provide instruction in fundamental skills so that students can express themselves for their own satisfaction and to the larger community.

We provide solid and respected professional programs for the committed student, and, more important, we provide a liberal arts education as an integral part of professional training so that students will be more flexible, more successful, and happier in the world of work. In the classrooms, in the residence halls, in the laboratories, on the playing fields, and in the lounges, McDaniel College works to disseminate these First Principles.

Our History

Shortly after the Civil War, Fayette R. Buell, a Westminster teacher, embarked on his dream of founding a small private college. He purchased a tract of land — a hill overlooking the town — and issued a prospectus in search of support for his dream. Although financing was slow to materialize, he did receive generous support from two of the community leaders: the Reverend J. T. Ward, of the Methodist Protestant Church, who would become the College’s first president, and John Smith, president of the thriving Western Maryland Railroad and a resident of nearby Wakefield Valley.

Mr. Smith, who became the first president of the College’s board of trustees, suggested that the College be named after the railroad, which maintained an important terminal in Westminster. On the day in 1866 that the cornerstone was laid for the Western Maryland College’s first building, free rail passage was granted to everyone who attended the ceremonies. Eventually, the Western Maryland Railroad became extinct after merging with another company.

The first building on the Hill was completed in September, 1867; 37 men and women were enrolled in eight areas of study. Already, the new college was in many ways ahead of its time. In the original Charter, the founders and the first board of trustees clearly reflected their intentions that the College be an innovative and independent institution.

The College was founded "upon a most liberal plan for the benefit of students without regard to race, religion, color, sex, national or ethnic origin, which students shall be eligible for admission to equal privileges and advantages of education and to all social activities and organizations of the college, without requiring or enforcing any sectarian, racial or civil test, and without discrimination on the basis of sex, national or ethnic origin, nor shall any prejudice be made in the choice of any officer, teacher, or other employee in the said college on account of these factors."

The College was the first coeducational college south of the Mason Dixon line, and one of the first coeducational colleges in the nation. Since its inception, it has been an independent liberal arts college with an autonomous Board of Trustees. A voluntary fraternal affiliation with the United Methodist Church existed from 1868 until 1974; today there are no ties to any denominational body. Control and ownership are fully vested by the Charter in the trustees, under Maryland state law.

On January 11, 2002, the trustees announced their unanimous decision to change the name of the College. The decision came after decades of discussion and surveys that confirmed the confusion surrounding the name. The College often was not perceived as what and where it is: a private institution within an hour's drive of Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

On July 1, 2002, WMC officially became McDaniel College. The new name honors William Roberts McDaniel, whose 65-year association with the College helped shape its destiny and today personifies its mission.

In its 135-year history, the College has had only eight presidents: Dr. Ward, Dr. Thomas Hamilton Lewis (1886-1920), Dr. Albert Norman Ward (1920-1935), Bishop Fred G. Holloway (1935-1947), Dr. Lowell S. Ensor (1947-1972), Dr. Ralph C. John (1972-1984), Dr. Robert H. Chambers (1984-2000), and Dr. Joan Develin Coley (2000-present). Under their guidance, the College has assumed a place among the quality liberal arts colleges in the nation, developing programs and material and physical assets that fulfill the vision of its founders.

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