e 5 ~ Club, - dents a Sane a Page Four as ee ” ? THE COLLEGE NEWS eer wand Wednesday, ‘Tam wee February 17, 1954 Clubs Outline Past Activities And Plan Future Parties, Lectures, Discussions The Classics Club, headed by Lidia-Wachsler and Lyke Ooiman, recently held a Christmas party in Rhoads. © Their plans include hav- ing speakers and presenting a play by Aristophanes or Plautus. Haverford’s Philosophy Club and Bryn Mawr’s under Marcia Storch have collaborated and present Ed- mund Sinnott, dean of Yale’s Grad- uate School, at Haverford on Wed- nesday, February 10, discussing “Celland Psyehe.” The groups plan an address by Dr. Ferrater Mora this’ month and are having presen- tations of student papers for dis- cussion and criticism. Usually two coffee hours a month with informal ‘discussions are held by the Spanish Club under Lois. Beekey. The club had a Christmas Pinata and presented a Técture on December 15 by Senor. Guillen of Princeton on “La Novel y Su Lec- tor.” Plans for future speakers include having Francisco Garcia- Lorca, New York University pro- ‘fessor of Spanish, on February 18. The sponsored by Miss Janet Yeager and headed by Lee Berlin, meets for an hour every Wednes- day to work on original routines, which they will present as en- tertainment during swimming com- petitions at Penn. Bryn Mawr and Haverford stu- collaborate in WEDGE (Wednesday Evening Discussion Group) which meets at St.. Mary’s ‘Episcopal Church in Ardmore. The group discusses subjects suggested by the students. Reently a psy- chologist joined in their discussion of .the importance of religion. ' After each meeting there are re- freshments served. Meredith Treene “and Harv. Freeman are the co- chairmen. An interest in French entitles * you to membership in The French Club whose president is Lois Bon- sal. The club holds teas in Wynd- ham, where they speak French, and invites lecturers who speak in French also. Weekly after-dinner coffee hours are being planned. Bryn Mawyr’s_ radio’ ‘station, WBMC, has just invested $45 in a new console built by Jaek Beatty, technical director of WHRC. Caro- line Warram, station manager, ex- plained that the console will give .» better quality and more facility. | - The station hopes to wire Radnor and Rhoads this year. Barbara Kalb has recorded her program, Cafe International, f broadcast over WIP, a Philadel- Stop In At Richard Stockton’s ! and See Their New Display of Panda Cards EUROPE, 60 Days, $490 ( incl. a v) ot, Motor, Rail. Also Latin America, West, Orient. RAVEL _ expense Low cost trips to oe every corner - the g - Synchronized Swimming | SADVENTURE HEE | J t, Ski): Around the World, $995 all _ | phia radio station. WIP is pre- senting a series of such programs from local colleges and schools en- titled “Ears to the Future.” The date of the program will be an- nounced. The Coatesville Recreation Group consists of seven people who go to Coatesville Hospital every Tues- day and Thursday afternoon. Their current project is-a performance of “Oklahoma!” given with the pa- tients’ collaboration. The .Maids’ and Porters’ Com- mittee has 19 active members, who are conducting classes in public speaking, Spanish, the Bible, typ- ing, handicrafts, sewing, bridge, and spiritual singing. The com- mittee has also organized the Maids’ and Porters’ caroling, dance and show, to be given on April 24. Group leaders for ~six school children’s clubs in the Philadelphia area are being provided by the Y- Teen Groups. About 12 students work at Nor- ristown Hospital. Groups of four go on Friday afternoons and take the patients who are on the way to rehabilitation for walks. At Christ- mas the group caroled in the wards. During the first semester 14 people went to Weekend Work Camp. « The work consisted of pa- pering and plastering in the poorer areas of Philadelphia. - Haverford Community Center: Two girls went to the Center every Monday through Thursday after- noon in the first semester, eleven in all. participating. _ They have guided._a different activity for the children each afternoon. MR. RUPEN THE INDO CHINA - TANGLE COMMON ROOM 7:30 (not 7:15) FEBRUARY 22nd r7g0\ with ‘Stopy-\ ano MEET THE PEOPLE} in PRIVATE CAR TOURS of EUROPE See your travel agent. STOP rours, Berkeley, Calif. Compliments of Haverford Pharmacy ov Haverford, Pa. _- —_ EASTER, Nassav style... is traditional for collegians on a holiday. A lot of ocean _ | ‘swimming, tennis, golf, sun tan and dinner dancing fits into a few days at Balmoral, in a private, congenial Club _ atmosphere that’s different, fun, and just right for a ~‘d- semester vacation. Special student rates reduced ’ 25% during Easter week. - N. Y. Office: 16 W. 55'$t. Knitting and Profs Are Oil and Water by Donnie Brown, ’57 Knitting and professors often This is obvious when a lecturer pauses so may recover her knitt\ that has dropped with a ‘tinny clat-. ter. A tendency toward a stultify- ing standstill: is only one of the reasons the two are not compat- ible. It is somewhat difficult to follow the intricate mathematics of a ski-sweater and; the Mendelian theory at the same time. Under- standably, if one were knitting a collegiate scarf, one would be thinking about Yale or Princeton, not dips and strikes, not Doyne or Toynbee. uy , An admirable way to rise above ithe clack @f knitting needles in. alia is to become oblivious to the audience, as. Miss Chowning says she can, This way the professor can concentrate on the notes and ignore the petty things like gigg- ling, note passing and knitting. On | the other hand there are professors whopare troubled, as Dr. Dryden is. They have to overcome their aver- sion to manifestations of mater- no-domicilieal functions. and condi- tion themselves to the fact that people will knit in class. There are some classes you don’t dare knit in, even if your little man’s birthday is next week and you’ve only: begun the Ar- gyles. But on the whole’the pro- fessors seem not to shudder pro- don’t mix. The Mexican Shop Has New, Different, Exciting | Squaw Dresses for ~~ Spring Guadalajara. Summer School The accredited bilingual summer school sponsored by the Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara and mem- bers of the Stanford University faculty will be offered in Guadalajara, Mex- ico, June 27-August 7, 1954. Offer- ings include art, creative writing, folk- |lore, geography, history, language and literature courses. $225 covers six- weeks tuition, board and room. Write Prof.. Juan B, Rael, Box K, Stanford University, Calif. 0 THE PLAZA New York’s most fashionable hotel overlooking Central Park and upper Fifth Avenue now offers SPECIAL STUDENT RATES $4.50 per person per day uaa cd e $5.00 per person per day $6.00 per person per day Two in a room pee person per day ne in a room $7.00 ‘— All-rooms with shower and-bath. Home of the famous Persian Room and the o smart Rendez-Vous for >) dining and dancing. our in a room Roles Continued from Page 3 interesting?) the sensibility of about eighteen, and there is a con- sequent discrepancy. between action and response. Six poems and two stories: is that all? Once again I will-swear there is more good work hiding out in Bryn Mawr? Where is that sestina I saw last April? Where are the sonnets that suffused Oc- tober? Where are the keys. to-all those locked cupboards? Where is the mimeographed, underground, savagely derisive opposition line, the Anti-Counterpoint? Where are the--signals- of - arrogance, the soaped window, the carnival tent, the strings of firecrackers? The question remains, what could a college literary’ magazine be?. That question really might’’be put to any number of enterprises. To a college theater, perhaps... Or to a “college news”: in a large community, a university, where it had to fight for even passing at- tention, it could be almost what- ever if cho8é tobe, free of the bur- dens. of conspjicuousness, In a smaller community (to judge from performance) it probably has to accept the perfunctory role —of court circular. But. not in all re- hibitively at knitting, and it is a good excuse not to take lecture notes. Lack Of Variety And Material In ‘Counterpoint’ Make Readers Wish To See More Campus Talent spects: when Counterpoints are published and opinions are called for, this soi-disant “College “News” might assume a real responsibility, assert itself, register student crit- icism. It might offer its own opin- ion; it doesn’t (I might in the cir- cumstances ungraciously add) have to turn to outside authority to do what could be one of its own useful jobs. The -Counterpoints of this world would profit by, the judg- ment of’a~peer. HUMMM ... February Weather Forecast from the Farmers’ Almanac: “Cold continues for one week, Heavy snowstorm expected be- tween the 11th and the 17. Last | two weeks milder but no three good ‘days in a row.” MARRIAGES Deborah Silverman 75S to Pvt. William Horwitz. Dorothy F. McKenney to Norman O. Schlegel Jr. Catesby Spears to Laurance Simpson, Jr. The INN Come with me For some tea _ls where to be. you see res “Three in a room ~— a oe a “Coke” is a registered trade-mark ~ When you pause... make i count... have { THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY ‘© 1953, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 2