a a > ie “ THE C1 LLEGE. \ EWs = VOL. XLH, NO. 20 ARDMORE .and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1946 Copyright Trustees of PRICE 10 CENTS 1945 Three Colleges FormCommittee On Food Crisis Bryn Mawr, Haverford, Swarthmore Plan Campaign Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarthmore have formed an_ in- tercollegiate committee for con- tacting other colleges to initiate food conservation programs and to urge national measures in the food crisis. The group is recommending that __a national food coordinator be ap- pointed to handle contacts between the different agencies responsible for procurement and distribution of food, and that supplies be chan- neled directly to relief organiza- tions, without passing through the civilian market. Several members of the committee expect to see high government officials in Washing- ton next week. A telegram is being sent by the committee to the chairmen of the appropriate organizations in other colleges both on the Eastern Coast Continued On Page 2 Fraenkel to Give Lecture on Math. Dr. ‘Adolph Fraenkel, former Rector of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, will speak on The Foundations of Mathematies in the Bryn Mawr Common Room at 4:30 on April 24. Dr. Fraenkel, who ‘is speaking under the auspices of the Mathematics and Philosophy de- partments of Bryn Mawr, Haver- ford, Swarthmore and the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, will discuss the Hebrew University at Haver- ford. at 8:30 on April 24. Dr. Fraenkel has been a profes- sor of mathematics at the Hebrew University and is the author of Einleitung in Die Mengentehre, a work on the foundations. of logic and matheamtics which has already gone through three editions. Model Congress Teaches Politics To B. dents A model congress held in Har- risburg during spring vacation gave students of Pennsylvania collegés “a chance to really con- duct a congress, and to see how the problems arise and are met by. congressmen,’ reported Joan Vitkin, ‘one of ten Bryn Mawr students who attended the confer- ence. For the first time since the war, the Intercollegiate Confer- ence on Government. renewed its annual meetings, each of a differ- ent type, to acquaint students with the workings of government and legislature. The session, to which all inter: ested students of the Pennsylvania colleges were invited, lasted from the 28th to the 31st of March at the headquarters, in the Penn Harris Hotel, and was patterned exactly after the national Con- gress, with elections for Speaker, lobbying, and voting upon the bills introduced by the delegates of each college. On.one day, committee meetings were held, and the bills presented andu.djscussed on the floor. The following day, congress went into plenary session, and the bills were passed or rejected. Par- ties and political activities filled the evenings, and the conclusion of the session was celebrated by a dance on Saturday night. In the most dramatic episode of the session, the congress passed by a very slight margin a closely contested bill -initiated by Shirley Wood and Betsy Fenstermacher of Bryn Mawr which proposed that the atomic bomb be turned over to an_ international committee on atomic control. Among the other bills passed was the Annual Wage Bill, proposed by another Bryn Mawr delegate. The Bryn Mawr “congressmen” returned with enthusiastic reports of the congress’s success in attain- ing the aims of the conference, and’ calling attention to the fact that. the delegation is unlimited, they urge a larger delegation for next year. Diverse Activities Consume Time Of B. M. Residents Over Holiday by Judy Marcus, ’49 The road to the bridge table is paved with good intentions, ac- cording to many of the staunch souls who remained at Bryn Mawr during the Spring vacation to catch up on their work. The girl who wasn’t a bridge enthusiast had to resign herself to social ob- scurity, unless she chose to take part in one of the chess games that continually went on in Rock during the twelve, day holiday. Bridge and chess were just two of the many activities that occu- pied the time of the girls who spent their vacations at college. ‘One psychology major reports that she had a pleasant time analyzing the personality of the girl who lived in the room she was occupy- ing. Others found pastimes of a less scholastic nature. A girl who remained at college to write a paper said, “We started out with firm resolutions . . . and then we went to the movies.” One .of the chief complaints of the temporary Rock residents ‘was that the pic- tures on the Main Line don’t change often enough. The first few days of the vaca- tion the girls spent hours wander- ing through the corridors looking for people they knew, and every vaguely familiar individual was greeted as a bosom buddy. Getting accustomed to the new surround- ings also took quite a while. One girl vows she will be eternally grateful to the owner of the room in which she stayed for leaving messages like “The stocking ‘stretchers are sizenine,” and “The alarm clock works pretty well if you wind it regularly,” scattered in appropriate places about the room. Some of the most amusing in- cidents of the vacation occurred when the girls staying in Rock ran afoul of that hall’s rather unique plumbing system. After starting to fill a tub for a bath, one’ of the inexperienced lasses wandered off to speak to a friend for a mo- ment. Upon her return she could not remember in which of, the many bathaaane— ~ha had left the water running. After a frantic search, she only managed to lo- cate it just in time to avert the incipient flood. / i Rn rs ae Bryn Mawr Chorus Rehearsal Music Room, Gooprart. Mrs. de Varon leads Chorus in prep- aration for Yale Concert of April 13. Inauguration Held On Taylor Steps The traditional inauguration cer- emony for the five major associa- tions_of the college -was held Thurs- day, April 11 with many, though minor, changes. For the first time it occurred on the Senior steps of Taylor instead of on Goodhart stage, the out-going officers plac- ing their caps upon the heads of their them with the gavels of their or- successors and _ presenting ganizations. Pat Behrens, as president of. the ‘Undergraduate Association, stress- ed the activity of the Undergradu- ate Council made up of the heads of the five major associations: Self- Government, Undergrad, Alliance, League, and Athletic Association, and the editor of the College News, who meet regularly as equals to discuss campus problems and to act as a coordinating body of cam- pus activities. The retiring officers dispensed with the customary reports of the annual activities of the organiza- tions. These reports, which the students are urged to read, can be foundin the Quita ay ener Room of the library. Zaremba Recital To Benefit Relief A piano recital by Sylvia Zar- emba, soloist with the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, will be given in Goodhart on April 29, for the benefit of the Bryn Mawr College Committee for Relief for Europe. Miss ' Zaremba, at the age of fourteen, has been a soloist with prominent orchestras all over the country for seven years. She was only seven when she made her first. appearance with a symphony orch- estra, playing a Mozart concerto with the Women’s Symphony Orch- estra debut at Town Hall at the age o ten, led the “New York Times” ip comment, “she has an exquisite talent.” Miss Zaremba. has also sq foie with the Philadelphia Orchdstra, the Cleveland Orchestra, and the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, and in.1944 appeared with Artur Rodzinski at Carnegie Hall over a nation-wide radio hook/up. Since 1940 she has been a pupji of Mme. Isabelle Vengerova at /the Curtis Institute of Music in F Philadelphia. PE EREN GN TBAT ON RAIS! SM TERT in Boston. Her New York; Haverford, B. M. Cast Spring Play Varsity Players’ and last big production of this year will be “George (Washington Slept Here” by George Kaufman and Moss Hart to be given in conjunc- tion with Cap and Bells of Haver- ford in Roberts Hall, Haverford, April 26 and 27 at 8:15. Mr. Frederic Thon of the Bryn Mawr faculty is directing the play. Mr. Thon, who graduated from Harvard and receiyed his M.F..A. from the department of Drama at Yale University, has served. as a writer and actor with Theatre (Collective in New York City. Former director. of Exper- imental Production at Ohio Uni- versity and of the Summer session of the School of Acting of the Pasadena Playhouse, Mr. Thon was unable to decide between the two finalists for the feminine lead in “George Washington Slept Here.” Therefore Katherine (Colvin ’46 will play Friday night and Geor- giana Wiebenson ’46 will take ths part on Saturday night. Other members of the cast hei second adh "49, Pat tease Johnson, Jean Kelley Kindler, Sandol 49, Dave Winder, and J Bryn Mawr students / ; Regular admis- Jc for students, » Bryn Mawr College, Concert Reveals Spirit, Variation In Presentation Effective Direction Fine Feeling by Helen Anderton °49 Goodhart Hall, April 13. A most interesting and enjoyable concert was presented here tonight by the members of the Bryn Mawr Chor- us and the Yale Glee Club. If in past years, there has ever existed any doubt as to the merits of Bryn Mawr’s singing, those doubts must have been dispelled tonight, for Bryn Mawr proved well able to hold its own beside one of the country’s leading singing groups. The concert opened with Two Palms by Schutz, which revealed the fine intonation and excellent diction displayed by the two groups singing together. The Yale Glee Club then Seng, Schubert’s Omnipotence, German Minnelieder, and a part/ ist, Richard Edwards, révealed a voice of good quatity/ which at times was spoiled by Seing forced. It was for this reagon that some of his notes did not come out to their best effect,/The Minnelieder, arranged-by Marshall Bartholo- mew, Yale’s gonductor, were light and melodiops, and sung with ap- propriate’ this group, Alas, To Whom Dare I Compl4in? was also arranged for solo afd chorus. Clive Dill’s -voice had An amazingly rich tone, sup- pleyhented by the Glee Club in the baékground. And Now ’Tis Time to , from the Peasants’ Cantata, was given a vigorous rendition, with good sustained effects in the necessary Places. The Bryn Mawr Chorus then sang O Vos Omnes, by Vittoria, and We Hasten To Thee from Bach’s Cantata 78. In the first, not |only was the intonation good, but the ‘different parts came out with -|great clarity, The Bach could have fallen quite flat. In this case it did not. The melody was displayed, to its utmost, as was the energetic rhytig, Pm "Continued on Page 4 which consisted mainly of homeless Westers. leaving tgoth-brushes behind and running iAto the fact ‘that sharing a roof, 1 crust, or a cigarette with their friends is all right, but a tooth- brush is ever sacred. Not really undaunted by their temporary dehousing, the — far- sighted inhabitants of Pembroke West left notes in almost every room, hoping for a response from Yale. Evidently Yale teaches them to write, and even Emily Post would. have commended the bread and butter letters: although some, it- must. be admitted, had—a-touch of the ironic. Ii answer to the query “How was the candy ?” found in an elab- |. A by Alice Wadsworth, ’49 orate guest book left by a certain hospitable freshmen, one youth had said “haven’t-found it”; his more enterprising room-mate however, simply remarked “Fine!” ‘The way to. a man’s heart, ete.; In another case the food problem seemed to have been adequately solved, when obvious clues indicated that the men had enjoyed a hearty break- fast of ‘wheat-hearts.” Perhaps the most tender senti- ment, one which could well be quoted in famous letters of the world, was found by an archaeol- ogy major, who had left her sched- ule on the desk. The text is as fol- lows: Jam “If I never ever get to meet you,’ have a wonderful life, and may you someday be the mother Romanesque churches cee’ The concert was a success... Yale, Bryn Mawr Show \ feeling. The second of | ‘of, some fine, healthy little pre- Y “