THE COLLEGE NEWS VOL. XLHY, NO. 9 ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1947 Beck to Analyse Theory of Value In Kant’s Philos. Dr. Lewis W. Beck, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Delaware, will speak to the Philosophy Club on Decem- ber 9th,..at 8:30, in the Com- mon Room. The subject of his lec- ture, “Freedom and Purpose of the Person in Kant”, will be Kant’s theory of value and will be based on Article 77 of the Critique of Judgment. -Professor Beck, who is at pres- ent making a new translation of Kant’s Ethics, to be published by the University of Chicago press, has also written books on Ethics, Epistomology and Methodology, and has contributed to the Journal of Philosophy. Professor Beck is a graduate of Emery University and received his doctorate from Duke University. He was a Julius Rosenwald fellow in 1937-38 and studied at the Kaiser Friedrich in Berlin. Ushenko Defines — His Perspective Theory of Truth Dr. Andrew P. Ushenko of the Department of Philosophy at Princeton, in the fourth de Laguna lecture, set forth his Perspective Theory of Truth by proposing that there are “alternative truths”, i. e. all propositions are derived from some point of view. He pointed out the affinity of this theory with the “coherency” theory which, however, maintains that perspect- ive is never short of absolute knowledge, whereas the perspect- ive theory limits-the perspectives. Dr. Ushenko grouped the evi- dence for His theory under two headings: 1) that—whatever we know we classify, and classification is based on resemblance or simil- arity, but whether or not two things resemble one another de- pends on the point of view; 2) that all our data are records from the past, but the perspective on past events is always changing. The objection that the past would have no reality except in perspective within the ever-changing present points out the danger of subject- ivism in this theory. We must find which view gives ‘the. real truth among the alternative perspectives. According to Dr. Ushenko there are three requirements: 1) if there are alternative perspectives on the same object, the object cannot possibly resemble any of them; 2) in spite of the fact that there are divergent aspects which do not re- semble one another, yet.they.must . be carrelated in the sense of “con- gruency” so that one can predict Continued on Page 2 Bunch to Discuss UN: Problems Mr. Ralph J. Bunch will speak on The United Nations and the Problem of Non Self-Governing Territories at the third Bryn Mawr Assembly on Current Affairs, on Thursday, December 11th, at 12.30, in Goodhart Hall. Mr. Bunch is Director of the Trusteeship Division of the U. N. He was on the Palestine Commis- sion this summer and before that was on the Trusteeship Division of the State Department. English Team Routs BM, 23-0; Excels in Speed, Coordination by Lenci Abell 750 On: Saturday, November 22 the Bryn Mawr hockey team played the All England Touring Team at Bryn Mawr. The final score was 23-0 in favor of the English. The game was a display of ex- cellent hockey skill on the part of both teams and of the individual players. Every member of the Bryn Mawr team should be con- gratulated on her playing against Blackburn Urges individual Talent | In Creating Art Goodhart, Common Room, De- cember 1: Stressing the elements of “Momism” stil left in art from the academic mévhods, Mr. Morris Blackburn spoke here today on “Creative Aspects of Painting”. Some of Mr. Blackburn’s paintings were on display; more are being exhibited at present at the Phila- delphia Art Alliance. Mr. Blackburn opened his talk by mentioning the excellent .and promising work now being done in the Art Studio in the Cornelia Otis Skinner Workshop—better work, he confessed, than he had expected to find. Painting is an adult ac- tivity, he went on to say, although it is infantile in some respects. Our dependency on the traditional ruling force of Mother Nature (the “Mom” element again) is an illus- tration of this infantilism; break- ing away from this dependency has been the whole tendency and effort of modern art movements. Everyone is interested in a con- tinuum, Mr. Blackburn stated. We see this in its broadest sense in the universal wish for self-perpetua- tion through the family, and in a more specific, artistic way in mu- sic, where silence is as important as actual sound. The modern painter’ should not look for .a “set-up” to copy down onto his canvas; rather he should begin to paint and at some point he will find a part of himself from which he will be able to continue. Representational painting, after all, does not really capture the ob- ject. We may paint a tree, and learn something from it, but when we go home the tree remains. Don’t Run a Mile: A Card’s on File Take notice, hungry Bryn Mawr- tyrs! It will soon be possible to go to the Soda Fountain penniless, when the new credit system goes into effect. Cards with 5, 10-and 15 cent sections (resembling a com- mutation ticket) will be sold by hall representatives for $1.00 each. The amount of any purchase will be punched on the card, .until it is used up. These credit cards may be kept on file at the Soda Foun- tain itself. They will be available for cash, as soon as they are print- ed, Sally Worthington and Dotty Sloane, heads of the Soda Foun-|. tain, have announced. Remember, all profits of the Soda Fountain go to the Bryn Mawr Summer Camp. The Foun- tain is open Sunday through Fri- day, at 9.30, and also from 4.00 to 5.00, for that tea-time “quickie.” And don’t forget the Juke Box in the Rumpus Room next door (strictly cold cash here). ” an excellent team. Each member of the team fought well in her own capacity to make an exciting game for the players as well as for the two hundred spectators. The first three English goals were scored in the opening: five minutes of the game, rte the Bryn Mawr team came back with a threat to the English goal. Betsy Parker got the ball and raced down the field toward scoring position, but the English backs were able to prevent ‘her from shooting for the goal, and they cleared the ball back to the middle of threatened the English goal. Betsy Parker again took the ball into English territory. Then Jane Stone and Sylvia Hayes each had a chance of scoring after they were able to get past the English backs, but, as before, the English were able to get possession of the bail. At the end of the 30 minute half the score was 12-0. One noticeable thing about {the English playing was the fact Inat they very seldom dribbled down the field, but elie pas in- stead. Their passifig ability was really a fine spectacle for each hard drive always seemed to reach the right person at the right time, as if each play had been carefully planned out beforehand. The swiftness of the English team was another of their many abilities. Continued on Page 4 Dr. Martin Foss Will Lead Chapel Chapel speaker next Sunday, De- cember 7, will be Dr. Martin Foss, Professor of Philosophy at Haver- ford College.* Dr. Foss came to this country in 1987. He had pre- viously lived in Berlin and Paris, where he worked in the fields of philosophy and law, publishing books in both of these fields. Last year the Princeton Univer- sity Press published his book on The Idea of Perfection in the West- ern World. In 1945-46 Dr. Foss was visiting Professor of Philosophy at Bryn Mawr. He is considered an expert in the field of art as well as that of philosophy. Dr. Foss’ son is the well-known modern composer Lu- kas Foss. Calendar Thursday, December 4 8:30—Mr. Watt, talk on the Experiment in _ International Living, Wyndham. Friday, December 5 7:30 — Undergrad movie, Lifeboat, Music Room. 30c¢ admission. 8:30—Party--- for foreign students, Wyndham. Saturday, December 6 9:00-1:00 — Denbigh Hall Dance. Radnor Hall Dance. Sunday, December 7 7:30—Chapel service con- ducted by Dr. Martin Foss, Professor of Philosophy, Hav- erford. College, Music Room. Monday, December 8 7:15—Current Events, Com- mon Room. 8:15—Record Concert, Com- mon Room (admission to Drive). . Tuesday, December 9 4:30—Vocational Committee Tea, Common Room. 8:30—Philosophy Club Lec- ture: Dr. Lewis Beck, “Free- | dom and Purpose of the Per- son in Kant”, Common Room. =. the field. | Three other times the B. M. team | Copyright, Trustees of Bryn Mawr College,1945 PRICE 10 CENTS Team Scores English Again American Hockey With Their Game Following the buffet supper giv- en at the Deanery on November 22 Margaret-Lodge, captain of the team, and Miss Joan Warwick, coach and manager, remarked on the differences between English and American hockey. They be- lieve that these contrasts account in part for the undefeated success of the English team and for the American team would been defeated by 9 edllege team. The first point brought out was that the English hit the ball much harder and with a more decisive stroke and aim than the American hockey player. Secondly, the Eng- lish hit to the right as easily and as often.as they hit to the left, while the American. player —hits only to the left when she is tired, | since that position is much easier. |The English player expects this _and therefore can plan her strat- ‘egy and that of the team according \to this type of drive. Finally, the forwards on _ the back line when the backs are hard pressed, as the English team does. The field hockey season in Eng- land lasts longer than that in merica,. Miss. Lodge continued. he English play for six months while Americans play for only two months. Furthermore, the All English Women’s Hockey Associa- tion is celebrating its 50th anni- versary, while the U. S. Field Hoc- key Association is celebrating its 25th. Thus the English team has an organized foundation and back- ground that is twice as old as ours. The English coach commented, however, that she had seen a defi- nite improvement in American field hockey since 1936. English Contrast — for the English hockey team, Miss | American team do not support the | Haverford, BM. Will Offer ‘Lear’ December 13,14 Shakespeare’s Relative Plays Title Role in Uncut Version ; On December 13 and 14, the Bryn Mawr Varsity Players and Haverford’s Cap and Bells will give “King Lear”, with Edward O. Shakespeare, a distant relative of the author, in the title role. The | play will be staged in Roberts | Hall at Haverford and it will begin _| promptly at 8 o’clock. The play will be given in its en- |tirety, Mr. Frederic Thon, the di- | rector, has announced. The only changes made will be for the sake of clarification. About twelve words such as “kibes”, i. e. chil- plains, have had to be modernized. The emphasis will be on Shakes- peare’s poetry. Authentic Staging The staging of “King Lear” will be bold, but authentic, Mr. Thon ‘continues. The play will take place on a bare stage accentuated with dramatic spot lighting. The splen- did and colorful costumes are rent- ed from Van Horn and Sons, Inc., a noted Philadelphia costumer. An effort has been made to have the robes as much as is possible like those of early Britain. There will be atmospheric background music from the works of Sibelius. The entire cast totals eight people: thirty- Corvdeua icici, Nancy Kunhardt ROWAN Gcaisissaasuuse Joan Gale RTONOLI: secssssastaryacseess Ellen Harriman leat Edward O. Shakespeare IONE. ciscssssgctscsasesmans Brooks Cooper Fal Herbert Cheyette sees eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneeee CFIOUCESTOY Vieissscsoare William Bishop WAQAL adi Richard McKinley HGMUNd cic. peesecscrress Henry Levinson PRPANCG sensi Don Kindler , COLNWaAIL .....ssyseeees David Rosenthal AD ic csiiunveonasnn Ned Coale Biv Qundy: scsscscossareseaces Ted Eastman OWI fiasisiicciesiesecis Lee Haring DOGtOL iiss Gordon Baldwin G10 Baap 8: 9 a aRrOPPT YET Te eePTTEPTTL Ben Birdsall CAPER ccsevcscosesssesevecss Tom Fleming CENEIEMAN ssrcisesscessiersces Jack Gailey TEAVOIG sissscsistuciiicninne Jack Acton There is also a large production staff headed by Alan Levensohn as production manager. Prompter Sarah Shakespeare Costumes, »..:.cepis0s Jackie Gawan and Martha Barber LAGDBAE siiserivissncess Douglas Richie Make-up ........ Bernice Robinson and Sheila Tatnall be: cio ucdisene Dave Buttrich Mid-morning “bracer” problems are solved! Coffee in Taylor for ten minutes after 10 and 11 o’clock can ‘give you that convenient pick- up in energy. There need no long- er be the asthmatic panting and knee weakness resulting from a too-quick trip to the Inn. All this and aid the Bryn Mawr College Fund—1946, too. Sell it and buy it. In both these ways you help the Drive. “This is a campus activity in which every- body participates and from which everyone can benefit”, points out Ann Corcoran ’49; chairman of the project. Coffee Now Served In Taylor To Drown Mid-Morning Blues A different hall is in charge of coffee sales each week. This hall makes the coffee and serves it. There are no cash problems in the enterprise, no nickels or dimes roll- ing down the main hall of Taylor. It’s all on pay day. ‘Not even the faculty pays cash when they buy; so no great mathematical genius is necessary for behind-the-counter work. In fact you don’t even need to be persuasive. Mid-morning coffee in Taylor speaks for itself. “A dime for a cup of coffee” will help the Drive and help your con- centration problems in morning classes. Page Two Or eins ? THE COLLEGE NEWS THE COLLEGE NEWS FOUNDED IN 1914 Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks- giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing Company, Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part without per- mission of the Editor-in-Chief. hu Editorial Board Harriet Warp, 48, Editor-in-Chief BarBaRA BETTMAN, °49, Copy Betty-BricHT Pace, 49, Makeup Louise Ervin, °49 EmILy TOWNSEND, ’50, Makeup Jean Evus, °49 Katrina THomas, *49 Editorial Staff MariAN Epwarps, °50 GtLoriA WHITE, ’48 CrEcELIA MaccaBeE, 50 Nina Cave ’50 GWYNNE WILLIAMS, 50 IRINA NELIDOW, ’50 ANNE GREET ’50 Pat NicHoL, ’50 BLAIKIE ForsyTH ’51 Hanna HoLsporn ‘50 CATHERINE Merritt ’51 ELizaABETH NELIDow, ’51 Photographer ROSAMOND KANE 748 Business Board Mary BEETLESTONE, *49, Business Manager Caror Baker, *48, Advertising Manager Joan Rossins, ’49 Betty Mutcn, ’50 ELEANOR OTTO ’51 Mary Lou Price ’51 MADELINE BLOUNT ’51 Subscription Board Axty Lou Hackney, 749, Manager Epizk Mason Ham, ’50 Sue KELiey, °49 ANNA-STINA ERIcsON ’48 EpyTHE LAGRANDE, “49 Ivy Borow ’50 SALLY CATLIN ’50 BarBaRA LIGHTFOOT, 50 BUNNY STADERMAN ’51 ™ ca Subscription, $2.75 Mailing price, $3.50 Subscriptions may begin at any time _ Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912 lof the Bryn Mawr Type, and when Made To Order During the past month there has been a general appeal for a unifying interest in campus activities, a search for an outlet for creative instincts. .Many suggestions have been presented but one ‘made-to-order’ solution has been . over- looked—the Bryn Mawr Alumnae Drive. The Drive committee wants to raise money, but has not insisted on any special means of collection. Just writing a check or giving a cash donation not only wreaks havoc on an allowance, but also is unsatisfying as a contribution. Doing something concrete will make the Drive more real and create a feeling of belonging to an extensive cooperative effortsSome students have already taken the initiative by organizing the sale of coffee in Taylor between morning classes; others have volunteered to do odd jobs such as returning overnight books to the Lib, running errands in the Vill, and knitting Christ- mas gifts. The field is still open, however, and many more projects are needed. So looking at the Drive as a campus activity, here is an opportunity to use our ingenuity—a way to try out our ideas —-and, incidentally, a means of achieving the Drive’s primary goal; increasing our professors’ salaries and improving our college! Turkey To Turkey | The fable does not say what class it was the Spartan boy had to sit through with a studiously blank face and a gnaw- ing pain inside; apparently, however, he survived the ordeal without making it too obvious to his professor and classmates that his flesh was there under protest, while his spirit was home in bed with a stiff slug of unmixed wine. His friends were undoubtedly grateful to him for not adding his troubles to theirs; may we model ourselves on him for weeks. : If we have seven papers, three quizzes, and a Christmas play to get through, let us not increase the atmospheric damp with tears. If we have half-a-dozen modern-dance classes before we can get back to the old-fashioned kind we really enjoy, let us at least be thankful we are not gutdoors in ten- nis shorts. And if the path from one turkey to the next seems unbearably long, and paved with an endless mosaic of . poached eggs and toast, let us, nevertheless, tread it with stoic indifference and deceptive gaiety. \ the next three BMT in Fiction by Katrina Thomas ’49 (Eprtor’s Note: This is the first of a series of articles to be pub- lished weekly) : Before we came to college, any- way, we had a pre-conceived idea we leave we will probably go out under Rock Arch with a model of the typical Bryn Mawr girl firmly fixed in our minds, though she may vary somewhat from the original image. I had been warned that she was blue-stotkinged and horn-rimmed, but that did not phase me as horn- rims could be very distinguished looking (inwardly I bewailed my 20-20 vision) and various colored very much in stockings were style. My conception was consid- Current Events November 24. “The border coun- tries often have an unhappy exist- ence”, stated Dr. Roger Hewes Wells, Professor of Political Science. Speaking on “Patterns of Change in Eastern Europe”, Dr. Wells compared the Big Three countries, Great Britain, the Unit- ed States, and Russia, to tailors able to change the pattern of the cloth of eastern Europe. At Yalta, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin had decided that the Nazi pattern must be. changed, and their Declar- ation on Liberated Europe, drawn on the principles of the Atlantic Charter, guaranteed sovereign rights to the smaller states of eastern Europe. “However,” continued Dr. Wells, “it takes more than a paper con- stitution to realize democracy”. He cited as an example our failure to establish true democracy in Eur- ope after World War I. Dr. Wells quoted sections of the newly estab- erably worse. In her worst form, the BMT was an incredible spec- imen of over-developed brains and an under-developed body. She wore glasses, to be sure, but they were steel-rimmed, and her hair was either straight or frizzily perman- ented, while her back curved over the books she perpetually clutch- ed to her flat bosom. For beauty) she could only rival Lens, but she. was a paragon of wisdom. She | bered, especially she remembered. She could quote Herodotus from the Greek or from any other prim- ary source to prove a point. The only man who had ever interested her was Zeno, or Samuel Johnson, Sir Isaac Newton, or Nebuchad- nezzer, and she would probably consider me in the last analysis as not very beautiful and awfully dumb. All summer long I hoped that there would be one or two other.painted hussies, flibbergib- bets like myself, with a taste for strapless evening gowns and an eye perpetually peeled for an at- tractive man. I should not have worried, for even the Dartmouth authors of For Men Lonely have found “enough feminine charm here to repel all fears of hyper- erudity” and that “although defin- itely on the sophisticated side, girls are girls... these are just a little smarter.” Cartoonists There are a number of male au- thors, who (though they have nev- er attended Bryn Mawr) have a clear conception of the BMT, posx ibly inspired by some alumnae their acquaintance. Most of us know James Thurber’s cartoon, one of those amorphous represen- tations of the battle between the sexes, which depicts a “femme fa- tale” kicking her heels in the liv- ing-room. She is surrounded by a circle of entranced gentlemen while an irate wife speaks to the knot, of ladies standing in a cor- ner: “She’s all I know about Bryn Mawr and she’s all I have to know.” In the Pem West smoker is the Carl Rose cartoon of a scene out- side the library. Taylor tower rises in the distance while a multitude of Bryn Mawr girls, in pants and long dowdy skirts with even long- er droopy slips, cluster around a chicly dressed girl in the fore- ground. The caption reads: “The Renaissance of a Rugged Individual. “The Bryn Mawr Sophomore who rect Assessories on the Campus.” While Mr. Thurber has pictured a rugged individualist and labeled her with Bryn Mawr, Mr. Rose has the plodding Bryn Mawr students staring wide-eyed at the individu- alistic swan in their midst. The writers are no more in accord tha lished peace treaty with Bulgaria to show the emphasis placed on human rights and the fundamenta! freedoms. At present, there is no joint ac- tion in the Allied Control Commis- sion to help solve the problem of how to stabilize spheres of influ- ence in times of transition until something permanent can be set- tled. In closing, Dr. Wells stated that propaganda can lead to economic warfare, which in turn can lead to actual warfare. For this rea- outlined, underlined, and remem-/.on he believes that President Tru- man is right in wishing to continue our shipments to Russia. Debaters Desire Cheering Cohorts The Debate Club has an active and ambitious season ahead, with 25 to 30 debates scheduled as well as several conferences. In recent debates the two-year-old club has conquered Rosemont and Villanova and lost, in a second Villanova bat- tle, by only one point... The 16 members, headed by Pam Stillman, feel that a larger audience would inspire them to even greater tri- umphs, so come. and cheer at the next debates, on December 3rd and 4th. Subjects so far have been the Taft-Hartley Bill and Civil Liber- ties; at the next debate the pros and cons of World Federation will be discussed. Hin desinse: ~ ‘Professional Attitude’’ Urged by Students For Drive To the Editor: In view of last year’s successful approach to” the’ Alumnae Drive, it is disappointing to note the lack of consideration in this year’s ef- fort. The negligible publicity of the New York Theatre Benefit, for ex- ample, is indicative of the ineffic- iency in the administration of the program. Little mention was made in the New York papers of this project, which seems to have been undertaken without adequate prep- aration. Invitations to the Decem- ber first performance of Antony and Cleopatra were mailed scarce- ly, a month ago, and tickets were not received, in some cases, before last week. This lack of foresight would seem detrimental to the suc- cess of the Drive which depends upon the good-will and cooperation of the friends of the college. Since the Drive is of fundamen- tal importance to the college, we believe it advisable to adopt a more professional attitude in the direction of its activities. Maxine Gordon ’49 Eleanor T. Rubsam ’49 Ushenko’s Theory~ Limits Perspective Continued from Page 1 one aspect from another; 8) the number of alternative aspects is limited. The nature of the object restricts the number of aspects. Therefore the problem essential- ly involves the nature of the ob- ject itself. Dr. Ushenko interprets it as being a “formal” nature which enables one to correlate the as- pects of it. The.object then is not actual but potential. The perspect- ive is a fusion of the fact and the interpretation. Dr. Ushenko concluded his lec- ture by quoting Grace de Laguna —that all knowledge is in some perspective; the directed focusing determines the dynamic perspe¢t- ive. The object is more than the aspect; it remains an inexhaust-- ible potentiality, and behind the actual representation of perspect- ive aspects there are potentialities which condition the final aspect. by Catherine Merritt ’51 Develop your muscles and your maternal instinct simultaneously and spend an afternoon at the Haverford Community Center. The muscles get their workout under the heading of transportation to and from the Center, which is con- ‘siderably off the beaten track, in Haverford. Unless you are a hiking devotee, procure a bicycle by fair means or foul. Invariably the tires will be flat and you’ll spend a few frantic moments trying to force a little air in the tire with arm muscles which are, in most cases, rather flabby, if you have been ne- glecting your daily dozen face. After this chore is accomplished, take to the road, and on the first hill you will feel that your legs too have a few flabby muscles. You will feel them more the next day. The Center is a brown house set in a field on a small side road. On our first visit we arrived early, and since the children were still at school, set out to brighten: up a corner of the bare main roomi However, cutting pictures from the children’s books was not a rapid process, as we constantly became these, cartoonists. ° engrossed in the always moralistic, Muscles or Maternal Instincts: Gain Either at Community Center never dull stories therein contain- ed. The first arrivals brought terror to our hearts. Panic was calmed by .a kind suggestion from the lady in charge that we should read to the children.- So, while we all eyed each other furtively, we read, and tried to act, and expressed great enthusiasm over The Bunny with the Magic Nose. Our audience was fascinated for only a_ limited. length of time, and it was obvious that a little strenuous exercise in the \ working-off-of-steam depart- | ment was in order. We started in on our store of games: London Bridge, Puss in the Corner, Mus- ical Chairs. When these had been played to the end of their partic- ular fascination, we appealed to one of the older children, and from then on all our problems were solv- ed. We proceeded to have the time of our lives playing games that really had great potentialities. They were even fun playing them the way we did, with rules that made very little sense. Five o’clock came much too soon. Maybe we’re not doing too well keeping peace in our world. Why not try your hand at keeping the peace among these children for two hours? A THE COLLEGE NEWS ‘\ Page Three BM Teams Fail As Males Assail by Hanna Holborn ’50 “Brawn over brain Has done it again!” This was the melancholy cheer that echoed over the hockey fields of Bryn Mawr as football and soc- cer played by Haverford with the aid of hockey sticks overwhelmed the more skilled but more delicate Bryn Mawr squads. It is rumored that the score of Monday’s game between the footballers and Bryn Mawr’s second hockey team was 3 to 1, while that of the other match, played on Tuesday by the first team, was 4 to 0. Both games were played in an atmosphere of chill, damp, and ut- ter darkness. Haverford expressed disappointment that the hockey rules included “Tackling Verboten” and aimed at each other rather than at the goal. One Haverford goalie was observed reposing hap- pily against the goal-post and playing with a yo-yo | Clad in a jumbled assortment of what passed for sports clothes, Haverford executed miraculous gymnastic feats on every part of a field liberally sprinkled with bodies. “How do they know so much about hockey?” overawed spectator as a Haverford man bounced off the field, commit- ting three fouls as he went. FINESSE THE JUKE-BOX Relax this Saturday night to the music of Don McCandles’ orchestra at Denbigh’s Christ- mas dance (contact Nan Gar- ton for tickets). asked one! Vocat. Committee Plans Science Tea The first Vocational Committee tea of the year will be held on Tuesday, November 9th, in the Common Room of Goodhart. This tea is the first to be held in re- sponse to the poll conducted earlier in the year. Tea will be served at 4.30 and discussion in the field of science will begig at_5.00. promptly....An alumna from each of the biology, chemistry and geology depart- ments will give a ten-minute talk on the work she has done after college, and Miss Oppenheimer will speak afterwards, to cover the points not mentioned. that an alumna who is a medical | student will also come to speak. An informal discussion will follow and the alumnae will be in the Rhoads show case after supper for individual interviews and discus- sions. Because all the speakers have not yet been heard from, these plans are necessarily tentative, but if there is no further announce- ment, the tea will be held as plan- ned. It cis hoped | NOTICES N. S. A. On Thursday, November 20, Bryn Mawr ratified the NSA con- stitution by a vote of 426-40. 85% of the undergraduate body voted, 98% for and 7% against ratifica- Ten cents will be added to the Common Treasury dues to cov- tion. er regional and national NSA dues. Common Treasury -Dues Common Treasury dues will be on the December 10 Pay Day—$3 for Undergrad, $1 for Alliance, 25 ; Murals, Please All contributions for the Mural Contest for the Rumpus Room are} to be submitted to Ann Hinman, Pem West. day, December 5. Head of Chapel Beginning this April the Head of Chapel will be. chosen by a | campus-wide election, | appointment by the Undergrad The deadline is Fri-/ instead of ‘prrog ’ Alwyne Recitals Mr. Horace Alwyne, Director of the Music Department, will give a series of three Pianoforte Recitals this season in the New Century Club in Wilmington, Delaware; the first program, to be given De- cember 9, will comprise Russian music. cents for Self-Government, ah Undergrad deficit, | NSA dues, and 60. cents for Varsity Players. Total is | $5.10. cents to cover 10 cents for Ardmore Beokshop in Suburban Square for BOOKS AND XMAS CARDS ~ TO MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS : WARDROBE SLEEK — Do Holiday Shopping at TRES CHIC SHOPPE YOU’LL NEVER BE A WALL-FLOWER AT THE DENBIGH DANCE IF YOU WEAR A REAL FLOWER FROM JEANNETT’S MAYO and PAYNE Cards Gifts RADIO Parts Repairs 821 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR Break the Routine! Ve Have a Delicious Friday Night Dinner at THE COLLEGE INN ) American Cleaner and Dyer For Quality Work Call Bryn Mawr 0494. JOSEPH TRONCELLITI Proprietor 880 LANCASTER AVENUE ACROSS FROM THE FIRE HOUSE Won a string of hearts for her very own. So she wed a Joe with a lot of dough, Settled down with him in a bungalow— And her secret’s scribed on the line below: A pn HOSIERY ole FULL-FASHIONED 2B ly HOW THE TME GOES BY”. when you’re listening to HAL McINTYRE’S newest NE OF the grooviest ork-pilots on the MGM record roster (MGM) record is Hal McIntyre. Like so many other top-notch performers, Hal is a Camel fan from ’way back. He prefers Camels because: “Camels suit me best all ways.” For the same reason — more people are smoking Camels than ever before! A great new record for a long-time favorite. Try Camels. Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the “choice of experience.” And here’s another great record _ lore people are smoking CAMELS than ever before! ¥ Nothing suits CAMEL. Ive smoked me like a R. J. Reynolds ¢ Tobacco Co., Winston- Salem, Noeth Carolina Page Four 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS ‘Two English BM students greet member of touring team. Eng. Hockey Skill Overcomes BM Team Continued from Page 1 Only a few of the Bryn Mawr players were able to overtake an English player. the English team was outstanding in her own position, but especial- ly the center forward, Joan Arkell, Every member of Turkish Student. _ Elected to Council - Delegates from International House and sixteen colleges were present at a recent meeting of the United Nations Student Council held here at Bryn Mawr. Suna Kili ’48, of Turkey, was elected one of the International House repre- sentatives to the Council. Committees were appointed to plan the possible publication of a United’-Nations Student. Council newspaper, to arrange for an ac- tive foreign student program, and to plan a program for the year. The next meeting will be held Bryn Mawr. All students are in- vited to attend all meetings, even if they are not delegates. An in- teresting item on the forthcoming agenda is a proposed ‘trip to New York to attend the United, Nation sessions. : on Sunday, December 7, here at Watch the Flicks: Benefit the Vets Now Bryn Mawrtyrs have a legi- timate excuse to forget the books and go to the “flicks.”” December 8th through 12th, movies will be shown in Ardmore, Wayne and Conshohocken, with proceeds to go toward a Christmas party for the patients at Valley Forge General Hospital, Coatesville Veterans’ Hospital and Philadelphia Naval Hospital. The theatres showing the films will be the Suburban in Ardmore, the Anthony Wayne in Wayne, and the Riant in Conshohocken. donation is $.75, tax included. The'both colleges, and also Villanova, | Since the Alliance realizes that the foreign students at Bryn Mawr do not have sufficient opportunities to see the sights around Philadel- phia, or to meet and know Ameri- can students on a social basis, it is sponsoring projects under’ the scope of the United Nations Stu- dent Council and the IRC for this purpose. The United Nations Student Council, the IRC clubs of Haver- ford and Bryn Mawr and the lan- guage clubs are jointly giving a party for the foreign students of on Friday night, December 5, at ~ Alliance Angles Wyndham, from 8.30 to 12.00. A program of dancing, games and re- freshments will not only give the foreign students an opportunity to mix with and meet Americans, but it will also introduce the American students of the respective clubs to an interesting, cosmopolitan social atmosphere. In addition to this party, the United Nations~Student Council plans further to provide sight see- ing tours to points of special his- torical interest in and around Phil- adelphia, so the foreign students can learn more from America than courses alone offer. om ye who scored nine of the 23 goals. Others scoring were Barbara Wood | Davies RH Rogers 5, Joan Cummins 5, Peggy Sulman | Sulman CH +" Cadbury 2, Pat Curtis 1, Peggy Lodge 1. Lodge LH Bagley This was the thirteenth game/| Hellyar RF Focardi for the English team, and in these | Barnes LF Savage 13 games they have scored a total} Finley G Geib — of 174 goals with only 4 goals scored against them. On Novem- ber 30 they defeated the All-Amer- ican team 8-0. The line-ups of the teams were as follows: England Bryn Mawr Lunches - Dinner Lodge RW Stone | J — West RI Parker Arkell CF Boas Cummins LI Hayes Dicks LW Winslow MEET AT THE GREEK’S Tasty Sandwiches | Refreshments Gane and Snyder Foods of Quality Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Compliments of the Haverford Pharmacy Haverford | | JUST WHAT YOU'VE | BEEN SEEKING! | THE GIFT WITH THE FOREIGN TOUCH! MEXICAN SHOP Ardmore HETHER you play basketball or are one of its host of enthusiastic fans, you will enjoy the re- freshing flavor of . .. Beech-Nut Gum ee) A WE HAVE A FINE SELECTION OF CHILDREN’S BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS Country Book Shoppe BRYN MAWR \ Everywhere it goes, the assur- ance of Beech-Nut for fine flavor goes with it. The yellow package with the red oval IT’S STILL NOT TOO LATE TO GET \ CHRISTMAS CARDS ; AT Richard Stockton BUT YOU'D BETTER HURRY! *. i | | Copyright 1947, Locerr & Mysxs Tosacco Co. a A ALWAYS MILDER B BETTER TASTING € cooLER SMOKING