ata ae ete a tetera Sash VOL. XLV—NO. 1 ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 © Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1959 PRICE 20 CENTS Class of 1963 Undergoes Freshman Weekend Flurry; Convocation to Mark College’s 75th Anniversary Year Convocation, Preceded by Academic Procession, Opens A Series Of Commemorative Events A convocation, the second ‘to be held at the beginning of the first semester since the college opened in 1885, will usher in Bryn Mawr’s seventy-fifth academic year on Monday, September 28, at 4:30 p.m. President Katharine E. McBride will officiate, and Dr. John W. Gardner, President of the Carnegie Corporation, will be the principal speaker. The convocation in Goodhart Hall will be preceded by an academic procession involving all the mem- bers of the faculty, Deans and staff, all students enrolled in the college, the President, speaker, and distinguished guests. As is customary at commencement, the procession will form on the Library green at 4:00 p.m., and, marshal- led by students, will advance into Goodhart auditorium. Guests Included The President’s party will in- clude presidents of neighboring colleges and heads of schools. A number of eminent alumnae are also included among the guests. The Convocation marks the op- ening not only of the seventy-fifth anniversary year, but also of the long series of events in commem- oration of this anniversary. The theme uniting activities here at the College and staged by Alum- nae in 31 cities is “New Horizons of Thought and the Stubborn Facts of Today.” The only other convocation held at the opening of the academic year was that which formally. an- nounced the birth of the college in 1885. These ceremonies of inaug- uration took place on September , ‘63's Dictionary Of BMC Terms Noah Webster and Samuel John- son once attempted to classify the English language. In the same spirit, a partial dictionary of Bryn Mawr terms may be composed. COLLEGE COUNCIL— This is a group which meets once a month for dinner and discussion. It is composed of Miss McBride, the deans, Miss Howe, a faculty and alumnae representative, the presi- | dents of the Big 6, class presidents, News editor, a hall president, a non-res representative, and a war- den. UNDERGRAD COUNCIL—This group meets once a week, without dinner. It is composed of the ed- itor of the NEWS, the presidents of the Big 6 and of the classes. Chaired by the president of Under- grad, it devotes itself to plans, projects, and policy. BIG 6—This institution is unique: to Bryn Mawr. It refers to the six autonomous ‘organizations which are college-wide in nature and with college-elected presidents. Between them, they deal with nearly all “extra-curricular activities,” and include Self-Gov, Undergrad, Lea- gue, Alliance, Athletic and Inter- faith Associations. SELF-GOV ADVISORY BOARD | —This “is made-up ofthe presidents and the president, vice- president, and secretary of Self- Gov. Continued on Page 5, Col. 1 They discuss problems of | 23 of that year, two days after the beginning of classes and eight . days after the College was open- ed for the reception of students for the first time. President D. C. Gilman of Johns Hopkins University, President Chase of Haverford and James Russell Lowell spoke at that first convocation. The first President of the College, Dr. James E. Rhoads, said of the even in his President’s Report for the year 1885: “The occasion was altogeth- er auspicious, and the College has entered upon its career with uni- versal good wishes for its ‘success, so that it has but to fulfill kind expectations by worthy perform- ance,” T AR} ° R en LOR ly DS Feneeon sere | : ine RHO Ak os — = os yp g ] RAD «cite roe / on | seat ww Rails MERION HALL 1963 AMDUR, M. A. ARNSTEIN, N. BENNER, L. B. BEGRAD, H. BURDICK, E. CARDWELL, M. R. ERSKINE, S. GOLDSAM, T. R. GOLONDZOWSKI, V. GREENBERG, E. HEILMAN, J. M. HIBBARD, M. C. HUSSEY, B. KANTER, R. B. KENNISON, J. KOVAG, A. F: LEVY,.G. -.. MELLINGER, K. MILLER, B. REED, A. M. SULLIVAN, D. J. Freshman Directory RADNOR HALL 1963 BARKER, M. BLU, K. EVANS, E. R. FRANKLE, J. E. GIBSON, A. S. GOLDENBERG, S. K. KASIUS, J. M. MARBURY, S. S. OSMOND, P. J. - SHAH, G. G. SHULL, C. J. SMITH, J. SPRING, C. TYSON, L. VON RAITS, H. WITMAN, A. L. DENBIGH HALL 1963 ALPERS, L. A. CLEMSON, G. L. DAVIS, M. 8. DE LAGUNA, A. GOLDSTONE, J. GREENBERG, N. J. HARTLEY, L. J. KAMMERMAN, J. LANDSMAN, B. L. LEWIS, C. MAGAZINER, E. L. MILDWAN, D. MUMFORD, K. T. NORTHROP, P. ORR, M. H. UTGOFF, A. WORTHEN, C. PEMBROKE EAST 1963 ANGELO, H. M. BOARDMAN, E. B. BROWN, J. H. CHIANG, J. DAVIS, W. H. C. FAIRFAX, M. GUMPERT, S. KISTLER, K. A. KNEELAND, A; KURZBERG, E. Continued on Page 6, Col. 1 Parade Night Welcomes The Freshmen Officially After A Hectic “Week”’ Parade Night, that solemn occa- sion which follows the first day of classes, is the time of official wel- coming of the ‘freshmen. But since the first post-dawn hours of Thurs- day morning that welcome has in fact been extended to the 206 members of the class of 1963. From voice tests to physicals, from interviews with Miss McBride to an ice cream party, the “week” has been a full one. Entering stu- dents have been housed where freshmen have not been housed in the recent past: 10 in the Gradu- ate Center, eight in the Deanery, and the Infirmary temporarily holds five. More familiar accom- modations are at slightly more than capacity. Tonight and Sunday, upper- classmen return to dorms already in full swing. But although class- es begin Monday morning, the College will not settle into its rou- tine until the Convocation opening the seventy-fifth anniversary is over and Parade Night has vent- ed its furies. Notice All. students, and especially freshmen, the slightest bit: inter- ested in trying out for the News are urged to attend a meeting on Tuesday, September 26, at 5:00 in the News room, Goodhart. Tryouts and the rigors and requirements of being a News staff member will be the principal topics of this con- versation between News editors and the young and eager. Batten Property Purchased Complete With Indoor Swimming Exactly a week before this year’s large freshman class arrived, Bryn Mawr concluded the purchase for $150,000 of the home of Harry A. Batten. This two-and-a-half storey eres ee NNT whitewashed field stone house at 830 Roberts Road will be a dormi- tory for 14 students. The Batten estate includes the 14-room, six-bath Colonial style “Once the home of Harry Batten, this residence will soon be a Bryn Mawr Dormitory. residence and six-and-a-half acres of grounds bordering the Graduate Center on the east. One wing of the house contains a 30-by-50 foot indoor swimming pool, with ad- jacent terraces. The College learned that the Batten property was for sale only in the latter part of August. Until that time, Bryn Mawr owned a number of beds purchased at the beginning of the summer, with no place to put them and little hope of finding space. Even with this addition, freshmen are being hous- ed in the Deanery, the new wing of the Infirmary, and the Graduate Center, in addition to the seven dormitories, the College Inn and East House. Present plans are that Batten House will not be an all-freshman dormitory like East House, but that upperclassmen will be invited to apply to live there. Because of the pool it is hoped that at least two Red Cross Lifesavers will be among those who apply. Denizens of the Batten house will take their meals at the Graduate Center. Unlike the gym pool, the Batten house pool is equipped with a reg- julation diving board, which will ‘make possible the inclusion of div- _ ing classes.in the sports curricu- lum. The pool will almost certain- ly be made generally available to Graduate Students as well. Page Two THE COLLEGE NEWS Saturday, September 26, 1959 THE COLLEGE NEWS FOUNDED IN 1914 Published weekly during the College Year (except ‘ae Thanksgiving, Christmas and taster holidays, and during examina- tion weeks) in the interest of Bryn Marr 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 wholly. or in part without permission of the tditor-in-Cnief. - EDITORIAL BOARD NE os ioc bok 465 dbs bo ebb bes debs ese Betsy Levering, ‘61 CONG BOOT civic cc eset cece eens arveccceeneeneecececrens Lois Potter, ‘61 PRIS GOT ook cc ic ces ceceeccewccessoereseesess E. Anne Eberle, ‘61 NS ee a ers rer rene Frederica Koller, ‘61 Members-at-large ........... 0c e eee Marion Coen, ‘62; Alison Baker, ‘62 EDITORIAL STAFF Isa Brannon, ‘62; Yvonne Chan, ‘62; Linda Davis, ‘62; Sandi Goldberg, ‘62; Anne Rassiga, ‘62; Grace Stevens, ‘61; Judy. Stuart, ‘62. BUSINESS BOARD Sybil Cohen, “61; Jane Levy, ‘59; Nancy Porter, ‘60; Freiman, ‘61; Melinda Aikins, ‘61; Martina Souretis, ‘61. Business Manager Associate Business Manager bs Irene Kwitter, ‘61; Sue ‘60 ‘60 Elizabeth Cooper, Tina Souretis, ee Staff Photographer ....... ae ee E TP ee Holly Miller, ‘59 OR AT eeer er re te oe Margaret Williams, ‘61 Subscription Manager ............cscsec esse ese ceeeveres Susan Szekley, ‘61 Subscription Board: Loretta Stern, ‘60; Karen Black, ‘61; Gail Lasdon, ‘61; Lois Potter, ‘61; Danna Pearson, ‘61;. Lisa Dobbin, ‘61; Sue Szekley, ‘61; Elise Cummings, ‘59; Sasha Siemel, ‘62; Doris Dickler, ‘60; Kate Jordan, ‘60; Jackie Goad, ‘61. Subscription, $3.50. Mailing price, $4.00. Subscription may begin at any time. Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office, under the Act of March 3, 1879. A Greeting And The Gallows “a . . you’re desperate to fly into any noose of the sun that should dangle down from the sky.” Like Thomas Mendip, we have hanging on our mind, and perhaps yow'll forgive us a short causerie on the subject before we come to the point, such as it is. Modes of execu- tion have always seized the popular imagination: crucifixion, which went out with the Christianized empire, but which has pervaded the Christian era; decapitation, and the image of the swarthy Moor with his Scimitar; death by guillotine, that fiendish invention peculiar to the French. But in the Anglo-Saxon world, hanging has enjoyed both popularity and a three-way usefulness. Hanging has been a legal form of execution, and is retained, in some states. In Dickens, legal hanging is ugly and capricious; in Gay it is‘an occasion for humor. Hanging has been, and, we note shamefacedly, is the method of the mob. No Western is complete without a lynching, and hanging is the symbol of racial hatred in the South. Especially vivid is Satre’s tragic burlesque of this situation in The Reluctant Prostitute, and the violence of Faulkner. Finally, hanging is'a fairly common form of self- execution, familiar in literature and history since the suicide of Judas the betrayer of Jesus. Hanging, then, has a legal, an extra- or quasi-legal, and a suicidal function. With the' exception of shooting, which, being swift and in a sense undramatic, has never found real favor with the excited crowd, we know of no other method of death that ericompasses these three functions. This vari- ety makes hanging a fitting subject for an allegory. We _ have been working up to an allegory, but its tone isso ad-. monishing and its implications so grandmotherly, that after we reveal it we shall have to reject it. Bryn Mawr has its | executions: Legal gallows which operate upon the rare and sad cases of academic lassitude and failure, or serious social misbehavior; the extra-legal lynchings of the crowd—social or anti-social.and extra-curricular activities taken in excess; and self-execution, which is this ordered society, is almost the only cause of the first two. But we mean to welcome, not to warn. Christopher Fry’s phrase is “nose of the sun”, and if there are nooses hanging around to snare wnwary freshmen (and upperclass- men), we believe that these nooses are really “of the sun.” During freshman weeks you have had a concentrated fore- taste of Bryn Mawr life. You have had innumerable teas and parties, you have met the Haverford men en masse, you have seriously considered your chosen subjects, and you have just been confronted with the allures of the Big Six and the News editor. The pace slows as you begin to live within an academic schedule. You may believe that at scholarly. Bryn Mawr everyone lives the life of an ascetic intellectual; you probably want to escape from the overload of social and extra-curricular activities which in some ways killed the academic profits of high school, Nevertheless, you will soon discover, like Oxonians who are said to. consider informal: discussions the most valuable aspect of their education, that real learning is incompatible with introversion, and that aca- demic vigor can only survive in a community where a contin- ual conversation is going on, and the conversation proceeds _ _ logically. into vital activities. . The News dangles its noose, as many other ‘Activities |colleges-.and. universities in the almost as worthy. And now we greet you heartily, and per- _ haps not mananndly 20:7 “hed J ac ccconla Freshman Agonistes by Lois Potter Dear Mom, T haven’t had time to write you before, because we have all been very busy, but I’m sure you didn’t think I was dead. If I was dead. somebody would tell you. Bryn Mawr is very nice. There are lots of girls here who have neat clothes and who talk a lot. They are called Freshmen. There are also some girls who look a little like human beings, only very wrinkled, and don’t ever say any- thing. They are called Upperclass- men. There will be more of them later. They are very nice, under all that hair, and are always happy to show us where things are, even when they don’t know either. Today we visited the Library. It is shaped like a square dough- nut, and the hole in the middle is filled with grass and people holding cigarettes. They call it the Cloisters. There are lots of books in the library, and some Profes- sors are kept there in cages. I hear they are quite harmless. After we saw the library, they took us on a tour of the Campus. We saw Taylor Hall, which must be a factory or something, be- cause they say it’s where dough- nuts and bluebooks come from. It has a real bell in the tower and four clocks each of which tells a different time. When I was there, one Upperclassman tried to jump off the tower, but a couple of friends caught her in a net. She was the Manager of Funiture Sale. There are lots of residence halls on Campus.-They are Gothic, which means the plumbing isn’t very good, especially on the top floors. The food is English Gothic too. Enough said. The gymnasium is located inside an old castle. We all wear green suits so as blend in with the trees. In winter, it is all white around here (because of snow), so we have to have gym indoors. They try to hide us as much as pos- sible when we have our gym suits on. There is also a Biology building and a Geology. building, but my feet hurt, so I didn’t go there. They say both buildings are very nice, if you like dogfish and rocks. _ Last night we went to a Mixer. A mixer is like a party, only more confusing. One. Upperclassman told me is was called a Mixer be- cause by the time you came out of one you are pretty well beat. There were lots of boys, and even more girls. tellectual Conversation. Example of Intellectual Conversation: Boy: Hello, where are you from? Girl: New Hampshire, where are you from? Boy: New York, where are you from? Girl: I’m going to get some punch, Boy: Well, nice meeting you. End of Intellectual Conversa- tion. Well, I must close now, because they want us to go see something, or meet somebody, or listen to somebody, or something. I have met lots of nice girls, but I can’t remember any of their names. Your loving daughter, _ Amaryllis. P. S. Please send my flashlight SOON, because we have Fire Drills at 2:00 in the Morning! 2 e Notice The Reverend David McShane, Director of the Westminster Foun- dation, will address the opening session of the Bryn Mawr-Haver-. ford Student Christian Movement on Sunday, October 4, at 4 p.m. in the Converse House of the Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church. As head of the Westminster Founda- tion Mr. McShane directs all the Presbyterian work with some 19 We had lots of In-} Philadelphia And Main Line Offer Cultural Events of Variety, Quality by Alison Baker Campus commitments are liable to become exceedingly pressing through the year, but at some point you might find it worth your while to dodge them long enough to take advantage of the many cultural opportunities in Philadelphia and |the Main Line area. Both of these, Philadelpliia in particular, bristle with music, art, theater, and build- ings of architectural and -historical interest. ‘The Academy of Music is the center of musical activities. Its main and regular attraction is the Philadelphia orchestra, with Or- mandy conducting, but aside from these Friday and Monday evening concerts, there are numerous visit- ing groups, including the Metropoli- tan opera. For folk music enthu- siasts there are periodical concerts at the International Club as well as individual recitals and get-to- gethers throughout the city. Another series of classical music FRSHMAN CURRICULAR by Gretchen Jessup, *58 Ed’s. Notes This Poem is almost @ tradition. Freshman, year is butter brickle Men are many and women fickle; The term begins, and ere it ends, One gathers lantern, tests - and friends. Dawns the era sophomore With queries and philosomore, - - Fewer facts than last year, true But less is certain than one knew. By junior year the pace is brisk In clubs, one’s major, and untold misc., While hearts once lost to chem’s entrances Are lost again on floors of dances. All confidence and thought and zest, The senior strives. Who needs to rest? The cycle soon will stand com- plete, - - A glad grad moves on BA’d feet. Upon a world prepared, one hopes, For talents trained from trig to tropes (Discreetly veiled with charm and wit) - - Well, Freshman Years are always It. concerts, taking place at fairly wide intervals, is that at the Rad- nor High School. The performing groups are usually small or solo, and the comparatively small con- cert hall makes listening and view- ing much more intimate than at the Academy. There is no admis- sion charged, although contribu- tions are welcome. In the Philadelphia theater you can preview all that later moves on to Broadway in New York. This means both the advantage of more available tickets and cheaper prices and the disadvantage of not very easily being able to judge the play beforehand through reviews. On the whole it is worth taking a few chances and taking in a few plays. Movie houses are scattered throughout the city and Main Line towns, and can be investigated jin the Philadelphia Inquirer. In the city, there are two foreign lang- uage movie theaters, one German and one Italian. ‘The Fine Arts Museum could keep any museum- goer occupied for a number of winter seasons. It has a newly arranged section | of Eastern art and architecture which is of particular interest. The permanent collection includes -_painting, sculpture, furniture and interiors from a wide range of periods and localities, all very well displayed. Occasionally films are shown at the Museum. Not far from -the Fine Arts Museum is a smaller one; the Rod- in museum, which has a very good collection of sculptures. The Uni- versity of Pennsylvania has a museum of its own which features ancient and primitive art and sculpture. For the scientist or interested layman, there is the Franklin In- stitute, witha planetarium and demonstrations of various machines and scientific phenomena. The city of Philadelphia abounds in houses and historical monu- ments, but. those would deserve a guide in themselves, and can be quite easily located. : On the whole, the best policy, I think, is to keep eyes and ears open for happenings in the outside world of culture, and to glance on the way between classes at the Arts Council bulletin board in Taylor, | The Tea As A Lively Arh Much tea is poured in he course of a year at Bryn Mawr, and its pouring fulfills countless and di- verse functions. You are liable to experience everything on campus from Miss: McBride’s tea, overflow- ing with delectable edibles and gentile sociability, to a midnight gulp snatched at the height of exam preparation—tap water ting- ed with a taste of soggy tea bag. The other occasions, however, usu- ally fall somewhere between these extremes. The mere fact of the beverage often becomes superficial- ly unimportant, its presence giv- ing form and substance to gather- ings which otherwise might remain hopelessly nebulous or entirely un- convened, First there are the official club teas, massed at the beginning of the year. Through the soothing draughts of a tea cup, committee heads try to lure the incoming class to activity in behalf of their special concerns and _ projects. Stark and unclothed this end would quite possibly attract but few, but accompanied by the social and comfortable note which tea introduces it becomes a broad suc- cess, in attendace even if not nec- essarily in final result. In this ease the purpose of the meeting ‘clothes the tea for those inclined: to sociability but mildly averse to with generally helpful and gregar- ious instincts. Then there is the small private tea, an undisguisedly social event. Here tea provides the necessary formality for acquaintances to progress from an occasional run- ning salutation in Taylor to more extensive communication. In these perhaps much the same thing is achieved as in a chat in the smok- er, but there is nevertheless a dis- tinctly perceptible difference. The tone of a tea discussion takes an entirely different turn from that taken by one in the presence of asphyxiating smoke clouds. Just as the Rhinelanders’ wine contrasts with the Bavarians’ beer and moulds their respective characters accrdingly, so the tea enforces a note of lightness, and perhaps even occasionally of elegant incisiveness which would prove entirely incom- patible with an atmosphere dead- ened by smoke fumes. Luckily, the effect of either is only temporary; one smoker session doesn’t seem to dull anyone ‘irrevocably for the finer pleasures of tea. Other teas fall perhaps more accurately into the category of “foods”, asin them the beverage has ceded its preeminence in favor of the accompanying cakes, sand- wiches, etc. These teas fulfill a very necessary function, in which Greater Philadelphia area. meeting is open to everyone inter- ested. idle chatter, and the tea clothes the purpose of the meeting for those having tio {individual drive but | x Ae gluttony often proves the mother ~ of inspiration, and often not. Continued on Page 6, Col. 4 ro as Saturday, September 26, 1959 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three Organization Presidents Outline Programs For Year Self-Government Association Undergraduate Association ~by Marcy Tench, Uudergrad President The entire Undergraduate As- sociation welcomes you to Bryn Mawr and hopes sincerely that you will take an active part in all As- sociation activities during your four years here. As far as a preview of coming attractions for this year, I shall be_brief. _Many of Undergrad’s projects and activities arise during the year.and much is spontaneous. The Social Chairman of the Col- lege sits on the Undergraduate Executive Board as the first Jun- ior Representative.. You met Patty Roberts on Saturday night. Aside from the three traditional weekends, Patty plans the college calendar on which all social events are included. We hope this year to have halls combine their mix- ers. Your ideas on social activities are most.-welcome and sought after. One activity which Undergrad plans to sponsor will be an inter- hall bridge tournament. One will be held each semester, if possible. Everyone is urged and welcome to play, beginners included. This summer the Undergraduate _ Association was represented at the .U. S. National Students’ Con- gress. As a result of the work- shops held at the Congress, Under- |° grad is making plans to improve informal communications between the students and faculty. Small teas for students and their pro- fesors and dinners in each hall for faculty will be encouraged. The faculty will be urged to entertain small groups of students, particu- larly underclassmen, in their homes, Unless you have not already heard the word “Reorganization,” you will soon. This shall be -Un- dergrad’s major project this year. The idea of reorganizing the stu- dent organizations has been brew- ing for three years, and it is my personal hope to see some action this year. I hope you will all fa- miliarize yourselves with the vari- ous ideas and offer any ideas you may have. We will be. having many open meetings concerning this topic, at. which your attend- ance and suggestions will be most appreciated. ' I have enjoyed meeting some of you already, and look forward to meeting the rest of you in the near. future. 7 Arts Council by Judy Polsky President of Art’s Council A college organization devoted to “the ‘arts” sounds most uncon- vincing; it is frightening as either a bureauaratic or a- patronage group . ... speaking practically, this would not “work” at Bryn Mawr. The Arts Council is, both will- ingly and by necessity, a “contact” group—as active as the students want and help it to be. Structural- ly the Arts Council admits to a very loose organization: it has no constitution; its Board consists of a Chairman, Vice - Chairman, the Head of the Arts Forum, hall representatives, and any other in- terested students. Functionally, it aspires to be even more variable— find what is of interest to the members of a liberal arts college .. and means for its expression. An Arts Night is held each fall —an opportunity for the presen- tation and sharing of student tal- ent and originality in the dance, instrumental music, singing, and forms of drama. _ Recitals, lectures and readings are sponsored during the year by Arts Forum. The recital program should make available to the col- lege community its own talented performers as well as music stu- dents from the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. Lectures are somewhat informal both in sub- ject and presentation ... as ex- pressing current interests. Arts Council asks for suggestions. — Folksinging or playreading get- togethers (many with Haverford- Continued on Page 4, Col. 4 Alliance for Political Affairs by Eunice Strong, In this article you will find in- formation about the Alliance for Political Affairs, commonly known as the Alliance. This organiza- tion, like the other “Big Six,” is composed of smaller organizations which can be thought of as a pyra- mid culminating in the Alliance Board. This board meets with fair regularity in the Roost at 5:00 p.m. on Thursday afternoons. These meetings are open to the College and you are more than welcome to come. They deal with the business of the Alliance as a whole and then there usualy is a discussion of interest on some phase of poli- tics. This year the Alliance is planning three speakers in the fall and then next spring a confer- ence lasting for a day on a topic which might possibly be African Nationalism. Below are resumés of what the individual clubs hope to do this year. - The International Relations Club Pres. Rez Conn; Rockefeller The club this year will try to in- crease cooperation with surround- ing colleges such as the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, Haverford, Princeton, Swarthmore etc. to keep the college informed on lectures, forums, meetings at these colleges, and to. try to provide transporta- tion. for those who are interested in- going:---The--IRC’s..main..func-. tion, as in the past, will be to serve as the liaison between us and the similar elubs of other colleges. "Phe Disoussion..Club Pres, Laurie Levine, Radnor Alliance President ple into its fold who are interested in discussing politics. Probably one or two people will be asked to prepare arguments “or at least clarify their thoughts in order to start the discussion.” Quotes are courtesy of the president. Debate Club Pres. Linda Davis, Rhoads This year Debate plans to in- crease the amount of its debates not only held maong students here but wtih other colleges as well. Mr. Bachrach has consented to ad- vise the club and its members. The Young Republicans and The Young Democrats Pres. Ruth Krastins, Josie Donovan Rhoads As this year is an “off-year” as far as major elections are con- cerned the activities of these clubs Interfaith by Cathy Lucas Interfaith President ‘The Interfaith Association is the newest and least well-defined of the Big Six Organizations. Arising out of the Chapel Com- mittee of the Undergrad Associa- tion, it is still limited in some minds to its function of the Sun- day evening service. Its new scope and potential service to the cam- pus is only gradually becoming more evident. The two very real purposes of our organization today are as fol- lows: 1) To aid the student in her personal religious growth by mak- ing known the opportunities off- campus for worship, and for re- ligious thinking from. a_ theologi- cal and ethical standpoint. Besides the local churches, there exist ac- tive study groups for Catholic, Protestant and Quaker students, and various activities for Jewish students, which are found and pub- licized by Interfaith. 2) To provide a unique meet- ing ground for minds, of all faiths or no faith, who are concerned with the religious aspect of ques- tions, political, sociological, philo- sophical, etc., and with other re- ligions than their own. To this end we present mid-week pro- grams which bring outstanding speakers and pertinent topics to the campus; the climax this year being the conference co-sponsored with Alliance and League. Continuing its function as Chapel Committee, Interfaith has -become,- then; a three-fold organ- izations: as co-ordinator and pub- licizer of the religious activities available to the individual student, it igs a service organization; as sponsor of lectures and discus- sions, trips and demonstrations, it is an interest group much like Al- liance; but in its presentation of college worship services, is has Continued on Page 4, Col. 4 by Sue Harris, Self-Gov. President Self-Government, by definition, means you. It is an organization of which you must be aware. The strength or weakness of this or- ganization can be measured by the understanding that you have of your place in and responsibility J:| toward Self-Gov. To gain an un- derstanding of Self-Gov. is not difficult, for the basic philosophy of the organization corresponds, as it must, to the everyday social and academic life of the college. The rules, stated in your Self- Gov. Constitution, deal with the details which are necessary in the efficient operation of the college community. These rules should be learned before you begin the varied social and academic activities con- nected with the college. Your re- sponsibility toward Self-Gov. lies in your appreciation of the ne- cessity of these rules, in your con- cern that these rules be followed by every student in your college, League by Julie O’Neil League President DON’T READ HERE—not until you stop to think—there is a need for you,—for your ability to con- sider someone’s problem,— for your energy to cope with it,—and for your tenacity to improve his lot, even in a small way, before this person is dropped by the way- side of forgotten troubles. © In college especially rises such an unconscious wall of deadlines —academic anthills which sudden- ly flourish to the exclusion of equally demanding work—dealing not with books, but with people. It is just this area in which the League acts as the channel to remedy this deficit in student life. Out of a liberal arts background, practical emphasis is placed on be- coming a constructive and imagin- ative member of society. The question immediately arises—who makes up this society? The sim- ple answer—everyone belongs. Not just those with, but those without. As members. we all affect and are affected by each other, whether consciously or not. Each member learns from another— can see his achievements and fail- ures in the character and predic- ament of another. Humanity is one animal, one spirit. In working with and learning from one an- other the giver ad the receiver are made complete in themselves: Who in the end, can name the giver, the receiver? As an illustration— at Sleighton Farm last year a Continued on Page 4, Col. 1 by Marion Coen If the newly-arrived upperclass- men appear to freshmen a partic- ularly agile, sound, and well-coor- dinated group it is not because they were born that ‘way; great numbers, in fact, of the now lithe will not be as great as they might be. However, there are city elec- tions in Philadelphia, and there are hopes that the Committee of 70 will be able to use members to poll watch, ete. and the parties will need people to distribute informa- tion. Through the Citizenship Clearing House we can get speak- ers to discuss or hold debates. There are also work-shops and YR and YD conventions. 2 You do not have to do anything to belong to any of these organiza- tions; they are open to all and ‘want people to take a part in them no matter how small. None of them require much time at all. Alliance get in touch with Eunice This club intends to gather peo- 2 Strong, 113 Rhoads South. year ungraceful, unrhythmic, and thoroughly incapable of hurling either basketball or themselves more than a paltry three or four feet. The remarkable transforma- tion of this number must be at- tributed to their rapid detection as non-gymnasts in a series of fool-proof tests which indicate one’s ability (or lack thereof) to hurl basketballs, run laps and crawl a plat ventre beneath hur- dles. Once recognized, the athlet- ically inept are snatched from their group and put imto a special course called Body Mechanics sci- entifically designed to co-ordinate | them within six weeks time. and limber began their freshman. As If Normal Sports Weren’t Enough! Freshmen Meet Basic Skills Head-On pool, the non-athletic is subjected to a rigorous program of body im- provement. Three times a week she submits to the fundamental training vital to such complex ath- letic maneuvers as dashing a bas- ketball against a wall, getting said ball into a basket, broadjumping, and trotting. These skills she is rather amazed to find are attain- ed by continual practice, not of them, but of several deceptively simple-looking exercises; i.e., sway- ing, skipping, and bicycling bike. — . ‘ Any loss of dignity suffered while skipping round and round the gym to waltz music or lying on one’s stomach struggling in vain to stretch one’s arms to meet one’s heels is easily forgotten in face of benefits reaped. By the end of the Fall term and Body Mechanics, the once gauche fresh- man not only is nimble, rhythmic, and poised, but has actually im- ‘While her more able-bodied classmates gad about in field and yaad “% ; and by your comprehension that Self-Gov. as a system of rules safeguards the reputation of your college, both academically and soc- ially. : Structurally, Self-Gov. relies upon lines of communication which run from each Hall Presi- dent and her hall to the Advisory Board, from college-elected class representatives to the Executive Board, and from Permission Giv- ers who are drawn from the stu- dent body at large and who oper- ate within the halls. It is for you that these lines of communication have been established, because only you can keep the rules and maintain the réputation of your hall, your class and your college. This year the Advisory and Executive Boards intend to strengthen these lines of com- munication. Copies of the rules will be passed out to all upper- classmen. Permission Givers will be asked to demonstrate a greater understanding of their position as Self-Gov. officers. Each student will be expected to visit meetings of the Boards to observe firsthand the internal workings of the or- ganization. A greater emphasis will be placed on the Academic Honor System. The dress rules will come up for college considera- tion. These plans are only a few of the many which shall be pre- sented during the year. Self-Gov., its rules and its philosophy of individual responsibility and over- all integrity, must meet your needs. But you must work to meet the needs of Self-Gov., for Self- Gov. means every student. Athletic Association by Helen Cohen, A. A. President The basic aim of the Athletic Association is to provide good fun and a recreational outlet for every- one on campus. This year we hope to carry on with and enlarge our program of strictly recreational activities. For example the ten- nis courts are always available for student use, the gym is open- ed by an A.A. representative on Sunday afternoons so that stu- dents may use the pool and other facilities of the gym, a program of inter-murals in such sports as hockey, basketball, volleyball, bad- minton, and swimming is offered, and even a bridge tournament is sponsored by the A.A. Several clubs are sponsored by the A.A., again along the lines of the strictly recreational. There is the Synchronized Swimming Club, the Dance Club (whch we hope to reorganize this year), the newly- formed Riding Club, the Outing Club which sponsors such great events as the mid-term skiing trip, and so on. We also hope to form some sort of a folk-singing group this year. During the school year the A.A. hopes to sponsor a program of movies—some on sporting events and possibly one or two of the Coronets” for instance. Our program of varsity sports is probably familiar to you all through the Freshman Handbook. In conjunction with the Physical Education Department, the A.A. offers varsity activity in hockey, tennis, swimming, badminton, la- only those of you who are inter- ested in playing, but also those come out for these activities. A proved her broad jump, dash, and foul-shot by at least ten per cent! e Continued on Page 6, Col. 5 pan classic “hits”, “Kind Hearts and . who are interested in watching, to ~ crosse and fencing. We urge not«.. 5 24 schedule of games for all varsities~ ~~ ~~ a gas, springs from the water pipe. ' leaving, one of the young, teen- . just keep your eyes on “the stars’ dents awaited, NEW IDEAS EX- Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS Saturday, September 26, 1959 Corrosive Liquids And Noxious Gases Fail To Daut Kager-Well-Chemists by Marion Coen Now is the time when acid- etched. and burn-scarred -upper- classmen look back with mingled mirth and agony to that happy hour during Freshmen Week when they learned that the laboratory science requirement could not be satisfied with a Chemistry Appre- ciation course. No one, they found, not even the most sensitive, shel- tered, and unscientific of ‘their number could slip through the four years ‘ without exposure of more than the cerebellum to sci- entific thought and processes; not even the most devoted English or history major might substitute Scientific Method or Lives of the Chemists 103 for the more incisive (mentally, emotionally, and occa- sionally physically) experience of total submergance into laboratory work. ‘ While artfully concealing the brown-rimmed holes in a hitherto (pre-chemistry) favorite sweater the upperclasmen, made objective by ther advanced position, can happily—if somewhat nostalgically —recollect the many poignant hours spent huddled over bunsen burner and test tube rack explor- ing the (alack—too long) Un- known. .Of those experiments which left a lasting impression (on either skin, clothing, or the imagination) she recalls several worthy of mention to the scien- tifically unoriented but chemically directed freshman. The Questionable Experiment 1.) The Bending Glass Experi- ment: Noteworthy both because it comprises the neophyte’s first en- counter with the laboratory and because it provides indisputable proof of that startling similarity between hot, tissue-searing glass and its cool (and harmless) coun- terpart. 2.) Decomposition of Elements by Heat:. Permanently remember- ed for its highly graphic demon- stration of the impotence of the bunsen burner when connected to that spout which, though decep- tively like the one exuding natural | 3.) Separation of Elements from Compounds: Memorable for its seemingly indisputable, calculated proof that there are nine pounds of pure silver in the American dime. 4.) Atomic Weight of A Metal: Memorable for its demonstration of .the principle that one’s hands should be off the substance plot- form of a balance scale before re- cording vital weights. 5.) Qualitative Analysis: Mem- orable. Lest the incipient chemist League Continued from Page 3, Col. 4 small group from BMC was in- vited for a luncheon visit. Upon agers chanced to ask, “And what are you going to do after school?” One of us remarked, “Oh—may- be work in the UN. But that seems so far off and at times I don’t. think .I’d-have .a chance there.” The youthful societal of- fender promptly replied, “You —that’s the only way to live—and you'll reach up there.” There is so much that can be accomplished this year—but this must be measured by the individ- ual. Programs already set up and awaiting participation, discussions to be set up,—with topics and stu- be disheartened by these painful recollections let it be said that at least one out of ten enjoy their lab escapades sufficiently to major in chem, and, although its liquids be corrosive and its gases noxious, the department: has never lost a chemist. Geology Survivor Recalls Encouner With Rocky Crew by E. Anne Eberle A freshman bounding gaily in to negotiate with Mrs. Broughton to plot the year’s schedule is not always armed with much informa- tion about courses which look so exciting, stimulating, etc. to her eager mind searching for knowl- edge, etc. again. Perhaps a word from a recent survivor of the geol- ogy experience will serve to en- lighten this bright, eager mind before it follows its path of knowl- edge straight up a Dead-STOP- End-Street. Admittedly, geology is an excel- lent way to dabble in all the other sciences. You will find yourself running between your more en- course in chemistry so you can translate the beautiful formula you copied in your class-notes; for a run-down of elementary physics so that you will understand why a molten flow oozing down here af- fects a perfectly innocent topog- raphy over there; and for a short summary of all evolution in order to see why a gastropod that didn’t know any better happened to in- habit the green layer and not the purple layer in your weekly map quiz. The Outdoors Life One of geology’s finer points is that it is “a chance to be outdoors a lot” to quote its aficionados. This means that you learn to operate a geology pick in mittens amidst snow flurries in the fall (while studying the unit Quarries Can Be Beautiful) and there is no better way to commune with nature than scrambling up sharp bits of it on the spring field trips. Geology requires time, but con- sidering it objectively (in more | than one sense), no more than French majors spend splitting ‘pages or music majors fingering Bryn Mawr’s worn-out pianos to hammer out their eerie new com- positions. Geology, as Anyone will notice, only has Y Wiab a week, which means that you come in all week end to figure out what hap- pened at the 38-hour blitzkrieg of rock specimens which you helped degenerate into gravel. Skills and Suchlike Skills you will acquire in ga0- logy: ... :1) You will become sensitive to the deep inner meaning of each of 38 shades of colored pencils. 2) With one blow of your mighty fingernail you will learn to reduce to powder Bryn Mawr’s last re- maining specimen of a rare fos- sil. 8) You will be able to look at a colored slide in a pitch black room and simultaneously listen to the instructor, find the rock © speci- men—out of 32 in your tray— which corresponds to the picture, examine it carefully and write meaningful notes thereon before the next slide flashes on the screen. 4) You will be the first in your neighborhood to. amaze your friends by informing them that a perfectly familiar, homey hill is in the youthful, mature, or old age era of its life. 5) You will have more paper weights after the spring field trip than any six of your friends. _6) You will acquire the simple lightened friends for a small basic] Biology 101 Has Hydra, Lobsters; Requires Artistry by Barbara Broome ’60 Scene: the Biology 101 Laboratory, ' early October. A History of Art major, an English major, a Rus- sian major and a Biology major / are found seated on high stools huddled around a table. Each is ‘observing something very close- ly. “I can’t see anything! Every- thing’s all black!” (Her hand is covering the specimen). “T see some black: wavy things.” (The reflection of her eyelashes). “T just can’t believe it! It looks just the way Miss Gardiner said it would.” November “My hydra keeps curling up and all I have to draw is a lump.” “Mine won’t stay still long enough for me to draw him.” December “T’ll never be able to look at a lobster again.” February “But they told me I had a MALE dogfish!” (as the lab instructor removes the six baby dogfish). ’ “T can’t find the sub-clavian ar- tery anwhere.” (This, of course, is the long strand she just cut in half by mistake a moment before). April “My slide just doesn’t look like anyone else’s. I’ve got all sorts of jagged lines through it.” One cracked slide—$1.98). Yes, the geologist may have field trips but only the biologist has the lobster, the dogfish, the chick and the A. E. Romer’s Man and the Vertebrates besides! The lab, as one may gather from the previous comments, is the place in which the great issues of the day are solved: ie, why the hydra curled up (the window was open —he was cold) or whether the lob- ster. should be named Larry or Lloyd. Here, these particular ani- mals and the odor of formaldihyde take on ‘a new and special meaning for the student. Here, Bryn Mawr- ters who “just can’t see this” or “just can’t find that” wave their arms frantically for the aid of a lab instructor. Here, too, one quickly learns that there is a dis- tinct difference between. a lab notebook and an English composi- tion and discovers a bit too late that a good course-in-basiedraw- ing might have helped consider- ably. However, one need not be an artist nor a scientist. Fear not! Biology 101 has a great deal to offer the interested and inquiring mind—even that of the most “un- scientific” person! by Anne Rassiga The brisk, invigorating autumn season is upon us once more,-and Bryn Mawters, both new and old, Interfaith Continued from Page 3, Col. 3 a unique and questionable role. Chapel is conducted for the bene- fit of the community and faculty as well as for students of _ all faiths. Somehow we expect to wor- ship together as an_ intellectual community even while we do not share a common faith. Hearing the many answers to this dilemma, we find we must continue to seek out and redetermine the proper role of this organization, which has not rested from change since its beginnings in 1918. It promises to be an exciting year! ae Arts Council Continued from Page 3, Col. 2 iangs and their Art Council) are planned whenever enthusiasm is audible. _ Student art — exhibits (both formal and clothesline var- iety) demand: more than a ran- sacking of the college “studio”— Arts Council asks for contribu- tions. A Ticket Agency for Philadel- phia theaters enables students to purchase tickets on campus for events of particular interest at the Academy of Music and at the theaters in the area. Advertise- ments of coming events are post- ed ‘on a Taylor. bulletin board. Arts Council hopes to print in the News critical reviews by students as well. A weekly-column-is-being considered—to be written by in- dividuals on their special inter- ests—from folksinging to the bal- let. If Arts Council activities sound tentative to'‘you, they are—they await your interest and participa- tion. From Hockey To Fencing, Fall Sports Run The Gamut And Maybe The Girl again feel surging through their arteries an intense desire to in- crease their physical appreciation of fall. Here at Bryn Mawr, we are very fortunate in. having a most understanding Physical Ed- ucation department. Their aim is to satisfy this urge, and thus they allow us, actually they require (or force?) freshmen and sophomores to participate in fall sports. « The student seeking self-ex- pression can find many creative outlets. For those who have ever desired to join Robin Hood’s band or who feel that they have weak arms, I highly recommend arch- ery. Here igs a_not-to-be-missed opportunity to hurl - straight sticks at a round bundle of hay. ‘Golf is recommended: for anyone intending to run for President. (Note: beginning Golf is played in the vicinity of Merion green and constitutes a hazzard for all trying to cross said green—use ex- treme caution!) Hockey is a popular fall sport as it has both varsity and J. V. teams. A hockey player is im- mediately distinguished by her heavy leg padding or her lack of it (in which case, her legs are swollen and bruised). Tennis, too, appears to be an- other campus favorite. There are many girls who in both fall and spring seem to sprout a strange three foot long extension from their right hands. Tennis any- one? Sports for Indoor-Type But what happens to the girl who prefers to create indoors? Modern dance may be the answer to her problem. Ah! the joy of writhing ecstatically over a cold, slippery, splintery gym floor! But there is even more in store for all indoor-ites. There is also fencing—a _ graceful combination of the best points of both the dance and the art of self-defense. A knowledge of fencing may someday prove to be invaluable— after all. who knows. when some- one may walk up to you and slap you in the face with his glove. Swimming brings out the fish in all of us, and fall gives all mer- maids or would-be mermaids a chance to swim. For all advanced ‘Swimmers, the Red Cross Senior Life Saving course gives you a chance to both earn your life sav- ing card and become a Bryn Mawr Life saver with its special pool privileges. Beginning {swimming classes are also offered. Come on in—the water’s fine! Splash! bubble, gurgle glub° Preview of October's Events Sunday, September 27 7:30 p.m. Freshman Chapel Service Address by the Reverend Norman A. Baxter, Lower Merion Baptist Church, Bryn Mawr. Anthem: The College Chorus—Music Room, Goodhart Hall. Monday, September 28 4:30 p.m. Convocation marking the opening of the 75th Academic Year. Address. by Dr. John W. Gardner, President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York. _Dr..Katharine E. McBride, | President of the College, will pre- side. By invitation only. The Academic Procession forms at 4:00 p.m. at Taylor Hall—Good- hart Hall. Sunday, October 4 . 7:30 p.m. Chapel Service _ Music Room, Goodhart Hall. Friday, October 9 “‘Thoias Mann Commemorative Program . sponsored’ by Haverford, Bryn Mawr and Swarthmore Colleges. Glenway Wescott, novelist, will lecture on “Thomas Mann Will- and the Juilliard Quartet will give PECTED from YOU, CLASS OF Continued on Page 6, Col 5 ~ power and Fiction” at 4:00 p.m./ ton only—Roberts Hall, Haverford College. : Friday and Saturday, October 9-10 8:30 p.m. Freshman Hall Plays Mrs. Otis Skinner Workshop, Baldwin Campus. Sunday, October 11 3:00 p.m. Friends of the Library ‘“Behind the Scenes with Three Bryn Mawr Authors,” a 75th An- niversary Program marking the opening of the Exhibition of Books by Bryn Mawr Alumnae. By invi- tation only — Quita Woodward Memorial Room, Library. -7:30. p.m .Chapel Service Music Room, Goodhart Hall. Monday, October 12 Director de la Mission Archéolo- gique Francaise en Iran, will give an illustrated lecture on “Les in- vasions des nomades en Iran au debut du les millénaire avant J. C.” as part of the 75th Anniversary Celebration at the College. The lecture will be given in Prench-- Goodhart Hall. . Sunday, October 18 730 p.m. Chapel Service @ recital -at~8:45-pam:—-By- invita-|—- 8:30 p.m. Monsieur R. Ghirshman | 8:30 p.m. Concert by the Philadelphia Woodwind © Quintet, with Mme. Agi Jambor, under the auspices of the Friends of Music. (Workshops, for mem-— bers only, in the Music Room on October 20 and 21). For informa- tion regarding guest tickets, write Mrs. Leicester S. Lewis, Chairman, Taylor Hall, Bryn Mawr—Good- hart Hall. Friday, October 23 8:00-p.m._Lantern Night, The traditional welcoming of the Freshman Class. General ad- mission $.60; student admission $.80. In the event of rain—Satur- ‘|day, October 24, 8:00 p.m.—Library Cloisters. Sunday, October 25 7:30 p.m. Chapel Service Music Room, Goodhart Hall. Monday, October 26 8:30 p.m. Bernard Nossitor journalist, will speak under the auspices of the Bryn Mawr Student Alliance for Political Affairs— Common Room, Goodhart Hall. Saturday, October 31 8:30 p.m. Junior Show Tickets on sale at Box Office the Music Room, Goodhart Hall. Tuesday, October— 20 ‘|evening of the performance. Good- Saturday, September 26, 1959 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five Marriage Lectures Will Begin Soon Every year the college offers a lecture and discussion series on marriage in which the social, psy- chological, physiological and prac- tical aspects of marriage are pre- sented by specialists in health, marriage counselling and family life. The dates and topics of the lectures are given below. Partici- pating in the presentation are Mr. Richard. N. Hey, Supervisor of Education for Marriage and Fam- ily Living, Marriage. Council of Philadelphia, and Instructor in Family Study, Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Elizabeth Humeston, College Physician of Bryn Mawr College. The course offers the opportunity not only to read -and™ listen but also to ask questions and join in exchange of opinion around sig- nificant questions relating to mar- riage. Students sometimes find it help- ful to have individual counselling. Applications for this can be made with the leaders of the series for convenient hours during the day of November 11. Continued from Page 1, Col. 1 Self-Gov as they relate to the halls. SELF’-GOV EXECUTIVE BOARD — This is the executive body of Self-Gov, elected by the college and the classes. UNDERGRAD ADVISORY BOARD—Composed of a represen- tative from each hall, this bears the same-relation to Undergrad as the Self-Gov advisory board does to Self-Gov. UNDERGRAD EXECUTIVE BOARD — This is the executive body of Undergrad, also composed of class and college-elected mem- bers, HALL REPRESENTATIVES — This term covers a variety of things. There are hall reps to the classes and to League, Alliance, A.A. and Interfaith. There is one class hall rep from each class in each hall; there are two hall reps (one freshman, one upperclassman ) to each of the four organizations mentioned above, who serve on their boards. LEGISLATURE—This organiza- tion bears a similar relationship to Bryn Mawr as Congress does to the United States, although it meets much less often. It is chair- ed by the senior class president: ig [| a Poo emma 8 AN. FAs, enatePCR RECAP ELOS? snmewne +4 ‘“OOKE"? $B 4 REGISTERED TRADE MARK, COPYRIGHT 1987 THE COCA-COLA ConrANY A Freshman Glossary Continued its‘) members are the class presi- , Self-Gov Advisory and Executive , revised. election systems to appor- dents, the Undergrad Council, the | Boards, and the class hall reps. It | tioning funds for the United Serv- Undergrad Executive Board, the|passes on matters ranging from |ice Fund. . Tareyton’s Dual Filter filters as no single filter can: THE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAL THING! Mr Funk & Mr Wagnalls “In re this matter of Good Taste,” said Mr. Funk to his secretary, “take a definition.” “Taste: sensations ... excited... by the... action of the gustatory nerves...” “And add this,”’ put in Mr. Wagnalls. “Taste: the faculty of . . . appreciating the beautiful...” “That,” said Mr. Funk, “wraps it up. Mr. ” Wagnalls, will you join me in a Coca-Cola?” “So good in taste...” “And ... in such good t-ste!” 1. It combines an efficient puse white outer filter... Hooray for college students! They’re making new Dual Filter Tareyton the big smoke on American campuses! Are you part of this movement? If so, thanks. If not, try ’em! 2. with a unique inrer filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL .. . which has been definitely proved to make the » smoke of a cigarette _milder_an smoother. \ new buat Fitter /C27EVLOT2 Y In on is our middle name. Product of She Nmuriean Sobaccolompany Jabaceo 3 ddl SIGN OF GOOD TASTE Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY © A. 7. Co. DOT DASHES THROUGH HER ASSIGNMENT AND ON THE @ ‘ j NIGHT OF THE FALL BALL... r oon, YOU DANCE DIVINELY. IM ALWAYS DANCING YOU'RE SO LIGHT ON MY ON AIR, PAL, SINCE FEET! _ I BECAME A AIK CEVA \ SMITH-CORONA = . Ve) WT , >) ne 0 Se J < Nv he? . WN =<, P 239 a4 SE 4. Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Saturday, September 26, 1959 : e e | Freshman Dorm Assignments Listed Geology e ® @ s Continued from Page 1, Col. 3 BLACK, C. R. COATES, N. P. GRADUATE CENTER Continued from Page 4, Col. 2 MIDDLETON. Ki. BROWN, R. A. DODGE, L. 1963 joy of staring back at passing ’ COPEN, J. G. FALCIONE, D. tarlat ie ee PADDOCK, J. C. CARLSON, K. motorists as you an others DEUTSCH, J. F. FANNING, B. lik , ; GARDINER. C. ike you cling to the side of a road PERRENOD, A. DUBKIN, P. B. FAULKNER, S. : i icipati Pp ’ ’ GEIST, E. cut in breathless anticipation of POTTER, P. HOWLETT, L. FLEMING, H. di : ‘lobi A JOHNSON, N. iscovering a trilobite. POTTER, S. A. JACXSENS, C. C. INGLIS, M. : SCHMIDERER, D. JAHAN, M. JOHNSON, M. MAYMAN, T. 7) And you will acquire that SCHRODER, S. NEILSEN. L JONES. M NEWMAN, L. calm, self-assured swagger of the STILLER, R. J. SALTEN ’p : KLEMP AY g OUGHTON, D. person who can detect an anticline VAN CLEEF. Ss. ey age ROSENBURG, C. or a syncline anywhere—and isn’t ’ . SHAPLEY, S. S. McMEEKIN, L. : STEARMS, E | METCALF, H SCHAUB, M. ators eer a0. TRAPNELL, C. C. MILES, K. : SONTHEIMER, K. This survivor assumes that any- PEMBROKE WEST TUCCIARONE, R. _ SKOVRON, E. | EB rearrsecte one hardy enough to choose geo- 1963 VIVENTI, 8. VINIKOOR, C. wer logy in her ie pl ag road a. WADE-DALTON, N. science requirement clause in e ALEXANDER, R. mente: Re eee first place should not be discour- BLIJUR, B. S. DAVIS, H see aged by this run-down (literally) CHAPIN, A. L. COLLEGE INN HEFFNER J of the joys of geology. Certainly CHAPIN, ‘J. 1963 : HUNTER C : a potential geology major would : . CONDO, 8S. A. KINDT lL rs not be deterred—they are a’ breed 4 DOWNS, R. H. CAPLES, C. KOKI L : in themselves and among the most 4 EUSTIS, A. DANIEL, S. MOTZ J undaunted around. FOX, E. A. GAYNOR, L. a —_— ’ SMITH, S. GOLDBERG, D. R. GORDON, J. : LARSEN, L. A. LONGOBARDI, A. INFIRMARY A A Plans MILLER, S. SPAIN, S. 1963 Continued from Page 3, Col. 5 MOMENT, 8S. G. SWIFT, C. will be posted in Taylor Hall so MURPHEY, K. L. TIHANY, E. BLANCHARD, M that you can plan to come out and MUTCHOW, S. FOSTER, L. support the team. PABST, M. A. Aa A m C : JOHNSON, K. Any ideas which you may have _ SCHNEIDER, L. T. C/ he nae onvene SCHOENER, A. for activities or projects will al- SEYMOUR, A. F. STRONG, H. ways be very welcome, The Ath- SILBER, C, C. RHOADS SOUTH 3 L do Di ———— letie Medtatesian is here to serve STEVENSON, S. M. 1963 or on n inner Livel Art you and we are grateful for any THOMAS, A. DOBBIN, A. J. Previewing the 75th anniversary y suggestions you might have. Each CHRISTENFELD, K. cclehration which will be teld st} Continued from Page 2, Col, 5 | héll sende several representatives GOODFRIEND, J. the college this year, the alumnae|,If one were to go into the finer | 0s. Spire ae Li vl wu ROCKEFELLER HALL GREENWOLD, M. held _a dinner in London, England | points of individual classification, more e g sl 1963 KIBLER, L. M. at the Oxford and Cambridge Uni-| there would be innumerable sub-| 2° W! I. BURLANT, L. LEAVITT, M. L. versities Club on June 24, The|strata and minglings of these ‘a COOP oe MARVIN, M. C. dinner was sponsored by the Bryn|broad categories, and indeed it Notice Ci oc pial F.C ROSENTHAL, J. A. Mawr Club of London; Miss Mc-| might be an interesting study for CULLEY, N ete SMITH, J. L. Bride was guest of honor. someone, to determine what effect| The Revue plans to sponsor an GABOR age Faculty members attending, the/the drinking of tea has had or is|exhibit of Doulton china on Tues- panne K EAST HOUSE dinner were Miss Caroline Rob-| likely to have in the future on the day, September 29. The survey TIN, K. 1963 bins, Professor and Mrs. Arthur | developing Bryn Mawrter.. There|will go on all day and will prob- GREENFADER, H. Colby Sprague, Miss Mary Wood-|are few other colleges where a|ably be held in the Common Room, HEIN, B. BAILEY, J. worth and Charles Mitchell, Visit- | recommended article for incoming |Goodhart. Proceeds will bolster . e oe cn 24 BRINK, J. A. ing Professor-elect. Freshmen is a tea set. the Revue’s flagging exchequer, LESS, J. LEWENTHAL, 1. , NEW! INSTANT! MOSSMAN, Ss. ‘A. 9 S rea S : Just mix with cold water a ORR, §. D. At last! A breakfast drink 4 PATON, s. , re _ POLISHUK, A. . Po . SCHAAR, C. y k p y aia e. OU Can Keep In your room : SCHOELLKOPF, M. a SEN, G. SMITH, P. K. More vitamin C than orange juice. New instant TANG is the breakfast WHAAAMS __ E. P. drink you can keep right on your bookshelf—because TANG _ any- where without refrigeration. RHOADS NORTH Make as much as you want, whenever you want. Just mix with plain cold 1963 water—nothing to squeeze, nothing to unfreeze. ASHER, F. L. Drink TANG every morning and get more vitamin C than orange or BEEKEY, S. A. grapefruit juice gives you. Plus vitamin A. Tastes real avod, too. Today's assignment: get TANG! Whether it is for the Ist, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th year JOYCE LEWIS ] Welcomes you (TAN G Ss Back To Bryn Mawr FOR THE | VITAMIN C pon sia wl To The Class Of 1963 The VANITY SHOPPE LA 5-1208 YOU'RE WELCOME! A Hearty Hello To Al Upperclassmen And A Warm Welcome To The Freshmen From DINAH. FROST a | JEANETT’S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop 823 Lancaster Avenue ie acer _ We-Wire Flowers| 'D: Situa Sa Gils. Noms Salil Gus: Cdl sundae Address: TANG College Contest, Dept. GRM, Post Division, Battle ‘LAwrence 5-0570- i (above). Must relate to TANG. Will pay $25 for every entry used. Creek, Michigan. (Entries must be postmarked before Dec. 15, 1959.)