_. WELCOME FRESHMEN THE COLLEGE NEWS | a Vol. LIV, No. 1 " BRYN MAWR, PA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1968 © Trustees of Bryh Mawr College, 1967 25 Cents Population peplosion: _ A freshman class of 196 skitiends combined with about 598 students in the upper classes has brought th expected .total undergraduate ely- rollment to 794 this fall..-The in- crease inthe student population has made-it- necessary to.convertmost.. freshman suites into triples. ‘The class of 1972 includes stu- dents from 33 different states and seven foreign countries. Although classes do not begin until-Monday,-Freshman Week. be- gan on Thursday appointments with Miss McBrid ; the Deans, various departments and. tours .and social events scheduled by the Freshman, Week Committee. ga Oe Two thirds of the Class of 72 attended public high schools, The* geographical distribution of the new class is: 13% from New England, 46% -from-the mid-At- ~ from. >the, from. the; 13% 15% lantic region, - Southern states, midwest, 8% from the far west and 5%..from foreign countries. - There are four new foreign stu- dents this. year. They are: . Ayse Erzan ~ from Turkey, Angela Uther Niedersachsen, Germany, Miyamoto from _ Tokyo, from Naoko Japan and Geraldine Betegh from Ven- ezuela, There are,also several transfer students Mrs. Marshall on Leave; Pruett Takes Over arriving: this fall from Mrs. Miss Painter (left) and. Mrs. Pruett, the administration, join forces in Freshman Week. Mrs, Dorothy Marshall, who tee been Dean of the College since 1946, and long-time Dean of Seniors, will be on leave first semester of this year. During this time she will move into a néw house which she has had built, Mrs, Marshallalsoplans a trip to Latin America, The trip, which she will make alone for about a month or six weeks will include © visits to Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Columbia and Peru, She will return to. her. position here‘ second semester, 2 ‘ou During Mrs.'Marshall’s absence, Mrs, Pruett, Assistant Dean of the College who usually advises sophomores and juniors will “assume the job of Dean of seniors in addition to continuing her work nforning, ’ The orientation period incl&des’ S cottege, Atlanta, Georgia), Paul- "University, Istanbul, on domestic and foreign uni- versities. Anne Witting Kuhn _ (Vassar . College), Judith Levine, “(New York University), Cheryl Rivers (Millsaps College) and Ann ‘Shalleck (Wellesley College) will be entering _ .as.._members_ of the sophomore __ class. Boettcher (Hokkaido* University of Education, Sapporo, Japan) and Michelle Freeman (Trinity Col- lege, Washington, D, C.) will be» members of the junior class, Esther Levine’ who attended school in Belgium will enter as a special student. . The graduate school is expected to hdve an enrollment of about five hundred students. Six fifth year students, ae have graduated from Negro colleges in the South, will spend an extra year at Bryn Mawr before going... Mary © gn to graduate school. oney (Savannah State College), “and Freddye Hill (Spelman ine Morgan (Central State Wilbérforce, Ohio), © Phyllis Piercey (Berea ‘College, Kentucky) and Joan- Thompson and Daisy Williams (Bethune-C ookman College, Daytona Beach, Florida) will participate in the fourth year of this program at Bryn Mawr. There is only one guest senior this year, Kathie Buchsbaum Abel of Connecticut College. Sphere by Mary Yee who have assumed new positions in meeting the increased demands of with sophomores, “Miss Painter, who was in charge of the calender last year, has been appointed Assistant Dean for a year,. (The calender has been trans- ferred to Mrs, Whelihan in the President’s Office.) Miss Painter will be Dean for the junior class and the College scholarship officer, Miss Painter is looking forward to her appointment.as a dean, ‘It should be a very interesting year,”” ed she commented. Miss .McPherson will continue as Dean of Freshmen, She also will be a. dean for the six post- baccalaureate students arriving this year, __ All three deaiis Will be available to counsel the arriving freshmen this weekend, Yoko’ 3 Assistant Profs. Advance Research In U.S.A. Abroad Three assistant professors at Bryn Mawr’ College will be on leave during the 1968-69 academic year under a program inaugurated by the College in 1967 to provide research fellowships for younger members of the faculty. ‘Miss Audrey Barnett, assistant professor of biology, will spend the year at the Argonne National Lab- oratory in Dlinois, Two other as- sistant professors will be going abroad -- Charles M, Brand, in history, will be in Athens, Greece, and Robert L, Patten, in English, will spend the year in London, According to Miss McBride, ‘The leave, which is granted either in the fourth or fifth year of the professor’s appointment to the fac- ulty, is principally to give the young scholar the opportunity to advance his research,’? Faculty members applying for a year’s leave will continue to receive fellowships from foundations or granting ag- encies as they have in the past, Among the senior members of the faculty who. will also be on leave from the College next year are Jay Martin Anderson, in chem- istry, who will be at the University of Ilinois; Morton E, Bitterman, in psychology, to the University of California at Davisg Robert L.-Con- . ner, in biology, to the Wistar In- stitute in Philadelphia¢ and Mrs, Agnes Kirsopp Michels, in latin, who will deliver a series of lec- tures at Oberlin College. Others going abroad are Rich- mond Lattimore, in Greek, to Oxford University in England} Mrs, Isabelle. MacCaffrey, in English, to Churehill College in Cambridge, England? Mrs. Jane C, Kronick in social work and social research, to Norway? James E, Snyder, in history of art, to northern Europe? and Alain Silvera in history, to the University of Lille in France, All- Campus Leciislctiure To Decide Main Issues Three major issues ‘are an rently under consideration by the Self-Gov executive and advisory boards and will be brought before the entire campus in a meeting of the Legislature this fall, At a meeting» late Wednesday night, Self Gov once again took up the questions of drinking on campus, abolishment of the dress rule and 8 a.m.’s for second- semester freshmen, No final de- cisions on any of these matters had been reached by the termina- tion of classes last spring, As the Bryn Mawr _ Self-Gov constitution presently reads there are to be nointoxicating beverages on the campus, -In a move ini- tiated by a petition campaign last spring, consideration, is being given to the possibility of per- mitting the use of liquor by 21- year-old’s only in a specifically désignated location on campus, Consideration is being given to the use of an area in the College Inn, There has also been talk by some students of allowing the pos- session and consumption of liquor by 21-year-old’s only in their respective dorm rooms, In the dress rule matter, reg- ulations now allow pants to be worn anywhere except to classes, Gym suits may be worn to class, Consideration is being given to g@ropping the dress clause from the constitution altogether and let- ting attire, for both in class and out, be up to each girl’s discre- tion. There-are also some people on campus who would favor wearing pants to class, but would rule out Tell it like itis. Write for the NEWS. certain other —_ of for class wear, The third question, concerning the extension of 8 a.m, privileges to freshmen who have spent one semester at Bryn Mawr, will also come before Legislature, Judy Liskin, senior class pres- ident and modérator of all ses- sions of Legislature this year, is uncertain at this time of the date Legislature will first con- vene, ‘One of my major concerns in setting a date is whether to wait until November when the fresh- men -have taken the test and are official memberszof Self Gov,’’ (Continued on page 3) New Religion Prof apparel Joins BMC Faculty Dr. Howard C. Kee, the New Testament scholar, has been ap- pointed as the Rufus Jones Pro- fessor of History of Religion at Bryn Mawr. The Rufus Jones Chair of Re- ligion was established at Bryn Mawr in 1948 as a memorial to the Quaker leader and_ phil- osopher, a trustee of the Col- lege for many years. Dr. Kee, who will join the fac- ulty this month, has recently been ~ in Israel where he held a Guggen- heim Fellowship for research in the Israeli Department of Antiq- uities. Dr. Kee, who holds a doc- torate degree from Yale Univer- sity,’ "has-been Professor of New Testament at. Drew. University, in Madison, New Jersey. He is » cosauthor with F, W. Young of ‘Understanding the New Testa- ment’’ which has been transla-. ted into ye seine Chinese, Thai and German. : ’ at the Wayne, Penna. Post Office under ‘the act ‘of March 3, 1879. a Offices in The College Inn ‘ . LA 5-9458 THE COLLEGE NEWS - ‘ ee Fridty, Soliheuihes 13, 1968 Page Two - THE COLLEGE NEWS os Editor-in-Chief _Nancy Miller '69 Managing Editor Robin Brantley ’69 Be Associate Editors Maggie Crosby '70, Cathy Hoskins '71 - Staff Jane Harrold, Brenda Kline Martha Pennington & Founded in 1914 Published weekly during the college year except during vacations and exam. periods. The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that: appears in it may be* reprinted wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief, COLLEGE NEWS is enteted as second class matter ~All Possible Worlds "Welcome to Bryn Mawr, the best and the worst of all possible worlds, The dean who registers you welcomes you. So do the one hundred members of ‘your philosophy class. Applebee and Lantern Night welcome you, So do the hygiene lectures, And most - importantly a rare experience welcomes you, But so ~J TERS Raat A cle en aes eee OM SETS Ae Sane ae REE eRe oe does a bad case of lethargy. Bryn Mawr is a world of extremes, There’s no middle ground here, It’s great or it’s awful, And it?s all up to you. That’s what they mean when they say. in the catalog that the Bryn Mawr girl should exercise an independent spirit. More than likely, you’ll switch from loving to hating to loving Bryn Mawr as frequently as the..seasons change, Individual attention abounds, The deans console as well as advise, But mass education has invaded Bryn Mawr, Some of your classes might as well be at Berkeley or Michigan or Ohio. Traditions also abound, Some, likeLantern Night, are lovely. But others, like the hygiene lectures, are antiquated, . They’re still around because, well, you know, ‘‘it?s just always been done that way’’, But large classes and hygiene lectures are just so many trifles, They can be coped with, The real hurdle is lethargy. black death, ‘‘But nothing ever happens here’’ gets muttered as often as Taylor bell rings. And of course. it’s not true, Things do happen, but how and why and when they happen depends on what you want. There is very little you can’t do here, from working on an individual research pro- ject to dating every night, if you want to do it badly enough, Don’t lie on the showcase sofa for four years, It?s not just a question of canvassing the Main Line neighborhood for a peace platform candidate or joining the French club or going to at least one mixer in a month or writing articles for the NEWS, although any of those activities are fine in themselves, : It?s a question of utilizing the opportunity to do or be anything you like (of course if you want to lie onthe showcase sofa, that’s a different matter), Bryn Mawr girls rarely ask questions and that’s both a fault and a virtue. When it comes to letting each person find his own way, it’s a virtue, We hope Bryn Mawr is your peat world at least half of the time, RB Committee Chairmen Welcome Freshmen - the textbooks = sai It plagues the campus like the Dear Freshmet. With loud hosannas we greet thee +«- Welcome to BMC! We hope that you’re healthy, rested, and ready for your frenetic round of activities. Please, do go everywhere and do everything that is planned for you. Some meetings have been planned for learning; others have been planned strictly for funsies -- but all has been planned for you, and cannot work without you. The upperclassmen-in-your hall have. competed . fiercely for the privilege of being here to meet you. So do not be fearful of ask- ing any advice. (Sophomores, in particular, are fonts of wisdom.) And if our pronouncements seem _ to rival those of the Delphic oracle in obscurity, hesitate not to ask for clarification. ee In short, don’t hold back --'do everything, go everywhere, ask anything! This is your week, and the school welcomes you! ; Ashley and Judy for the Freshman Week - en emake * aes * wok Pes seins sega Student eimai Idealistic — Despite Chicago Tear Gas Like thousands of other young Americans, I went to Chicago during the Democratic convention to .work for ,Senator McCarthy hoping, I suppose, for a miracle’ hoping that /democracy was like it was and that the people really did control the politics of the country. What I saw and experienced in Chicago has made me feel that | perhaps those who say that the political system is too corrupt to work within, that we are only® deluding ourselves and seeking an escape in McCarthy are right. But maybe there, is hope too as: long ds there are people liké-the_ ones I met in Chicago, willing to work and even-to suffer to try to change things. Exciting People I was in Chicago for two weeks, most of which time I spent working for McCarthy. I certainly did not come to make trouble and I wasn’t: even planning on demon- strating. It seemed that most of the kids I met who were there for the purpose of working for McCarthy were especially careful not to become too involved in demonstrations (at least until Humphrey was nominated) for fear it would turn opinion against the Senator. If they should be arrested, their purpose for coming. to Chicago to work for McCarthy would be defeated. . So I spent most of my time greeting dele- gates, writing invitations, sorting mail, passing out literature, stuf- fing press kits and doing other similar: tasks. The work wasn’t exciting but the people I metwere. It is hard to believe that sixteen or eighteen year old kids worked on the national staff, were leaders “in. state campaigns and spent eight months of their lives doing almost nothing but working for MeCarthy. The night Vice President Hum- phrey was nominated, the night when so many kids got their heads smashed with billy clubs in the middle of Michigan Avenue, I had a perfect view of the spectacle - from a hotel room overlooking Grant Park. I remember watching five cops beat someone while Mayor Daley was angrily denying on television that the cops used excessive violence, Watching doz- ens of police charge into a crowd of demonstrators, I felt horribly guilty that I wasn’t down ‘there but I honestly was too scared to move, I’m sure some of the demonstrators were provoking the police, but I didn’t see it, neither from the window .or, the next night, from the middle of the clashes, Bayonets and Clubs The next day I went to Grant Park late in the afternoon. The Wisconsin delegation had just been stopped from marching to the Ampitheater. The demonstrators then attempted the same march. We were met by troops with bay- onets and police with clubs so we peaceably returned to the park. At this _point Dick Gregory Welcome °72 The editorial page is an open forum for letters, viewpoints or rok other contributions (poetry ?). Work submitted | should be typed on a 35-space Peseta nes addressed the crowd explaining that we would probably be stopped at a certain street where he would then try to negotiate with the National=Guard so we could pro- ceed further. He warned us very emphatically against provoking the police. He explained that although this’ might be an individual act, the reper- cussions would not be. directed against individuals, The march then, proceeded slowly until we reached 18th Street where we were stopped and told that anyone who attempted to go further would be arrested. Gregory then walked down the row of demonstiators ‘and. advised anyone who was not willing to get arrested to leave. The police let 50 people cross the street and then arrested them. Among those arrested were Gregory and, supposedly, 15 dele- gates. Those of us who stayed expected to get arrested and I wondered several times during the evening if that wouldn’t have beén more pleasant than what followed, I guess the police thought it would be -too much trouble to arrest 2,000 people so they tear gassed us instead, Everyone turned.and, in an attempt to escape, ran down. an alley where we were again greeted by police. At this point a large group of us tried to go back towards the Ampi-. _ theatér but we were again stopped by tear gas. I’m not quite sure what happened thén because all I was aware of was not being able to .see and being overcome by this horrible burning pain from my stomach to my throat and being able to do nothing about it. _ Facing, the Gas It was really impressive how all those people were willing to ‘keep going back and face the gas and not be turned around. The leaders of the march finally decided to head back toGrant Park © and the relative safety of the Hilton Hotel which was the con- vention headquarters. As we neared the park we were tear- gassed again. It seems strange but I think I was more frightened watching from a hotel window the night before than when I was in the center of the demonstrations. The fear seemed to be replaced by a strong conviction in what we were there for. Finally the démonstration lead- ers got everyone to sit in the park (surrounded by. troops) and Peter and Mary of Peter, Paul and Mary. led everyone in singing. It is impossible to describe how it felt to be there with all these people who had been through such an awful night but didn’t run and stood .up for what they believed. Somehow, at. least at-that,smoment, I really almost believed that ‘‘we shall overcome’’ and ‘we shall all be free’? and the times are ‘‘a=changin,’ ?? Somehow it didn’t really seem corny. that the guy with the microphone had said - “these people are your brothers and sisters’’ because they really were, Democratic Dream -That was the important thing about the whole two weeks (for me, anyway)---the people. I’ll never forget the 18-year-old girl I was with who had been gassed, beaten and maced but as we were at the edge of the park, pointed to the people who -were facing the national guard and said ‘we should go back. We helong there.’’ And [I?ll never forget all of the other people who in spite of everything still took time to think of others. There was the lawyer who stayed up all night because he ‘couldn’t sleep until he knew that all the 25 kids who had been sleeping on © ‘the floor in his hotel suite were safe; there was the person who got up and covered-me in the middle of the night because it was cold; and there was the guy who re-— turned to McCarthy headquarters at’ 5:30 a.m. to see if a girl he had never mét was. Safe. There were also the kids who | didn’t sleep for days because there was so much to be done, and there were the thousands of dedi- cated people who came to Chicago and who worked and are working ‘all over the country to try to make that dream of democracy come true. . : Polly Nichol ‘71 Were you in Chicago? Then tell ‘us what happened. Don’t let Mayor Daley have the final word. Submit typed articles (35-space line) to Nancy Miller in Pem East.. SELF-GOV STATEMENT ON DRUGS SELF:-GOVERNMENT’S Statement on Drugs, adopted by Legislature on Oct. 24; 1967: Because drugs are illegal and potentially dan- gerous physically and psychologically, Self Gov will deal with every case of drug use by Bryn Mawr students which comes to its attention, on the basis that illegal agtions within a community pose a threat to the continued existence of the community and that actions potentially dangerous to individuals are potentially dangerous to the community in which the individuals live, * In view of the drug: cases which have come to its attention in the course of this year, SELF- GOVERNMENT makes the following clarifications of the drug statement approved by Legislature last fall: 1. It is evident that itis impossible to possess or use drugs on the Bryn Mawr campus and at the same _ time not pose the following threats enumerated in that statement: A, Potential physical and Psychological danger to the individual b. Threat to the Sensis 1. Threat of legal enforcement . oe : 2. Possible offense to other members. of e < the community, THEREFORE, there should be no = . Possession or use of drugs on this campus. = # _2, SELF-GOVERNMENT reiterates, that when | off-campus use of drugs poses the above threats rears wy to the Bryn Mawr community, it will act in those Friday, September 13, 1968 _THE COLLEGE NEWS Grad Studies Offered In History of Science A new program leading to ad- vanced degrees in the history and philosophy of science is being offered this fall. in a joint project by Bryn Mawr College, the Un- iversity of Pennsylvania and the American Philosophical Society, under agrantfrom the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation. The combined pro- gram will develop teaching and stimulate research in the history of the basic medical sciences, the practice of medicine and-its social relations, Two new faculty appointments have been made by Bryn Mawr and U, of Pennsylvania in the history of a science. Dr. Charles A. Culotta, formerly of the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed in the history of biology and’-Dr. Arnold W, Thackray of Cambridge University, England, in the history of chemistry. Other faculty members at Bryn Mawr who are working on the pro- gram are Jose Ferrater Mora as director, chemistry, Jane _Oppenhéimer in and Ernst Berliner in biology and Mary Maples Dunn in : history, Seminars and graduate courses for work leading to the M.A, and Ph.D. degrees will begin at the College this month. Key resources in the new program are the libraries of the three sponsoring institutions and several collections in Philadelphia, notably at the Libr- ary Company of Philadelphia, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the College of Physicians of Phila- .| delphia,. the Academy. of Natural Sciences, the Franklin Institute, the Pennsylvania Hospitak and the Wagner Free Institute of Science, This grant of $234,200 to the program is part of a Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation program Which has so far this year awarded $1,167,500 to education and research in these fields. This is the first such partici- pation by the American Philoso-~ phical Society in adegree-granting program, and it is believed to be one of the first programsinvolving a learned society in the United ‘States. - °Page Three Photo by Nancy Milter Due to a series of labor problems, construction on the new library was disrupted during the summer. No announcement has been made about a delay in the completion date. ° Saga Fodd Service Returns; a Promises Home-Cooked Meals Giant Saga Food service wears a cas- ual yet competent face on campus these days. seconds, it seems, having fed us in ’66 - °67, and they are now supplanting Marriot of last year’s Mighty Mo fame. m a . When asked why they thou tht they were better equipped than others to meet the finnicky demands of some of our more sensitive sto- machs, they replied they had a ‘different type of system’’ than Marriot 4nd worked on the in- dividual -kitchen theory to make. the cooking ‘‘as close to home cooking as possible’’. When pressed to describe a little of the home cooking idea, they answered calmly that all the ~colleges they serve have the same standard of food and menu. Fur- thermore the various meals are planned according to old-approved menus based on broad surveys. They also stated without hesitation that they were the ‘only and lar- gest all-college feeding company” which I took to mean they are the only company to specialize solely in colleges and that they have the largest college business They are back for - of any service. (262 colleges), ‘‘We feed Swarthmore’’ they added. ‘Do you feed Haverford?’ ‘Indirectly we feed Haverford’’, said one man cheerfully from the back of the room, They also wére pleasant about the Inf. Open Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-ll p.m., Sat. close at 5; Sun. open at night only. Charges, they said, with a .25¢ minimum and some - form of identification. No more “1 cheeseburger, Minnje Mouse, Pembroke East,” they said. Per= haps they will be more sympathetic towards our schizophrenics later on in the year. Some other innovations will be a buffet breakfast with hot food cooked to order, and a food com- mittee with dorm reps for all student complaints. (Saga even applied for the job on the strength of student complaints; their spies had read about them in the NEWS), Also a tentative early breakfast and brunch arrangements on Sunday, were discussed, | The Saga men were mostagree- able and seemed especially tuned in to the campus’s former aches photo by Nancy Miller ies 3 _w 3 on and pains. Their final pitch for approval was ‘unlimited’seconds’’ and pehaps they consider them- selves in a similar position. Faith Greenfield _ Self Gov... (Continued from page 1) Judy reported, “This would delay the decisions, but it doesn’t seem right to let three-fourths of the campus vote on issues which will affect the entire student body,’? she con- cluded, Work for the. NEWS It’s better than shooting down red barons. come to the Inn, second floor next Thursday evening 7:30 DISCOUNT RECORDS ‘9 W. Lancaster Ave. Ardmore MI 2-0764 Largest Selection Folk Music: Pop - Classics - Jazz Where the Action is’’ =~ HER CLOTHES TREE Bryn Mawr Mall (Next to Station) »** ©] 2% 44 224207444 2244244774484 Poster from any photo 2 ft. x3 ft. only $795" ($4.95 value) *Send any black & white or color photo (no negatives) and the name “Swingline” cut out from any Swingline package (or reasonable facsimile) to: POSTER-MART, P.O. Box 165, Woodside, N. Y. 11377. Enclose $1.95 cash, check, or money order (no C.0.D.’s). Add sales tax where appli- cable. Poster rolled and mailed (post- paid) in sturdy tube. Original mate- rial returned undamaged. Satisfaction guaranteed. Get a Swingline Tot Stapler ee neg | % es pr ae ees . 98° (including 1000 staples) Larger size CUB Desk Stapler only $1.69 Unconditionally guaranteed. At any stationery, variety, or book store. Swinghne INC. LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. 11101 UNUSUAL AND LARGE SELECTION GIFTS AND CARDS RICHARD STOCKTON 851 Lancaster Ave. GIFTS — SOCIAL Stationery _**.* «4 4 4 «4444444 © 44244444 STAMP IT! IT’S THE RAGE } REGULAR MODEL “eo 3 LINE TEXT The finest INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL POCKET RUBBER STAMP. 1,” x 2”. Send check or money order. Be sure to include your Zip Code.-No postage or handling charges. Add sales tax. You get one with every bottle of Lensine, a removable contact lens carrying case. Lensine, by Murine is the new, all-purpose solution for complete contact lens care. It ends the need for separate solutions for wetting, soaking and cleaning your lenses. It’s the one solution for all your contact 3 . lens problems. ie age for contacts over-_ night Page. Four } THE COLLEGE NEWS. | Friday, September 13, 1968 Below is a list of the class of | 1972, according to dorm assign- ments, Phone numbers © for the dorms are in the Freshman . Handbook. Upperclassmen can usually be reached through the dorm ‘listed in last year’s finding list, Merion Hall Baum, S. Glover, C, Gormley, D ; Jacobs, R, : : Jerdan, J. Johnson, J, Klos, S, Levine, J. Melnick, L. Mitnick, M. Miyamoto, N, Pang, M. Piercy, P, Podolsky, M . Svenson, E, Thompson, J. , Wilkinson, D, Radnor Hall Albers, A, Alvarez, C. Anderson, S. Blume, R, Cash, H. Duszak, D, Erzan, A, Friedman, C, Friedman, J. Hedge’, K. ‘Hunt, P, Kitchen, E, LaPiana, K, J . Sey, Lucas, B, McReynolds, M. Norusis, V, Ostrow, E, Potter, T, Saunders, B, Shalleck, A, Torre, A, Yonkendy, J. #F reshman F aie List Denbigh Hall Berman, C, Chadwick, D, Crouse, T, Doddy, J. Fedarko, C, | Geiger, L, Grunert, A, Hoffman, B. Kolmar, W, Lord, L, Moore, K, ‘Nicoll, A, Sabatello, R, Satanoff, R, Schauffler, R, - Schenk, L, Schubert, A, Scott, V. Speicher, K, Tordiglione, C, Travis, J. Pembroke East Ballard, M, Blumenthal, N Hediger, M, Kidd, S. . McCloskey, M McCurdy, S Morrow, M, Mayer, L. Meza, R, Noennig, N Nutter, J; Sherman, K, Smith, P; Smith, S, Szent-Gyorgyi, K, Uther, A. Wolff, C. Pembroke West .Aimone, M, Alberi, M, Anderson, S, Baier, D, Bardnaho, M. Berich, P, Corbett, P, Sophomore Reminiscences As a freshman, you walk up to the foreboding gray building, which, you have been informed, is to be your ‘thome-away-from- home, dd and hope no one will notice the wrinkles on the seat of your new skirt, Out of the sea of strange faces» someone asks you your name and hastily pins on a name tag. But then your time is up, as the faces turn to the next customer, You are on your own, But things are different when you are no- longer a freshman, The building is still foreboding and gray, but you have learned that that ‘‘home-away-from-home’’ bit is something found only in college catalogs.. Your appearance is a matter for only your parents’ con- cern since you have traded in those Villagers for a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, The faces inside may not be strange; the names, however, have . Somehow slipped your mind, Boys who look familiar offer to carry your baggage and leave the fresh- men to struggle with their own, You retire to your favorite chair in the smoker and pick up the gossip where you left off in May. When you were a freshman, you tried to think of ways to make your parents stay longer, Now in a very martyr-like way, you tell them to go ahead home, and you can unpack by yourself, As soon as they are safelyout. the door, you proceed to confiscate ° any pieces of furniture you need from the vacant rooms and leave the freshmen to fend for them- selves, ° It is now time to invite all the freshmen out into the smoker, where you will terrify them with ‘tales of freshman comps every week and the mystery of Hell Week, ‘For every bad meal, you can re- late to the freshmen fifteen from last year that were worse, ». Actually, the greatest advantage of being an upperclassman is hav- ing all the wisdom of a year at Bryn Mawr and the pleasure of slowly and condescendingly trans- ferring it to the novices, ° As you continue to monopolize the con- versation, you can’t help feeling a little superior, and glorying in those few days when the freshmen believe you are, Jane Harrold Martha Pennington a Le aaa STATION CLEANERS Pay Day ) Pick Up and Delivery : - One Day Service RY LA 5-9126 — 22 N. Bryn Mawr Ave. ; j (next to the Post Office) ; SI aS ee ee —— ag a addi i i ip tn tp i i a ee >> < GANE and SNYDER All the Goodies for Your Tea Parties! Many Kinds of Tea — Cookies — Fruit 834 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr LA 5-0573 Freeman, M, Grady, D, Harte, E, Hoersch, A, Koukal, C, McGarry, L, ana Merz, .S. Pilgrim, G. Rhea, R, Sandoz, M, Spitzer, L. Sweeney, K. Tuttle, F, Williams, J. Rockefeller Angel, C, Atkinson, K, Bedell, S, Bernard, M. Black, M. Brand, S, Burhan, P, Burton, J, Darby, C Franzen, P, Gagliotti, C, George, A, Gray, “J. Hatheway, A. Hooker, M, - Jackoway, J. Kail, B. Karban, J, Kelner, M, Kuchman, L, Lalire, V. Lamb, S, Lowen, R, Lyons, L. Mattingly, L, _ ‘Meyer, J, Miller, LU, Mittleman, J, Morris, S, Raskob, A, Risso, P, Ritter, M. Roeser, J. Timko, N. Whitehouse, K, Wolff, G, Yost, M, / Rock Annex Ireland, J. yn Me Meiselas, N VanDusen, V. Rhoads North Antonioli, J, Das, K, Easton, J, Gaudiani, L, Hulick, D, Levitt, F. Perun, D, Rosen, J. Thomas, C, Wolf, S, Rhoads South Davis, N. Frothingham, C Fuller, T, Haney, C, Lawson, E, Levine, K. Lipton, D. Lytle, C, Ransohoff, M. Shapiro, F, | Strickland, R. Tems, §S, Warren, K, Week's Schedule Friday- Barbeque and fun with Haver- ford at Bryn Mawr; 5-12:30p.m. Saturday- Freshman Class meeting, Good- hart Hall; 11:30 a.m Picnic with Haverford at Hav- erford; 1 p.m. Mixing with Penn at Bryn Mawr; 8 - 12:30 p.m. Sunday- Miss McBride’s Tea for fresh- men at the home of the Presi- dent; 4 - 6 p.m. Required Undergraduate Asso-_ ciation meeting for freshmen, Goodhart Hall, bring Freshman Handbook; 7:15 p.m. Coffee in professors’? homes; 8:30 p.m, % Monday- Convocation, Goodhart Hall, Miss McBride opens the 84th academic year, wear caps and S0wns; 8:45 a.m. / Classes begin Parade Night; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday- Meeting of International Club, Batten House; 4 p.m Arts Council tea, first floor of the Inn; 5 p.m, Thursday- Curriculum Committee meeting, 1:30 p.m, Arts Council meeting, second floor-of the Inn, 6 p.m. COLLEGE NEWS meeting, sec- ond floor of the Inn, 7:30 p.m. See your name in print. Write for the NEWS BRYN MAWR RECORDS VISA CARDS HONORED ( 4 , Every Type of Classical, Psychedelic, and Folk Record : : i _ 8 Track and Cassette Tapes | ( 4 4 ¢ 1026 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn mew 527-1175 ae * Erdman A Armstrong, C, Davidson, D, Donohue, F, Engel, A, Hurwicz, M, Kralova, E, Leach, S, Mansfield, S, Mix, P, Montet, G, Neils, J. Rupp, L. Smith, K, Stickney, C Staub, D. Taussig, V Tramdack, S, Wagener, M, Warshaw, A, _ Erdman B Cunningham, S, Fidd, G. Gilbert, S. Hill, R. avy, By. Karess, M. Kates, B. Miner, L Picker, G, Resnik, J. ; Shoshkes, C, Thomforde, A, Valen, N, Erdman Cc | Beckett, E, Chapin, P, Ciulla, E, Dudley, C, Dymkowski, C, Erhart, K,. Glassmyer, L,” Labate, C, Willoughby, A. & >® & ® * @ B® 722722232O232 2% 7 y An Art Center ’ Will Open Inn Basement Mon., Sept. 23rd 4 ; »4 Those Interested > ‘ ¢ in ‘ Pottery Classes > ) A Place to Paint > i , Anytime : A Place to Sew } ) , , é , PLEASE COME toa - MEETING — THURS. 5:00 — Inn — 2nd FI. pelllnadllinlactnadatltn tite dite at atte tp ty tn ng COOP OS se. ] © @ 24 2225024 / ee &] ®* 4% 2% 2224244244224 EN ODI IID FROMALL CONTINENTS . THE GARB HAS GARMENTS