‘COLLEGE NEWS Vol. LI, No. 19 BRYN MAWR, PA. April 15, 1966 © Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1966 25 Cents Undergrad Goes On Discussing Dance Concert Previagt Shows Imaginative Assortment of Moods Committees, Bi-College Council Much of the business of Monday night?’s Undergrad meeting con- cerned the committees for next year. The committee lists which had been posted in Taylor were reviewed, and five members ofthe Executive Board were selected to be members of a Finance Com- mittee which. will review and dis- cuss the budgets of next year’s clubs and committees. The paid jobs such as Travel Bureau,Furniture Sale, and Record Library will be assigned next week after President Margaret Edwards has consulted with the scholarship committee. Other jobs and com- mittee chairmen will be chosen by each committee. The discussion of a bi-college committee was continued from the last meeting. Margaret said she had discussed the committee with. Mike Bratman, president of the Haverford Council, andthey agreed that the committee should consist of at least the heads of the var- ‘ious committees of both colleges in order to function well. After discussion on the subject it was decided that this combina- tion would not serve much more purpose than merely a cooperation of both colleges’ committee heads, as there often is now. In order to make communication between Bryn Mawr and Haverford easier, a list of all heads of committees of both colleges will be published. This list will include all phone numbers. Sue Orbeton volunteered to be Bryn Mawr’s overseer of the ‘‘oreen bus’’ and of the Meal Ex- change. Conservative Club Members Sponsor Fulton Lewis III Fulton Lewis III is the next speaker on the Conservative Club agenda with a talk scheduled Mon- day, April 18, at 7:30 in the Com- mon Room on ‘‘Vietnam: Why Are We There and Where Do We Go From Here?’? Mr. Lewis has recently deliver - ed this speech at several western campuses,, including U.C.L.A., Berkeley and Reed. At one time a research director for the House Committee on Un- American Activities, Mr. Lewis was a co-director of the film “‘Operation Abolition’ and he par- ticipated in the production of the new HUAC film ‘While Brave Men Die,’’ both concerning com- munist. infiltration in the United States, Although he wants especially to speak on Vietnam. he is willing to answer any questions about his experiences with the HUAC. He is now working on the magazine NEWSCOPE in Washington D.C. On Friday, April 22. he will be at Yale to debate with Staughton Lynd. the professor who made an independent visit to North Vietnam this year. Cathy Sims. Consefvative Club, Lewis will chairman of the feels Mr. educational and informative rather than active. with speakers who are not extremely opinionated but rather middle of the road and moderate. be an enthusiastic - ~ speaker. She: feels in general that the. purpose. of.the club.should be . A new publicity committee will be instituted at Bryn Mawr and its members will be paid by Under - grad to publicize all school events, including committees and organi- zations on campus. Perhaps the two most interest- ing innovations brought out at the meeting are those made concern- ing Bryn Mawr and Haverford communications. Campus mail will now go to Haverford every day, and any letter mailed before 10 a.m. will arrive at Haverford that day. Also the Bryn Mawr and Haver- ford *‘Operation Match’? has been arranged and will begin soon, The new operation is called ‘‘CO- HABIT,” and will cost 25¢. Time has already been leased for the use of the computer in the match. They didn’t want to let me, but a little pressure inthe right places brings results. So I saw it. The Dance Concert. Granted, a preview isn’t the same as the real thing, but it looks professional, damned professional, ‘*Play’? -- that opens the pro- gram -- is a spoof. Someone once said that dancers take themselves too seriously, but that isn’t neces- sarily so. In ‘‘Play’’ the dancers come onto the stage as they would enter the studio; they limber at the bar and cavort across the floor -- at the same time mocking the images of themselves which they confront inthe mirror. ‘‘Prayer’’ follows; a little reverence doesn’t hurt and the Dance Club isn’t about to alienate anybody. And then there’s §*Prelude’’ -- a light, O’Neitlt-Play Cast Enters Early Rehearsal Stages College Theatre’s spring pro- duction of Eugene O’Neill’s ‘‘Long Day’s Journey Into Night’’ is scheduled for May 6 and 7 at 8:00 p.m. in Roberts Hall, Haverford. Ticket prices will be $1.00 for students, $1.50 for all others, Rehearsals have begun for the members of the cast. It is a dis- tinctive feature of this production that all the actors and actresses are experienced and can thus start rehearsing without much in the way of preliminaries. This is in marked contrast to the previous production, ‘‘Under Milk Wood,’’ where a considerable amount of preparatory work was necessary because of the large number of ‘tnew’’ people having parts. In **Long Day’s Journey’’ the role of the father will be played by Munson Hicks; Margaret Ed- wards will play the mother; Chuck Strang, the consumptive son; Steve Bennett, his brother Jamie; and Jane Taylor, the maid, Despite the experience of the H‘ford Professors Not Paying Taxes Professors William Davidon and Ariel Loewy of Haverford are not paying their income taxes this year, in protest of U.S. involve- ment in Vietnam. They are parties to an invitation signed by over 300 other people; all taxpayers were invited to consider this action. Signers include A, J, Mustey, Staughton Lynd, Dave Dellinger and Joan Baez. Their statement says that they feel the ordinary chan- nels of protest are exhausted and more radical action is needed to help avert a nuclear war. They recognize the gravity oftheir step, which could result in fines up to $10,000 and a year in jail, but they think the U.S. is violating the Constitution, the U.N, Charter and international law, and they do not want to participate in crimes against humanity. A. J. Mustey has not paid his taxes for “40 years. In such cases the government merely takes the proper amount from the offender’s bank account or salary and does not prosecute. In this way the person does not get the advantage of any deductions. » cast, work on the play cannot really get under way until after the Dance Concert, because of the absence of some College Theatre officers for this latter. Besides using an especially ex- perienced cast, it should be re- marked, Director Robert Butman and the people of College Theatre are undertaking to present a particularly difficult drama, All in all, the ‘‘day’’ of ‘*Long Day’s Journey,’’ with its particularity and intensity and the length of exposure of each of the characters to the audience’s scrutiny, should afford an interesting contrast to the day of ‘*Under Milk Wood,”’ with its generality, its easy alternation of moods, and the brief- ness of the glimpses it allowed of the townspeople of L! . eggub. Students to Aitend Avignon, Madrid Summer Schools Names of students going to sum - mer studies in either Avignon or Madrid have been released by the French and Spanish Departments. Bonnie Cunningham, ’68; Eliza- beth Duke, ’68; Nimet Habachy, ’67; Cookie Poplin, ’69; Patricia Pyle, graduate student; Emily Singer, ’67 and Andrea Stark, ’67 are going to Avignon. They will leave on a Bryn Mawr group flight from New York to Paris June 15, Rebecca Cooley, ’67; Florence Castelle, ’66; Linda Emroch, ’68; Jean M. Miller, ’67; and Melissa McCarty, ’66 will be studying in Madrid. They will leave at ap- proximately the same time as the French students, as they have to register in Madrid on the 18th. Both groups take two courses there for six weeks, to allow them one month free (August) to see more of Europe than they would during class time. The Avignon group has the option of meeting in Paris for ten days at the end of August before coming home. The program calls for staying with families during the school time and provides the students with visits to places of interest ‘around their particular school. These students are supposed to have had the equivalent of three years of college French or Span- ish. fast section -- an appetizer, as it were, a brief overture to an am- bitious concert. There are three student choreo- graphed works in the concert. Two -are remarkably complex. Liz Schneider, choreographer of ‘‘the mind is its own beautiful prisoner” characterizes her piece as the ‘«contraction of the mind into it- self and its expansion toward others.’ Liz capitalizes ona large cast by quick entrances and exits which cut across space and which keep the stage in constant motion. ‘‘Synapse,’’ choreographed by Alice Leib, is a seven-part study of hanging. The title refers to the moment of hanging -- when the rope is snapped, leaving a still- warm body suspended between two worlds, ‘‘Dancers can afford to be pretentious,’’ Alice states matter- of-factly, and *‘anyway I’m using five H’ford boys.” Jessica Harris and Amy Dickin- son perform ‘*Time,”’ a Dave Clark Five selectioh of the same name. Mrs, Ann Mason, Bryn Mawr’s own teacher/choreographer, inad- dition to the three opening move- ments offers a piece entitled “‘Tranquility,’? to music by Paul Creston, and a dance-dramatiza- tion of Thornton Wilder’s ‘Our Town’’ to music by Aaron Copland, The former is danced by a quintet whose wide sweeping arm gestures and swift runs are anything but tranquil, Mrs. Mason explained that this is a ‘mood piece,’’ one which suggests the poles of emo- tion one can experience while wait- ing, those of vigor and of languor. Toby Williams is Emily in‘*Our Town’? and she is blonde and lovely. Her duets with Rick Grossman, as George, are high points of the program. And what of performance? On the whole, the girls are trimmer and tighter than in previous years; they move with greater certainty and with more grace, Lead dancer Andy Stark performs withthe same exactness, strength, and fluidity of movement. she so. admirably demonstrated in last year’s con- cert. AS a company, the BMC dance group is. still not Sarah Lawrence or Bennington. But then BMC has no fine arts program, The dance group is professional in its attitude, however, and the concert is professional. Light de- ‘signs by Lance Jackson are im- aginative and effettive; sets by Judy Chapman are clean and simple; costumes by Sue Slocaare ~ colorful and becoming. The Dance Club’s performance is Friday night at 8:30 in Goodhart, I think you should see it. The Dance Club is a non-profit organ- ization dedicated to the advance- ment of the performing arts, And besides, the girls get AA points, A.L. Diane Stein, Andrea Stark, Brad Bowers,and aon Gorchov in preparation for dance concert. Psychologist Weighs Influence Of Politics On The Individual Donald Brown, from the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching ofthe University of Mich- igan, will discuss the relevancy of psychology to politics Tuesday, April 19, at 4:30 in the Common Room, A member of the university’s psychology department for ten years, Mr. Brownhas written many articles in the field of education, especially on its psychological as- pects. He is a contributor toa ~volume edited by Nevitt Sanford called “‘The American College.” In the past, Mr. Brown par- ticipated in a long research pro- ~ gram on the impact of education x an women, studying Wellesley graduates. He is now working on an Ann Arbor program, that is trying to create a college within a university to improve the pros- pects of higher education for the student in a large university. Mr. Brown was invited by Mr. Bachrach of the Political Science Department to apply his experience in the field of psychology to a political question. His talk will consider whether or not there is a contributary value for the in- dividual in participating actively in the formation of political de- cisions, and whether such a role is necessary for mental health, Page 2 / COLLEGE NEWS | April 15; 1966 THE COLLEGE NEWS Subscription $3.75 — Mailing price $5.00 — Subscriptions may begin at any time Entered as second class matter at the Bryn Mawr, Pa. Post Office, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Application for re-entry at the Bryn Mawr, Pa. Post Office filed October Ist, 1963, Second Class Postage paid at Bryn Mawr, Pa. , FOUNDED IN 1914 Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks- giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Regional Printing Company, Inc., Bryn Mawr, 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 6f the Editorin-Chief. EDITORIAL BOARD IIE ys 5 0 0.0.0.0 00.05 660 8008 8 ecceseces Nanette Holben '68 Co a rerrrrrrrrririririrr errrrirrre Laire,K'rugmdn * 67- Managing Editor 4.00 b 6-08 6's'b:6 0 00 00:8 6 060 60k One cin BAU 68 Copy Editor Coccccccccscocescesecccecce s sLleanor yon Auw °68 Make-Up Editor €0.00censee es csccesenecseses Datténe Peetastier "68 MembereateLarge .sscccccccccccccsccccseseses Robin Johnson °68 Freshman Comp According to the current curriculum, the required freshman comp course is a year-long study of writers within the fields of literature of the twentieth century, English Renaissance literature, American literature, or themes and forms. The efforts of the student are directed at the weekly papers and the second-semester six-week paper, with the aim of developing competent writing. If freshmen enter with fives in the English advanced placement exam, or if they demonstrate competent writing after one semester here, they are exempt from all or half a year of this composition course. We have observed within the student body an unusual amount of dis- satisfaction concerning the term of this requirement; the feeling that the freshman comp course should be cut to one semester is a common one. Suggestions for such a revision run as follows: The course should meet three times a week for one semester rather than twice a week for two semesters. Weekly papers should still be required, with the bi-weekly conferences. While some students might like to see only this half-unit of workin English required, it is probable that the first step would be to require yet another half-unit of English. This second half-unit would be taken during the second semester of the freshman year, and chosen from a variety of literature and creative writing courses -- to insure the writing of something comparable to a six-week paper. (We have in mind the organization of the Philosophy Department with its required 10la course and choice of 200 aor b courses to fulfill the unit,) Students in favor of condensing the freshman comp course feel that in general freshmen are able to carry a heavier work load than the course now requires; that the progressive advanced classes of high schools are comparable if not identical inemphasisto freshman English here; that the year-long study in one of the four fields still does not suit individual tastes; that a work load of only four subjects per year should allow for more variety in the field of English, if the freshman course will be a student’s only opportunity to take any English here. If the course were condensed, perhaps reading lists could be sent out in the summer. : Of course there are practical problems to be considered. Members of the English Department feel that a student’s writing would not improve enough in the space of one semester of freshman comp, and indeed, these classes are ‘‘a service course for the rest of the college’’ as far as papers go. Second, instructors now consider the individual confer- ences the ‘‘third hour’’ of class; if the above change were made, they would need still extra hours to keep up these conferences, Further, if a switch in instructors were made at mid-year (from the comp course into an elective English course), the new instructor would be unfamiliar with the student’s problems in writing when she undertook her long paper. Finally, if second-semester courses were offered in both litera- ture and creative writing, a turnover in personnel might be needed to fulfill these demands. Such are the suggestions and the obstacles; any revision lk ‘would call for intricate planning. The COLLEGE NEWS would like to See the suggestions gradually implemented, with the careful considera- tion of Curriculum Committee, which is meeting next week and plans to discuss this situation. Over the weekend the NEWS is distributing a questionnaire to which every student is requested to present her opinions on freshman comp revision. We hope for thoughtful and serious answers; they could in time contribute to the progress of the college. A Taxing Situation The story of the movement not to pay income taxes on the front page perhaps deserves additional comment. Levying an income tax isa relatively recent Constitutional (amendment #16) right of our govern- ment, but taxes are generally thought of as inevitable; witness the old phrase ‘‘as sure as death and ...’? The money accrued to the U.S, through income taxes is used for, among other things, schools, Atlas © Agena rockets and lights in the Senate Office Building. These however are minor. This year about 60% of our budget is spent on defense items. Almost 100% of our defense energy today is tied up in Vietnam. Three hundred people have decided they don’t like the way the U.S, is spending those slices of their dollars. And they don’t like it enough to refuse to hand over anything. This act of civil disobedience throws a small but bothersome monkeywrench in the doings of the Internal Revenue Service. Of course the service can get the money by withdraw- ing it from the participants’ bank accounts or deducting it from their salaries. But that’s not the point. The point is that those people are no longer personally and actively contributing to the war effort which they find so distasteful. Additionally their actions have publicity value. Refusal to pay income tax is not as light a thing as a Saturday afternoon march down Fifth Avenue, It seems to show the seriousness with which these people con- sider present policy. Their refusal is as serious as they think the sit- uation is grave. We are a divided newspaper staff. Some of us cannot condone their action, seeing it as a deliberate and uncalled for breaking of the law. Others think that their action is appropriate and commendable. The _ Same situationis undoubtedly true in the soeiely af a whole. These people will be both condemned and praised in coming months. We, being divided, can simply urge that students reconsider the position and responsibility of the U.S, in the world, and the duties and rights of each of her citizens. Mrs. Hanson Assembles Exhibit; ‘Manet Circus’ Heads For Philly by Anne Lovgren It all started some time ago when Assistant Professor Anne Coffin Hagson of the History of Art Department was asked to write the catalogue for a November showing of Manet paintings, draw- ings and prints at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Since then, Bryn Mawr graduate -students, under- graduates, and, most of all, Mrs. Hanson herself have become in- volved in what she terms ‘‘a Manet Circus,”’ The writing of the catalogue is a monumental task in itself, since it must provide a full discussion of the style, subject matter, and identification of subjects as well as ‘the bibliography, history, and provenence (history of ownership) for each of the exhibit’ s 200 pieces. Then too, catalogue writing is a special sort of professional prob- lem for the art historian, since it requires selectivity of information rather than deep, lengthy analysis of the art works. And of course, the writer must take into account the diversified nature of her audi- ence -- the complete spectrum from the Saturday afternoon art buff to the professional art scholar. Mrs, Hanson then sees the func- tion of the catalogue as two-fold: It should give the general public information and background neces- sary to its enjoyment of the ex- hibition, and accordingly it should be written in terms clear and understandable to the layman; moreover, it should point out to the art historian visiting the ex- hibit relationships between various works and provide him with com- plete up-to-date information on each of them, **an exhibition such as this,” Mrs. Hanson comments, ‘‘is a great opportunity for the art historian to see works together Edouard Manet’s oil painting, that are not normally together.” By noting stylistic and subjective changes, the scholar can, she feels, *tbetter understand the total con- tribution of the artist.” Her work on the Manet catalogue has provided an artistic spring- board for a graduate seminar, undergraduate course work and senior comp conference work. During first semester, Mrs. Hanson conducted a graduate sem- inar on Manet, in which the stu- dents, as part of their work, wrote typical catalogue entries. It is a comment on the difficulty of cata- logue writing that each of the graduate students could finish only two or three entries in the course of the semester. The concentration on Manet also provided one of the graduate stu- dents with information and pos- sibilities for significant new criticism on the painting ‘‘Lola De Valence.’’? (Lola is coming from the Louvre for the exhibi- tion.) She, as Bryn Mawr repre- sentative, will present her paper on this painting and its relationship to typical ballet prints of the century at a conference for young New Heralds’ Flags Going Up For May Day, Commencement Last year’s yearbook staff left $491.49 to buy new flags for Com- mencement and May Day. Mrs. Whelihan, with the help of Manon Williams and Gwen Aaron, two Welsh graduate students, have been researching Welsh, English and | applebee : i some people never let an owl perch in peace ... it was a lovely spring afternoon ... drowsy-eyed i sat blinking away my time ... meditating a deep metaphysical problem: is the reseeded patch of ground by the deanery rerere- seeded or just reseeded? and then they came ... four of them ... you know those very familiar groups of four -- actually three being led by one ... the blind being led by the all-seeing one, her hands aflail pointing, gesticu- lating, sprouting facts ... they stopped right in front of me ... **this, oh yes, this’’ said the all- seeing, ‘fis an owl’’ ... girl and mother smiled ... they didn’t in- troduce themselves .. . “‘*how many owls do you have here?’ asked the man ... the all-seeing one calculated -- over a quarter of a million volumes in the library plus student faculty ratio to the nth power minus 1885 -- -well there must be about seven and a half now ... they smiled and moved on across the rerereseeded lawn _Which 1 guess will have’ to” be rererereseeded now ... or is it ~ reseeded? j ¢ thoughtfully, applebee Scottish heraldry and have come up with seven new flags to add to the Bryn Mawr collection. Six more old ones have been refur- bished by George Bryant. There is a possibility that one more will be ordered, as there is about , $150 left. Each flag costs about $100 and is about 6 x 10 feet. The old flags were bought around 1911 so they have lasted many years, without being entirely des- troyed by wind flapping. For the new ones, there was a choice of cotton, nylon or nylawool. Mrs. Whelihan said the nylon ‘flies nicely because it’s so light, but since nylon is a relatively recent invention, no one really knows how long it might last.’’ It is also more expensive. The committee ended up buying the two plainest ones in cotton to save money and the rest in either nylon or the nylon mixture. As for colors, Mrs. Whelihan felt the blue goes better with the -gray stones of the campus and besides Bryn Mawr already has plenty of red. This is part of her reason why the extra money should be spent on a Royal Standard of England, which is three gold lions on a blue field. The new ones already ordered are the Royal Standard of Scotland; the new national flag of Wales; the St. George Cross, which is green stripes on red and white; Orif-. lamme, red with a jagged edge; Botetorte, black on gold;- Tudor Stream, which is fleurs de lis; and St. Edmunds, three gold crowns on blue. These are all flags of knights’ families. ~The Sinithsonian Institute, the National Library of Wales, the Philadelphia Library and the Bryn Mawr Library have helped in pick- ing the flags, ‘*at the Races,” which will arrive from the Chicago Art Institute for the November, 1966 exhibition. Art Histories held by the Frick ‘Museum and the New York Uni- ‘versity Institute of Fine Arts. Several art history majors, as part of their compconference work have chosen: topics of concentra- tion closely related to Manet, An- gelika deKornfeld is studying Japanese prints, which, as Mrs. Hanson commented, ‘‘affected Manet in very subtle ways.” Carole Slatkin is examining the . art theories of Baudelaire and Mallarme, both of whom consider - ‘ed modern life to provide the most important subject matter and spirit for modern art. Manet was aclose friend to the two writers and there was a marked interchange of in- fluence between the poets and the artist. Their association is par- ticularly significant because it is a specific case in which the interrelationship of the arts can be studied. Susan Anderson, another senior, is pursuing the study of photograph, which, Mrs. Hanson believes is essential to the Manet style. In the advanced art course this semester, ‘*Manet and the Nine- teenth Century Painters,” the stu- dents are again treating works included in the show. Each is working to present a report ona particular group of Manet paint- ings such as his still life works and;his paintings of philosophers. In conjunction with the course work, both this class and the grad- uate seminar have visited the Manet collection at the Philadel- phia Museum, Mrs. Hanson and the growing con- glomeration of catalogue refer- ences. Mrs. Hanson’s modus operendi for writing the catalogue centers around a large filing system with written entries and photographs of each work. This ‘“‘working cata- logue’’ has been used extensively by students in her classes, who visit Mrs. Hanson and the files to find information or volunteer ideas in what she calls ‘‘a constant give and take process.’’ As the catalogue’s publication date grows closer and student projects on Manet become more and more involved, a weary Mrs. Hanson remarks, ‘‘At this point I don’t know whether I’m teaching a class or running a circus -- a Manet Circus,”’ In all the artistic frenzy sur- -rounding her office, it is a telling postscript that the library cleaning _ man had to make an appointment with her to sweep the office floor. eo April 15, 1966 COLLEGE NEWS Page 3 Excerpts From Levi’s Cal. Talk Consider Student Rights, Duties Following are brief ex— cerpts from the speech Mar— goret Levi has prepared to deliver at a conference on the American university May 8-10 in Los Angeles. The topic is students and their mutual responsibilities.—Ed. (At. Bryn. Mawr) Students ‘are certainly encouraged to take part in decisions which affect the college and they do have control over their own social regulations, Yet, despite the emphasis on demo- cratic control of the university, the level of participation in stu- dent affairs is very low. Despite its emphasis on the academic, the school suffers from a lack of intellectualism. Despite its repu- tation for attracting bright, sensi- tive and individualistic girls, its classrooms are dull... ‘¢Four major factors contribute to the small degree of democrat- ization and _ intellectualization which has taken place on the cam- pus. First is the lack of atradition of participation in our society. People are just not used to being called upon to make decisions which will count... ‘*Second, and particularly evi- dent at Bryn Mawr, is the stress on individualism as the most de- sirable trait to be found in a stu- dent. The college used to have a reputation for seeking and attract- ing the type of individualist who, because of their exceptional brilliance or creativity, lived in a - world of their own. But more ..Frecently. the. trend has .been to-. wards ‘wholesome,’ well-rounded, and stable girls--bright enough — but not impressive. The students are no longer concerned with in- dividualism in the old sense but with a privatism, valued to such a degree that its importance far mosphere as impersonal as the one in which the student is a mere IBM number... ‘The fourth factor is the con- cern which most ‘collegés have in retaining their ‘liberalism.’ This means that the range of the faculty is automatically limited, for the non-liberal viewpoint or an ardent Marxtst, will not be tolerated-:. 2° ~ **But the saddest thing is that students themselves have accepted the myths (of non-participation and passive education) or else .they believe that the present sys- tem of education and forms of stu- dent government R®epresent the outshadows that of the special responsibilities placed upon the - girls both as students and as members of a community ... “Third, the myth that education is the passive acquisition of knowl- edge and that one’s loyalties are to the abstract university rather than to the other members of the college community creates an at- | tema Books Stationery Greeting Cards 844 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. b MAGASIN DE LINGE LAwrence 5-5802 825 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa ' | LA 50443 “LA 56666 James P. Kerchner Pharmacist PARVIN’S PHARMACY: _ 90 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr: ee limit ‘of what they can do,’ & RESTAURANT We deliver - Call by 10 p.m. LA 5-9352 Open Sunday & Everyday BRYN MAWR DELICATESSEN AFS Committee Raises Funds To Entertain Foreign Students If you haven’t heard the word ‘*AFS*? mentioned at least once during the past few weeks, chances are you haven’t been around Bryn Mawr recently. Two morning bake sales in Tay- lor last week and a French-style flea market on the back porch of Wyndham last Saturday have been part of a short-run but desperate attempt to raise funds for the latest endeavor of the Bryn Mawr-Haverford Chapter of AFS, Decoded, AFS stands for Ameri- can Field Service, a high school student exchange program between the United States and approximate- ly thirty foreign countries, The AFS chapter here, organized at the beginning of this year by Americans who have gone abroad on the program and by foreign students who have returned to the United States after their AFS year here, is planning a weekend at Bryn Mawr College for some of the AFS students spending their senior year in high schools in this area, The weekend activities, planned for April 15 and 16, include attend- ance of classes here and at Haver - ford, a picnic at Batten House, cert and the mixer on Friday night. The students come from coun- tries as varied as Norway, Italy, Malaysia and Brazil. Manyofthem are considerably older than the average American senior in high school and have not had as much opportunity to talk with older stu- dents as they might have liked. Those who have replied to the invitations sent out have responded enthusiastically to the opportunity, 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. aiaiaadaeey GANE & SNYDER * 834 Lancaster Avenue, Fresh Fruit a BRYN MAWR’S NEW SMART EATING PLACE KENNY’S” 24 N. Bryn Mawr Avenue LA 5-6623-4 Night Deliveries — _ — = ——————— Qualifications @ Bachelor's Degree @ A Liberal Education ‘MADS DISCQUNT RECORDS 9 W. Lancaster Ave.: Ardmore MI 2-0754 - Lorgest Selection Folk Music Pop - Classics - Jazz cent acinalndinil e@ No Education Courses Required @ Preparation in a Subject Area — TEACH Elementary Secondary, or Special Education Earn while learning... Annual Income of $5500 Placement and Tenure INTERN TEACHING PROGRAM e TEMPLE UNIVERSITY @ Philadelphia, Po. 19122 e@ Master's Degree @ Professional Certification . . Don’t go to the Devil Come to William Michael Butler International Hairstylist 1049 Lancaster LA 5-9592 HE: First time | ever made the Dean's List. SHE: You gonna call your folks? HE: The shock might kill them. 5 rv + Risk it. Good news—however startling—is always welcome. Besides, your parents look forward to hearing from you. Call home often. ‘| “The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania ia - Bryn Mawr Students and Teachers are invited to hear Professor Howard Selsam, “ETHICS in TODAY’S WORLD: MARXISM, EXISTENTIALISM, -and the LINGUISTIC PHILOSOPHY” Dr. Selsam taught philosophy for 10 years at Columbia University; has authored many books on the subject and is an internationally recog- nized authority. Friday, April 22, - 8:30 P.M., sharp: at the ' PHILADELPHIA HOTEL, 314 N. Broad St. (near Vine) Bryn Mawr Room, 5th Floor . Admission $1 — Students 50¢ Auspices: Philadelphia Social Science Forum Ph.D., of New York, on V00K2 NEW MEDIUM-WEIGHT BLAZER and our new cotton oxford shirt in bold British stripings The classic navy blazer for women is now featured in Dacron® polyester-and- worsted for year around wear. With it try our own make button-down collar cotton oxford shirt in attractive blue, pink or yellow bold British stripings on white for casual wear...same striping on English cotton voile for.a dressier touch. Navy blazer with brass buttons, $36 Cotton oxford shirt, $10.50; F-nglish voile, $12.50 ESTABLISHED 1818 C@SLOTHINGS)D Mens s Boys Furnishings. Bats + Shoes 346 MADISON AVE., COR. 44TH ST., NEW YORK, N.Y. 10917 ‘ 46 NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY ST., BOSTON, MASS. 02116 | PITTSBURGH * CHICAGO * SAN FRANCISCO * LOS ANGELES “4, HMM CHY . ee ees Af. Af Af. Page 4 COLLEGE NEWS April 15, 1966 Musical Selections Set _| Spring Sports For Employees Concert The‘ Bryn Mawr College em- ployees will present their annual Spring Concert Thursday, April 21. The employees have given concerts and musical productions every year for the past 40 years. In 1940 they performed ‘*Porgy and Bess,’’ and their other pro- ductions have included: ‘‘Carou- ~set,***Fintan’s- Rainbow;’*~ and many Gilbert and Sullivan selec- tions. This year’s program will con- sist of show tunes, liturgical music, and several Negro spir- ituals, including ‘‘Wide, Wide. River.’? The concert is directed by Walter Anderson,who has_di- rected several productions in the past. : Last year the proceeds of the concert went towards Christmas gifts for the retired maids and thie The same policy will be Tollowéd™ this” year; and in addi- tion some of the proceeds will go to the Opportunities Industrial Center. The concert will be at 8:30 p.m. in Goodhart and admission is $1.00. ' April 14 Tennis at Westchester April 15 Dance Concert at 8:30 April 16 Lacrosse at Drexel April 19 Lacrosse vg. Swarth- more, 4:00 here April 21 Tennis at Penn Correction from. 10 till 2 was errone— ously reported as _ being April 18. it will be April 15. ~The mixer at Merion Hall’ Morning Coffees Successful, Expand to Other Dormitories As a result of the success of the Merion-Denbigh coffee hours, ‘coffee and tea will be served from 10:30 to 11:30 at all the halls, on a rotating schedule. Friday, April 15, the coffee hour will be held at Rhoads and Batten House; Monday, April 18, at Radnor; Tuesday, April 19, at ~Pembroke East-and West; Wednes=’ day, April 20, at Wyndham; Thurs- day, April 21, at Rockefeller, and Friday, April 22, at Merion. It is hoped that students will With this one exception, GT&E holds the lead in remote control We leave it up to the dexterity of youth to manipulate slot cars. But concede nothing to anyone in the matter of making machines act as they should without human inter- vention...even if they’re sepa- rated by hundreds of miles. The lead is supplied by two of GT&E’s family of companies. Automatic Electric manufactures the control systems, and Lenkurt Electric the equipment to trans- mit the control signals over wire lines or microwave radio. In com- bination, the systems are used to automate gas and oil pipelines, electric utility complexes, and the operations of railroads. The ConiTeEL™ 2000 supervis- ory and control system—new from Automatic Electric—can report the status of 180 devices in as lit- tle as .290 seconds. Lenkurt’s new Journal Data Transmission transmits “hotbox” information instantly so railroad controllers may stop trains before costly accidents occur. Automatic remote control is just one of many ways GT&E is serv: ing the national interest. Our total activities are covered in a booklet you can obtain from your place- ment office, or by writing General Telephone& Electronics, 730 Third Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10017. & GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS 730 THIRD AVE.,N.Y.10017 + GT&E SUBSIDIARIES: General Telephone Operating Cos. in 33 states - GT&E Laboratories » GT&E International - General Telephone Directory Co. + Automatic Electric + Lenkurt Electric + Sylvania Electric oh } mes continue to use this morning hour as a chance to get to know pro- fessors and friends outside their hall by gathering in an informal atmosphere. Space permitting, the NEWS will run schedules of coffee hours each week, 4 Be PR EERE a Taek a HANDBLOCKED COTTON SHIFTS CHEERFUL COLORS FOLK DESIGNS PEASANT GARB 868 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR You’re sure of yourself when you have Bidette. Here is a soft, safe cloth, pre- moistened with soothing lotion, that cleans and refreshes...swiftly banishes odor and discomfort. 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