* sina OOperative. Her dorm, Denbigh, “i “Vol. kL No. 7 Signouts Vanish In Saturday Night Hallowe’en Thefts The disappearance of signout books from Bryn Mawr dormito- ries Saturday night, trick or treat night, was ‘‘definitely not our treat,’’ states Emily Bardack, President of Self-Gov. It appears that the culprits, who ‘removed ‘both: overnight and’ eve-:: ning signout books early Saturday night, were Haverford freshmen, Emily reports that Haverford Stu- dent Council .officials were very was the only one not deprived ‘of its book. -Séme of the books were re- turned before 12:30Saturday night, -and‘some did not come in until the. next morning. The bookless dorms attempted to make do with extra signout sheets for those who had not yet signed out, al- though it \had no record of the missing signouts. - Emily stressed the severity of the problem of missing books on two counts; first, Saturday night was a night when students were al- ‘lowed to. sign. out until. 3:30. by special permission of Self-Gov. arid second, signout books are not for public consumption, although the individuals who removed.them went so.far as to tear out some pages.. Thus if a student did not come in at the curfew, a search for her would begin later than ~ usual, and in the absence of the books, her absence might not even be. definitely noticed. The _lantern_men were natural- » ly most upset by the. theft of thee books. Emily stated that Self-Gov. had taken no steps as of yet to further safeguard the books, ‘‘It would be a pity and not really necessary under normal conditions to chain the books down; this is really not a constructive answer.”’ Group to Present Prometheus Bound As-a Shadow Play Bryn Mawr and Haverford will present PROMETHEUS BOUND as a shadow. play November 21 in Skinner .Workshop. The perform-= ers will use the Edith Hamilton translation of the drama by Ae- schylus, The presentation will use a two dimensional approach, so that the audience .will.see Only shadows, The dialogue will be previously taped instead of spoken live. According to director Connie Maravell, the shadow play formni is an attempt to demonstrate the uni- versality of this Greek drama. —The more abstract: the-perfor+—- _mance, the more universally the themes can be applied. She hopes that the technique will therefore ‘¢make the play stand on its ownon the basis of what it has to say.’’ A partial cast list includes Steve ~SBennett as Prometheus, Diane Gardner as Oceanus, John Pierce as Hephaistos, Barbara Beck as Hermes, and Betsy Bielski as Io. Among the members of the chorus will be Judy Goodwin, Sarah Kuntz,- Madeline Sloane, and Lyle. ? York. PROMETHEUS BOUND is the only play surviving of a trilogy that included PROMETHEUS LOOSED and PROMETHEUS THE -—--FIRE“BEARER= =} =~ BRYN MAWR, PA. Part of the olevenct us Bryn Mawr caravan avidly November 6, 1964 © Trustees of. Bryn Mawr College, 1964 _25 Cents .|.for.mass. production of ticker tape. “c : — ~—- Alliance Program Speaking on Peru Speakers sponsored by Alliance for this fall will talk on subjects ranging from political problemsin problems in Nigeria to enforce~ ement of the Civil Rights Bill at home. L, -Joe Berry of Bryn Mawr’s Biology Department will open the Alliance series Monday, November 9, at 4 in the Common Room, An infinity of adding machine operators prepares made -..carbon--copies—of. _.wends its way to Conyention, Hall, tear the cards out of your hands....”" _mer gives dress rehearsal instructions to ener- getic Mawrters and messengers. Peru. Morton Baratz, janes Pro- fessor of Economics here, will speak November. 16.on-his work at ~ the University of Ibadan in Nigeria Opens With Berry _ Latin America and educational - Goodhart, with movies he took in.: wand then a messenger girl will streak by, Don Far- **Are you SURE that Johnson-Goldwater is your CONGRESSIONAL race?” asks a stunned ho ee ee Daupenspeck while other. girls wait-as usual - for telephone calls. BMC Election Operation Merits By. Nanette Holben and Laurie Deutsch ‘This is not a rehearsal, and we can’t do it again next Tuesday night,’?’ joked NBC’s state elec- tion manager Don Farmer, never- theless implying the seriousness of Bryn Mawr’s part in tabulating the Pennsylvania returns. ° : Approximately 500 Bryn Mawr- ters, organized by Sandy Shapiro ‘and Betsey Pinckney, worked an average eight hours at Convention Hall in Philadelphia where they -aided the. Network Election Serv- - ice, a pool of five news media united to increase efficiency and cut cost. After the operation Farmer labeled BMC girls‘‘great, tremen- dous ; "good leaders, ~ well- organized, If I hadn’t had Betsey and Sandy, I’d have beenin serious trouble -- the work was. too much for one person.’’ He went on to cite the ‘‘beauty of working with students,’? who ‘‘picked up their jobs fast ina complex operation where indivi- : dual training was impossible.’’ _The majority of girls were tele- phone operators (minus ' bouffant hairdos-at Mr. Farmer's request), accepting calls from 9286 voting préeincts, which reported results for presidential, senate and’state congressional races. Messengers hiréd from Temple University relayed congressional “returns to special desks for tabu- © « lation, while slip sorters and county tabulators filed, sorted and ° tabulated the other returns at county tab tables. Results then went to adding ma- chines™ operated by Manpower, Inc., and tally clerks figured percen- — tages. Throughout the process clip- board keepers stationed along county and congressional tab tables turns. An initial report was given to the state desk, which relayed the information by direct line to the NES New York headquarters. . Carbon copies were distributed to the five arms of news media participating in NES: NBC, CBS, ABC, UPI and AP. ' Back-up operators at the county tab. tables, congressional district desks and state manager’s desk, some of whom worked until 5:30 High Praise From State Manager a.m, contirmed totals which had been tabulated earlier. Workers will receive a10-dollar bill in their dorms sometime next week; they must pick it up in per- son and sign for it. All ‘idiot work’? people should hand in their names and hours to Betsey Pinck- ney or to the Bureau of Recom- mendations by midday on Friday, Nov. 6. called back precincts and _. last year reorganizing the Univer- sity’s Economics Department. Luis Aguilar has been invited from Georgetown University to speak on ‘‘Christian Democracy: A Threat or a Promise?’’-ir particu- lar regardtothe recent elections in Chile, Mr, Aguilar will discuss - them at 4 p.m, -in the Deanery - Tuesday, Nov. 17. ussian Department to present ~Boris Unbegaun, Professor of Comparative’ Slavonic Philology at Oxford, to speak on ‘‘Problems of’ Research in Russian Vocabulary” in the Ely Room Wyndham, Nov- ember 30. On,December 7 another speaker on. Latin American’ problems, James. Rowe of the American Uni- versity Field Service, willdiscuss _*Peronism and Neo-Peronism,” based on his. studies aw political situation in Argentina this sum- * mer, Finally, on December 14, Al- liance will present Burke Marshall, in charge: of the Civil Rights Divi- sion of the. Justice Department, Mr. Marshall will talk about the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and its enforcement. 100 Bryn Mawrters, Havertordians- Involved in Antony and C leopatra By Carol Garten At a. rehearsal of Antony ard Cleopatra this past week, College Theatre Director Robert Butman rejected the scholarly notion that~ the play concerns the fall of human dignity. He :sustituted the theory that ‘‘the play is about Cleopatra becoming a woman, and Antony becoming a map, in the simplest sense of the words.’’| Just what ‘*becoming a woman”? entails he left somewhat vague, although he did throw some light -on-the- picture. when-he-commented. -: that ‘‘the play’ is about knowledge that..can be learned only through ‘the expression and constant testing “of love---in the case of Antony and, Cleopatra, only through a mu- tual willingness to die for each other.”? Still in a chtlosophival mood, Mr. Butman remarked that-he- thought Shakespeare to have beena being*of ‘‘utter compassion’’. He advised that in order to fully com- prehend Shakespeare’s genius, we must look beyond the lines of his “plays and listen for the sheer ~ magic behind them. ‘‘For Shakes- ‘peare,’”? he declared, ‘teaches .everything this side of pr ophecy.” tgs ee “ ‘ ane a a RD tion means in terms of the total effect of the play, is thatemphasis ‘is shifted from heavy classicism *to a vital And -pertinent.message for the modern audience. In addi- tion to a new emphasis, Napoleonic costuming is another distinct fea- ture of the production. Mr. Butman equates its..ornateness with the ornateness of Shakespeare’s verse. The set, in stark contrast with the costumes and verse, is to be very simple. It is a block set, consisting of platforms-and-incon- secutive series of steps scattered " purposefully about the stage. The “simplicity of the set serves the (Continued on page 2). Janie Robbins ccoaned sad 'iienbar Mieke Hee star in Col- = _re-___ What. Mr.. Butman’s intarpreta=_ -lepa. Thentare-Haxettotd Drama Club. tS ease production, - 7 * o + Kit Bakke, a ~"a GiSaster for students travelling a 2 nae, “pace Tana acne Pave Two Pate oa Rect nc ee anc mn ecm oS ep aN IO ION ace ARIE ACE CS Sta NORA RN conn ae mi tacrmacntinng cucnlne Macdnaheanancteenattectivinnnapen deat ag teaty eapsmutnstect ae saeca " COLLEGE NEWS November 6, ena “THE COLLEGE NEWS * Subscription $3.75 — Mailing price $5.00-—Subscriptions may begin at any time, ra, yey ge gocond cles matter — —. ar Be gg ica ing od under arch 3, plication for re-entry at the Bryn Mawr, Pa Post Othice filed Octeber ‘1stises. . -Second Class Postage paid at Bryn Mawr, Pa~ FOUN ED IN 1914 Published weckly during the College Year (except during Thanks: dying, Ch Christmas erest of Bryn Mawr College IN nn ana pany. ince ‘Bryn Mawr. Pa., and Bryn ‘ollege. College News is fully protected by copyright: Nothing that appears in _it may be reprinted wholly or in part without per.uission of the Editor-in-Chief. EDITORIAL BOARD Editor-in-Chief Anne Lovgren, ‘66 Associate Editor Constance Managing Editor Lynne Lackenbach, "$6 Copy E vag G nt rw ged ‘ = Contributing no Banter sdatehnian EL EO Margery Aronson, ’65 and Peggy Wilber, °65 Jean Howarth, ’65 and Stephie Wenkert, B+ Mary Wolfe, '66 sesmesseeeeeeeeeeseecosoneneeees usiness Managers Sobaarlatloncitevleticn Manager EDITORIAL STAFF Charlotte Huntley, °66, Edna Perkins, °66, Pilar Richardson, °66, Jane -. - Walton, °66, Sally Carson, °67, Suzanne Fedunok, '67, Karen Kobler, °67, Susan Kieus, °67, Laura Krugman, °67; Marilyn Williams, °67, Jane Wolman, — °68, Laurie Deutsch, '68, Ginny Gerhart, '68, Erica Hahn, °68, Nanette Holben, ’68, Robin Johnson, '68, Jeanne La Sala, '68, Mary Little, °68, Andrea Lurie, ’68, Barbara Mann, '68, Dari ene Prei ssler, °68, Marion Scoon, '68, Roberta Smith, °68, Peggy Thomas, °68, Jacqueline Williams, °68, ner Winsby; *68, Carol Garten, '68, Marcia Young, "68 An Early Start. The approach of Thanksgiving Vacation brings up a perennial problem for the home-bound Bryn Mawrter. Required attendance at the last class before . vacation is not. only an inconvenience, but frequently. istance. seit # after the last scheduled class es the greatest problems. Labs Thanksgiving vacation, which be rather than ata specified hour, cai _ or late afternoon classes frequently make it impossible for-students to ~ get home in time for Thanksgiving, due usually to bad travel connections. Signing out of the last class is a necessary evil. The faculty is quite justified in ‘insisting upon this rule“for fear of empty classrooms on the last day of lectures. But the problem can be largely alleviated without. abolishing the procedure of signing out. If the beginning of Thanksgiving vacation could be put on the same basis: as Christmas vacation, that is, starting for all students at 12:45 p.m. on the day before Thanksgiving, rather than‘at the end of the last scheduled class, many ,of the problems would be relieved. Students and faculty alike could make resonable travel arrangements , including taking advantage of rides from other schools, and get away early enough to enjoy a real vacation.. Establishing a campus-wide time- for Set vacations would require no major surgery on the academic schedule, nor would it | _affect class attendance at the last lectures. And ‘it would be a- ‘great convenience to both faculty and students. November. Third The election is over. President Johnson has “anand landslidingly © victorious, losing only five Dixiecrat states which. have until now constituted one of the Democrat’s major party problems. Johnson’s election fulfills a prediction made by James Reston last November -- that the American people would place themselves under moderate leadership, conservative, but not radidally conservative. Kennedy’s death fostered a great desire to preserve the status quo, to slip into, rather than stride towards the New Frontier. It spread a cover of fear over the country, and the fear remained to dominate the Presidential campaign. Many people, afraid of Goldwater’s extreme _ and dogmatic views or of Johnson’s stand on. civil rights,.cast their os votes for the other: candidate, the. one who least threatened their . security. ~ One of Johnson’s many problems .is to work snbeicih the fear that elected him. The government. must make substantial progress in the . civil. rights and space. programs,.as well as. in foreign-relations ,-in— -the next four years, and~ must do this in spite of the conservative temper of the nation. The time demands progress; the people, tran- quility. Johnson’s administration faces the dilemma of having to try to embrace both. Witless an. Well, Havectord has done it again. Stealing -hall signout .books, a matchless Hallowe’en trick, was.the latest manifestation of Haverford’s own peculiar sense of humor. Perhaps ‘this sort of prank is gratifying, or even funny, to Haverford ” z* « boys. We, however, find it singularly -unamusing. It inconvenienced a great number of students, especially hall presidents. It repre- ’ sented a particularly unwelcome invasion of privacy. But.most impor- tant, it potentially endangered students: whose whereabouts could only be known by their signouts.' Haverford also exhibited its iii a sense of timing in this prank. October 31, the night of the theft, was also the night of the Bryn Mawr-Haverford Sophomore Weekend Boatride, for which Bryn Mawr students had special 3:30 a.m. late permissions “if it had been imper- — ative to reach a student on that evening, it would have been impossible _ until’ she returned, possibly at 3:30. But if a student had been unable “to return to her hall at 3:30, for any reason, there was no record of her absence iy no- pieces ” _— = for hér. This second onl shatnats. way fenhy.. Since this particular incident has sid it might be worth- while to take some steps to avoid its recurrence. Perhaps Haverford boys. might be informed- of the purpose—of. our signouts; i.e. that-of.-~last-week, the vote originally stood contacting students in cases of real emergency and in checking the ‘safety of each student.. Perhaps it might also be stressed that signout books are private documents, not public reading material. A final distressing aspect of this*theft was that it was done by~ “Haverford freshmen. Although these freshmen might not have ‘been. as well acquainted with Bryn Mawr sigrout procedure as Haverford upperclassmen, they must surely have been indoctrinated with the Haverford attitude of theft as ‘‘amusing’”? and Bryn Mawr’s equally lenient ‘aétitude tn. accepting 4t. This attitude thay also be worth con- Phi cacy Bryn Mawr. -wishes incidents of this type to and Easter holidays, ‘iedhond ae Po expanded responsibilities beyond the traditional chores of precinct .dow. a visit to rhoads the tole ‘of the center round table in’ the ~ Young’ Donkeys and Elephants Praised | ~ For Political Enthusiasm They Raised _ BALTIMORE (CPS) "ne. 1964 election” cantpaigta=: a "aie one in many respects -- may well' go down in history as the first campaign in which young people, particularly collége — _ students, played a major role.. Political leaders of both parties here, taking stock of their post- election strengths and weaknesses, are more than satisfied with the support’ they received: from the younger generation. Most significantly, “both Repub- licans and Democrats are con- vinced that they made a wise decision in giving young people . proliferated within both parties. -JInder. the umbrella group of Young ~ Americans. for Goldwater-Miller, the GOP had the Young Republican National Federation, Youth for ~ Goldwater=Miller, “Young Amer= icans for Freedom, Young Demo- crats for Goldwater, and Young Independents for Goldwater. On the Democratic side, there were the: Young Democrats, Col- lege Young Democrats, and Young Citizens for Johnson. The Democrats were ‘so anxious for the West Coast college vote that they sent noted economist John Kenneth Galbraith on a five-day speaking tour of 12 campuses from Los: Angeles to Seattle. canvassing, telephone surveying ~~. ‘‘I don’t know of a’single college and leaflet distribution, During the campaign, a series | activity on behalf of President of youth and student snared Johnson, except those where the colleges don’t permit on-campus said Eugene | 1 b “political activity,” sal ~app-ze ee... ~~ *"{zens for Johnson. Theroux noted that Johnson selected the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor for his “‘great so- ciety’? speech which was to become campaign. _-*An unprecedented spirit of so- cial concern has tur our stu- dents in the 60’s much more con- ’ scious of their foreign and do- -mestic -responsibilities and op- portunities,’”’ added Theroux. *‘Naturally, much of thls carried - over to the campai More than 15,000 young people turned out for a day-long youth . celebration at the Democratic Na- »tional Convention, marking the as iflew past rhoads iast friday © night i beheld an eight-foot rubber plant floating - uncertainly, but . somehow, charmingly, by a win- - _.Theroux, an official of Young Cit- x the keynote of the Democratic... first time that a major segment ‘of a,cgaventiop b2Adeon civen over to such a purpose. ror the GOP, it was young people, for the most part, who _ _ worked tirelessly for two years. ‘to advance Senator Godldwater’s candidacy before he actually de- clared his availability. And when Goldwater won the GOP nomination he carried. many of these young. people into Republican ‘National Committee posts. Last January, Goldwater said that one of the major factors in convincing him to run was. the enthusiasm and support generated among young people. As an indica- tion of his faith in the generation’s : - ability, he named 36-year-old Dean where there wasn’t some political . Burch as Chairman of the Republi- can National.Committee, Youth rallies in Austin, Pitts- burgh, and Chicago attraced thou- sands of young Republicans and were “successful way beyond our _ expectations,” ‘said. James Harff, = National Director of in for Goldwater=Miller, ~~ Harff, in’ a statement Tl by Theroux, said he had ‘‘ab; lutely no complaints about our — role in the campaign, It was a major role -- greatly expanded from anything in the past. We’re convinced that the future will see even’ more: active youth partici- pation in major Snes.” Tennis Finals | Finals of the Bryn Mawr tennis. singles tournament will be played this’ Sunday at 2:00. Spectators are urged (and welcomed) to attend. ' lowing day revealed the plant, complete with worm, onthe middle. dining room:..wearing ~ a sign: ‘tarthur says -happy. halloween.’’ “why arthur?” i asked a girl whose motherly look identifiedher . Mixer Mix-ups - To the Editor: The improved situation of having ok ae aitieets eeaaiaia - each hall’s mixer and coffee hours “Whe rules the round table. the” °rrentiy needs to be further clare worm is mordred. he’s also from ified., My suggestion would be that mad magazine, but i suppose you the attire to be worn by those don’t read that.’’ , girls attending be announced, In arthur was towering pr oudly be-. this way, unnecessary embarrass- tween two chandeliers. i had to: ‘nent due to improper attire would admit he gave the dining room a® ‘be avoided, . certain symmetry, class A Perhaps ere Ludiobasané: biestsiavels heels” might be made standard but the age of arthur has passed. -attire unless otherwise announced corner. in the. smoker, all eight feet of him, just as he was be- . ginning to bloom. a arthur, born to be. central, by . Gong skirts, maybe) or somewhere virtue ‘of beauty and per'sonality, ‘else. Thank you very much, is once again doomed to be back-. - Caroline Willis: ground, to watch ad infinitum knit- Social Chairman ting, bridge games and stray boy- at In Appreciation friends from. his retired corner. ~ To the. Editor: we join rhoads in lamenting his relegation. ; eae a @legaically, It is. not a usual happening ac applebee prm Mawr was the entire campus non-conformists try . expressing Voting Machines Rigged By Goucher Professors To teach the student body ‘that | ‘tthe price of liberty is eternal: vigilence ~~ and don’t anyone of you forget it!,’? two political science "professors at Goucher College in’ aniive ‘whethe? tie. ‘cule ‘stand by” his statement prior tothe balloting ‘way the East Coast will go.’? He admitted that. the machine shad been fixed so that the first ing machine used in a campus _ 200 votes that Johnson got were mock election for President. carried over to Goldwater, The In the . all-school election held -of-Johnson, at 311-163 in favor. of Senator _ Barry Goldwater. | ‘The results were in by 5 p.m; by 6:30, the entire student body was huddled into little unbelieving en- ~ Claves. Even the @ampus conserva- tives couldn’t believe it. After writing a biting editorial, the editor of the student newspaper -Called--one-of-the- professors.who- -. had set hd the — to deter- z ee people who hadn’t voted began to forgive themselves. Some of the Goldwater fans were furious, - but one admitted: ‘‘I knew it wasn’t | “true anyway.”” The newspaper editor had to write anew editorial. And Goucher agreed that in the ’ defense of liberty, it was necessary _to.watch out for political science. grcieenorss 5 eR ee eo aan eet aye a Bra, [LETTERS TO THE EDITOR joins‘ in to work on a project; nor "casual. May I. plead then, that-the.- . their rebellion in -a- different way - actual vote was 363- 111 in favor SS pe tate ya ee gee Baa aay is it usual for any show of wide- spread enthusiasm. Last Tuesday evening was the exception. On Election Night-more-than.500 students, both graduate andunder- ° graduate, worked. long and hard compiling and processing returns with fantastic efficiency and good humor. More often than not, the jobs were unglamorous and tiring, and yet spirits. continued to run - high with a minimum of complaints: We apologize that many girls had little or nothing to do, while others were continuously kept busy. Work- ing with a large organization such -as~ NES, we had to be réady and manned for any eventuality. The Undergraduate Association and Alliance together would like to thank each gir] individually for. - a job sathaeingtionlly and well- done, Sincerely, Betsey Pinckney i -Pres. of Under. Assoc, Sandy Shapiro Pres. of Alliance College Theater (Continued from page .1) dual function of affording facility of scene charige, andof not distracting, ...the audience’s attention from. the. . ‘actual ‘development: of* the play. Mr. Butman also made special © “ Antony and Cleopatra, numbering. about forty five, is the largest cast ever - used in a single production | here. Cooperation between cast and stage crew hgs.been.excellent, and is particularly notable. in light of --the fact-that over one hundred Bryn Mawr and Haverfordstudents were — involved in one or another aspect -of the play’s production. Featuring Munson Hicks and ~ _Jane Robbins.in the title roles, the play is to be présénted inGoodhart Hall. on Novembér 14 and 15. ‘Tickets will be on sale in Taylor, Hall throughout the coming week. 2s eg - = % ‘that ‘the way Goucher-goes.is.the mention of the fact that the ¢ast of ‘Student admission is’ one dollar, ~~ while sibs admission is a 50. 4 as & ~ 2 COLLEGE NEWS Page Three “Mawr College Theatre _.| 13,_All material may be submitted November 6, 1964 The November syndrome —— silent smokers overflow. _. Music Groups Present - JFK Memorial Concert At.8 p.m. Sunday, November 22, the. combined orchestra and choruses of Haverford and Bryn ““Mawr will present a concert in commemoration of President « -Kennedys The piece tobe perform= ed is ‘*When Lilacs Last in the “Door-Yard Bloom’d” by — Paul Hindemith. The hour long: performance in Goodhart, to be free to the public, will feature guest soloists Ethelwyn Whitmore,mezzo-so- prano, and baritone Mac Morgan, ». formerly of the NBC Opera Com- pany. This requiem has never been performed before in the Philadel- phia area. Though adifficult, chal- lenging piece, Mr. Goodale commented that the singers ‘‘are ‘extremely “ “erithusiastic about it. The circumstances of the poem and music seem extremely appropri- ate.’? . ~ Walt Whitman wrote the poem in Campus Events -Tuésday, November Tenth Andre Gregory; of the Theater — of’ Living Arts in~ Philadelphia will speak in the Common Room. under the auspices of Arts Coun- cil,at 8:30. 8 Thursday, November Twelfth Jean Boorsch, Street Professor of Modern Languages, Yale Uni- - versity, will.speak on ‘‘Sartre et LES MOTS,”’ under the auspices of the Department of French. The lecture will be given in French at 8:30 in the Ely Room. Thursday, November Twelfth Friday and Saturday, November ‘thirteenth and fourteenth, Shakes - peare’s ‘‘Antony and Cleopatra,’’ ‘will: be ‘presented by the Bryn Haverford Drama Club, under the direction of Robert Butman. Tickets ($1.50 for both perfor- mances) will be on sale from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the Goodhart Hall Box Office the week of the per- formance. The play will be pre- .sented in Goodhart at 8 p.m. both nights, 2, and the « Review Deadline for all stories, pleys, ort work, etc. submitted to the Bryn Mawr REVIEW is Friday, November to Faith —- Pembroke ~ East. ‘22 N. Bryn Mowr Ave., Bryn Manno A 5.9126 LA 5-0443 LA 5-6664 James P. Kerchner Pharmacist 30 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr. Pa. | PARVIN’S PHARMACY} |. memory of Lincoln, In 1946 Paul Hindemith set the work to music with the subtitle ‘*A Requiem For “those we love” to commemorate Franklin D, Roosevelt’s death. Three symbols, the lilac, the star, and the bird, pervade the poem. The lilac with its heart- shaped leaves, abundant in Wash- ington at the time of. Lincoln’s funeral, suggested love to Whitman, The star is Lincoln, and the bird is the poet singing his song. The three are drawn together finally in a simple and very beauti- ‘ful chorus. at the end of the piece. Hindemith was ‘moved by deep personal feelings in writing the Re- quiem for Roosevelt. The musician was forced to flee Nazi Gérmany and found asylum in the United States, where he became ateacher at Yale, Roosevelt, as the leader of the American people, was the embodiment of the American ideal for him. His expression of this - ideal in music can now aptly serve © to honor the memory of. John F, Kennedy. _ NSA Offers Low-Rate Insurance- To BMC Students in New Plan Bryn Mawr students are now eains0?*orod..a. new. low-rate life insurance plan under the auspices © of the National Madan Associa- tion. ~ “Two weeks" ago™ all parents “of Bryn Mawr students received a letter from Undergrad President Betsey Pinckney explaining the new “program and including in- formation folders -and an applica- tion form. - The NSA plan offers $10, 000 ' coverage at a Student rate of $20 -a year through age 24, $25 a year ages 25 through 28 and $30 a year ages 29 through 33. -" The present enrollment period . is open to all graduate and under- graduate: students at-NSA member. colleges through November 30. The only. restriction inthe policy is in case of suicide within the first two’ years, Otherwise,, the policy is guaranteed renewable and _non-cancellable by the com-, pany as long as premiums are paid, even if the student becomes “Uninsurable.~ If a student drops out of col- lege, transfers or enters the Armed Forces after- his policy has been issued, he may retain his: insurance at student. rates until after his expected gradua- tion date. Following graduation, the plan . will change . automatically to life — _ coverage (at reduced rates for the first four years) if the student desires. Permanent rates, for. .women are; graduation age 18, "$100. 80; reduced rate for four years, $77.- 83; age 21, $109.30, reduced rate, $86.35; age. 24, $118.20, reduced rate, $95.30; and age 27; $129.10, reduced rate, $106.18. _A_ medical examination is not required for any*NSA student who is in good health as determined by the company’s inspection. B.M.C. -Yale Mental Mixer Proves A Stimulating Affair -. By Sinus Orbeton, °67 The Bryn Mawr-Yale mental .mixer held October 24 was a _.definite success. Both hosts and guests found the event far more enjoyable than traditional free- for-alls. It provided an opportunity ‘for genuine exchange of ideas. The mixer was held in the home of Dr. Andrew Patterson, master of Morse College. His daughter, Ellen Patterson, is a BMC junior in-Merion Hall, Participating inthe mixer were 15 Bryn Mawr girls and: 30 Yalies. The springboard for discussion was a lecture by Jose Delgada, a ““Yatephysiology professor: He spoke on a series of behavior ex- periments he had conducted. Elec- trical impulses canbe sent through electrodes cic in the brain’ . I STATION Sak [EANERS} 10% Discount To Bryn Mawr Students DEL TONE RECORD SHOP | 824 LANCASTER AVENUE _ (Bryn Mawr Theatre Arcade) : BRYN MAWR, PA, PHONE 527-0163 | i FEATURING. ~ Golden Discs of the Past . in ROCK 'N ROLL, FIESTA Sion a AS eet imi . z — wieow ge DS =|) INTRIGUING, HANDMADE. 6 DISCOUNT RECORDS» ; EARRINGS - —— FOR THAT PIERCED LOOK" _ Ardmore. ee : ; Mi 2-0764 . = — . Classics « > Jozz ~ BRYN rece PENNA. 3 ; a Sh ae a eT ome ae Of .a human. or -animal wihibak: They stimulate” the subject to respond in a certain way. Different . areds of the brain control different responses. By recording the effect produced, experimenters have be- gun to map out functional areas of the brain. Enlivened with dry wit,’ Mr. Delgada’s speech was ‘entertaining as well as_ thought-provoking. Afterwards, the listeners. dis- cussed his experiments ‘with him - and with each other. As supper- ~ time approached, every girl found . herself invited. to dinner. A dance with a live band followed. The Pat- ‘tersons kept ‘their home open to the’ girls and their dates through- out the évening. Underwriting the plan is Ameri- can Healthg,ap4 life. Insurance Company, a subsidiary of Com- ‘mercial Credit Company. The - company guarantees that rates cannot be“ increased, restrictions cannot be added, and benefits can- not be reduced in the plan. The student....has the. right, through age 33, to convert ‘the policy to one which will accumu- late cash savings. The student is “also free to cancel the policy ~ at any time. Plans Taking Shape ~ For BMC-Princeton Play — “\¢Hippolytus”” enthusiasts met with Richmond Lattimore and - Mable -Lang last Thursday evening to discuss the play and possible production techniques. Traditional tragic drama masks will be worn by ‘both principal actors and chorus members.,°» Speaking through the masks, how- ever was agreed to be technically _ difficult, since masks would muffle actors voices and in Goodhart “Auditorium and in McCarter’ thea- ter (both acoustically poor) many of -the- lines: would-be: lost. Pre-recording the production - would also give added freedom: to the chorus. Chorus members would not then be faced with the difficult order of speaking and. dancing Director Gregory Presents Lecture On Phila. Theater Mr.. Andre Gregory, from tne Theater of the Living Arts, will speak at an Arts Council Lecture in the Common Room; October 10 at 8:30. The Theater of the Living Arts has. been organized as a non- profit, tax-exempt community foundation by a group of distin- guished Philadelphians to sponsor a resident,*professional play pro- ducing company. : Mr. Gregory,.Artistic Director of the Theater’s productions, is . well known in theater circles. He ‘is with the N. Y. Actors Studio - (Directors Wing); was ‘founder of Writers Studio in New York and co-founder last year of the Seattle ~Repertory Theatre:, Mr, Gregory has. also worked with the Actors Workshop in San Francisco And Bertolt Brecht’s : Berliner Ensemble. He is producer of Jean Genets THE BLACKS, now in its fourth year in New York and was direc- tor of the American Theater at the Brussels World’s Fair. - Unique Office Supply Co: - Office & School Supplies , Greeting Cards —../ "26 N. BRYN MAWR AVE, (BRYN MAWR,; PA. LA 5-9845 simultaneously. Since the play will be presented in Greek, it was felt that the movement of the chorus — should express, as fully as possi- ‘ble, the meaning and emotional tenor of their speeches. Greater ~ freedom in its choreography might | accomplish this. '. Recording of the principal speeches ‘will be done during a complete rehearsal of. the’ play. Recording of the choruses may be “done ‘by Gréek stidénts, who are ~ more fanfiliar with the metrics of Greek poetry. “Carol Cain and Anne ROR met.with Princeton coordinators of the play Friday October 30. At this nfteting it was decided that final casting for principal parts be. held at’ Bryn Mawr and Princeton next week. Time and place of the Bryn Mawr ‘‘Hipploytus’’ tryouts will be announced in the halls. The casting meeting will take the form of a play reading (in English of course) with acting hopefuls alternating on the roles.: Presently under consideration is a joint meeting of Princeton and Bryn Mawr actors and prédiiction workers next weekend. This week- end might ‘include play reading, a lecture on the presentation of -Greek drama in classical times and enjoyment of College Theater’s **Antony and Cleopatra.’» Anyone interesting in- working on ‘¢*Hippolytus” in any capacity should contact Pilar Richardson ‘in Rhoads. GANE SNYDER” 834 Lane ster Avenue Exotic Tea Supplies [SHARP GIRLS WANTED Our company presently plans to pub- lish a book surveying the political attitudes of college students on college campuses throughout the U.S. We are presently in need of several attractive, personadie girls ir. or sr. preferred) with an interest in politics ‘to spend about 5 hours 3 weeks in Nov./Dec. interviewing ‘their friends * and ‘other college students on their politicaf opin- ions from prepared question . forms. Salary is $5.00/hr. Work is chatlenging, interesting and only for responsible, mature individuals. . Mn: this york you will be working with a young, dedicated recent graduate of itical science at Oxford University. To-arrange:an inter- view in N.Y.C. call Mr. Greenberg “@ 212-MU'3-8802 or write Monarch oe Inc., 387 Park Ave. So., N.Y, 16, N.Y. = = ir _ Avoid a guilt complex. ‘ paohie aime tonight—before you find that you can no longer live ‘with your- self. Your parents miss you and you know it. Comfort them with a call. _The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsyivania sic SWeratabeum Sedan” saat cnet SNA ia cue pampcacvigers & sas 4 dcadiiens ~ss sunset inane seas SSS SE dpe ca Bs * Page Four ~ a ° COLLEGE NEWS - @ November 6, 1964 Cooperation of Re ligions Wilson of Harvard Interfaith sponsored a speaker Wednesday, Rabbi Alexander Sha- piro; who spoke “on Religion’ ‘and Race Relations. Rabbi Shapiro, a ~ Pennsylvania resident, has worked _Sets US Premiere_ ‘in Alabama~with- Martin~Luther~ King ‘and the Southern Christian BMC Film Maker For November 18 League will cooperate with Arts Council and Alliance to present a film. study of the life of Negroes in the Philadelphia area, scheduled for .Wednesday, November 18, at 8:30 p.m. in the Common Room, '. (Montage: A ‘study of Negroes in the Philadelphia Area’’ will be narrated by Michele Greene, °65, who made the film, last year.as 3 an honors project for a Sociology course in Race Relations. Ex- penses ‘for production of the 30- minute film were paid jointly by League, Alliance, and Arts Coun- cil. i Michele describes the film 4s an ‘‘impressionistic documen- tary’’; rather than a strictly fac- tual and educational presentation ' ef conditions in Philadelphia, it is a more subjectively arranged -{*montage’”’ of film clips concern- ing general areas of life in the Negro community; housing, educa- tion, jobs, etc. It is designed to give a general impressionistic picture of the scope of life in the Negro com- munities in and near Philadelphia, and to particularly point up con- trasts. between upper-class Negro families who have adopted the values’ of the white society and those Negroes who-live in slums. Michele will provide a spoken _ commentary over the film’s musi- , cal background. She emphasizes _ that the movie ; while impressior- istic, has no — to being *tarty. iB) Art Show Invites. All Creative Talent To Exhibit Efforts A student Art Show will be held on the Bryn Mawr campus in the near future, so creative and even not = so - ‘creative students should take note. Plans are already made; all that’s needed now-is original work - painting, drawing, sculp- dure, prints, photographs, odds and ends done in any manner and in any medium or combination of “ mediums. ~Grace Seiberling, who is in charge of the show, encourages students of all classes to parti- oipate. ‘If you’re embarrassed, go ahead and turn something in anonymously,’’ she stated. Facul- ty members and grad students- are ' also invéted to participate in the show. Entries are to be brought, tagged and mounted, to 255 Rhoads like a Haverford seminar, Leadership Conference. Accordings to Rabbi S problem of a’ religionist iro tiie - cussing religion and race is to deal with the challenge that re- -ligious’ “tdeals “have” never been fully realized. Religion, he said, has never asserted itself in defense of what it professes to believe. As an example he gave the Jewish persecution during World War I. The recent Civil Rights ‘battle * dramatizes religion’s dilemma. The problem, said Rabbi Shapiro, is-a problem of the dignity of man, and since this is an ideal common to all religious ideologies it serves as a unifying factor. ‘“The Negro’s problem is corrupting to the very nature of society.’’ Rabbi Shapiro felt that it is the duty of religion to raise and save society. One area, he said, where the Church has failed is in developing a sensitivity to the oppressions of aun Fallow: ae A ~e ee weeser 6+ =e go to church every week and still continue to” ignore the sufferings and injustices-around him. This, said Rabbi Shapiro, strikes a blow to the dignity of man and thus. to the cause of religion itself. For this reason: Protestant and Jew are involved in a common. effort for the first time. Rabbi Shapiro also stressed the lack of communication. .between both religious denominations and races. This is a basic problem impeding progress. _ There was a brief question and answer period after the lecture, wis" “iavhards Professor of Cherri ~ Clate Needed in Race Conflict Current Professor In Hford Program Dr. E,' Bright Wilson, the T at Harvard, will ‘give the first Philips lecture in a series of three “at 4:30" p.m: ifr Stokes Auditorium~ at Haverford today. He will speak on ‘*Microwave’ Spectroscopy.’’ Tomorrow Dr. Wilson will con- tinue with the same subject in his “lecture ‘Recent Applications of ‘Micrewave ‘Spéctroscopy. 7” OnNo- vember..9, Dr...Paul. Berg, Asso- Professor of “Mathematics at. Stanford University, will com- lete the current Philips series: in delivering a lecture on the ‘Transcription and Translation of the Genetic Message.’’ The lectures are.a-part.of.the Haverford College Philips Visitors program, the fulfillment of a plan ‘ of William Pyle Philips. When he died in 1950, Mr. Philips desig- nated that a portion of the estate ae xe10 “to F1iaverrerd -be used to bring ‘‘distinguished scientists and statesmen’? to the campus... Being accomplished ‘in his field is not the only qualification which ‘the Administration and a Faculty Committee on Philips Visitoi 3 consider in selecting a visitor, however. The candidate must also possess. an ability and willingness to teach students on a personal level. For it is-hoped that each visitor will communicate his know - ledge with such enthusiasm that students will be inspired to an interest beyond the limits of his ‘required college studies. Beginning Judo Students Prepare tor Dark Alleys ‘This semester the BMC compu- ter may take a second look at two schedules. To their regular pro- grams Lynette Scott ’65 and Flor- ence -Castelle ’66 have added an extra-curricular newcomer - Judo 41. although it sounds susptciously the course is actually given at the Main Line Night School. One night a week the 16-member class meets at Radnor Junior High School in Wayne: for one and one half hours of falls, tosses, kicks, and grips, instructor Jerry Goldman, himself a black belt, combines the sport and self-de- fense aspects of judo in his les- sons, ‘Technically, judo is. the sport ‘included within jujitsu, which is the general art of self-defense. Stud- ents are requiredtolearnacertain. number of sport manoeuvresinthe - class as well as defensive devices. The ten week course began with ‘instruction in the proper manner of falling. In: the. next. few -weeks. they will learn to handle knife-and..gun- .PEGGY EVANS. SHAGGY SHIRTS wielding assatlants. Members of the class vary from the young man trying to match his judo-knowing: fiancee to a_ girl ~studying Yoga at the same ‘time. The five girls in the group range in- age from 15 to 22, while the oldest man is inhis middle forties. Volunteers have already offered to administer the final exam. for Lynette: and Florence intimidated Haverford student pro- posed = a dark alley; three*at= tackers per girl, and well-sharp- ened knives. He has at present succeeded, in recruiting only two. BRYN MAWR'S Smart Eating Place KENNY’S WHERE EVERYONE : ON THE MAIN LINE MEETS ° 24.N. Bryn Mawr Avenue 2 LA 5-6623-4 NIGHT DELIVERIES “WHAT'S | NEW IN THE NOVEMBER “ATLANTIC2 Canada: A Special Supplement dis- . Cusses-segregation, the néw Canadian “leadership, Canada’s Struggle for unity, her authors and painters. Timely articles on: What Is Canada?, Can French Canada Stand Alone?, The a Fumiture moving in mi¢rocosmic Edrman. By Peggy Wilber A new *‘game’’ has replaced the ostensibly more serious activities ‘catried on in the Office of the President and her Assistant, Mrs. Whelihan. This involves manipula-° tion of doll-house sized balsa wood pieces of furniture in a two room model of Erdman Hall. The primary interest of the Administration’s new ‘toy’? is to — demonstrate the furniture design * submitted by “the office of Louis Kahn, Erdman’s architect. All rooms will contain a chair with a curving back and arms, which, though more graceful than the standard desk chair, hardly seems _ suitable for typing. The basic desk and bureau ac- tually constitutes a unit, as their edges are constructed to: fit to- gether exactly... Window seats, the sine qua non of any Bryn Mawr dorm,no matter how ‘‘modern,’’ either directly 4 face the windows, or are ‘located in a sideways position. Closets are quite wide and deep,’and:Mrs, Whelihan- reports that all walls will be white, ‘‘for the first. Hage As one | | LAwrence’5-0894 » LAwrence 5-7350 _ SUBURBAN HARDWARE BRYN MAWR, PA. We carry a complete line of as Household Articles = President, Staff Find Diversion _ Arranging Doll House Erdman -at least.’ The purpose of the two-room model is to show, throughmanipu- lation. of the furniture, how two adjoining rooms may be converted into a sitting room and a bed- room for two, if the occupants * desire this arrangement. It is uncertain whether identical curtains will be required for Erd- man’s windows; readers'of the August ’°63 issue of MADEMOI- SELLE will recall College Board member. Jane Goldstone’s .report on ‘‘The Curtain War’? concerning Erdman. Apparently, even at this ‘early stage Mr. Kahn intended to install uniform curtains, much to the dismay of students. If such a uniformity is enforced, Mrs. Whelihar® suggests that one could hang ‘‘college curtains’’ to be seen on the outside. Inside these, however, one’s own individuality could be preserved with paisley, mohatr, or heirloom cheetah drapes. " Mrs. Whelihan wishes to stress that all the above plans are aac tentative. [Classified Ads| FOR SALE Sears Portable Electric*Typewriter, identical in all respects with Smith- “Corona portable electric. Features: twelve inch catriage, automatic keys. Has some special characters suitable for sciéntists. Prof. J.M. Anderson, Phys. Bldg. Sci. "137, A College Student Service of The Main Line's Own Bank | WAMPUM? “Il want to pay by check like Bead money went out with tomahawks. Just like older folks, young men and wo- men going to college should NOI” hed everybody _ else! Can't blame. you. abit! r Trouble With Quebec, Canada as a ; ie ; _North. E: ee Middle Power, Education: Past and have their own Checking 1 Future, The Dilemma of the Canadian : : ; , : ° Writer, and other’subjects.. saa Accounts. q > ’ ‘‘Pomp and Circumstance: C. P.” We're sympathetic. with teen-age : Snow’’ by Robert Adams: An appraisal ideas here at Bryn Mawr Trust. 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