The College Hews YOL. XLIX No. 21 BRYN MAWR, PA. FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1964 © Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1964 20 Cents st ** 3 y" a aa aan cata Neither snow nor rain nor sleet nor hail shall stay these Mawrters from the swift completion of their appointed duties. Some individual with considerable forethought even purchased plastic streamers for the water logged may poles. Sport, Dance, Boat Ride Highlight Soph Weekend A boat ride, spectator sports and a dance will be the highlights of the Sophomore Weekend this Friday and Saturday, May 1 and 2. A rock and roll band will pro- vide music for dancing at the boat ride on the Delaware River. Liquid refreshments will also be served. Rides will leave Pem Arch at 8:15 pem., however those students who have cars are urged to drive in- stead. Although there will be no carni- val as in the past, this year a number of sports events have been planned. At Haverford on Saturday there will, be a cricket match be- tween the Haverford alumni and the college team. Tea will be served around 4 p.m. at the half, Haver- ford also will be competing against Swarthmore in track and tennis at Haverford and in sailing and base- ball at Swarthmore. A ‘*formal preferred’’ dance will end the Weekend Saturday night. Clyde Emerson and his six piece band will play in Founders Hall from 9 p.m. until 2, and re- freshments will be served at mid- night in the Haverford common room. The cost of the entire weekend per couple is three dollars, or two dollars for either the boat ride or the dance. Tickets are on sale in Taylor from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., or they may be purchased at the dock for the boat ride or at the door for the dance. Out-of-town dates may be boarded at Haverford, A blanket 3 a.m. permission has been extended for signouts both Friday and Saturday nights. The combined Haverford-Bryn Mawr Weekend will coincide with Bryn Mawr’s May Day festivities and Haverford’s Alumni Day. Further information about any of the events may be had from the sophomore organizers of the Weekend; Sam Hopkins (Haverford) Dabney Harfst (Pembroke), or Caroline Willis (Denbigh). Academic Awards Announced At Assembly Rolly Phillips Wins Hinchman, Brooke Hall In this morning’s May Day as- sembly, Miss McBride announced the academic awards presented to top Bryn Mawr Scholars, Rolly J. Phillips, ’65, has been named the recipient of both the Maria Le Eastman Brooke Hall Memorial Scholarship and_ the Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Scholarship. The Brooke Hall award is given to the member of the junior class with the highest academic average and is held during the senior year. The Hinchman prize is awarded to a junior for work of special excellence in her major subject and is likewise held throughout her senior year. Rolly is presently taking a double major in Latin andGreek and plans to do an honors paper in Jatin ROLLY PHILLIPS Three Elizabeth S. Shippen Scholarships were awarded today CANDY SIMPSON Class, Katherine R.Silberblatt was awarded the Shippen Scholarship in Foreign Languages and Zdenka Kopal and Candy Simpson were awarded jointly the Shippen Schol- arship in Science, Katherine Silberblatt, an Italian major, is presently studying onthe junior year abroad program in Florence, Italy. Kathy, as afresh- man, played the role of ‘‘Judge’’ in her class show, ‘‘Witch Weigh,”’ Zdenka Kopal, a physics major, came to Bryn Mawr as a sopho- more. She -has worked for the college in computer programming, particularly for the faculty cur- riculum committee. She comes from Cheshire, England. H. R. M. Judy Zinsser Delivers ‘Edict of May’ In true Bryn Mawr fashion, May Day Queen Judy Zinsser spoke this morning in a vein closely corres- ponding to ‘‘the history and phi- losophy of May Day from its be- ginnings to the present day.’’ After commenting briefly on archaic May Days, Queen Judy traced the celebration into the Elizabethan era, then compared Miss McBride Generates New Catalogue, Plots Bulb Rationing, Recharges Infirmary Ed. note. below is the text of the speech which Miss McBride gave this morning at the May Day as- sembly. We are writing the 1964-65 cata- logue and we have come up with a new thrust. I wanted to let you know. Wwe’ve made changes wherever we could this year because the type is to be reset. We tried not to say anything we had said be- fore but we did have to repeat ‘¢philadelphia’’ and ‘*Paoli’’; and we are also using English as our first language. Bryn Mawr was founded by stu- dents in order to bring speakers into warm buildings. It has been increasingly successful in attain- ing this objective and is now by means of agrant from Ford Found- dation seeking other forms of con- frontation. Beginning in fall of 1964, a new plan will improve faculty-student relations. It is expected to involve some delay in the opening of the College, and Thanksgiving dinner will therefore be eliminated. By the new plan, students will move to faculty homes and apart- ments, and faculty with minor chil- dren will move to the residence halls, where they will be freed for informal faculty-student relations. It is understood that faculty will not be disturbed after their lights are out. If, however, lights are out from Sunday to Thursday, new bulbs will be required. In this catalogue the section on courses has been eliminated. The change is made because all Bryn Mawr courses will, after Septem- ber 1964, be those given in other colleges. These courses must be registered by students by July unless they are former Bryn Mawr Courses, in which case they must be given off campus. Students wish- ing to know about former Bryn Mawr courses should consult the Haverford College Library, Cura- tor of Rare Books. Scholarships formerly awarded to Bryn Mawr students have been legally transferred to the United College Office of Financial Aid and Full Time Employment, A few scholarships can be retrieved from colleges with computer systems identical with the Bryn Mawr - Haverford IBM 1620, provided those colleges are the same col- leges in which the student has found a course, A building formerly used as an infirmary has been closed to pro- vide a student union, The old equip- ment of the infirmary is being removed as rapidly as it can be sold since this equipment is not considered appropriate for a stu- dent union. No new equipment is planned for the faculty in the residence halls, other than the light bulbs -- which will be furnished each Friday morning. Students moving into faculty housing will have certain needs for new equipment, These will be CONSIDERED each Fri- day morning! and contrasted this with the ultra modern, mechanized, militarized Soviet May Day. Comments ye queene, ‘they don’t hop, they march instead.’’? Being a Quaker college, Bryn Mawrters, of course, ignore these modern refinements and rest quietly in the Elizabethan tradition. Being a modern and perceptive monarch, Judy theorized on the “Spirit of May Day.’? She sur- mised that Bryn Mawrters are too tortured and introverted and then suggested that, as a cure for these ills, the May Day spirit be insti- tuted as a year-round tradition. She cited several changes which have helped to contribute to this extension of may day festivity. The new ‘fopen door’? -- or rather open dorm -- policy on Friday nights helps us share our spirits - May Day, of course - far into the night. The ‘¢men inthe rooms’? rule allow more timid Bryn Mawr- ters to sing, hop and dance with similarly minded males in the relative privacy of their own rooms, One step, however, has been rather dismal, i.e., the extension of library hours. ‘This was a back- ward step,’’ saith ye queen, with an irony vast and mincing, Also, BMC’s myriad ipso facto organization present intriguing possibilities. ‘‘Why not make Dance Club ipso facto too?’’ When queried about her sudden ascendency to the May Day throne, Judy first said, ‘‘The whole idea appeals tremendously,’’ and then confessed (whisper) ‘I have a Napoleon complex, you know.’’ Candy Simpson, a chemistry major, has been offered a Ford to three members of the junior Grant for summer research, Ann Allan, a junior, was chosen by the history department to re- ceive the Elizibeth Duane Gillespie Scholarship in American History. A present resident of German House, Ann plans to visit Germany this summer. Jane Hutchins, a British Grad- uate Scholar was awarded the Am- erican Academy of Poets Prize. This prize is awarded to the stu- dent who submits to the English department the best poem or group of poems. Sallee Horhovitz, ’64, received the Bain-Swiggett Poetry prize. This prize is awarded annually by a committee of the Faculty on the basis of work submitted. Sallee is co-editor of the 1964 Yearbook. The Katharine Fullerton Gerould Memorial Prize was awarded to Barbara Wyler, ’65. Honorable mention went to Pat Collins, ’65. Barbara, an anthropology major, has been active in Arts Council. She is presently studying poetry and prose composition in the Ex- perimental writing course ZDENKA KOPAL Connie Rosenblum and Diane Willis received the Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Scholarships in English. Connie, a junior English major won the Kilroy award for excel- lence of work in second year or advanced courses in English. Con- nie has served for three years on the COLLEGE NEWS, and has held the offices of Member at Large to the Editorial Board and, pre- sently, Associate Editor, She was recently elected editor of the 1965 Yearbook. Diane Willis received the Kilroy award for the best essay written during the Freshman Comp. course. She wrote her prize-win- ning essay on ULYSSES. a KATHERINE SILERBLATT Page Two THE COLLEGE NEWS Friday, May 1, 1964 THE COLLEGE NEWS Subscription $3.75 — Mailing price $5.0C—Subscriptions may, begin at any time, under Entered as second class matter at the Bryn Mawr, Pa. Post Cree, ndet a Post. the Act of March 3, 1879. aprteenoe for re-entry at the Bryn Mawr, Office filed October 1st,1963. Second Class Postage paid at Bryn Mawr, Pa. FOUNDED IN 1914 Published weckly during the College Year (except during Thanks- iving, Christmas and Ezster holidays, and during examination weeks) n the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Regional Printing Com- pany, Inc, Bry Mawr. Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. The College News is iully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears In it may be reprinted wholly or in part without pcr.uussion of the Editor-in-Uhief. EDITORIAL BOARD Editor-in-Chiet Lov. Associate Editor dito Anne Constance Rosenblum, ’65 caer E ood s ths ohs bn goimndconsasevas tuisp deckacomcoscoocesbsteueiiteg “cuealiioas Elizabeth Greene, ’65 Make-up Editor .» Lynne Lackenbach, ’66 Member-at-Large To Be Elected Campus News Editor ; coos « JOAN Cavallaro, 766 Contributing Editors Margery Aronson, 65 and Gail Sanger, ’65 Business Managers ....0.000....ccce. e Jean Howarth, °65,. Stephanie Wenkert, ’65, Subscription-Circulation Manager Sas Magnusson, ’66 BUSINESS STAFF June Boey, °66; Eve Hitchman, ’66 EDITORIAL STAFF Mary H. Warfield, 64; Mary H. Smith, °65; Pegey Wilber, 65; Ann Bradley, ’66; Karen Durbin, °66; Norma Ford 66; Edna Perkins, 66; Sandra Shapiro, °66; Jane Walton, ’66; Pam Barald, 67; Sally Carson, 67; Marg Eggers, ’67; Suzanne Fedunok, 67; Nancy Gellman, 67; Babs Keith 62; Susan aus, 67; Karen Kobier, 67; Laura Krugman, 67; Alison New ouse, 67; Ruth Rodisch, "67; Andi Saltzman, ’67; Penny Small, '67; Andrea Stark. ‘67; Marilyn Williams, ’67; Jane Wolman, ’67; Barbara Termin, 67. Penny Milbouer, °67 Ciaudia Kempt, 65 SUBSCRIPTION STAFF Dabney Park, Rock; Kat MacVeagh, Pem West; Gail Chavenelle, Pem East; Ellen Simonoff, Rhoads; Connie Maravell, Denbigh; Lynette Scott, Spanish House; Ruth Peterson, Merion; Susan Orbeton, Radnor; Ruth Rodisch, College iaoe Harriet Swern, Wyndham; Margaret Vogel, Batten; June Boey, Leslie "66 Faculty Prerogatives The letter recently sent to THE COLLEGE NEWS (see ‘‘Letters to the Editor’? column) and every Bryn Mawr Faculty member has prompted considerable concern and disturbance among faculty mem- bers and students alike, Certain unfortunate aspects of this letter are immediately apparent. Many faculty and students feel that the examples cited of lack of faculty interest in student affairs and social problems are not valid ones, Faculty members may choose other means for their personal participation in causes such as the civil rights movement, And it is certainly their prerogative to choose the directions, as well as the type and number, which their personal concerns may take, It is certainly not a student prerogative to demand interest or participa- tion in any particular effort. The letter also cited poor faculty attendance at the Civil Rights Conference and the Vietnam discussions, Students, as well, might be questioned about their attendance and interest in the recent ‘‘Soviet Women’’ symposium, The most detrimental aspect of this letter, however, was its mis- representation of the writers’ honest desire to improve student- faculty relations. These students distributed flyers to the faculty containing constructive proposals for improvement of this relationship which far better clarified their intentions and motives than their letter did. We hope the faculty will consider the content and intention of the flyers presented to them more indicative of student intentions than the tone of the letter received Wednesday, Non-partisan Protest Almost every issue which has caught the public attention recently has become confused, rightly or wrongly, with the civil rights question. An obvious example of this is the recent activity in Chester, which was originally sparked off by a protest against sub-standard and inadequate school facilities, The same confusion of issues is likely to result as a result of the legislative move to revoke the charter of Tougaloo (Miss.) College, It is true, of course, that Tougaloo has been the site of active civil rights protest. But this consideration has no bearing upon the fact that the ’ legislature’s move is a direct affront to the students’ basic right to an education. The issue does have a relation, indirectly, tothe civil rights question. Southerners have often made the charge that Negroes, because they have had an inferior education, are unqualified to vote. If this is true, Negroes will surely not become better educated by the closing of the few Negro colleges in the South, However, this question must not be confused with civil rights. Neither liberals nor conservatives have any legitimate reason for re- fusing to support Tougaloo’s protest. The right to an education is a fundamental part of our laws. Essentially it is the reason we are in college. Any affront to this right demands protest and indignation. Help! It seems almost too beautiful a day to complain about something as sordid as this year’s exam schedules. After all, maybe we should be merrily frisking around the gaily-streamered maypoles (assuming they’re still here), leisurely munching our strawberries, or surrepti- tiously practicing hoop rolling in the Cloisters. But it is precisely because of the exam schedules that many of us are unable even to consider doing any of these things. The arguments for and against self-scheduled exams have been bandied about for too long to have any potency repeated again here. Students plead for them; faculty and administration object onthe grounds that we are hereto learn responsibility andthat tohave four exams the first days of exam week is the ideal way toteach us such responsibility, They warn us that later in life we will have to endure hardships far beyond that of having too many exams in too few days, that we must prime ourselves for such hardships NOW, But the lack of self-scheduled exams is highly inconsistent with Bryn Mawr’s policies in other areas of academic life. For example, all stu- dents are required to write their exams under the same physical con- ditions -- ie, in the same room -- although they are free to leave the exam room any time during the three hours, This is a sensible rule, But where is the logic in assuming that a student who has had ten days to study is writing under the same conditions as one who has had exams on the three or four days preceding? The success of the Haverford system has been observed upon and commended, Eventually it will have to replace Bryn Mawr’s inefficient, cumbersome, and basically unfair system. It is unfortuante, however, that so many students are going through such agony (hardly a strong enough word to describe this year’s exam schedules) before such a change can be made, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Academia? Ed. note Copies of this letter were sent by the undersigned students to members of the faculty on Wed- nesday morning. To The Editor: Are the educational aims of the Bryn Mawr Faculty purely aca- demic?* We--and a great number of students-- are appalled by the lack of faculty attendance at lec- tures and conferences on current and critical problems. For exam- ple, there were no more than ten faculty members at the Civil Rights Conference in February, and none at the recent discussion of the problem in South Vietnam held on the Bryn Mawr campus. This dis- cussion arose from a situation which has IMPORTANT implica- tions for academic freedom. In what way is the faculty concerned with the student? Do they wish to prepare the student for effective living, as a member «4 society; or do they wish to perpetuate the academic isolation of the student? We do not object to academic pur- suits as such. But we maintain that there is a larger frame of reference without which academic pursuits are meaningless. We want to accept our responsibilities; we also want the faculty to accept theirs. * Webster’s NEW COLLEGI- ATE DICTIONARY, G, and C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass., 1956, p. 5: syn: pedan- tic, bookish, scholastic, theo- retical, speculative. Anne B, Cross °64 Elizabeth Gibbs ’64 Katharine Lawrence ’66 Ed. Note: This letter was received after the above letter had been received by the NEWS and the faculty. To The Editor; We would like to apologize for any offense our letter may have caused, when certainly none was intended. Our purpose was to pro- mote discussion on theimportance of faculty-student relations in the over-all educational process, Lack of attendance at confer- ences and lectures is not our pri- mary complaint, In this respect- the students are as much at fault as the faculty, Our concern is with the exchange of interests andideas which are often stimulated by lec- tures. We feel adeep committment to encourage this exchange and to . perhaps improve it. We are very sorry that our! letter was ambiguous and conveyed the impression of insolence. We sent personal copies toeach mem- ber of the faculty and the admin- istration because we wanted them to see it before it was published in The College News. Our purpose in writing this letter was sincere: our desire was for greater com- munication between faculty and students outside the classroom, applebee in the stream, in the night maypole streamers float astray, but now they’: « back, waving bright to greet the first of may. violets, tulips, dogwood, quince fill maybaskets today sleepy sophomores sing and wince st dawn of first of may. maypole dancers step and hop in sheets or finer white array but when the dragon comes, they stop and bow to early may. forget the dawny warmth of dream, wake up! rejoice! be gay! think of strawberries and cream and greet the first of may, happy may day, applebee Follow up proposals to promote this exchange were handed out at the faculty meeting on Wednesday, April 29th. I. A joint faculty-student coffee hour in the Deanery on Monday and Thursday. Greater exchange of ideas be- faculty and students, A. More expression of faculty opinion in theCOLLEGE NEWS. B. Informal talks by faculty about activities in which they are interested or have participated. C. Availability of professors other than in office hours, Students, in turn; Ae Will invite professors to dinner more often, B. Will have professors totea in the rooms, C. Will set up a central bul- letin board informing the faculty of student events, IV. Panel discussions by members of faculty on current events, Anne B. Cross ’64 Elizabeth Gibbs ’64 Katharine Lawrence ’66 Chorus To the Editor: Il. Ile I would like to announce the new Officers of Chorus for 1964- 1965: Donna Macek, Vice- President; Judy Goodwin, Sec- retary; Janet Brown, Librarian; and Martha Beveridge, Librarian, We have exciting new plans such! as system and order, and the creation of a vibrant atmosphere in which each member can con- tirbute and gain as an important part of a whole group; this, in turn, will be reflected in the quality of the singing. Our first program next year is for President Kennedy’s Mem- orial on Nov. 22, when Paul Hind- ermith’s arrangement of Walt Whitman’s WHENLILACS LAST IN THE DOORYARD BLOOM’D will be performed with the Haverford Col- lege Glee Club, Through each member, Chorus will be an integral part of College life. We hope that non-Chorus Members will take an increasing interest in us, for Chorus is an important group, if not the only one, that represents our College to the outside world. We welcome constructive criticisms and all suggestions. Thank You. Mako Yamanouchi ‘66 President, Bryn Mawr College Chorus Tougaloo To The Editor: Monday, May 4, at 9:45 p.m., in the Roost, Undergrad will discuss a letter received from NSA, con- cerning the proposed revocation of the charter of Tougaloo University. The pending bill before the Mis- Sissippi Legislature evidentiy will be passed unless pressure of some sort can be exerted onthe lawmak- ers and the governor. Tougaloo has been actively in- volved in the civil rights movement in the South, and has been respon- sible for civil disturbances. How- ever, the closing of a University does not seem to be a legitimate way to counteract these distur- bances. On these grounds, Bryn Mawr could have been closed in the 1900’s for having Suffragettes who were responsible for riots. Undergrad hopes to pass areso- lution supporting the University, which will be sent to legislators and the governor. Such a resolution is not expect- ed to be very effective. However, it is the only contribution we can make at this time. A more effective stand could be made by the Bryn Mawr faculty and by the National Federation of Teachers, The passage of this bill would establish a dangerous precedent and it is hoped that our faculty are sufficiently concerned with this threat to education to take action. The National Federation coula encourage Mississippi teachers to threaten resignation, in the event of the bill’s passage. Perhaps the lawmakers would bet- ter understand this kind of pres- sure. Sincerely, Gill Bunshaft Vice-President of Undergrad and NSA representative Schuetz Warblers To The Editor; With reference to your article “Schuetz Warbling Wows Alum- nae’’ (April 22), I felt that the mem- bers of the Schuetz Group as well as other Bryn Mawr and Haverford ‘friends of Schuetz’ would be inter- ested in the following comments. The first comes from the President of the Bryn Mawr Clubof Washing- ton, D.C., Mrs. Frank Hammond, who writes: *¢, eI cannot tell you how much all our alumnae and guests en- joyed your delightful concert! Believe me--the combined group --is a most successful ‘experi- ment’--and the music was just magnificent... You are wonder- ful ‘public relations agents’ for Bryn Mavwr...’’ The second comes from Eliza- beth Reed (’62) who was in charge of the Washington arrangements for the Group: **The Bryn Mawr Alumnae Club was delighted with your Wash- ington spring concert, and I am happy to tell you that the Hein- rich Schuetz Singers raised more money for the local schol- arship fund than any similar group has done before. Congrat- ulations on a job well done, and we look forward to a future con- cert...” It is wonderful to be appreciated, - and I hope that future members of the Group will enjoy return trips as much as we enjoyed this one. Sincerely yours, Anda Polyzoides President of the Bryn Mawr- Haverford Schuetz Group Consideration? To the Editor: I am very much disturbed by the thoughtless negligence of people on this campus. What is wrong when professed interest in a given subject fails to carry through to action? Why is it that Bryn Mawrtyrs feel that they take on no responsibility when their expressed interests create a pro- ject? Are they aware of the time and effort which goes into plan- ning activities on this campus? The immediate cause of my annoyance is the response to the Interfaith-sponsored trip to the Circle Mission of Father Divine in Philadelphia. The trip was plan- ned for Thursday evening, and twenty-five names were signed on the list in Taylor. On Thursday two girls showed up at Pem Arch, The other girls seem to have forgotten or simply decided to study, at the last moment. Because of the interest shown, I had asked two Haverfordians to drive into Philadelphia, this in addition to the student-driven college station wagon. Three cars were ready and waiting on Thurs- day evening, driven by people will- ing to sacrifice this time to take twenty-five ‘‘interested’? Bryn Mawr students to Philadelphia. Can the point be clearer? Such total lack of responsible action hardly seems compatible with our Status of intelligent, educated young women - ‘leaders of our so- ciety’? in the not-so-distant fut- ure? Courtesy is an important quality in anyone. Sincerely, Carly Wade President of the Interfaith Assoc, Friday, May 1, 1964 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three Undergrad on May Day: Vietnam Film Gives New Perspective Destruction Deplored Undergrad opened last Monday night with a discussion of policy concerning destructive May Day activities, It was pointed out that in the past Bryn Mawr students have actively participated in plans to carry off or damage maypoles. It was hoped this year that Bryn Mawr students would not aid or Arts Council Maps Next Year’s Plans: Tickets and Talent Arts Council met Tuesday after- noon to organize and outline its program for next year, President Diana Hamilton said that the plans are centered around encouraging the students both to participate in Arts Council activities and to ex- ploit their own talents. New projects for the Council in- clude a poster committee, compos- ed of willing and able slaveysfrom each hall; a Haverford-Bryn Mawr calendar of events, (closer cooper- ation and coordination between the cultural and aesthetic elements of both campuses will presumably enrich each, and next year the Haverford and Bryn Mawr Councils hope to work together to greater advantage); organized trips to pri- vate collections in the area; and a regular movie series ‘‘featuring GOOD movies, Bogart, Chaplin, maybe even Fellini.’’ An ‘tespecially exciting’’ inno- vation next year will be a contest, sponsored by Council and the Re- view, for original one-act plays. The winners will be directed in an experimental presentation of, by, and for students. Arts Council will continue to provide the symphony series in September and tickets for various events throughout the year, A tic- ket commission will try to make tickets more available by pooling unused tickets and redistributing them, Arts night will be produced as usual, and a program of speak- ers will be maintained with em- phasis on lecturers of interest who are area experts, for example from the Barnes collection or Philadelphia Museum of Fine Arts. Student suggestion and interest are the factors that can and should determine Council’s program, Di- ana Hamilton and your hall rep- resentative are approachable and receptive .o your ideas. Lists will be posted in Taylor next week for nominations to Secretary and Treasurer. Math, Anthro, Economics Departments abet any Haverford plot which would involve destructive activi- ties, Extra May Day activities dis- playing ‘‘wit or humor’? is fine. The Haverford College Varsity Marching Society and Auxiliary Fife and Drum Corps will enter- tain Bryn Mawrters on May Day Eve from 10:30 to 11:30 p.m. on the Bryn Mawr campus, Undergrad will put out a com- bined Haverford-Bryn Mawr Weekly Calendar for the rest of the year. The Calendar will be distributed to each student. If the Calendar is well received and financially practical, it will be continued all next year. Various committees were chos- ej. 4dded to the present College Inn Committee of Joan Cavallaro (Head), Danny Laylin, Dabney Har- fst, and Babs Keith are Sibyl Klee- man, Steffi Lewis, Lynn Scholz, Ellen Siminoff and Stephanie Van Hoorn, The Committee will elect a new head this spring. Co-Chairmé:i cf the Library Council are Ruth Rodisch and Chris Eliot. Head of the Lost and Found Committee is Gwen Prosser, Ei- leen Ferrin and Barbara Lieb will run the Furniture Sale for next year’s Freshmen Week, The Foreign Students Commit- | tee, which plans amon.: things to entertain foreign students on cam- pus a few days before Freshmen Week begins, consists of Judy Baer, Pam Barald, Mary Delaney, Kathy Grossman, Sarah Matthews, and Mako Yamanouchi. A new list for volunteers for Parents Day Committee Heads wit:i ve posted in Taylor, requesting that girls sign up in pairs. Lists will also be posted for Travel Bureau and the Library Record and Li- brary Picture Committees, Evokes Rebuttal, Vigorous Dissent By Gail Sanger That even propaganda cannot be summarily dismissed as falacious was convincingly demonstrated Monday night. The film present- ing the North Vietnamese perspec- tive on the war in So. Vietnam, Soggy senior songmistress Bobbie Hurwitz reefs in streamers from may while not entirely acceptable in emphasis, certainly presented dis- turbing reminders of recent his- torical events in that war-torn country, It cannot be denied that the U.S, categorically disregarded the Gen- ill. pole in anticipation of fresh onslaught of rain. Panofsky Presents Thesis On Death’s Positive Side A quotation from St. Ambrose -- “«Mors testimonium vitae”’ -- pro- vided the subject of a lecture presented by art historian Erwin Panofsky on Monday night. Mr. Panofsky, a member of Princeton’s Institute of Fine Arts, ~ (EAH yf ff ERS Ni W St) Offer a Wide Variety of New Courses Several entirely new courses will be offered at Bryn Mawr next year. In addition, many stan- dard courses, especially those be- ing taught by new professors, will also undergo changes in approach and subject matter. New courses are being offered in economics, political science, sociology and anthropology, and philosophy. The Department of Economics will provide a new advanced course (intended primarily for seniors) entitled ‘‘American Economic De- velopment.”’ Mr. Duboff, who will be teaching at Bryn Mawr for the first time, has announced that the course will discuss ‘long-run trends in the indicated macro-economic variables’’ with emphasis on such topics as industrial development and technical change, the Ameri- can system of manufacture, and the dual economy. No special knowledge of statistical mathe- matics is required, he noted, Three new courses will be avail- able for students interested in political science. Miss Leighton will lecture on ‘‘Values, Science, and Politics.’”’ Mr. Brass, a new professor, will teach a course on ‘Government and Politics inSouth Asia, India, Pakistan and Ceylon.” These areas were not covered last year, There will also be a new 200 course entitled ‘Politics of the Developing Areas,’’ ‘The Soviet System’’, taught by Mr. Hunter at Haverford, has always been in- cluded in the curriculum sche- dule; next year two more Haver- ford courses will also be listed: “Public Administration and Bureaucracy’’, by Mr. Diamant, and ‘African Politics’, by Mr. Glickman. . The Departments of Sociology and Anthropology have announced three additional courses. There will be an advanced ‘‘History of Anthropology’, taught by Mr. Hallowell, a noted anthropologist formerly at Penn, “Social Stratification’’, dealing with class and status systems in the U.S.A. and other countries, is the title of a course to be taught by Mr. Levantman, There is also a mysterious course ‘208 ae whose content is ‘‘as yet undeter- mined.” Philosophy, History, and Math- ematics have also announced changes, ‘‘American Philosophy” will be a new feature in the Phi- losophy Department. The History Department has expanded ‘‘Topics in the History of the Modern Near East’, by Mr. Silver, from a half-year course to a year course. «Advanced English History” will hereafter cover a specific field each year. Next year, it will be “The Victorians’’, taught by Miss Robbins. The Mathematics Department would like to point out that there are two first year courses, In- stead of the standard ‘‘Calculus, with Analytic Geometry’’, the non- math Major might like totake ‘*Al- gebra and Probability Models’’, where the emphasis is on princl- ples and fundamental concepts of mathematics, spoke under the Bushbeck Mem- orial Fund, ' He began his illustrated lecture with a tomb by Bernini in St. Peter’s and referred to Bernini’s changes in emotion and icono- graphy. The customary virtues are present, but the personage of Death is absent. Rather, there is a skeleton, a winged feminine fi- gure, holding a book in which is inscribed the Pope’s name, for Death keeps a record of his vic- tims. The basic meaning of the tomb, however, is that ‘‘only in death does it become known what we are,’”’ The commemorative function of winged death is expressed in funerary monuments, In the Tomb of Alexander VII, death and time are fused: death becomes the vin- dicator of time. Here’ the sarcophagus is partially con- cealed, and more personifications are added, They include theologi- cal and moral virtues, but a fourth, ‘twho really doesn’t belong to the club’’, is added -=- Truth, Truth was never considered a virtue in Christian theology, but is included here to express the revelation of truth by time. The act which has terminated the Pope’s life will bring out his true essence, Death immortalizes his victims, Panofsky stressed the dual em- phasis upon the saving of the soul and the immortality of the name. Death is the ultimate test ofa good name, St. Ambrose expressed this idea in the passage which contained the title of the lecture. He continued: “How can we praise a man before he has reached the harbor?’’ He described death as the fulfillment of our service, as a power which shapes our lives. The same idea is present in Michelangelo’s tomb to the Magni- fici in the Medici Palace, as well as in an engraving by Veneziano, In the engraving, one can see a debate between death andthe devil, ie., the forces of good as opposed to the devil, in which death success- fully refutes the devil’s claims. Panofsky concluded with a theory relating this engraving to the de- sire for sanctification of the Ital- ian prophet Savanorola after his death, the jawless skeleton in the engraving representing Savano- rola, eva Agreement of 1954, It cannot be denied that there are masses of foreign troops in Vietnam---U,S, troops; that these were introduced only on the invitation of a U.S, puppet dictator--Diem; that the free elections scheduled for 1956 never took place under Diem; that the repressive nature of the total- itarian Diem regime recruited strong anti-American feelings still evident in South Vietnam, It cannot be denied the U.S, has employed chemical warfare inthis war, chemicals banned at the Hague, chemicals lethal to children and animals, ‘Strategic hamlets,’’ although unsuccessful as a military strategy, continue to be the mecha- nism of forced relocation of indig- inous South Vietnamese, The movie stirred up some vig- orous dissent and instructive re- buttal, Russ Stetler displayed ad- mirable composure in the face of antagonistic baiting by some of the audience and was prepared to an- } swer legitimate questions ina dig- nified and factual manner, He re- viewed the fate of Malcolm Brown, the AP reporter whose reports of , the resistance by the National Lib- eration Front were suppressed during the four years in which the U.S. denied the existence of the people’s resistance group, This group is now defamed with the title ‘*Viet Cong,’’ a U.S, inven- tion to abbreviate Vietnamese Communist, The _ practical considerations alone point to the necessity of withdrawal of our troops before Vietnam becomes another Korea or a confrontation as dangerous as Cuba, The unavoidable fact is that WE ARE LOSING THE WAR IN VIETNAM and nothing short of an all-out attack on North Vietnam, possible including tactical atomic weapons, will gain this military objective. The moral issue seems clear cut to this observer, It’s certainly about time the perspec- tive of the resistance group was no longer suppressed in U,S, news reporting. Five BMC Juniors Given Ford Grants For Summer Work Five grants from the Ford Foun- dation will enable Kathryn Terzian Joan Deutses, Johanna Frodin, Michele Greene, and Nancy Sours to start hover’s workthis summer. Chosen by a committee of faculty from the Social Science and His- tory departments, the five girls will work in four departments. Kathryn Terzian, economics major, will spend the summer in Europe, investigating the Common Market, Joan Deutsch, history major, will do research in Chicago on the Immunity Act of 1954. Johanna Fordin, economics major, will go to Columbia to start her project. Michele Greene anthropology major, will travel to the Southwest to study Indians; and Nancy Sours, political sci- ence major, will use her grant to study civil rights issues in the South. The stipend allows the student to devote full time to research and to lighten the amount of work during her senior year. The inter- ested junior also has the oppor- tunity for independent work under a faculty advisor. This is the fifth summer that the Ford Foundation has given the money to the Col- lege. The faculty committee selects the students on the basis of her project and the methods and mat- erials she plans to use. A student from any department who has the desire to work on a project re- lating to public affairs is eligible. Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS Friday, May 1, 1964 SOC UAPAW MMOPmP VU MMO RPyee> Hen STH HERS Friday, May 1, 1964 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five MUSIC In And Around Philadelphia Van Cliburn will present a concert at the Academy of Music Friday, May 1, at 8:30 p.m. The program will include Four Intermezzi, Opus 4, by Schumann; the Appassionata Sonata, by Beethoven; Barber’s Sonata, Opus 26, and Chopin’s Sonata in B Minor, Opus 58, Also on Friday evening: Ray Charles, the Raelets, and orchestra will perform at Convention Hall, at 8:30, THEATER *‘Camelot’’ goes into its last two weeks at the Shubert, with Anne Jeffreys, George Wallace, and Arthur Treacher, Two plays, Arthur Miller’s ‘“‘A Memory of Two Mondays,’’ and “‘George’s Moon,”’ by Jules Feiffer will be presented Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings for five weeks, at the Neighborhood Players Theater, Starting Saturday, May 2, at the Bucks County Playhouse in New Hope, Pa., is Molnar’s comedy, ‘The Play’s the Thing,’’ with Genevieve. A new play, ‘‘The White House,”’ with Helen Hayes, Fritz Weaver, and James Daly, begins Monday, May 4, at the Forrest, FILMS Now playing at the Lane is Japanese crime thriller, ‘‘High and Low,’’ directed by Akira Kurosawa and starring Toshiro Mifune, “Point of Order,’ a 97-minute documentary of the 1954 Army- McCarthy hearings taken from the television footage, is currently at the Trans- Lux. Ermanno Olmi’s ‘‘The Fiances,” a poignant drama of separated lovers, starts Friday, May 1, at the Yorktown. **Ladybug, Ladybug,”’ the story of a nuclear attack on schoolchildren in the Delaware Valley, is now playing at the Bryn Mawr. “Lilies of the Field,’’ starring Academy Award winner Sidney Poitier, continues at the Ardmore, Year’s Final Chamber Concert Shows Only Spotty Excellence By Nancy Milner, '65 The final performance of the season in the series of chamber music concerts presented by the Student Ensemble Group under the direction of Mme Agi Jambor was given Sunday afternoon. The event was well-attended, and it isunfor- tunate that the performance as a whole did not live up to the expec- tations aroused by the last recital of this genre, There were, how- ever, some very exciting moments, Barbara Dancis and Mme Jam- bor played superbly the first move- ment of the Brahms SONATA #2 IN A MAJOR for violin and piano. The performance was a spontan- eous recreation of the romantic expressiveness of the music. The rapport established between the two artists permitted the full in- terpretation of the lyrical Allegro amabile. The effect was rather moving. The concert opened with Mo- zart’s SONATA IN C MAJOR, For this piece, Emily Singer joined Miss Dancis in a technically pol- ished rendering. I especially en- joyed the Andante sostenuto in which the performers brought out the richness of the melodic line, The Allegro movements were slightly heavy in legato sections, but these were balanced by an understanding of the contrasting lightness and depth of Mozart’s music, The Schubert QUARTET IN A MINOR was rehearsed solely under the direction of Barbara Dancis, who deserves great praise for her dramatic interpretation of the work, It is indeed unfortunate that the group was out of tune through so much of the piece, for the dis- cordant sections broke the spell Interfaith Presents Morality Lecture Millicent Carey McIntosh will speak on Wednesday, May 6, in Interfaith’s final lecture of the year. Mrs. McIntosh, a Bryn Mawr alumna and mother of two sons, is President Emeritus of Barnard College, Vice-President of the Bryn Mawr College Board of Trus- tees, and amember of the college’s Board of Directors, Her subject is ‘*Has the Young- er Generation a New Morality?’’ As a member of the board which is responsible for approving the new Self-Gov, legislation concern- ing such rules as meninthedorms and two o’clock permissions, Mrs, McIntosh’s comments on the sub- ject should be of special interest to the undergraduate members of the college. created by the movements of har- monious perfection. A LARGHETTOFOR BASS CLA= RINET AND PIANO by Anton Dvo-- rak was the most recently com- posed piece on the program. Bar- bara Rohrmayer brought a deep resonance from her instrument, but she never lost sight of the line of the music. Interest was main- tained through the intensification of long, held notes on the clarinet, while Emily Singer balanced this sonority with contrasting intrica- cies on the piano. The program closed with a per- formance of the CONCERTO IN D MINOR FOR TWO VIOLINS AND PIANO by J. S. Bach. Marcia Fullard used a viola bow, and to this may be attributed, at least partially, the excessive heaviness which greatly distorted the effect of the music. The contrapuntal elements were lost in the quantity of sound produced. Robin Kadison played the other violin, and the whole was accompanied by Mme Jambor on the piano, The concert was excellent in part although it lacked the general co- hesiveness of previous recitals, Nevertheless, we look forward to an exciting and interesting season next year, ‘Memory’ Key to Staging and Direction Of Williams’ Drama, ‘Glass Menagerie’ A FRAGILE MOMENT during a rehearsal of Tennesee Williams’ ‘‘The Glass Menagerie.’’ The : cast includes (left to right) Margaret Edwards as Amanda, Phil Hawkins as Tom, Lorena Gill as Laura, and Yogi Herring as Jim. The play will be presented by the Bryn Mawr College Theatre and the Haverford Drama Club at Roberts Hall, under the direction of Robert Butman. On May 8th and 9th the Bryn Mawr and Haverford Drama Clubs will present a production of Ten- nessee Williams’s “The Glass Menagerie.”’ This play differs from many of Williams’s other plays in that its characters are not the perverted people that one finds, for example, in ‘‘Streetcar Named Desire.’’ The cast is small; a mother raised in the southern tradition of gentility; her son, restless to leave his family to seek a new life; her daughter, who lives in a world only partially based on reality, and a young friend of the son who works in the same factory. The most basic idea used both in directing and in staging the play is that the play is memory. Be- cause it is memory, the set is only semi-realistic. Also the special effect of projecting slides on the rear wall of the set helps to isolate the play in time as a memory, and not as present action. In directing the play Robert But- man has stressed the poetry in- herent in the actors’ lines, poetry arising from what Wordsworth has called ‘‘emotion recollected in tranquillity.’’ The play is tragic, but tragic in a different way from St. George and Phoenix Arise; Reborn in BMC May Day Plays The annual May Day play andthe traditional ‘‘Dragon Play’ will provide dramatic entertainment today, with the Library as a suit- ably Mediaeval backdrop. Christopher Fry’s ‘A Phoenix Too Frequent’? heralds in some changes in May Day play custom, It is a modern drama with only three characters, in contrast to the usual Renaissance or Medi- aeval play involving a large num- ber of girls. ‘‘Theater in the Round’? is another innovation, for it will be produced in the Cloisters this year, Vicki May is director, the role of Dynamene will be played by Wendy Wassyng, Tebus-Chro- mis by Peter Moscovitz, and Doto by Nimet Habachy. The Dragon Play is traditionally produced by the juniors in Pem East, and takes place on the Li- brary steps, Though a new play is written every May Day, the basic elements of St. George, the Dragon, and the Library steps remain un- JANTZEN & CATALINA ~ | Bathing Suits for those ‘‘Well-secluded places”’ Joyce Lewis 839 Lancaster Aye. Bryn Mawr, Pa. changed from year to year. Penny Proddow is director, and the prin- cipal roles are taken by Ilene Wink- ler as the Dragon, and Faith Lewis as the Knight. Also appearing in the play are Tessa Stanwood, Barbara Thacher, Helen Gray, Harriet Hanger, and Marjorie Hornblower. The two standard bearers, who will accompany Miss McBride during the May Day festivities, are Men- akka Weerasinghe and Ruth Vose, MADS DISCOUNT RECORDS 9 W. Lancaster Ave. Ardmore MI 2-0764 Largest Selection Folk Music Pop - Classics - Jazz | i “FOr. “—@ MUSIC ne ae Tonight thru, Monday JACK ELLIOT - Also - JEAN REDPATH THE 2ND FRET 1902 SANSOM STREET, LO 7-9640 NIGHTLY: 9:15, 11; FRI. & SAT. 8:30, 10, 12 HOOTENANNY EVERY TUESDAY Strindberg’s ‘¢*The Father:’’ here there are no malicious characters working to destroy each other, the tragedy is the result only of the inherent weaknesses of the characters, weaknesses they real- ize but have little or no power to correct, Atalanta’sLoss Offers Hope For Seniors In Hoop Race According to Bryn Mawr lore, the lovely Senior maid who rolls her hoop first down Senior Row will be the first of her class to marry. Do these young hopefuls ever wonder, however, if the whole quaint custom might not be found- ed on a huge myth? Has anyone ever tried to verify whether or not the fleet-footed damsels ever even made the trip to the altar, much less made it before anyone else? The records are ominously si- lent on this score, This silence is sufficient to plant a horrible suspicion in the mind. Maybe the winners of the hoop-rolling con- tests never married at all but remained athletic old maids to the end of their days. The assumption is that the win- ner of the race is the most phy- Sically prepared to withstand the rigors of the manhunt, but in view of the evidence--rather lack of evidence-- the following proposal is now thrown open for consider- ation, Seniors, break training rules, smoke a cigarette, settle back and reread the story about Atalanta and the golden apples, Atalanta, after all, was wedded because she lost the race. So don’t set your heart on rolling your hoop down the row first. Perhaps you may be another Atalanta, BRYN MAWR’S NEW SMART EATING PLACE KENNY’S 24 .N. Bryn Mawr Avenue LA 5-6623-4 Night Deliveries MAGASIN DE LINGE LAwrence 5-5802 | 825 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mowr, Pa. ‘GANE & SNYDER 834 Lancaster Avenue Lxotic Tea Supplies EN & 4 for mama may 10 y U | a stole a pin a handbag a hug THE PEASANT SHOP} | 1602 Spruce St. Philadelphic 845 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr WHAT'S NEW IN THE MAY ATLANTIC? “The Squeeze on the Liberal Uni- versity’’ by J. Douglas Brown: Can the liberal university survive in a climate of bigness, diversity, and specialization? And what values would be lost if we succumbed to the concepts of the multiversities? **Liebling, Libel, and the Press’’: Louis M. Lyons discusses the respon- sibility of the press, the threat to the freedom of the press from libel suits, and inadequate training of reporters. ‘‘The Computers of Tomorrow’’: Martin Greenberger analyzes the ex- tent to which computers will reach into our daily lives. PLUS: ‘‘The Mad Strangler of Boston’’ by Erle Stanley Gardner, “Tokyo and the Olympics”, ‘‘People on Fire: The Congo” and “‘A Rough Map of Greece’’. What happens when an outstanding staff of editors sets out to produce a maga- zine of the highest ‘academic and cul- tural interest? You'll know when you read The Atlantic. In each issue you'll find fresh new ideas, exciting lit- erary techniques, keen analyses of current affairs and a high order of criti- cism. Get your copy today. Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Friday, May 1, 1964 Steve Bonine, Sandy Blachley, and Bobby Hurwitz rehearse for Sunday's « se Renaissance Choir performance. It will be held at the Bryn Mawr Pres- byterian Church at 4 p.m. Arrests and Injuries in Chester After NAACP, CFFN Intervention In the latest series of civil rights demonstrations in Chester, between 30 and 40 persons have been injured, including several police officers, and about 250 have been arrested. The trouble started last Wednes- day after negotiations between the school board and the NAACP and Committee for Freedom Now fail- ed to bring any agreement about de facto segregation in the schools. About 50 persons held a sit-in at the school board offices and in Negro schools. They were arrest- ed without incident, but the school board called the demonstration ‘tviolent?? and kept the schools closed for almost a week. Protest marches have been held in the Chester business district almost nightly for a month, but on Wednesday, the demonstrators held their orderly but noisy protest outside the home of political boss CampusEvents May 1 and 2 Middle States Inter-Collegiate Tennis Tournament, Bryn Mawr College tennis courts. Monday, May 4 Lecture by Frede.ic Grover, As- sociate Professor of French, Swarthmore, on ‘‘A la recherche d’unecrivain; Drieu La Rochelle,’’ 8:30 p.m. in the Ely Roo:::. Wednesday, May 6 Lecture for Interfaith by Millicent Carey McIntosh, Trustee of the College and President Emeritus of Barnard Ce ege, 7:30 pem. in the Common Room. Thursday, May 7 Illustrated lecture by Herman Meyer, Professor of German, Uni- versity of A~ terdam and visiting Professor at the University of Pittsburgh this semester, on ‘Space in Modern Art and Mod- ern Literature.’’ NEWS AGENCY Books Stationery Greeting Cards 844 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. John McClure. When police arrived a few demonstrators resisted ar- rest and were beaten, Others, in- cluding women and children, were beaten seemingly without provoca- tion. Among those injured was a re- porter from the Philadelphia Bul- letin. When he identified himself, several officers attacked him, broke his nose, and then arrested him for ‘assaulting an officer.’’ On Friday night demonstrators who intended to be arrested block- ed an intersection in a Negro part of town, Police ordered them to disperse and then attacked the demonstrators swinging riot sticks. Bricks were thrown at po- lice, seemingly from rooftops, In the skirmish, a large number of demonstrators were injured by police, including many who did not resist arrest. When state police arrived to scatter the crowd, one group of Negroes sought refuge in a tavern, but police followed them in. A fight ensued. Police also smashed the camera of a photog- rapher who identified himself as an employee of the United States Information Agency. A pregnant woman watching from her door- way was struck in the abdomen be an officer. She lost her baby. On Sunday Governor Scranton met with the mayor and school officials, but not with Negro lead- ers. Public hearings on school segregation were scheduled, but Branche said his group will not attend unless an investigation of police brutality is also held. Meanwhile, about a hundred per- sons who could not obtain the high bail set for them are still in cus- tody. They are imprisoned in the county garage, a single large room with insufficient light and plumb- ing. They each have one blanket and sleep on the floor. E.P. 4) : ae Oe. i FIESTA STRAW BAZAAR Gay Hats And Bags From Italy and Hong Kong 1011 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, PENNA. Come in Early for Best Selection of MO THER’S DAY Cards and Gifts LISI AL IIIS SSSI) RICHARD STOCKTON eee 851 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mowr, Pa. Gifts-Social Stationery-Cards oe SUBURBAN HARDWARE BRYN MAWR, PA. | LAwrence 5-0894 » LAwrence 5-7350 We carry a complete line of Household Articles LA 5-6664, PARVIN’S PHARMACY James P. Kerchner Pharmacist . 30 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr. Pa. LA 5-0443 Coffee Cabaret: Fine Folk Music Fri; 8; 10:15 Sat; 8; 9:45; 11:30 PAUL CADWELL t,,.the greatest 5-string banjo picker in the world.” with Al Bluhm : GORDON BOK Mandy & Margot 875 Lancaster, Bryn MawrLA 5-3375 SUN: G. Britton’s HOOTENANY 3pm Sixty Intrepid Geologists Embarked On Full-Guided Sedimental Journey Watson, Dryden, and Regnier Tours, (very) Ltd. last weekend conducted over’ sixty rowdy Geology 101 students on the annual tour of scenic upstate Penn- sylvania. The sleepy army--for army they looked, clad in varied bivouac shirts and dungarees and each carrying a regulation U.S, Army field bag--assembled at Pembroke Arch, As has happened in past years, no one slept late; cont- rariwise, due to the excited anti- cipation, most had awakened early, The Air Conditioned Red Arrow Motor Coach (bus), driven by Joe, the best sport of all, left almost at the scheduled 8:15 for three days of healthful formation ob- serving and rock whacking. On the way to the first stop, Watson and Dryden, encouraged by the bus speaker system and captive audience for their witty repartee, uncovered a lode of local (1) ore. Tales of William Penn’s black-sheep son and the Doyles- town banker’s daughter who married the pseudo-Swiss count greatly enriched the soil of Bucks County. 7 Lunch stops and overnight ac- commodations often left something to be desired, although most of the fledgling geologists considered the privations part of the adven- ture. They realized that, in the field, one should prefer a pickled Pleistocene hairy mammoth to filet mignon, Three mangy deer greeted the travellers Friday at the aptly named Deer Stop Drive-In when they pulled in to consume soggy peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and other goodies prepared by the Bryn Mawr kitchens. The rest- aurant did a booming business in Cokes and ice cream, but failed to move any quantity of Genuine Hand Embroidered Pennsylvania Dutch Hex Sign Johnny Lid Cover and Matching Bath Mat sets. Saturday’s stops were devoted largely to fossil collecting, which for many meant taking a series of frustration-releasing whacks at an outcrop, sorting through the H’ford’s May Day Role: Inspired, But Innocuous By now we know what gay prank the Haverfairies thought up and impishly executed--or attempted --last night. It was suggested they spirit back the pole they carried off last year and dance with the rest of us in the dawn, dressed, perhaps, in white shorts and black and red sashes. Last year’s pole-snatching was well-planned and clever. To recap for the uninformed, some boys set off decoy firecrackers on one sec- tion of the campus, others crept through the cold drizzle and extri- cated the maypole from the pro- tecting grasp of Mr. Miz ET ALe In former years, attempts to carry off maypoles have invariab- ly failed, generally ending in an early-hour fracas between Haver- fordians and lantern men. One year, pole-snatching was not even attempted. For their traditional May Eve activity, the boys merely *texplicated’’ the poles by placing two large white stones at the base of each, Another year, their sole parti- cipation in the festivities was the floating of a banner from Taylor tower which proclaimed, in ornate Gothic lettering, ‘‘How Quaint,’ Some year Haverford may do something really unusual that would shock the whole campus--leave the maypoles alone and let Bryn Mawr hold its rites in peace. (Ed. note: As of Tuesday morning four maypoles were found to be missing from Radnor basement, where they had been kept. Two of the poles were later found in the creek behind Batten House. Since this was premature of May Day it is unlikely that Haverford had any part in the abduction, If the other two poles are not found, May Day will proceed with only three poles.) Walter’s Swiss Pastries Cakes - Pastries - Cookies 870 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr 9-6 Mon. - Sat. Heed the still, small voice of conscience Call home now! It’s easy, it’s inexpensive, and the folks’ll love you for it! shatterea material, tossing the non-fossiliferous fragments on another fossil-hunter below, and exclaiming, ‘‘Oh, (snicker), I’m sorry!”? Most of the trilobites--the fos- sils most easily recognized and therefore most sought after--- seemed to have been either found last year or so deeply entrenched in the rock as to be uncollectable. High point of the trip was the visit to the Greenhill (a misnomer to be sure) Stripping Corporation, the largest open-pit coal mine in the United States, and aside from the Panama Canal, the fore- most hole in the entire earth. After getting a structure lesson from the precipice, the class climbed back in the bus for the long, winding, suffocating, dusty descent into the pit. Joe, the dri- ver, displayed not only a great deal of bravery and devotion to the cause, by subjecting his bus to the tréacherous road, but also a vast knowledge of mining, since his father was a manufacturer of coal mining equipment. The last stop Sunday was on a road cut high above the Lehigh Water Gap to observe a contact in Blue Mountain between the Shawangunk (say ‘‘shon-gun’’) and the Martinsburg. Once all were aboard, the bus headed back to Bryn Maw as all meditated upon the wonders en- countered on the trip. Consensus was that the fun would have been more so if the students were not expected to learn something. Classified Ads SPINET PIANO BARGAIN WANTED: Responsible party to take low monthly payments on a spinet piano. can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager, P.O. Box 35 Court- land, Ohio. “LOST: Gold Psi Chi traternity key (on a gold Chain). If found please contact Sue Pana, Pem. West. WhO B.B.0.0 (Big Bear On Campus) POOH, THAT'S WHO! Literature’s most durable bear is once again the talk of college campuses coast to coast. Last time it was the Latin Winnie Ille Pu. This time, the Pooh stories become the vehicle for a devastating parody of a dozen different schools of literary criticism. Here, par- alleling the “freshman case- book” approach to a literary problem, are the 12 keys to ‘the hidden meaning” be- hind Milne’s creations— Pooh, Piglet, Kanga, Owl, et al. Every vagary of con- temporary criticism — Freudian, Marxian, the New Critical—is taken off in this riotous collection. Join the Pooh bandwagon and find out why “If there were a Pulitzer Prize for Humor, it would go this year to author Crews."—Boston Herald THE POOH PPERPLEK by Frederick C. Crews drawings by E. H. Shepard $2.95 at your colle bookstore wad DUTTON ARN