‘« if a ‘ 4 “VOL.- XLVIHI—NO. 10 hat oe ee rt er a a RNS Ee oF FOE SS : # ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA... WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1962 © Trustees of Bryn. Mawr.College, +88 - Manhattan Republican, Lindsay, Arts Night Selections Lack Polish, Gusto: Chides Party for Minority Role © - The problems unsolved by the 87th Congress and the ability of the present Congress to cope with these questions were the subjects under_., discussion by John Lindsay, speaker at the Monday evening Current Events lecture. A.New York City Republican -serving his third Congressional term, Mr. Lindsay’s ‘district includes four major universities, the theatre district,- Greenwich Village, and parts of the East and West side res- idential areas. : In the two-year wat approach- ing, there ure four key areas which must be considered:“aid to education and church and state separation; rious opinions and Arrange certain agreements—aundefiried but necessary functions. Finally, merated the. problems facing the present Congress. . education and urban’ affairs, includ- ing mass transit.and-urban renewal, much of which was locked up in rules Continued on Page 6, Col.-1- the Congressinan.~-enti= _ First, it must . cope with questions’ pertaining. to Dances Show Imagination, Technical Sl Arts Night got off to a faint start. The occasion is informal, a family affair. by Sarah Shapley ’63 ated more polish, more-substance, more gusto; in short;-more good theater. had they been solidly ambitious, then any number of rough edges might have been ignored. As it was, about half the performers did not. speak-to the audience, did not tell us that they were worth listening to or watching, did not present us with a*good-sized, developed piece of their idea and talent. The master of ceremonies, Wanda Bershen, could be heard even if the exact name. of the piece could not: were introductory. ~automation~ and accompanying’ diffi- "ff the growing military and culties; industrial complex; and Congress’ ~ responsibility concerning foreign. policy. aaa a DRAW BACKS Is Congress equipped to cope with these questions, or-dre its procedures. too antiquated? Mr. Lindsay refer- red to several drawbacks in the present. system, The current voting sates entails an*hour and ten minutes for each separate vote to be taken. The seni- ority system results in bitter war- fare and frequent refusal to take action. The question of supremacy between" House and Senate -has-re-». 99 “sulted in such inefficiencies as the recent refusal of the Appropriations Committee to—meet.- There is frequent tice of commu- nication between the legislative and. executive branches, The Congress- man suggested as a possible alter- - native for this a question-and-answer ~ period at which Cabinet officers would be’ required to face floor de- bate, rather than the formalized, _ stilted subcommittee hearings now s a a “ in effect. These are inefficient and often avoid “the nub” of the ques= tion.” Present staffing facilities are in- adequate—close to “quasi-corrupt,” Mr. Lindsay stressed: Staff -mem- bers. are currently responsible only to ranking minority members, sub- ' committee chairmen or similiar of- ficials. Other,Congressmen are forc- ed to turn to different sources for help. This has “resulted in what is sometimes referred to as. the “fifth branch of the government,”’ a healthy development which is mak. ing a practical and effective contri- bution, in spite of its drawbacks. Not. all is bleak, however, Mr. Lindsay pointed out. For example, the voting system; while: time-con- suming, provides a valuable oppor; . tunity for members to consider va- Miss McBride To Attend » ‘E-W Mesting In Hawaii Miss. McBride ‘is leaving on Sat- carday-for Honolulu. -She will attend.- a three day meeting of the Panel of Advisors of the Center for Cultnral and Technical Interchange ‘between* East and West. ‘5 The East-Wést Center is an ede cational institution’ for Asian and American students, Established: by the United States Congress in 1960; it is located. at the University. of . Hawaii, and-has programs for un- - dérgraduates, resident scholars and— technical trainees. ‘The Panel of Advisors also ° in- cludes. Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, Under- Secretary of the United-Nations; Dr.~~ A. C. Joshi, President’ of Panjab University; and M. R. Chakratong Tongyai, Under-Secretary -of State for Agriculture in Thailand among. , its nine members. What brings PLO te Slinlibeiais Dinner? 2% ounces of. sherry in a juice glass, what-else? Results of Ellender’s African S peech Show Evils of Giving Private Views by Nancy Geist ’66 ““T am an American politician. Send me. abroad to say the wrong —— & in an official capes. seaviiag US. embassies and consulates, Senator Allen’ J... Ellender. - (D-Louisiana) held a press conference that™ had. undesirable, far-reaching consequenc- es, Speaking in Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia on Saturday, December 1, the Senator had been quoted as say- ing that (1) he had yet to see any part. of Africh that was ready for self-government, (2) the average African was. incapable of leader- ship without white assistance, (3) the policy of apartheid in the Un- ion of South Africa -was-too* late, but on the. right road, and (4) he would use his influence in the Sen- ate Appropriations Committee (he is the fourth’ ranking member ) to stop aid to Northern Rhodesia and’ Nyasaland _ if they broke away from the white dominated Federa- tion of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. AUBTS.U.8. 250 A ‘transcript. of this. news con- ference issued by the United States Infornration Service -confirms at least one of these statements, mak- ing clear that Senator Ellender had ‘stipulated that they were ‘his -per- sonal opinions. Unfortunately, how- - ever, several of the- African na- tions have chosen *to «regard the: Senator’s - statements as reflections of the policy of the U.S. Govern-. _ ment. The Kennedy administration, attempting to counteract the effects e~ statements, ‘has issued’ one stressing America’s support * for . the \Africans’ aspirations to free- dom and independence. _.Why should the U. S. Govern- ment be placed in such a position? © Proteasome Ls It is incredible that the Kennedy _administration, knowing Senator Ellender’s views, should have sent him to Africa. Many times in the past he has voiced - these same sen- - timents, but he has never done so in Africa. Why ‘should he been. given the opportunity +t; dos se e the Kennedy so while making an official This is not to bl administration completely for the situation, for'surely Senator Ellen-. der should have realized what the reaction to his speech. would be, and in the interests of the country he should have refrained from making his views public. Sharp reactions to'the Senater’s words have come from the Govern- ments of Kenya, Northern Rhode- sia, Ethiopia, Tanganyika, and Uganda. The: last three have bar- red his entrance (making him. t first person-deelared a ‘prohibited immigrant since Uganda~ became . independent of Great Britain on’ October 19). °: ‘i If it is possible to differentiate, ...the whole incident. occured -at-pos-— sibly the worst | time. Only seven weeks ago the Prime Minister of Uganda, Milton Obote, visited. Pres- ident Kennedy. It is possible that _ithas undone’ some of the good being wrought by American grants « to Uganda of $3,500,000 for.devel- opment of agricultural and educa- tional projects, a loan of $2,000,000 to that country,_a-$10,000,000 loan to Tanganyika along with a °$2,200,- 000: development: grant ‘program, UGLY AMERICAN <” It is obvious’ that Senator Ellen- der’s comments enraged the lead- ers of various African. states. It. ig not difficult to believe that the African people who heard of them were. not pleased. From the stand- wks . oo bang webgomes rs "sycamore. . First Prize: A» VIEW OF HUMANITY by Sara Ann Beekey ’63 I am @ péa-brained dinosaur. ‘T stalk through the wilderness With no obvious purpose. My eyes, Brobdignag fashion, See only giant sizes. My scaly tail ignorantly -.Lashes innocents to. death; Nor is* my. fiery tongue controlled. Or, . Tam a dexterougs hanintagbird, I flit through honeysuckle Transporting: fertility. My eyes encompas details But. the entirety is vague. I have no voice to join in The songs of life and love; My actions must speak my. purpose, AN ERA GONE -- by Sara Ann Beekey 63° My long lane lies here compressedat the base of -muted~jade slopes, its firm earthy bed lately pressed more firm * by tar and grey stones. Human intrusion distreses, absolves _.childhood memories, One harshness is spared: no, wide white line yet ‘accents the valley _ where ridges converge, I follow. each curve, - unwilling to yield my sight to danger. | The sanctuary: rots like that dead ‘barn which once made it holy. | No cows graze semi- vertically in overgrown. méadows;.- some new. farmer-—the gentleman type—tends * his crop of tamed’ minks. One more curve, . Ah! here lanky milkweeds sway ‘beneath a leafless They must be my memory’s lorie altar flowers. point of these results, it is clear that his statements gained no new friends for the United States. Re- gardless of his personal feelings, no matter how well-based, ‘he -should- not~have. undermined the efforts of the U. 8. Governnient as he did. : Yet what of the ‘free speech which is guaranteed in the Con-- , Stitution? Cannot “a government official make. his private. opinions “public as private citizens 46? Or ‘does lie ‘have more of a responsi- bility than they do? Said the Rho- -. desia Herald (Southern Rhodesia) “What the Governments of Ugan- . “da and Tanganyika have done in. effect is to deny Senator Ellender ‘the right to free speech. Presum- ably the next time members of-the. ‘ Afro-Asian bloc fulminate about ‘the suppression of freedom of. ex- pression under - ‘white. minority rule’ these “states will: remain si- . lent.” c ‘The poems were disti But I would have appreci- Had the numbers been experimental, The two, recorder-players, Nicole and Gabrielle ~Schupf, traced a few little ditties which we were later told John Pancos’ playing of a Chopin Andante and Polonaise lacked precision in the runs and _ turns-and-contabile -in-the treble: linés. “The roof-shaking resonance in his bass chords seemed forced in relation to the rest of the piece’s faimt expres- sion. Pam Mulac’s- choreography and dancing to parts of Benjamin brit- ten’s A Ceremony_of. Carols. also lacked _precision and-~seemed only ‘faintly related either to the cere-- mony or to the.carols, YOLK SONGS The inadequacy of the two folk- song numbers must be chalked up oe the planning of. the program. Both Maggie Blanchard and. the Bob Gaiway and Stu Macwougal team sing well. But again, 1 would have appreciated having the Gaiway-Macvougal team; with its °foot-stomping and howl-rais- ing potential, put earlier on the program — they appeared just.be- fore the -end.- And I-*would have liked. them to have raised the roof, ~as they did last year, As it was, the ila was short and the. sing- ing faint. 4 The two poetry prizes ne first _ prize, $15, to Sara Ann Beekey, and second -prize, $10, to Sallee. Horho- vitz.. The judges were M.-Maurin, Mr. Lattimore and Mrs, MacCattrey. ruished most by their verbal referehces and their intricately-patterned metre and lin- eation. The “reading. of Garcia Lorca’s .. “The Lament, for Ignacio Sanchez Medias,” given in Spanish by Jane Robbins,. démonstrated the com- plexity ofan. aesthetic experience which is both verbal and aural. By reading the poem in Spanish she demanded that we allow ourselves to fall in with and follow the poem’s drama aurally. This act was both experimental and ambitious. It was. solidly conceived and con- vincingly put across. Ellen. Hal- pern’s playing of some Spanish ~ guitar music by way of accompan- iment was properly . unobtrusive. Though perhaps a little long, the reading was well worth falling in». with and following: _MADRIGALS Two numbers done with consid- erable verve were the madrigal . singing and the jazz dance. Scott Gillam’s group performed with--a welcome unity and well-modulated _volumé, Pam Mulac’s jazz dance — -performed: by- Pam; "Perry San- tini, Barbara Hurwitz, Elena Mes- tre, Minna Nkoum, and. Gretchen -Field—utilized the ‘stage-space’ well - and had a -little thematic gesture appropriate to the Brubeck thenie; but., the : figures were rather pat and , undeveloped and_ therefore faintly predietable. - Roger Herzel’ s play, “Miss Uni- verse,” was. stacked ‘to: be univer- ° sally appealing. It had Helen; Par-. is, and Aphrodite somewhat ‘strip-” ped of their epical grandeur. It had suspenseful sexual’ “complica- tions’ including -both~ inadequacy and hyper-capacity. It had healthily full-grown corn, as in the exclam- ation, “My Goddess!” It* had “im- mortal simplicity, as in the. line, Continued on Page 3, Col. 1 2 Ea i "PRICE 20 CENTS: . ee Mr. Herlihy Attends Meeting With Medieval Weather-men Page Two. THE COLLEGE NEWS Livingstone, BMC Prepare Exchange - |Reorganization of Undergrad| “At a long session last: night the~ tion in boards, and to enlarge the cussion ‘of these proposals and for face — for at least the colleges sicatasa “Aivect role of the representatives from the discussion of charges in the election ee tes : olulu. a rae mie ee esides direct mention of warmth, ag tenement EE WE have been worked out 1 : ee es — ~The East-West Center, an in- cold, rain, ete. in Chronicles; there “The new Executive Council” would by” a~ comnrittee~chaired-by+ Shirley — = e.exchange students will at- +. tion-devoted- to furthering. often occurrences from whick -. portance is their job and the class Pull out And Father Christmas, we would certainly love it sone P ' © You'd know our requests are as aa eae “= = Se eintemmet sg zt 2 . a $e hlant tay ininincempoe ‘it may be reprinted wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief. iy front of you: and me Giving. - - Book Shop stafids ready to fill any wi Kase “EDITORIAL, BOARD : “...' * . gnowblindedly, For the literarily directed, Richard: stocking. = Editor-in-Chief 6b wee aces ober esecndsccesesereneeee® Janice Copen, 63 s - re > a pe : ° , eg ee a ae shies | applebee Armour’s satire gives a refreshing ~ Go see for yourself! Ea = ad at rR ine Se fe eek nace segs aeanaee™ games sins saat ve amauee eR eer 4 jane A get peacoat Mn pak p come ‘ ot FE iit i ce , ; rs i 23 combined kixecutive and Activities Boards of Undergrad. discussed the revision of its constitution. ‘line .pro- posais were made by the Constitu- tional, Kevision Committee neaded by Caroline Kooseveit, ’65. At present, tne Undergraduate Organization is divided into two consists. -ot - tie Pres., Secretary of Undergrad, tne * om -reasurer, the Presidents ‘df the four’ classes, the heads ot the other major organizations including tne News, and Curriculum Committee, “and tne N.S.A. rep. It is called at the discretion of the President, All tis memoers. vote, except tne Sec- retary and the President. ~~ Tne Activities Board now con- sists of the Pres. Vice-Pres. and Secretary of Undergrad., the. Class “presidents, the Ciass- and, Hall Reps. ¥é is this board which handles most of. tne work which keeps Undergrad. -running. The new system has two. major - .purposes—to eliminate the duplica- be composed of the three Under- grad, otticers, the Common Treasur- er (who is elected by the Sopho- more Class), the Social Chairman (who is now First. Junior), the Pub- -licity Chairman (who is now first Sophomore), the Traditions Chair- man (who is now second Sopho- more), the N.S.A. rep., and the hall “organizations, and the Class Presi- dents would comprise an Advisory Council which would attend these meetings ex-officio (i.e, without a vote). The Freshman class would be represeuted,-éx-oflicio, by observ- ers. oe The revised constitution would spectiy the duties of tne now class “major boards. ‘Phe -Hixeeutive ssoard——reps, who, although still elected. by. Vice-PTes.,. their class, will .be treated. as. the chairmen of specific.committees. The social chairmen from each hall, for example, will serye on a committee presided over by the Social Chair- man (present first Junior.) The Hall Reps. have also been _ given specific duties: “1, The Hall Képresentative shall be responsible “for ~ the” Half’s “representation © at each, meeting; 2. They shall assist the Traditions Chairman and Pub- licity Chairman when called upon to-do. 30;...3. They shall - serve | on temporary committees; 4. They are the liaison between the hall ‘and the Executive Council.” ‘Tne combined boards will meet — again after vacation for further dis- Daniels, Vice-President of Under- ‘grad. Olid constitutions have been given to all students. These do not indi- cate the proposals discussed last. night, it-must be remembered that the changes are only. proposals. The . final. decision rests with Legislature which will not meet until. some time in the ‘second semester. reps. The Presidents of the other “Revisions: Since every student at Bryn Mawr ‘is ipso facto a member of the Undergraduate Association, the constitution atfect every One of “us. “ the proposed revisions in ‘The News clearly-sees the objection to having two boards meeting separatety but discussing essentially the same mate- rial, she -question..of.representation and voting privileges _ a question which warrants much consid- -geems to us, however, ..derts, three. girls and three boys, Early in the second. semester, an exchange of students, arranged through Undergrad, will take place between Bryn Mawr and Haverford, and Livingstone Col- lege. Livingstone, a Negro teachers’ college,..will_send..six..of its stu- ie to Bryn Mawr and Haverford: re- spectively. Haverford plans to send three boys, and Undergrad will vote in the near future on the three’ girls tobe sent: from’ Bryn” Mawr. The exchange students will be chosen from: the Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes, prefer- ably one from each. It is hoped that this exchange _- will bring about a_better under-.. standing of the qualities of a pre- ‘dominantly white and a predom- inantly Negro college — how they differ, what problems they have to tend classes and social functions at the college they visit. At Bryn Mawr, a College (Council has been arranged as,an opporcunity for a — “bétter Understanding of the work- ings of the college. 'fhis is the first time that~Bryn Mawr has partici- pated in an exchange of this type. i : ~ Experiment Participates In Scholarship Program The Experiment in International Living ‘offers you the opportunity to form international friendships and to learn about life in another country by living it. eration on the part of the student body.” "he proposal ehminates.the voting power from the four class presidents and the heads of the other major organiza- - tions on campus. leaves them voting privileges. servers but for no Hreshman vote on are elected in the Spring, do-the Freshmen have any say in who they are). hall reps men nor It changes the names of the class reps but — It provides for Freshmen ob- the board’ at all (since they can neither be ¥ resh- Can Hall Reps really be representative even given greater importance in. the organization? 1s coliege elected) representative of the student body? ? Is the N.S.A. - are the class elected representatives representing if their im- President has no vote? Or isn’t it-that every. individual, regardless of who elects her, is, and if that_is so, ' beard have equal privileges of voting? To: Santa Claus Taylor Hall. Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania ‘O Father Christmas, if you loved us at all, ~ You’d bring us refrigerators for every hall; For the library you’d bring in you sleigh Overhead lighting, and coolness in -May ; Reindeer to hold hall.doors open ’til twelve; And books of this century on library: shelves. O Father Christmas, if y: You’d bring us a change in And@ along with your. holly an -You’d bring us new dryers an if you loved us. dearly, © iat Aa EES the driving rule yearly. deChristmas greens,. d washing machines. And when with your pack of gifts you enter, ~~. for us,a new’Student Center. If you brought us better food, and much more of it, And At the College Inn, O Father Christmas, speaking of. food; we.get very. nervous, while waiting for service. if you knew us well old as Noel. mgt “ a THE COLLEGE NEWS : 4 : “FOUNDED“IN 1914 °°) 3 Published weekly. during ,the College Year (except during © Thanksgiving, tion weeks) in the interest, Ardmore, ted by copyright. : Printing Company, The College News is fully prot Christmas- and- Easter holidays; end during examina-— - of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore — Pa., and Bryn Mawr College Nothing that appears in” rep (who is all- Whom” ‘by human nature, representing herself.and.her close friends,. why should not every mémber of the new lone oe alimited scholarships are avail- able to outbound experimenters. As Bryn Mawr students, you are eligible to apply for two scholar- - ships being given by the Philadel- phia Experiment Council. All gchol- ‘arship applicants must apply by January 15; all others by March 15. A word of caution — groups fill up fast, especially those to Western. Europe. I suggest you - apply now. Write to The Experi- ment in‘ International Living, Put- ney, Vermont; or see Judith Hale in Wyndham for applications. — Applebee weather is a bore : to owls as well as-men— —— and when we talk about.it ' the weather seems to win >< the little game to put to shame - the plans of owls and men it snows just: when we want-to leave its hot just when we want to work tr arid when we really couldn’t care. its perfect ‘ z ray 4 <=-$--- - what seems to be the answer to this friend whos always teasing “should we muzzle it or grab it or chain it to a tree ici or just sit back and let it play One day last Juné,; Mr.. Herlihy was enjoying the sun in Florence, Italy.. The next day, last June, he “’ was enjoying the sun in Aspen, Colo- ~ tado-ata conference on “The Paleo- | climatology of the 11th and 16th — Centuries.” -_ a Mr. Herlihy, Associate Profeso ' of History at Bryn Mawr, was doing ~ yesearch in Florence on a Guggen- ‘jeim Grant when he received an in- vitation to attend the conference, sponsored by the Ad Hoc Commit- tee on Paleoclimatology of -the Na- East-West Center ~ - Aids Asian Study by Constance Rosenblum Graduating seniors considering diplomatic service -in - Asia, teach- ing Asian affairs, or other careers - related to the Far: East, will be interested in. scholarships offered by the East-West Center in Hon- mutual understanding between the “United States and sia, offers expense-paid, twenty-one month ‘scholarships for study at. the Uni- versity of Hawaii and in-Asia. The | scholarships include round-trip transportation, general living ex- penses, and an Asian field study grant. During field ‘study, the ..gtudent..goes. to_a country “in Asia particular culture and language in which he is specializing. The University of Hawaii. offers one of the finest programs in Asian affairs, including such languages as Korean, Indonesian, Javanese, Thai, Hindi, and Sanskrit, as well: as Chinese and Japanese. Further information-may be ob- tained by writing the East-West Center, Honolulu. 14, Hawaii. Ap- plication deadline is February first. tional Academy of Science and of the National Research Council ‘and the High Altitude Observatory of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory. The sponsors flew him to Aspen where he joined other his- torians, geologists, anthropologists, biologists and metedrologists to dis- - cuss medieval -weather, .. -The--purpos.: of--the~ meetings, which lasted from June 16 to 24, was to see what help other disci- plines could be in studying the his- tory of weather. There was no di- rect discussion of the influence of weather on human institutions, but™ ~~ perhaps the conference’ served as a stimulus. to. the other disciplines to .—. pay more.attention to the weather in their. studies. The 11th and 16th centuries were chosen because the former is thought to-have been. an—unusually:-warm time, and the latter exceptionally cold. Mr. Herlihy indicated -how a historian can help trace weather. CHERRY BLOSSOMS relative: weather factors may be de- duced. For example, the dates of the appearance of cherry blossoms and of the freezing of-a lake are men- . tioned in one Japanese’-source, For when the. wine harvest .was, how long certain ports were ice-locked, etc. *The biologists are able to help by such indications as the thickness*of- a_tree ring (although one can. tell ‘for direct ~acquaintance with the. only -whether a year was good or bad for growing, not why). The geo- logists.can offer evidence of glaciér advances or retreats. ae The: --confereees.- concluded that there is no such thing as a weather _ cycle (although the 19th century ‘seems. to have been a warm phase and we may be entering a cold ene): They did, however, realize that oth- er disciplines could’ be very helpful — in ‘tracing the history of weather conditions. Cea e e a “Western® Europe, one can find out ~~ a Book Shop Features Scholarly Gifts; . - by Ronni. Iselin ’65., : The Christmas season is in full commercial swing. With. only. twelve. . “shopping days left, you are probably " . *wildly- pouring over--catalogues. and storming area shops to find justthe “right gift for room-mates, relatives, and-others on the receiving rell.. -Yet, like the proverbial seeker who consistently ignores the won- - ~ders—of his “own backyard,” Bryn. Mawrters seem to overlook the fact that their gift problems may be solv- ed by a trip to our College Book Shop. ; MCiHER GOOSE. . Scholarly tomes -aside, the Book- shop has a varied stock of purely entertaming works to suit all tastes. -_ For the academically-minded there — -are annotated versions. of Alice in Wonderland and Mother Goose. Ever wonder what. the “bunting” ‘was in the nursery rhyme, “Bye, Baby Bunt- ing?” Footnote #23 gives the Ox- _ ford English Dictionary definition as “short and thick... asa plump child.” ; In a gaily definitive. vein, Charles Schultz’s renowned “Peanuts” char- acters declare that happiness is “hic- cups ... after they’ve gone away,” “three friends in a sandbox « . ; with no fighting,’ and “finding ~someone: you like at. the front door,” in the _ small ‘book—-Happiness ‘is. a., Warm Puppy. : : ~r> ~The -whimsicat~~illustrations-—of: a delight . . Joan “Walsh Anglud jare to any age group in Lis oe a Spe- cial ‘Way of. Feeling,;A. riend Is Someone Who Likes You, and; “ap-: propriately, ‘Christmas Is a Time of interpretation of noble characters in The Classics Re-classified. The. idea that Hester Prynne’s scarlet | Annotated Mother Goose Heads List.» “A” was a result of hey running out ~ of thread: while making a New Eng- land sampler might provide a novel paper topic. parang P. L. Travers presents the ulti- mate in alliteration in Mary Poppins from A-Z, Meet. the King with a Key to the park where he flies his. Kite made of Kid and Kapok. Great for a gala gift. Macabre merrymaking seems to be in vogue, Not, only can you give -— Charles. Adams’ latest. cartoon col- lection, Drawn and Quartered, but this can be accompanied by stuffed replicas of his cadaverous creations. One word of advice, though, “Watch out for~ trolls!” : Further Gothic humor may be found ‘in Edward--Gorey’s The—-Wil-— lowdale Handcar as Edna, Harry, and Sam pursue their ghastly. frol- ics. The numerous illustrations are laughably melancholy. ss \ POTPOURRI . Finally, The Saturday Book de- * fies classification as anything but a potpourri:of intriguing irrelevancy. Lavishly illustrated, this work ex- pounds upon such topics. as. “Canal - Boat Baroque,” “The Robin Hood Mystery,” and “The Unnatural : His- x“ tory of the Salamander.” _ a Complete with volumes covering -every subject from astrology to Zen’ -with Tashlin’s “Bear That Wasnt,” and “Feiffer’s bourgeois neurotics, children’s stories in four languages, ‘and eveh non-bookish novelties (no- — ‘tably Froys and BMC animals), the. ' gesture is novel and * take in fully or meaningfully;*yet ‘performance is “Wednesday, “Decamber 12, 1962 “70s COLLEGE NEWS. . Pape. Se | Speakers at smite Session — Wil Discuss Effects of Cuberneties. This year the topic of the In- terim Session at Smith College will be “Cybernetics and Its Impact on Society.” During a three week period, eight . Speakers. will explore the effects on_oursociety of machines which are able to take information and reach. their o conclusions from that information. a - COMPUTERS The term “cybernetics” was de- rived from the Greek word mean- —ing-steersman- or governor, and has been used in the engineering _field to refer to self regulating me- ~chanisms. Today it is used as a general term describing the com- puters which have become a vital part of our modern industry. The Interim Program was insti- tuted last year on a. three year experimental basis. Under this plan, the first semester examina- - tions are held before Christmas vacation. The students return in January to a three week session oi lectures and. independent, stuay. _ Fields .of work may be discussed with faculty..members. and_ biblio- graphies are sometimes suggested. However, once a student’s project is formulated, she ‘works indepen- dently. __Donald- Michael, the Director of Planning ‘Programs at Peace. Re- search Institute will. be the key- Marriage,’ ‘Icons’ | Rescue Arts,Night . Continued from Page 1, Col: 5 “We are alone.” (One wonders if ‘Eve. had to.utter it five times as. did. Herzel’s Helen.) It had large ethical concepts, as in the viola- tion of that famous Greek hospi- tality by Paris when he “couldn’t ~. even getup to see Ménelaus off”; or as in the highly refined moral tensions between the concepts of comfortable and uncomfortable in- fidelity. And to polish off any ling- ering disbelief, it had an Aphro- . dite with the most down-to-earth southern accent ever heard. The cast, headed by Jane Robbins with George Sargent and Caroline Wil- lis, couldn’t lose and added greatly to the evening’s enjoyment. “{GONS”: A: DELIGHT I conclude with’ the two most seriously imaginative and_techni- cally adept pieces. on the. program: “The Marriage of Canaan,” danced . to the Ezra Pound poem, “Dance: Figure,” by Nicole Schupf — and Senta Driver;-and “Icons” danced by Beverley Carter, Senta- Driver,..and Toby Williams, and accompanied by ' the droopiest southern band music ever blared forth.. Both darices were choreographed by Senta Dri- ver. _ The “marriage” took true and proper advantage of the special opportunity of Arts Night, The dance is in many ways unfinished, . or unresolved; its vocabulary of difficult to the skill ofthe piece and of its - indubitable. My most specific ‘suggestion, aside from my objection to the poem’s Raving, been read with a non-Am- erican_ accent, is that the bride ., must »be the centre of our focus . and that the reader-figure in her sown gestures and in her. occupa- tion of the space around the bride ‘.« must. be subordinated and cooordi- ae “Icons” nated with the. bride. ’ = was - a delight: ~I had. ——~ with gusto —. jitters, flops, slops, and slinks. The costumes wrapped™ the dancers in proper mystery and '. yet revealed a clue to their char- _acter.in the form of a dangling pony-. tail-plume.. The dance utilized a few, ‘insti -grasped comic .gestures and then play hem for all they were worth, whic was a lot, and nuances --flitted —— So stinges : 7 .tion’s Congress, held ovexy: the. past sum- . mer, considered and passed a var- note speaker. The other speakers during the session will- be George Boehm, the science editor of For- tune;: Luther Evans, the’ Director of the National Education Associa- tion; Herbert Striner of the/Urban Studies , Program, yStanford Re- search Institute; Robert. Heilbro-_ _ ner, author of The Future As His- _ tory; Carl Stover of the Economic Development Division, Stanford ' Research Institute; Harold Rosen-. berg, United States Air Force; and Daniel Bell, Professor of Sociology at Columbia University. Faculty reaction to the program but there were reservations. Many professors felt that more plan- ning was needed before the session began.and that it should include fewer pre-arranged- projects. Sxperhnecha Thorne School - Sought Pupils’ Total Health . by Judith Deutsch *63 With apologies to the members of History 303a, who have already heard this report: © One of the outgrowtiis of the Deweyite ideas on progres-ive edu-_ cation was the Organic School of Education. Members. of the Schoo! held that it was impossible to have good health in one part of the or- ganism :and ill health .in. another. They -aimed-to 1) minister to the health of the body; 2) develop the finest mental grasp; and 3) to pre- serve the sincerity of the emotion- last year was generally favorable, ~ al life. They believed ‘there should be no pressures on children, but - that spontaneity, interest, and -in- itiative should guide their lives inside as well as | outside the class- room. 7 Y “ New-York -=— One of the most cevonitonary institutions of the Organic School was the’ Phebe Anna Thorne Open- .. Air Model School for Girls, found- ed in June, 1910, by the legacy. of the late Phebe Anna Thorne, of The school. was situated” oppo- site. the Pembroke ‘Gateway of: Bryn Mawr College, at the corner of Merion and Lombard Avenues. Causing» “Bryn Mawr, of pure scholarship, took to fostering a pragmatic experiment in second- ary’ education,” the school laste t- from 1913 until 1931. OPEN-AIR ~ The classrooms for the operair ~sechool-were-wood and glass pago- More Prize Winning Poetry From Arts Night AN OBSERVATION . by Sara Ann Beekey 63 Iam run through life with Trained ears, hearing the. Machinery sidelines ‘everywhere:) Slick, black, prolific, barbaric. My vote elects a liar to dizzy caucuses; My prejudice gements some . Inbred farmer to his rural furrows. Neither eats meat on Eattay: Detroit’s battalions speed™at “50 miles While radar’s blinking eye deals : Enforced liberty and’ justice to all. A mighty fortress evalves.. I hear operators shoeing keys, levers, Scholars -fumble pages, warping Their eager eyes in vain, Urge men-to tithe on- Sunday. We frail human gadgets break up'and disintegrate; The imposed machinery ._Clicks_on to advance or inter mankind. I will my cog to fresh ears. A THOUGHT AT. MY BROTHER’S GRAVE by Sallee Horhovitz ’64 Your half from Mother dies: mine breathes. Your half from Father dies: We are the Twins . I-the-living one : You the memories 3 which blossorn on your grave. IL know you in that-bed-which-now is yours, Within your buried bésom, loud I beat: “We are the Twins, I the sister cells Of ‘yours but for their death the match.” Where did.the difference rise to take the charm From one of two same. selves, to part Loud litanies 6 THE BATH “by Sallee Horhovitz 64 ‘Under the gentle streams of the warm waters ‘My flesh loosens and is one with’ . ‘The passing. liquid. My growing feet Strain the autumns’ wastage for an 1 old toe- stone On which waters chew and polish Toe-holds, -well angled To buck the flow. » “per hour; - | rebut the tide -with arm-kicks-at its loin The frothy anger from its face Falls out; and mouths to Suck me under,.......- . buttons; Strange fish am I to fight waters which I curve Or which curve me the Same, a mold, Of liquid love. A would-be shroud, loomed And yet we wriggle to. misshape the other. I turn unfeeling To wipe them dry. The waters moisten me while I, ~~ Until I step onto the soft mud and roots : Of broken waters, To curve it home, Of banks, and towel down the chips mine breathes. The living Twins, . To leave the singing cells ° ‘A tune of blackest choral. dirge? _ ¢ |-stand-in-life and feel the change Which ceased mitotic raptures of The Total Twins; * Living Usher; smelling Death bs Within the system of the Breath, i fs Unable to define the twist: Which snapped the Whole and left - But half our parents’ wedding kissed. National Student Association = Approves Stands Opposing Internal Security Act and Nuclear Testing The-—National Student: -Associa- twelfth National Student iety of resolutions ranging. from those concerning problems of student government. to statements on“American foreign policy. Among others, NSA _ took stands~on -nuclear. testing and on_. the Internal Security Act of 1950. CODIFICATION OF POLICY In. its “Codification of. Policy,” s the-- Congress asserts-its- right-to.... oppose the development of nuclear “weapons” on.the-grounds~ that-the-— academic commiunity’s efforts to realize’ a free society are endan- gered: by even the threat of war. The resolution: states: ~ \ “USNSA ‘realizes that each . of. the nuclear powers is acting in what it feels to be its national in- terests. USNSA “coridemns militar-~ administrative . fe? ‘ily and politically oriented tests of nuclear devices —' whether by the USSR, the United States, Great Britain, France, or any other na- tion currently -developing nuclear weapons-and whether atmospheric, underwater, underground ‘or in outer space —. because of the con- _ sequent radioactive ¢ontamination and the effect’ of ‘such tests in ac- celerating - the arms . race,. thus making more difficult’ the success- ful conclusion of any negotiations AGE the cessation: of nuclear wea-._ pons. testing and. ‘the’ provision of adequate international — and-control. eae ae “IJSNSA - supports _the right “of * students to “express. themselves..on.: the question’ ef testing and -dis- armament and hopes that students . in-all_parts of the world will: con- tinue to make ‘known their feelings. In’ particular USNSA- notes the demor strations “of: “American: ‘stu- . ; PORT own mame - E ax ae? oo Z - lass +e oe dents ae Washinigton- “and —aéross the country last year, and. the re-: cent. attempt of Japanese. students to protest Soviet. and US testing in Moscow.” McCARREN ACT Considering. the McCarren Act of 1950; which requires all mem- bers’ of Conimunist and Commun- ist front organizations to register, the Congress formulated this de- claration: | “The ‘abelling of shied ake ad-_ - yotate these’ (unpopular) ideas.<. makes. it practically. impossible for or cern (at first) because, the last stronghold pera after the _ Japanese siaitel (One of the Jater: pagodas stil! stands, behind Cartret.) The four sides of the classrooms remained open in nearly all ‘kinds of wea- ther, although glass: screens could -—-~be-drawn in storms: The schoolday ~ lasted from. 9:00. a.m. to 3:30. There wére two “midday breaks, for bread and milk, and a longer break at noon, fo a substantial hot meal — in the College Inn! “Lessons Were interspersed with field’ games and-classes in a thmics.” : ¢ The__students—-wore-blue—tunies. with white blouses; and they kept their coats on, since they were out- doors. Over their coats, they wore hooded jackets and’ trousers of a - heavy material -¢similar to-eskimo suits), and on their feet they wore “fleecé-lined boots. One of the for- mer students recalls that the girls learned to ‘write with their gloves on, ore ‘he girls Were never told what to do in class. They could study or’ ___ not, as they pleaséd.The teachers’ had no desks, but moved around among the rows of students.. When a student recited, she would come~- to the front of the room and be- come the.focus of -the class. Ac- cording to the School catalogue; “anyone who knows how difficult it _is to get good discussion from. wo- men college students will realize the value of this simple device.” The pupils were expected to “learn to ‘stand straight and unconscious, and-to- speak easily and convincing= * ly to a challenging audience . of peers.” Classes in the Phebe Anna Thorne School ‘were small, usually . aving less than fifteen girls. Few . texts were used, and no homework was allowed until the girls reached . the ‘two highest grades. ‘SPOKEN LATIN’: °°: Arithmetic. was . taught - chiefly by games; geography by the map work and studies of the earth’s structure; Latin and French, by’ the “direct method.” Visitors were often amazed because the students could easily plunge -into’a Latin conversation. —T Art classes were re given. in denen: ing, painting, weaving, and bas- ketry, which were all as far as possible correlated with-the study of geography, ‘science,~history or ~~ literature. The Eurythmics classes were-meant not only to,teach rhy- thm, movement, and singing, but also to lead to improvising and composing music) for songs and dances. The Phebe Anna’ Thora School was intended to be ‘a feeder fot Bryn Mawr College. In its early years. it was probably successful. - There are records of graduates who scored very highly on BMC. Entrance Exams. Later, however, the schoo] ran into financial diffi- culties,.and«was’ forced. to hire ‘teachers. of less merit, One grad- uate. from the later period recalls . that no one in her Class passed the College Boards. Probably, the “pro- gressive education” that the. girls received could not be ‘valued by’ regimented testing. — It. appears that the value in the Outdoor éducation was - the fact that it was~a very ‘pleas- ,ant experience for all who shared it. The pupils could do anything ‘ they wanted, and they. usually *did. If they ‘wished, they would put thumbtacks on the: téachers’ chairs; ae cover ‘the chairs with snow, There ‘is a lot’ to be said for the independence allowed the. girls. greatest : %, * ctceing -designated*- organizations ‘to~ ton “~The curriculum was not “geared “to tinue to exist; and thus violates the fundamental right of free ex- pression. (The Act endangers free- dom of Speech of individuals who. detest these unpopular views, for ‘it is possible under the law for the College Board Exams, still those-who really wanted to-go‘on to college usually managed to. dé so. Those who were not interested in studying. could develop other talents. One of the graduates who ‘groups to be ordered ‘to register did not™ go to college is. now in Continued on Page 5, Col. 1 Hey te deli Se ee Continued on. Page 6, Col. 1 \ P eee Wednesday, Desariber 12, 1962 I and Around Philadelphia — MUSIC ' Andre Kostelanetz: will conduct: “ie Philadelphia tthentih “Pops”. Concert - on Saturday, December 15.at 8:30 at the Academy. The program will 3 2 HE ‘eau GE NEWS. | Civil Rights News: o Se ge te Student Non-Violent Conkdiniting Committee Meets; ~ Leaders Urge Resumption Of Direct Action Methods (Page. eur From’ the Swarthmore College PHOENIX, November 30, 1962: Leaders of ‘the Student Non-Vio- ‘lent Coordinating Committee empha- sized. last week that voter registra- . tion must’ not submerge direct ac- — tion, and that both must continue with full strength, ; At the three-day conference in Nashville, | workers and students involved in the civil rights movemen in the South evaluated the petina tha pro- “gram. : . Field workers reported on the cur- rent voter registration ‘projects in southwest Georgia and the delta ‘area of Mississippi. The project has spread to five nearby counties and is expected to grow. Penny Patch (Swarthmore ’65), one of the eight students now working out of .Albany, Georgia, gave a vivid ac- ‘count of her six. months. there. In Mississippi, the registration is | Candidate Features | Dominating Mother . ~ And Wicked Reds by Brooks Robards ’64 There: naven’t been many’ thrill- : ers of the quality of Manchurian” .Candidate in quite a while. But. per- ~ haps it would be -better to call it a horror movie because of its some- times distorted - gimicks. Manchurian Candidate’ is the story of brainwashing techniques employ- ed on American soldiers by the Red Chinese, Brainwashing turns into something which is strictly Houdini method hypnotism, when the enemy trains a brainwashed G. I., Ronald fidante ‘and the love ‘interest in the — movie. Manchurian. Candidate is sus- = nti = rN ‘bver 200 SNCC field. continuing despite recent shootings, attacks and harassments of student workers there. _Both groups sug- gested that their work is not direct- - ed solely to voter registration, but — to breaking down two myths which keep the Negro community in bond- age: that .“White equals‘right,” and that “Negroes can’t stick together.” ‘In the past year, most.of SNCC’s — energies have’been devoted to these two projects and to voter registra- . tion elsewhere. Leaders at the con- ference felt, however, that direct action (sit-ins, demonstrations) must be resumed in the coming months. Tne recent-use of injunctions, and “red-baiting” to harass the Bove. ment” dominated: much of the dis- cussion sessions of the conference. In light of recent injunctions issued --against civil rights action, SNCC-is faced with the dilemma of follow- ing the injunction or violating it by continuing’ :action,~ speakers iat-the discussion favored breaking the injunctions, for they consider’ injumctions no different from any other unjust law. SUBVERSIVES Bob Zellner, of the SNCC. staff, advocated that the group make a policy decision concerning , “subver- sives” within the organization. He suggested ‘that SNCC accept aid and support. from any persons commit- ted to SNCC’s aims, ‘regardless of political affiliations or belief. Offi- cial action on this and the injunc- Guests Sleep the Tiddly Winks Intellectual Cam- pus. Highbrows. (TWICH prefers the English spelling of the word). Most of the . tion problem will probably be taken at the next executive meeting of SNCC. : RACE PRIDE At a mass sitsatiras Friday night on the Fisk campus, the Rev. Slater King of Albany, Georgia,. formulat- ~edshic idee ot the —““movement.”. He emphasized the need for race pride and ° self-sufficiency, and attacked the prejudice and rigid social struc- ture within the Negro community. He suggested the need for a typeof “in-group socialism.’ In the closing address, exécutive director Charles McDew emphasized that the movement was not just concerned with integration, but with “justice, freedom, and equality. ” He attacked. the concept that integra- ‘tion is enough and asked “integra- tion into what?” many aspects of white, American ‘middle class society. “He mentioned the Black Muslims as also aspiring to “justice, freedom, and equality,” and said that the difference between the two groups is one of approach, McDew was impressed by his: re- cent visit to the “United Nations during which he~spoke -to-ambassa- dors to the UN from the US, the ~USSR, and-Cuba, among others, He said that Ralph Bunche had no knowledge of SNCC, but Zorin ask-~ ed detailed questions: about SNCC’s problems, demonstrating an _inti- mate knowledge of the organization. BMC Hosts IOCA Dance; on.Gym Floor this venture. Several clubs from other colleges: have suggested that the group sponsor another such y ee archi peintanenantntnennmrstentanier ico winter _ MeDew said that _he did. not want to integrate into include Tschaikovsky’s Marche Solennelle, the “Pas de Deux” from om Nutcracker Suite, and Grofe’s Grand Canyon Suite, Eugene Ormandy and the Singing City Choir will combine talents for the annual presentation of Handel’s Messiah at the Academy, Sunday, De- cember 16 ‘at 3:30. * THEATER The musical comedy, I Can Get.It For You Wholesale, will open at the For- rest, December 17, '‘ Evening performances at 8:30; opening night at. 8:00. Matinees at 2:00 on Wednesday and Saturday. | Bert Lahr stats in The Beauty Part—at the Locust through Desaihar 22, Walnut until January 5, “The musical; Take Her She’s- Mine, starring Tom Newell, willbe “at the. The School for Scandal, directed by John Gielgud, is in its last week at the ‘ ‘Shubert. -The Co-Opera Company, in. association with the Society Hill Playhouse, presents The Threepenny Opera on Thursday atid Friday evenings at 8:30 through December — at the Playhouse, 507.S. 8th Street. Mayakovsky’s The Bedbug is performed, at the Society Hill Playhouse on Wednesday and’ Saturcay cvcenings at 8:30 through December 29: Guys and Dolls is in its final week at the Towne Playhouse. Frederick Knott’s Write Me A Murder i is the current production at the Abbey Stage Door. -_ LECTURES Dr. Theodore Peterson will discuss Thé Role of Minority Magazines on December 13. 4:30, at the Annenberg Schoq) of Communications, 3623 Locust Street. Sette tte _~< Once, Again — The Famous TCE EUROPEAN STUDENT TOURS (Some tours include an exciting visit to Israel) The faiilows long-established Tours that include many unique features: live several days with a ~-French~ family special opportunities. to-make friends abroad, special cultural events, evenin - entertainment, meet students fromall over the world. Travel by Deluxe Motor Coach. SUMMER 1963 53 Days in Europe $705 * weds Transatlantic Transportation Additional Travel Arrangements Made For Independent “Groups On Request At Reasonable Prices TRAVEL & CULTURAL EXCHANGE, INC. Dept..C- SOT Pifth Ave. © N.Y.17,N.Y. © OX 7-4129 @x~ Shaw, played by Lawrence Harvey orp starh ery sr yo 2 (the British actor who starred with ~~ This fall, the Bryn™ “Mawr Col- different colleges stayed at Bryn “ aa Sa - Simone Signoret in Room at the lege Outing Club was host’ for a Mawr during the weekend. For the Ww ny Top);-to kill on demand. . - square dance weekend to which first time in Bryn Mawyr’s history,” W¢ iy tenant = a Ronald wiris , the Congressional all of the Middle Atlantic Confer- boys stayed over night on the XE : . Nt Medal of Honor, but his Army bud- ence of Intercollegiate Outing Club Bryn Mawr campus. They slept in M fe dies begin’ to have recurring and Association was-invited. ... ___sleeping bags on the floor of the -- Qy. - shed incriminating nightmares about him. Thirty-five people from -twelvyé Graduate School gym. The week- we yn One of them, Major Ben Marco, end included, in addition to the “p oN “played by Frank Sinatra (king of dance which was attended by about ¥ BN the Rat Pack),’ is sent to track down ~ Team Taps Talents 100 students, Saturday dinner and ' 3 in Ronald and find out what the mys- ' M4 . Sunday breakfast. cooked over the NG de tery is all about. ' To iry Tiddly winks fire at Applebee Barn. : es Janet Leigh, who played the same A new Bryn Mawr undergrad- The many favorable comments Ye ihe sort of peripheral part in Hitch- data athistis oumenteatl which the Outing Club ha aah : Ane ; ganization has re- g Ulu 8 receiv NG] cock’s Psycho, acts as Sinatra’s. con- contly- “bean formed: TWI CH, or ed indicate the great success of M a 3S pensefuls A killer is on the loose, event later this year, and the Out- — W4 ah a ea ~ing-Club will plan one if there is’ oe eek BG proprietous touch Interest in the sport of tiddly- ee a. Xf : te of sex, the stock Hollywood love winkshas been growing~in-jeaps Pus: Ni i story, politics and. pratriotism to Nd bounds on campuses across the ROCK CLIMBING Ne AT BROOKS BROTHERS is keep the viewer ‘on’ the edge of his eastern seaboard. Smith has organiz- BR seat. -ed_its_tiddlywinks players “into the Many of' the other projects . in “) THIS CHRISTMAS BR. But the movie makes a’ mistake rch — Undergraduate Tiddly- eg ear a - acer agtey ab ; DR : ious a si t winks Society: SLUT; Harvard has Were coordinated with nearby col- : — is pha ats oat as ne aot ae foremd a group known as the GUTS; leges Some of these’ were a rock . FOR THAT MAN.ON.YOUR LisT...A host.of ® hiteneead patekotia: Sahaiton: witout the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tid- ee trip with the tem tae p good-looking giftwear ideas reflecting our mR ; . dlywinks Society.. Lid inks untaineers,” a weekend of sail- © &% “ es AY ahr at — of fact and an honest sadunns: teiitd ders a ee ae a ing with the Princeton Outing quality and good taste...and not gerierally fh As suspense, the movie is fine, larger scale, forming the»NU1S, Club, and several. camping and % obtainable elsewhere...priced from at 50 ft but as propaganda it is a flop for. the National Undergraduate — caving trips in conjunction with NG . if the perceptive movie-goer and dan- lywinks Society. - Haverford, Prineeton, Swarthmore, NG FOR “YOURSELF... Brooks sweaters, our new — ifs gerously distorted for anyone else. The Oxford (England) ‘tidaly- Lafayette and the University of « : A Lbl hi BR ‘Americans have good enough rea- Winks team first aroused interest Pennsylvania. NG navy flannel blazer, our own make shirts, : es _sons_ag it is for -hostility towards in the sport when it came to Am- ‘At this fall’s Middle Atlantic QF polo coats and other classics... all exclusive AN the Red Chinese; a put-up. job is erica to challenge the-GUTS-(Har- Conference, Nancy _Marcus,..Presi-._ yg anc te aati a a unnecessary and is the kind of atti- vard’s team). The Oxford team dent of the Bryn Mawr Outing % with us. . fn tude which breeds fanaticism, defeated the GUTS, but Harvard’s Club, was elected Executive Sec-' #7 | : : is Lawrence Harvey, when he doesn’t team remains undefeated in intra- ‘etary of this region, marking the 7 Illustrated Catalogue Upon Request uN ‘ det his British accent get the. best America team competition. first time that anyone from Bryn. sags Sens an - of him; Sinatra, when confusion. Arlene Joy, ’65, is coach of Bryn ‘Mawr has held this. post. oy : é any seems the character's and not his ©Mawr’s TWICH, and other mem- SKI TRIP Mf a fs _ own; Janet Leigh, when she has bers of the team are Katie Roy, ene Ni : age . something “worth acting out: all the.. 65, Joanie McClughan, '64, and (On the agenda for this winter ~ Wa 5 joae Se " ISTABLISHED 1818 waste tt a .. stars -tufn. in: adequate perma = Barbara Gaines, ’65. .,are’ plans for a skiing trip. during Ni y a ess ea : i pees TWICH’s first “scheduled game inter-session. Lehigh’s Outing > ds ; ~ Without Geing < iii “art iia ‘Was against the ‘Penn ‘tiddlywinks ' Club is’ sponsoring a trip to Pine DS NR touted of creativity in handling a team, and TWICH won by default Grove Furnace Cabin in central hy camera shine through in ‘some scenes ~~ -when the Penn team mysteriously Pennsylvania. over- the weekend of... Wf of the Manchurian Candidate, unus- didn’t show up. ,Jognne McClug- February 22. Anyone who is in- - “We ~CCSELOT LOTHIN I NGS) : - ual for something so typcal asa Hol- han reports that, having practised ' terested in these planned activities NE lywood suspense «story. — hard for the Penn match, TWICH or who would be interested in 9% ane Mens Furnishings, § Hats et aa fe = Mincharin. Candhinte--in-playing ._ is _uajting-:for challenges. ‘from’ going on any of the many-camp:.” ¢ Va 600 SMITHFIELD AVE, COR. SIXTH.AVE, PITTSBURGH 22, PA.“ at the 68th St. Playhouse in New other colleges and hopes to- play: ‘ing, caving and. canoeing ‘trips to ae York and the Fox Theater in Phila- against the. Columbia team in the which Bryn Mawr is planning to & NEW YORK * BOSTON « CHICAGO + LOS ANGELES'* SAN FRANCISCO : _delphia, and it’s worth taking the near future. Anyone interested in - send participants during the win- ‘ is time to go and see‘during the holi- joining the team should get ‘in ‘ter and spring is encouraged to 4 ’ ‘ is days, if only to be- able-to-tall- your touch with. Arlene puns Perry signup on_ the. —— heerd 1 ao R . — = “ — “ ea a _. House. ‘ ah aah tae coh oe Ca at at cat Cicer cet (ze iat (arty Wednesday, December 12, 1962 THE CO L LE GE NE ws Page Five BMC Profs Play Concert Of Duets M = as a ree ; . “What are African women think- scription of the first session of Bryn On Friday 7 Jan. ] ] This year marks the four-hund- of Princeton University — will ing?) in the. ovlostion..Aeked.-and-- Masecls inatiate det iiuden Seam ° - reth anniversary of the birth of speak on “The Dramatic Technique cae d by « Bryn Mawr alana valeee in Avignon by Mabel Gres’ _ On Friday, Jdhuary 11, Madame the great Spanish dramatist, Lope of Lope de Vega.” Mr. Downer = the fall Peles ie! soot genheim, Associnte Professor of Agi Jafnbor and Mr.: Horace Alwyne’ de Vega, born in 1562. The Span- will make reference to the similar- SA Maan: Rasahond Mae willed a -Tennly .of. the. Bryn..Mawr. Department. of Music .will present a “Concert. of. Music for Two Pianos.” The con- cert will be in Goodhart ‘at 8:30 p.m. ‘Reading of Lope de Vega To Mark His Anniversary ish department is-commemorating this event with two lectures con- cerning de Vega and his works on January 10,'in the Gommon Room ity between the dramatic works of*~ Lope de Vega and Shakespeare. Readings from de Vega’s play *“Fuenteovejuna” by Mr. Ferrater Alumnae Bulletin Articles Discuss African Women and French Schools: villgge in Uganda, and reported her conversation with native women,’ some of whom had walked seven miles to see an American. M. Guggenheim’s description was followed by a letter from a Lafay- ette College student, who attended - _ the Institute. He calls the courses _ The program has not yet been fix- of Goodhart Hall. ; Mora, Mr. Gonzales - Gerth, Mr. tie a : ee £ ed definitely, but it will Melude sev- An. outstanding... figure. in. the... Acensio. from, Hayerford, and Mr. aes ma a = rill Ne ‘a eee ro ae Prac eed eral ‘of the following works: Spanish Golden Age of the 16th “Llorens from Princeton as well as Tee _ Boe ney ee s also_solid,”-and sugges av -per- = asked: “What is the first-step that haps the greatest credit for the suc- Clementi, Sonata in B. flat. Busoni, Duettino Concertante after Mozart. Franck-Duparc, Organ Chorale No. 1-in-E: : Vaughan Williams, and Fugue. Benjamin Britten, Introduction and Rondo Burlesca. Arnold Bax; ‘Tone-Poem). Introduction Moy Mell (Irish Poulenc, Elegie (en accords. al- ternes) Poulenc. Sonata. - Palmgren, Maskenball. Infante, Mufiques d’Espagne. Tansman, [fs Habis Neufs du Roi. Glazofiiév, Fantasie, Op. 104. NSA Continued from: Page 3, Col. 4 mt) if they agree with the Communists on only one issue.) “The law denies the fundamental tenet of American society that the’ people must be free to choose be- and ‘17th centuries, Lope de Vega was an extremely versatile and prolific. writer.. He is known to have composed -1800 dramas of. which about 500 survive. These are a. mixture of comedies, histories ._and...tragedies...De—Vega-—endowed— . Spain with an entire dramatic li- * terature and established a drama- tic form which endured in Spain for 150 years. Not only a play- wright of the ‘highest quality, Lope de Vega also wrote lyric po- etry, one of the many expressions of his creative genius. Professor Manuel “Duran of Yale University, a specialist in the literature of the Spanish Golden Age, wilk lecture on “Lope de ‘Vega and the Spanish Theatre” at 5 p.m, in the Common Room. After the lecture selections. from Span- ish Baroque music will be present- ed as well as songs from some of .de Vega’s plays given by some members of the Chorus. : At. 8 p.m., also in. the Common Room, Professor Alan §. Downer others, will accompany the lecture. Mimeographed copies in English of these selections. will be avail- able to the audience. These lectures will make a fit- ting salute to one of Spain’s great- est playwrights and since they are . to be given in English, language will present no barrier to the un- derstanding and cesses of them. Parents’ Day Parents’ Day will be held on © Saturday, April 20. This year’s . schedule for the bi-annual] tra- dition is being planned by a committee . composed of Mr, Dudden, chairman; Mrs. King; Mr. Conner; the four class pres- idents;- Judy Deutsch, President of Undergrad; Marjorie Heller; Susan Gumpert and two. repre- sentatives from. each Please ask your family to re- _ serve the date. Further details will be forthcoming. class... women .in other countriés took to- wards being respected?” They also * wanted to learn to vote responsibly, once given the privilege, rather than as their husbands told them. The Bulletin also contains a de- cess of the program was the serious preparation and attitude of the pro- fessors and most of the students.” He was “especially impressed with and interested in” the program of » speakers at the Institute. : SANTA. HANGS HIS HAT WHERE _ tween conflicting views and that they must be trusted in their : . . : y et sola? , DAN ROSEN. PRESENTS — a Both these resolutions were. pass- ~~ .eCl Lin = ed by a vote of the full Congress. JOSH WHITE > In: all, 28 oluti id- t st vid he Ae al aa Town Hall, Broad & Race Sts.; Dec. 14 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $1.85, $2:50, $3.25, $3. 85 _ ered by the Congress. However, approximately twice as many policy Tickets Available at: Discount Record Shop 1730° Chestnut St. statements did not. come up for ap- Mail Order: Enclose Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope with -proval by the Congress but were passed’ ‘by the ‘National Executive Remittance to Dan Rosen Productions, Dept. BM, 6410 Castor Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. : PECK” and’ PECK =~ a Suburban Square , Ardmore,.-Pa. --- al Committee of the Congress, a group composed of regional repre- ~ sentatives and having about 30 members. ee How to see Britain for less than $45 a week copyriGnt © 1961, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS For less than $45 a week, you can * ‘ — : a “s stay at friendly youth hostels, visit Seeing Britain on less — Weg enon nens m= theatres and palaces, meet charsi- ten SSS -.) ,.. s ing people, eat well and\see the fyelem Srenee shee ! country. Clip coupon below for 3 nights in London...... $ 9.00 4 nights in Youth Hostels. .$ 2.00 Breakfast, lunch and dinner. for seven days. your free student's Travel Kit. . $23.80 OME thrifty students say you can S Bicycle hire for one week.$ 3.00 have the time of your life in Britain * for less than it-costs to stay home. The Visits to Tower of London, reason is that most prices in Britain are castle and stately home. 84 lower than in the U.S. Two visits to the theatre. .$ 1.00 a ; ’ 2 cents.a mile is the price of bus eet Ree ae 5.00 = travel. Or you can. hire a bicycle for Sass —4 only $3 a week. Total... .:.$44.64 - 50 cents is average for a night's lodg-.. ing at Britain’s 400 youth hostels. Join the American Youth Hostels Association ‘before you go. Transatlantic fares are surprising- ly modest, too. With aq ‘college charter flight, you can fly by jet . ‘ 55 cents buys he a seat at the Shake- . foes Aig ya eee fp Evans and speare Season of Plays at Stratford. A gallery seat in London’s theatres is only aes ci 3 ao: ARS os fifty cents. SERA ES ee ee ‘ ees oe se . -sscaliSiht adbeast Ua eee pays for a six-weeks’ course at of making friends with other visiting students. Free! Any of Britain’s 50 cathedrals: and most museums and art galleries, Oxford, Birmingham or Edinburgh uni- versities. Price includes meals, lodging, _ tuition and excursions. Plus the chance +. FREE STUDENT'S TRAVEL HF eames 3 c { Please serid my free student’s Travel Kit: 1. Stu- fae send dents Visiting .Britain, “2. Calendar of Events in Po Britain: 8. Traveler's Guide to Britain. 4. Britain. : Travel Association - at one of these addresses: ~NEW YORK: 680 Fifth Avenue _ LOS ANGELES: 612 So. Flower St. 5. London, 6. Traveling or a) Namie = es : (PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY) =~ noth caine College “rr: * | ! f J os ba | I. — sf | | BETWEEN BITES... - t , ; i] ' + a i ; ; ; i i ao | "Ai Ss his 0. La Salle St. anes Be get that: refreshing new feeling: : Ce ee eee ee ee with Coke! i ‘ ees — State om seen rma =f _ Bottled under authority of — Spurs . eer tol : ! _* At j cs i | “ The Coca-Cola Company by. The Philadelphia Coca-Cola Bottling Company - ao SF L Ss Fae ay aed : ’ : , : y é r : . *% . ! y ’ m is pind P me ‘ ‘ « ° ‘ . “ c : . : ~ ae ; . Fee pene oe & Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS 4 “Wednesday, December 12, 1982 Congressman Lindsay’s Lecture Continued from Page 1, Col. 2 committees in the last term. Prob- \ lems of tax reform and population * explosion, including Medicare, welll face the Congress. One of its greatest problems is in the area of civil rights—the Indivi- dual Security Bill, which he cited as one of the worst bills ever pre- sented, was almost passed. The most pressing difficulty con- cerns the luck of rapport between the majority and_the administration. . Mr. Lindsay believes that the Pres- ~~ ident ‘often stresses public relations in preference to “substance;” there- sfore, with regard to bills presented, “everything has been Mount Eve- rest.” The minority is faced with’ “the question of the. direction it” fe. " should take. ~ Phe Republicans have floundered, with resultant division in their own ranks. The root of this is the an- * cient problem of Republicans—the _ lack of desire to become the major- STEP WAY OUT in the Fashion Parade! Adorable Squaq Boots will take you ‘most-everywhere in snug comfort... . or highlight your “at home” attire. Foam rubber innersole . . . durable top-grain leather ...... white only .. . $6.00 (no CODs : . . we pay postage) State. regular shoe size and width. Send your name and mailing address to: CONESTOGA HOUSE Post. Office -Box..11203, Dept. 8-7 . Fort Worth 10, Texas rian now Tor youl ‘SBERMUDA College Week 1963 bigger, busier, : better than ever!” “oe ocuntes dance to stant e fun : College Day at the Beach . biggest beach party of the atts All-day cruise to historic St. George. Luncheon. Calypso music. . Gom y Dancers. : Round Robin Tennis Tournament. ' College Talent Revue. i Fun Festival with . jazz concerts, choral groups, « dance contests. - . Barbecue Luncheon. Sightseeing. ‘1 Special Tennis Trophies. * ALL YOURS AT NO CHARGE tm BERMUDA Trade Development Board 620 Fifth Ave., New York 20.N.¥. Scholar dollars - travel farther ~~~ with SHERATON _. HOTELS STUDENT- FACULTY | DISC OUNTS | -Save on the going price. ‘4, 0f going places at , ~ Sheraton Hotels, e . Special save-money ates on ~y-singles and greater savings-per ** “person when you share ison sae one, two.or three friends. erous group rates arran for-athletic teams, clubs ee and college clans on-the-go. For rates, reservations or further information, get in touch with "MR. PAT GREEN . College Relations Dept. - Sheraton Corporation 470 Atiantic Avenue Cree: Boston 10, Mass. | EVERYTHING ‘IN FLOWERS & PLANTS ity, .This-is manifest in their in- ability to provide, attractive alter- natives for governmental. action. The Republicans must-realize, Mr. Lindsay stressed, that not only must they become “city-minded,” but, in addition, they must make a concen- trated effort. to win the city vote, which he feels they are capable of doing. Furthermore, a definite and clear statement of their civil rights program is necessary. {In conclusion, he emphasized’ the “importance of —getting- the coun-~ try off dead center” and stressed the lack of any simple solutions ;to these problems, because of the com- plexity. of our political ‘system. Jeannett’s Bryn Mawr Flower Shop 823 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa. LAwrence 5-0326 LAwrence 5-0570 Members: Florists’ Telegraph Delivery tonite thru Dec. LEON BIBB and JUAN MORENO “Flamenco Guitarist THE OND D FRET -2eG- 17 SHOW STARTS eB efi NIGHTLY 9:15 11:00, ananny-Tu FRI.& SAT ssdays 12:18 a8 PAT‘School ‘ Continued-from Page 3, Col. 5 charge-of lighting for most of the . productions on Broadway, We can” be certain that her abilities were. . recognized and cultured by her “progressive education.” At.a time when such courses were available nowhere else, the PAT School: offered training in dramatics, rhythms, painting, .and drawing. The experiment was quite valuable to the College’s ed- ucation and psychology depart- “ments, which were always certain of a ready source of subjects. Most of the observors reported that the students: were rosy-cheeked,- and healthy looking, but they admitted ' ‘that studying outdoors was a bit bizarre. In time the financial difficulties of the Phebe Anna Thorne School _ became so great that with the ad-. ‘vent of the Depression it ceased its ‘Classs are held indoors in a large “house on the ‘corner of Wyndon The present Phebe Anna Thorne school is only a nursery school started after the second World War. activities. Avenue and Roberts Road. BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN © OPEN TO THE PUBLIC a BREAKFAST screens ewes : 9:00-11;00 A.M. WGN fe sk bs ike 12:00- 2:00 P.M. 4 _ AFTERNOON TEA .......... «oes eve oh -3490-- 5:00PM, DINNER 'e oie 0's 6 ds Pag arin ater ey aes oe ee 5:30-.7:30 P:M. SUNDAY.. DINNER TELEPHONE LAWRENCE 5.0386 ~ LUNCHEON . PLATTERS FROM .50 ‘DINNER PLATTERS FROM “$1.05 OPEN 7 DAYS WEEKLY SPECIAL PARTIES AND BANQUETS ARRANGED foie 00- 7:30 P.M. LOMBAERT ST. AND MORRIS AVE. ~ BRYN MAWR, -PENNSYLVANIA~ SUMMER SCHOOLS ITALY — From June 24 to August \2 in Florence at Torre di Bellosguardo, 16th : Courses taught’ in English and centered on the Italian Renaissance—art, literature, music and Florence t under the Medici. Begin- Century Villa. ning and advanced Italian is also offered. Board, room, tuition, ‘and two excursions IN: $600 ( FRANCE—From June 24: to August 2 in Paris at the Cite Universitaire, a center for students from all parts of the world. Courses taught in English and __centeted on Modern France — literature, art, and social and. ;political history. Beginning .and-advanced French is also offered. Board, room, tuition, and tw& excursiong: $600 A.12 day. tour of Greece (from June 11 to June 23) is also offered pre- ceding the Sarah Lawrence Summer Schools. A Sarah Lawrence faculty member accompanies the group, and the itinerary has ‘been planned to include the most important historical and archeological sites. For information and applications write: Summer Sessions, Sarah Lawrence College; Bronxville, New York - ALL COURSES TAUGHT BY THE SARAH LAWRENCE FACULTY _ > . . “Tareyton’ s Dual Filter i in duas partes divisa est!” ae : = says Marius ¢ (Gay Blade) Camillus of the’ Forum Fencing Team. Says Gay Blade, “Anyone on terra firma a ~ ; will agree Tareyton i is a firma; fina cigarette=packed with tobacco bono. No wonder you enjoy de gustibys you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette.” . Dual Filter makes the. difference cama’ ure fon | pean oe Re rannne is our middle name © 0. 7.0» : ——— = cermin nae Rent eae nae man — _ ar ae > :