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College news, March 11, 1953
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1953-03-11
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 39, No. 16
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol39-no16
Wednesday, March 11, 1953
AP
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page.Three
Sports
by Lynn Badler, ’56
In an exciting swimming meet
held at Bryn Mawr on Thursday,
Swarthmore defeated Bryn Mawr:
the varsity won 41-16, the junior
varsity barely pulled out a 29-27
win. Competing with spirit, but
handicapped by the loss of Glenna
Vare, Bryn Mawr started hopefully
against the champion Swarthmore
team, but lost ground steadily as
the meet progressed.
For the varsity Ann Lebo won
top honors for the backcrawl. Mig-
gy Schwab sparkled throughout
the junior varsity contests; she
came in first in the free-style race,
and, with Judy Sands and ayia ibaa their winning
Hunt, led.the junior varsity to
win in the medley relay. Judy
Sands also was a star for the jun-
ior varsity, winning the backcrawl
with amazing speed. For the div-
ing competition Marilyn Fain plac-
ed for the varsity and Pat McEI-
roy for the junior varsity. At the
intermission period the performers
of the Synchronized Swimming
Club showed excellent form as they
gave their beautifully coordinated
version of “Ting-a-ling.”
On March 4 at Beaver, Bryn
Mawr’s varsity lost in basketball
Haverford Drama Club, College Theatre Stage
‘Boy With a Cart’, ‘The
Continued from Page 1
Cuthman and helps him to build his
church in spite of the interference
of Mrs. Phipps, played by Kathy
Lurker, and her two sons, played
44-28, while the junior varsity won
50-30. The varsity was not up to
par and Beaver had control all dur-
ing the game. The junior varsity,
paced by Pauline Smith with 22
points, took the lead immediately
so that the team had scored 30
points by the end of the first half.
The last basketball game of the
season will be played here against
Swarthmore on March 11.
Bryn Mawr’s badminton teams
streak
as they defeated Chestnut Hill
in a match held there on Wed-
nesday. Deedy McCormick, Janet
Leeds, and Judy McCulloch swept
the singles games, winning every, a
In the doubles, Marilyn Pe@red in former college theatre
match.
Trojan Horse’ in March
by Tom Wood and Joe Stein. Other
characters in the play are Mowers,
played by Phil Silver, Hans Broek-
man, Charles Fry, and Jack Pio-
trow; people of South England,
played by Jill Fansler, Liz Warren,
and Dina Bickerman.
Archibald MacLeish’s The Tro-
jan Horse should prove to be very
interesting and thought-provoking,
for it was written by a man who
is not known as a playwright but
as a poet, and is to be read, not
acted in the traditional manner.
Here too the cast is a large one
with a number of fairly equal
smaller parts.
The leading roles are Cassan-
dra, played by Kathy Lurker;
Helen, played by Patsy Price;
Laocoon, played by Jack Piotrow;
and a blind man, played by Charles
Robinson. All five actors have ap-
Muir-Beth Davis and Lois Bonsal-| P’°ductions.
Prue Oliver aided in achieving the
5-0 win. The junior varsity also
won, Barbara Bornemann and
Cathy Nebolsine pulling out very
close wins in the singles, and the
team of Harriet Cooper-Sukie Ku-
ser victorious in the doubles
match.
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES
FOR WEEKENDS & HOLIDAYS
Attractive Rooms—All with Shower and Bath
$4.50 per person per day—Three in a room
$5.50 per person per day—Two in a room
$6.50 per person per day—One in a room
For reservations contact
Beth Davis—Pembroke West Hall
Hotel
OOSEVELT
Frank G. Wangeman, General Manager
A WILTON HOTEL
MADISON AVENUE AT 45TH STREET, NEW Yeas
The other characters are a young
woman, played by Coryce Ozanne;
a girl, played by Pat Clifford; two
women, played by Barbara Penny-
packer and Barbara Goldberg, a
child, played by Catherine Euster;
two men of Troy, played by Joe
Stein and Jim Coote; three coun-
cillors, played by Bob Greer, John
me tome tes
Want to travel
and study
abroad?
Z
Ww
Take a university-sponsored
tour via TWA this summer
and earn full college credit |
while you travel
Visit the countries of your choice
. study from 2 to 6 weeks at a
foreign university. You can do both
on one trip when you arrange a uni-
Versity-sponsored tour via TWA.
Itineraries include countries in
Europe, the Middle East, Asia and
Africa. Snecial study tours available,
Low all-inclusive prices with TWA's
economical Sky Tourist service.
For information, write: John H.
Furbay, Ph. D., Director, Air World
Tours, Dept. CN, 80 East 42nd St,
New York 17, N. Y. Be sure to meme
tion countries you wish to visit.
=IWA
TRANS WORLD AMINED
capers
Rehearsals stretch out,
for the big Glee Club
tour is ahead. Work and worry call
for a pause—so, relax...
refresh with ice-cold Coke.
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RRR
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
“Coke"' is a registered trade-mark.
© 1953, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Pfaltz, and Mac Gatch: and a boy,
played by Phil Silver.
The casts and the directors of
both plays have been working very
hard to make this double bill a suc-
cessful Spring Production at Bryn
Mawr. Boy With a Cart and The
Trojan Horse will both take place
March 20 and 21 in Goodhart at
8:30. Tickets will be on sale March
16-20 at Goodhart Box Office.
Enter Fiction Now
For ‘Mademoiselle’
Eight years ago MADEMOI-
SELLE established the College
Fiction Contest — an opportunity
for women undergraduates to test
their creative writing talents by
professional standards. This a‘
fords the college student a chance
for recognition in a national mag:
azine well known for its outstand-
ing quality of fiction, and it gives
to MADEMOISELLE a tremen-/} #
dous satisfaction in having a hand
in the recognition of new literary
talent.
Year after year, the magazine is
represented in the anthologies of
the best American short stories,
not only by such established writ-
ers as Carson McCullers, Paul
Bowles, Christine Weston, Ray
Bradbury, and Truman Capote, but
also by the winners of the College
Fiction Contest.
Of the recent finalists, 1950's
winners, J. Carol Goodman and
Ilona Karmel, both saw their
stories reprinted in THE BEST
AMERICAN SHORT STORIES
1951, and Miss Karmel’s first
novel, STEPHANIA, has just been
selected as an April choice by the
Literary Guild. Elizabeth Mar-
shall, who won last year, will sec
her story, THE HILL PEOPLE, in
the 1958 edition of THE BEST|#@
AMERICAN SHORT STORIES.
Again this year, MADEMOI:
SELLE will award a $500 fiction
prize for each of the two best short
stories submitted by a college stu
dent between now and April 15.
MADEMOISELLE magazine lists
the following rules for the Fictior
Contest:
PRIZES: $500 to each of tw:
winners for serial rights to thei:
stories and publication in August,
’63,. College MLLE. We reserve
the right to buy other acceptable
stories at our regular rates.
RULES: Eligibility: Women un-
dergraduates only. Stories that
have appeared in undergraduate
college publications are acceptable
but only if they have not been pub-
lished elsewhere.
Length: 3,000 to 5,000 words.
We are glad to accept more than
one story from each contestant.
Format: Typewritten, double-
spaced, one side of paper only, ac-
companied by contestant’s clearly
marked name, home address, col-
lege address, college year.
MLLE assumes no responsibility
for manuscripts, will return only
those accompanied by stamped,
self-addressed legal-size envelopes.
Judges: MLLE editers, whose
decision will be final.
DEADLINE: Entries must be
postmarked by midnight April 15,
1958.
SUBMIT TO: College Fiction
Contest, MADEMOISELLE, 575
Madison Avenue, New York 22,
New York.
Flowers
from
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3