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‘“Mathematics—Joan Steen of Laurel-
VOL. XLVIII—NO. 21
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1
952 Copyright,
Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College, 1952
PRICE 20 CENTS
College Grants
Graduate Dean
Post te Alumna
Miss Eleanor A. Bliss
Assumes New
Position
Announcement has been made
of the appointment of Miss Elea-
nor A. Bliss, of Baltimore, as Dean}
of the Graduate School.
Miss Bliss, an alumna of the]
College, is Assistant Professor of
Preventive Medicine at the Johns]
Hopkins Medical School in Balti- |}
more. She will succeed Miss Lily })
Ross Taylor, who is retiring at the]
end of the academic year.
Well-known for her research in
bacteriology, Miss Bliss is credited
with the discovery of minute
haemolytic streptococcus, now
known as Group F. She has been
on the staff of Johns Hopkins
since 1925, at which time she re-
ceived a Doctor of Science degree,
and was appointed assistant pro-
fessor in 1940,
During the last war, Miss Bliss
served with the Office of Scientific
Research and Development and is
now a civilian consultant to the
Chemical Warfare Service. She is
the author of a book on the use of
sulfanilamide and is a contributor
to many scientific journals.
In 1948, Miss Bliss was elected a
Director-at-large of Bryn Mawr
College after a term as Alumnae
Lily Ross Taylor
Supervises Study
At Roman School
Lily Ross Taylor, Professor of
Latin and Dean of the Graduate
School of Bryn Mawr College, has
been appointed Professor - in-
Charge of the School of Classical
Studies of the American Academy
in Rome, James Kellum Smith,
|President of the Academy has an-
nounced.
Miss Taylor will succeed Professor
Frank E. Brown, who will join the
faculty of Yale University in the
‘fall. At the same time Mr. Smith
‘announced that Lawrence Rich-
,ardson, Jr., has accepted the posi-
ition of Field Archaeologist at the
‘Academy. Under the general su-
ipervision of Miss Taylor, Mr.
‘Richardson will conduct the Acad-
iemy’s excavations at Cosa. Both
lappointments are for one year be-
ginning October 1, 1952.
| Miss Taylor is a widely known
lauthority on Roman civilization.
‘After graduation from the Univer-
isity of Wisconsin in 1906, she
studied at the American Academy
‘in Rome and later went to Bryn
Mawr for further study, receiving
‘a Ph.D. degree in 1912.
In 1945 Miss Taylor was elected
to membership in the American
Philosophical Society, whose ros-
ter includes a group of 500 Amer-
ican scholars in all fields of learn-
ing. She was recently elected a
Fellow of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences. Miss Taylor
is past President of the American
Philological Association, was a
Director.
Continued on Page 5, Col. 1
President McBride Announces Grad
Fellowships, Scholarships for 52-53
Miss McBride has announced
awards in the Graduate School to
47 Fellows and Scholars for the
year 1952-1953, beginning next
September.
Of the group, eleven were
awarded Resident Fellowships of
$1500 each, five of whom were
Canadians. The Graduate Schol-
arships vary in amounts from $500
to $800.
The British Graduate Scholar-
ship of $1400 was given to Miss
Josephine Margaret Dow, of Lea-
mington Spa, England, for work
in classical archaeology.
The awards are as follows:
RESIDENT FELLOWSHIPS
French—Margaret Epstein of Bishop’s
Falls, Newfoundland, Canada.
B.A. McMaster University 1951;
M.A. Candidate, Bryn Mawr,
1962.
German—Joyce Woodside of Ottawa,
Canada. B.A. Queens’ University
1946; Bonn University 1951-52.
Greek—E. Marie Spence of Edmon-
ton, Alberta, Canada. B.A. Uni-
versity of Alberta 1950; M.A.
candidate, Bryn Mawr 1952.
History—Isabel Witte of Belmont,
Mass. A.B. Swarthmore College
1947; M.A. candidate, Bryn Mawr §-
1952.
Latin—Katherin
woody, Georgia.
Scott College 1949;
date, Bryn Mawr 1952.
Geffcken of Dun-
A.B. Agnes
M.A. candi-
ton, b.. 1, N. YY. A.B... Barnara
College 1951; M.A. candidate,
Bryn Mawr 1952.
Howard L. Goodhart Fellowship
in Mediaeval Studies — Julia McGrew
of York Mills, Ontario, Canada.
A.B. Oberlin College 1943, M.A.
1945.
Phildsophy—Catesby Spears of Paris,
Kentucky. A.B. Bryn Mawr 1948;
Lo University Kentucky
Psychology—Adeline Scovil of Bing-
hamton, N. Y. A.B. William Smith
College 1950.
Sociology and
Anthropology—Martha Ann Phowsine
of Little Rock, Ark. A.B. Bryn
Mawr 1950. M.A. candidate, Uni-
ae
Hoyt, New Brunswick, Canada.
B.A. University of British Colum-
bia 1950.
RESIDENT GRADUATE
SCHOLARSHIPS
English—Mary Tower of Laconia, N.
H. A.B. Goucher College 1951.
Rose-Marie Brown of New York
City. A.B. to be. conferred,
Hunter College 1952,
Barbara Weissman of New York
City. A.B. to be conferred, Hunt-
er College 1952.
‘Norma Phillips of Amsterdam,
N. Y. A.B. to be conferred, Uni-
versity of Rochester 1952.
French—Eva Maria Stadler of Forest
Hills, N. Y. A.B. to be conferred,
Barnard College 1952.
Diane Dewis of Providence, R. I.
A.B. Mt. Holyoke College 1948;
M.A. University of Kansas 1951.
Charlotte Hince of Lowell, Mass.
A.B. to be _ conferred, Wheaton
College 1952.
Mary Alice Slauson of Williams-
burg, Va. A.B. to be conferred,
ee of William and Mary
Greek—Mary Lee Hunnicutt of
Orangeburg, S. C. A.B. to be
ogneerred, Agnes Scott College
History—Janet Taylor Letts of Ho-
Ho-Kus, N. J. A.B. to be con-
ferred, Swarthmore College 1952.
Clara Louise Mattern of Farm-
ingdale, N. Y. A.B. to be con-
a University of Rochester
Barbara Elaine Mann of Lincoln,
Neb. A.B. to be conferred, Uni-
versity of Nebraska 1952.
Mediaevel Studies—Nancy C. Lane of
Fayetteville, Ark. A.B. to be
conferred, University of Arkan-
sas 1952.
Philosophy—Liana DeBona of New
York City. A.B. to be conferred,
Barnard College 1952.
Judith Nina Marks of Los An-
goles, Calif. A.B. to be conferred,
Brandeis University 1952.
Beryl Berger of Quincy, Mass.
A.B. to be conferred, Mt. Holyoke
College. 1952.
Physics—Mary Jean Scott of Brook-
lyn, N. Y. B.S. to be conferred,
St. Lawrence University 1952.
Mary Agnes Melliwraith of Toron-
to, Canada. A.B. to be con-
“ae University of Toronto
Sociology &
Anthropology—Mary Jane Downs of
Milwaukee, Wis. A.B. to be con-
ferred, Beloit College 1952.
Marilyn Spalding of East Lan-
versity of Pennsylvania 1952.
Spanish—Margaret Ethel Smith of
Continued on Page 6, Col. 2
Orchestra Presents
Concert Featuring
Famous Concertos
The Bryn Mawr and Haverford
orchestras, under the direction of
William Reese, will provide added
attractions at their next concert
in the form of the Drexel orches-
tra and two proficient soloists. On
Saturday evening, April 19, at
8:30, in Goodhart, the three com-
bined orchestras will be graced by
the harpist who was for many
years with the New York Philhar-
monic Orchestra, Steffy Ormandy.
In addition, Wendell Kolostanyi, a
Haverford graduate student. who
was a member of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra and whom
‘Bryn Mawr has heard with great
‘pleasure in earlier orchestra con-
‘certs. this year, will be concert-
master. The program will fea-
ture Handel’s Harp Concerto and
the second performance of Bach’s
fourth Brandenburg Concerto,
which proved so popular at a pre-
vious concert. Included in the
program are works by Vaughn
Williams and Aaron Copland.
The College Theatre announc-
es the following elections:
President: Maggie Glenn.
Vice-President:. Danny Luz-
zatto.
Production
Bolster.
Business Manager:
Kauffman.
Publicity. Manager:
Harvey.
Reading Committee
man: Ann Blaisdell.
CALENDAR
Friday, April 18
8:15 p.m. Actresses Anony-
-mous will present two one-act
plays in the Mrs. Otis Skinner
Workshop. There is no admission
charge.
Saturday, April 19
8:30 p.m. The combined orch-
estras of Bryn Mawr, Haverford,
and Drexel Imstitute will give a
concert, conducted by William H.
Reese with Steffy Ormandy as
guest soloist, in Goodhart audi-
torium. Admission $.60.
Sunday, April 20
5:00 p.m. Bryn Mawr Music
Club Concert by string quartet in
Manager: Candy
Joan
Phoebe
Chair-
known author and critic,
Tuesday afternoon, April 15, in
the Deanery on
are all writers,
Wescott Analyzes
Female Portraits
In Colette Novels
well-
spoke
Mr. Glenway Wescott,
“The Feminine
Characters of Colette’s Novels”.
Mr. Wescott is an authority on
Colette and is the author of the
introduction to her newly--publish-
ed collection, The Short Novels of
Colette, which includes her fam-
ous Chere and La Fin de Chere.
In his lecture, Mr. Wescott con-
centrated primarily on one of her
earlier short novels, Le Ble en
Herbe. According to Mr. Wescott,
fiction is only interesting if it is
conceived in a way to tell the
truth. Because Colette is “One of
the most truthful fiction writers”
he considers her to be the greatest
living French novelist and the
greatest living authoress.
Colette’s theory of love consti-
tutes one of the most interesting
and vital parts of her ficion. De-
spite her reputation as “the prose-
poet of voluptuousness”, Colette
definitely believes that love goes
beyond the mere “pursuit of hap-
piness”. Ultimately, love is based
on unselfishness and_ kindness.
This theory of Colette’s is exem-
plified in many of her works, from
the “hack” stories (Minne and
others) which she wrote to be pub-
lished under the name of her
worthless husband, Willy, to her
later more complex and mature
works.
Mr. Wescott proved that in Le
Ble en Herbe, this theme of the
discovery of selfless love is clear-
ly stressed. The development of
the “juvenile delinquents”, Phil-
ippe and Vinca, from “summer
happiness” to the realization of
the value of true love is superbly
expressed. Colette’s descriptions
of sensual experience are done
with a faultless and excellent
evocation of emotion, on the high-
est level.
Colette is an internationalist, as
continued Mr.
Wescott. He pointed out that there
are at least two motifs in Le Ble
en Herbe which show Germanic in-
fluences. The first of these is the
Continued on Page 5, Col. 4
Parker Insists
Scholars Write
For Enjoyment
‘Aim at Your Audience’
Parker Pleads
To Grads
At the commencement of the
Graduate Assembly on April 9,
President McBride announced the
appointment of Miss Eleanor A.
Bliss, Se. D. of Johns Hopkins, as
new Dean of the Graduate School.
Highlighting the Fellowship an-
nouncements during the assembly
was Miss MeBride’s revelation of
the two Fanny Bullock Workman
Fellowships being given to two
students for outstanding graduate
work. The new Fellows are Miss
Helen Dow in History of Art and
Miss Elsa Ebleling in Mediaeval
History.
Dean Taylor then introduced
Professor William Riley Parker,
head of the English department
at N. Y.U., the present Executive
Secretary of the Modern Language
Assvciation, and Editor of the
Modern Language Association
Publication.
Scholar and: Audience
Mr. Parker, in considering The
Scholar and the Audience, insisted
that attempts at scholarly writing
can and must be improved with the
writer’s main consideration being
his audience. As a motto, Mr.
Parker suggested that in writing
one “enjoy himself and relax his
performance while aiming at his
audience.” In illustrating these
points, Professor Parker related
the circumstances of John H. Wil-
son, Professor of English at Ohic
State. who, after one two-month
period of rewriting a too scholar-
ly account of Nell Gwyn and a
careful contemplation of a broad-
er, less widely read audience, pro-
duced a current best seller.
Mr. Parker, in connection with
his own publication, chose as the
most frequent criticism of contem-
porary attempts at scholarly writ-
ing “lack of form, lack of clarity,
Continued on Page 2, Col. 3
the Gertrude Ely Room, Wynd-
ham.
7:30 p.m. The Reverend Pal-
frey Perkins, King’s Chapel, Bos-
ton, will speak at the evening
chapel service.
Monday, April 21
7:15 p.m. Mr. Gilbert will dis-
cuss “The Unification of Ger-
many” at Current Events in the
Common Room.
8:00 p.m., 9:15 p.m. Mr. Ar-
mand Spitz, Inventor of the Spitz
‘Planetarium, will offer two plan-
etarium demonstrations in the
‘Music Room. “An Evening with
the Stars” was arranged for the
‘Friends of the Bryn Mawr Lib-
rary.
8:45 p.m. Mr. Louis Craig
Green, Associate Professor of As-
tronomy at Haverford College,
will talk on “Some Astronomical
Matters in Chaucer, Donne, and
Milton” in the Common Room.
Tuesday, April 22
8:30 p.m. Patrick M. Malin,
Executive Director of the Amer-
Continued on Page 2, Col. 5
art thou Romeo?”
oft-quoted line, Juliet (Liz Klupt)
makes her entrance, but not on the
balcony. This time she enters her
garden, where Portia (Bea Mer-
rick) and Kathryn (Mary Jane
Chubbuck) greet her. They have
come to offer her advice on her
love affair with Romeo.
(Patsy
finally Cleopatra
slinks into the garden.
has advice for “Julie”.
Kind Hearts and Shakespeare’s Ladies
Promise To Sparkle For A.A. Dramas
“Oh, Romeo, Romeo, whereture
Sighing this
Ophelia
Price) and Desdemona
(Elsie Kemp) arrive later, and
(Rene Ryan)
She, too,
All these famous women are
gathered to enact a modern situa-
tion in When Shakespeare’s Ladies
Meet. The ‘Actresses Anonymous
production is to be presented April
18, at Skinner (Workshop. The per-
formance. will begin at 8:15, with
admission free.
Kind Hearts Are More Than
Coronets is a Victorian melodrama,
unother one-act play, which will
be presented the same evening. it
is a touching story about a boy
going to war. The cast:
BE isvevesescrvrecveteiinnsi Eleanor Small
GOONS | csicscsctesceass Jan Wilmerding
Mr. Eccles ......... Adrienne Shrieber
ON cscetsisuiion «Kay Sherman
TRING srccsssiseoennsce «..R0Z Kremer
Tne Actresses Anonymous per-
formance is planned to give pros-
pective actresses an opportunity
to test their talent. Claire Wei-
gand, Jo Case, and Carey Rich
mond are directing for the first
time. Claire is directing Shakes-
peare’s Ladies, and Jo and Carey
are directing Kind Hearts.
Virginia Randolph is stage man-
ager for the production, with Joan
Kauffman, assistant. Liz Gordon is
taking charge of lights; Connie
Hicks, make-up; Anne Mazick,
costumes; Wendy Ewer, publicity.
Page Two T
HE COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, April 16, 1952
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks.
giving, Christmas and Haster holidays, and during examination weeks)
in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing Company,
Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The Colle News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that
appears in it aay be reprinted either wholly or in part without permission
oF the Editor-in-Chief. .
EDITORIAL BOARD
Sheila Atkinson, ‘53, Editor-in-Chief
Claire Robinson, ‘54, Copy Frances Shirley, ‘53, Makeup
Margaret McCabe, ‘54, Managing Editor
Barbara Drysdale, ‘55 Elizabeth Davis, ‘54
Judy Thompson, ‘54 Mary Alice Drinkle, ‘53
EDITORIAL STAFF | oH
Emmy Cadwalader, ‘53 Mary Jane Chubbuck, ‘55
A.A. reporter Ann Shocket, ‘54
Joyce Annan, ‘53 Barbara Fischer, ‘55
Ellen Bell, ‘53 Marcia Joseph, ‘55
Ann McGregor, ‘54 Anne Mazick, ‘55
Chris Schavier, ‘54 Pat Preston, ‘55
Kay Sherman, ‘54 Carcline Warram, ‘55
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Judy Leopold, ‘53
BUSINESS MANAGER
M. G. Warren, ‘54
Julia Heimowitz, ‘55, Associate Business Manager
BUSINESS STAFF
Vicky Kraver, ‘54 Claire Weigand, ‘55
SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER
Barbara Goldman, ‘53
SUBSCRIPTION BOARD
Lee Sedgwick, ‘53 Jo Case, ‘54
Bobbie Olsen, ‘54 Suki Webb, ‘54
Marilyn Dew, ‘54 Molly Plunkett, ‘54
Liz Simpson, ‘54 Joy Fox, ‘54
Barbara Rasnick, ‘53 Karen Hansen, ‘54
Peggy Hitchcock, ‘54
Subscription, $3.50 Mailing price, $4.00
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office
: Under the Act of March 3, 1879
We Are Born
This year sees still another accession to the ranks of the
colleges for women. Bryn Mawr College which was founded
in 1879 by Dr. Joseph Taylor was completed and formally
opened to students at the beginning of the present college
year. This institution is situated on the Pennsylvania Rail-
road about ten miles from Philadelphia. It has at present
three buildings, a lecture hall, a dormitory, and a gymnasium,
while still another dormitory is still to be erected. The site
of the college is a high hill in the midst of that picturesque
and undulating country near Bryn Mawr which is so deserv-|,
edly popular among Philadelphians as a summer resort.
As this is its first year, the college is composed entirely
of freshmen, about forty in number. There are thirteen in-
structors, of whom three are women. The president, Dr.
Rhoads, believes in allowing the students to regulate their].
own conduct, and as yet has drawn up no “rules and regula-|'
tions” respecting their conduct, so that all exercises, includ-|'
ing chapel, are voluntary. So far this arrangement has work-
ed very well and the faculty now believe that they will not)
find it necessary to resort to the more customary, but less
ideal methods of college government.
The. dormitory, Merion Hall, has eighteen suits of three
rooms each, besides thirteen \single rooms, it contains also
the dining-room where all students may board. The gymna-
sium is finished with Dr. Sargent’s apparatus and is superin-| |
tended by a directress who is well acquainted with his meth-
ods. The system of physical examinations is also in vogue.
The requirements for admission are much the same as
those for Harvard, although French and German are taken
as an equivalent for Greek. The course for the degree of
Bachelor of Arts is expected to take four years, and is a com-
bination of the curriculum, group and elective systems. Thus,
while each student is required to pursue certain studies
whose usefulness is acknowledged, she may at the same time
by a proper choice of “groups” and “free electives” make out
a general course embracing almost as great a variety of sub-
jects as we have here at Harvard, or she may even specialize
to a certain extent; while for students who desire to devote
themselves entirely to one branch, a special course is always
open.
With all these advantages for mental and physical cul-
ture, there seems to be no reason why Bryn Mawr College
Parker Enumerates Why
Scholars Must Improve
Continued from Page 1
lack of style, and no sense of
structure.” If it is necessary to
place the blame for this type of
writing somewhere, Mr. Parker
suggests that it be placed not on
the Freshman Comp instructors,
but on the “major villain’, the
Graduate Thesis. To alleviate the
necessity of dry and unreadable
theses, two questions should be
asked the instructor: what is it
you want me to do—report upona
detailed process or the final prod-
uct; and, for whom am I writing?
|As early as student thesis days,
the audience, be it one instructor
or thirty experts, is a major con-
sideration.
To consider the audience in still
another sense of the word is to be
“decent” about your documenta;
tion.. Mr. Parker labeled excess-
ive and useless documentation the
“curse” of scholarly writing. Foot-
notes are at best an interruption
and therefore should consist of
pertinent factual material. “As
far as Freshmen are concerned,
everytime they open their mouths,
a footnote is inserted”, said Mr.
Parker. This can be eliminated
by using the “Superior Number”
only when absolutely needed.
‘Be considerate of your audience
by being yourself in your writing.
If honest and intelligent wit are
inherent in your nature, it will ap-
pear unforced; also carefully con-
sider the knowledge of your audi-
ence before making scholarly as-
sumptions of their background to
emphasize your own.
In answer to the question, “why
try to improve scholarly writing”
these five basic reasons were sum-
marized: 1) Scholars are consid-
ered the most literate im mind and
shouid of necessity be so in primt;
2) Since printing costs have gone
up, it is common courtesy to write
well-formed, appealing works, no
matter how select the audience; 3)
Scholarship supported by society
(as is his publication) is obligated
to bring to society its best; 4) Of
non-creative writing (usually pe-
destrian and weak) and creative
writing, the scholar should choose
to write creatively even if it must
be non-imaginative, so that he
may present to readers the prod-
uct of a creative mind
Encouragement to all aspiring
writers was the note upon which
Mr. Parker closed. His departing
advice was: “to express yourself
well, care about scholarly expres-
sion” .
ENGAGEMENTS
- (Deborah Babbitt, ’58, to Nathan
, Mary Will Boone, ’52, to Wells
Anderson Darling.
Sandra Davis, ’55, to William
Amdre Trevathan.
' (Laura Erdman, °52, to Ralph
Norman Peters.
. Patricia Maxwell Mulligan, °52,
to Donald Shelton Pierce.
Louise S. Peterson, ’55, to Par-
viz ‘/]ahoaz..
Niu.ey Mott Tufel to Dr. George
John Kirn,
Helene Anderton,
John Reed.
MARRIAGE
- Elisabeth Besson Rudolphy, ’55,
to George Dinges Whitmore.
ex-’50, to
Mrs. Woolston Probes
Steel Wage
Dispute
Almost certain inflationary ef-
fects on our economy were seen as
the ultimate outcome of the pres-
ent steel dispute by Mrs. Woolston
in a talk at Current Events, Mon-
day, April 14, at 7:15 in the Com-
mon Room. In spite of Labor’s
protestations that a wage increase
will not add to the inflationary
spiral, Mrs. Woolston stated that
its effects would be felt, through
an amendment to Wage-Price leg-
islation permitting increased costs
in manufacturing to be passed on
to the public through increased
wholesale and retail price levels.
The actual measurable effects de-
pend on the elasticity of demand
and the price-setting conditions
within the industry.
Stating the basic facts in the
dispute between the United Steel
Workers, representing 650,000
men, and the 89 to 92 steel com-
panies involved, producers of 95%
of steel in the United States, Mrs.
Woolston emphasized the duration
of the dispute and gave statistics
underlying the demands. The
an hour pay raise, based on the
rising cost of living and the low
level of their salaries compared
with workers in other industries.
Since the contract under discus-
sion is the first in four years, con-
taining 22 items of contention, its
settlement has been prolonged.
The problem was referred to the
Wage Stabilization Board by
President Truman after the dis-
pute had gone on from November
1 to January 3 without any pros-
pect of settlement by collective
bargaining; however, the fact that
the problem, had not been certified
by the two parties did not make
the decision of the board binding.
In order to avert the strike set by
the union for April 8, after the
companies refused the -Board’s
recommendations, and the Presi-
dent took over the steel companies,
present industrial heads keep on
managing the plants under gov-
ernment supervision.
Labor, the Wage Stabilization
Board, and the President, hold
that industry can meet a general
pay raise without a consequent
raise in the price of steel, for
profits after taxes in the steel in-
dustry were 209% last year, the
return on met worth, 11%. Indus-
try, however, insists on a price
raise of six dollars a ton if the
proposed wage demands go
through. The workers’ demands
were closely followed by the Wage
Stabilization Board, which graat-
ed a 17% cent an hour raise,
where industry refused more than
a mine cent increase. The Board
also recommended acceding to the
workers’ demands for a Union
Shop, as well as to the reduction
of the North-South wage differen-
six paid holidays a year, and shift
differentials. It referred the ques-
tions of seniority, a guaranteed
annual wage and severance pay,
working conditions, job structure,
and managerial decisions back to
the parties for collective bargain-
decided by the Board, put the
blame on industry, holding that
most of labor’s demands were jus-
tified and should be granted.
On the Presidential question,
Mrs. Woolston gave a brief res-
ume of President’s Truman’s de-
fenmse of his own actions—that he
was interfering not because this
colleges.
setts, Monday, February 22, 1886).
should not be as successful as are many of its older sister
(From The Daily Crimson, Vol. IX, No. 7, Cambridge, Massachu-
Union is asking for an 18% cents}
tial from ten cents to five cents, | |
ing. The question of rightness, as| |
CURRENT EVENTS
Mr. Dudden Considers
Election Issues,
Candidates
Speaking at Current Events on
April 7, on the election scene as it
now stands, Dr. Dudden explained
along the lines of his fall outline
of the Philadelphia elections, the
national political scene, from the
point of view of issues and can-
didates. The issues which dom-
inated the Philadelphia elections—
corruption, the Korean situation,
Socialism, and Communism — will
have varying influences on the na-
tional election, the most important
being that of the Korean situation.
Dr. Dudden described the various
aspects of the Korean issue, say-
ing that there was generally uni-
versal discontent with the hand-
ling of the situation, including
such factors as the lack of pro-
gress, the much disputed treat-
ment of MacArthur, and the un-
successfulness of the truce talks.
He went on to point out that the
voting classes were also seriously
concerned with Communism and
fits progress.
In contract to this, the question
fof corruption is no longer a live
issue, while the socialist group re-
mains only as a “debating club.”
‘There are, he added, various
industrial issues, including an
increasing touchiness on the part
of labor and, a likelihood that
political capital will be made
of the production lag of mil-
itary materials. Perhaps inflation
will become an issue also, but as
yet it is not.
At the time when Dr. Dudden
spoke, there were, he said, 55 state
conventions and 13 primaries to
go. After naming and describing
some of these, he went on to point
out the candidates who show the
most prominence so far. In the
Republican scene are Taft and
Eisenhower, now more or less on
an equal footing, Taft slowing
down the Ike bandwagon.
In the Democratic scene, how-
ever, things are somewhat more
confused, — Truman holding the
leading role in the party without
holding control of patronage. The
most serious candidates include
Stevenson (the reluctant candidate
who is running for governor and
who would carry with him the
criticism of the Truman admin-
istration should he be elected)
Russell, the popular Illinois sena-
tor Douglas, and also the popular
Kefauver. To add to this list are
several “favorite son” candidates
including Barkley, Rayburn, Sen-
ator Humphrey, and others.
The NEWS welcomes Barbara
Drysdale, °55 to its Editorial
' Board.
CALENDAR
Continued from Page 1
ican Civil Liberties Umion, will
“speak on “World Tension and
‘American Civil Liberties” in the
Common Room.
Wednesday, April 23
. 6:00 p.m. Three color films
‘about the natives of Australia_
“will be shown in the Music Room
‘by the Department of Sociology
‘and Anthropology.
was a prolonged labor dispute
needing settling, but because it
‘was a national emergency, threat-
éning the even flow of supplies to
the Korean front. Mrs. Woolston
pointed out that such powers have
been utilized under Article Two of
6 Constitution by previous Pres-
Wednesday, April 16, 1952
THE COLLEGE
NEWS
Page Three
Mr. Michels Wins
Ford Fund Award
Mr. Walter Christian Michels,
Professor of Physics at Bryn
Mawr )College, has been awarded
a Fund for the Advancement of
Education Fellowship tor 1952-53.
Awards of fellowships for the
1952-53 school year to 246 college
veachers were announced by Clar-
ence H. Faust, President of the
Fund for the Advancement of Ed-
ucation. The awards are a con-
tinuation of the Fund’s Faculty
Fellowship program, which was
started last year shortly after the
Fund was created by the Ford
Foundation.
This year’s grants, which total
approximately $1,400.000. are be-
ing made, Mr. Faust said, as part
of the Fund’s program aimed at
strengthening liberal education in
United States colleges. The pur-
pose of the fellowships, he said, is
to enable the recipients to become
better qualified to teach in their re-
spective fields, which include the
humanities, the social sciences and
the natural sciences.
Two hundred and twenty-one of
the recipients are men and 25 are
women. They represent 160 col-
leges and universities in 42. states.
Regionally, 76 fellowships were
granted in the East, 56 in the
North Central states, 65 in the
South and 49 in the West.
‘Recipients, who are generally
between the ages of 30 and 45, in-
clude 59 professors, 72 associate
professors, 80 assistant professors
and 11 instructors.
“The Faculty Fellowship Pro-
gram is based’, said Mr. Faust,
“on the belief that a year devoted
to study, research, observation or
experiment will renew and enrich
the intellectual lives of the recipi-
ents of the awards and help them
to become better teachers or un-
dergraduates.”’
He said: the program is not in-
tended to give support to research
projects aimed_at—increasing the
fund of knowledge iin a given field,
nor to provide for completion of
doctorate study as such. Research
is supported, he said, only if it
bears directly on the effort to im-
prove teaching by broadening and
deepening the teacher’s under-
standing of his own or related
fields.
Selections were made by the
Hall Presidents: Left
to right, Halperin, Martin,
Kent, Voorhis, Merritt, Sonne, Spector, Foley.
Halls, Non-Reses
Elect New Veeps
Election returns are still coming
in! Along with campus-wide offic-
ers, the halls are happy to an-
nounce the election of their new
vice-presidents :
Denbigh: Emmy Meginnity
Merion: Lita Picard
Non-Res.: Barbara Bradley
Pem East: Kathy Ehlers
Pem West: Betty Wei
Radnor: Carolyn Limbaugh
‘Rhoads: Bea Merrick
Reck: Cissy Puschett
Musicians Slate
Year's Last Recital
The last program of the Bryn
Mawr Music Club, featuring a
string quartet from the Curtis In-
stitute, will take place on Sun-
day, April 20, at five o’clock, in the
Ely Music Room of Wyndham. The
performers will be Michael Apple-
baum and Enrique Serratos, vio-
lins; Alfred Brown, viola, and
Donald McCall, violoncello, who
will play Quartet in A minor by
Brahms; a Rochberg quartet by
George Rochberg, an esteemed
Philadelphian who has won many
prizes for his music; and the
Haydn Quartet E flat major. There
will also be a brief business meet-
ing before the concert,
committee on Faculty Fellowships
from a total of 1,158 applications.
Harper, Atalla Discuss Peace Seminars,
Portion of the Friends’ Service Program
The program of the Interna-
tional Service Seminars for Peace,
held in several locations each sum-
mer by the Friends’ Service Com-
mittee, is aimed directly at the
promotion of “understanding
across national, religious, and col-
or barriers”. Robin Harper of
Haverford and Mary Atalla, a
graduate. student there, both
spent last summer at such sem-
inars, and on Thursday evening,
March 27, they used the Common
Room for a discussion of these
seminars and a movie picturing the
life lived within them.
During the summer, a Yroup of
approximately thirty-five young
people, representing many differ
ent countries and including about
five Americans, meet in an at-
tractive spot in this country +o
discuss and study both the po-
litical aspects and the cultural
aspects of various nations. Each
week, a prominent person, par-
ticularly well-versed in one field
(religion, sociology, organizational
work, politics) becomes the guest
faculty member of the group, not
so much to lecture, but to answer
questions and provide a spring-
board for small discussion groups
- within the seminar.
The students spend as much
time as they wish in study, but the
less tangible benefits of the sum-
mer come in the form of the per-
sonal relationships within the
unit. Mary Atalla described the
lively discussions and _ interna-
tional games that made the con-
tacts between students so pleas-
ant. The sports, the cooking and
housecleaning, the lazy afternoons
together, all were as important in
cementing the group as was the
actual study of different ideas
through research and discussion.
The seminars, located in different
sections of the country, are open
to any American student who is
twenty years old and capable of
coping with the questions, often
indignant and always intelligent,
that he will. doubtless be asked by
his foreign friends. Since so few
American students can be included
in the units, one’s. “capability”
must be far above average. Knowl-
edge, patience, comparative ma-
turity, and breadth of interest are
important qualifications.
The problems faced by Amer-
ican students at the seminars were
pointed up by the movie shown.
Here one could see the quick
minds of the foreign students in
action, and the Americans who, as
hosts in this project, are respon-
sible for their visitors and are
looked upon as minor authorities
on political and social questions.
Continued on Page 6, Col. 1
LAST NIGHTERS
Villanova Play Displays
Humor, but Lack
Of Depth
by Barbara Drysdale, ’55
The playwright attempts no
small task when he broadcasts the
message that age can be a spir-
itual and not a physical state.
This is, however, the purpose of
Robert McErone, author of The
Silver Whistle, and it has proved
a successful theme both on the
legitimate stage and in_ the
movies. Mr. McErone’s play is
more than adequately philosoph-
ical and humorous, so that it is
much easier for a cast to take
away from than add to the writ-
ten work.
The Belle Masque Society of
Villanova College offered an in-
terpretation which aimed in the
right direction for general tone,
but seemed to fall a bit short
through superficiality. The actors,
being young people, seemed for
the most part unable to project
their characters across the foot-
lights as believable elderly people
undergoing a. basic _ spiritual
change. As characters of a com-
edy, however, they created an
hilarious evening.
Especially humorous. and pa-
thetic as “guests” of St. John’s
Home for the Aged were Tony
Della Rocca as Mr. Beebe and
Jeanne Ward as Mrs. Hammer, who
characterized their parts quite be-
lievably, the former as the elder-
ly man who has accepted old age
while keeping one eye ever open
for his lost youth, the latter as an
elderly hypochondriac whose sour
outlook on life and old age were
influenced for the better by Mr.
Erwenter.
Tom Hayden, who portrayed the
psychologist-tramp Oliver T. Er-
wenter, had good feeling for the
part and an_ excellent voice,
although his interpretation was a
bit superficial. His descriptive
powers, however, were illustrated
especially well in the scene where
Mr. Erwenter tells about his ad-
venture in the Cairo bar where he
and a Persian prince staked Er-
wenter’s life against the prince’s
jewels. The audience found itself
breathless along with Mr. Er-
wenter’s enthralled circle on stage
as he described the atmosphere
from Cairo to the veldt for the un-
traveled Mr. Beebe and Mr.
Cherry.
Miss Hoadley (Ellie Purcell),
Mrs. Gross (Mimi Heffernan), Mr.
Cherry (George Crist), and Em-
mett (Mark DeMarco) all deserve
special bouquets for their comic
additions, particularly Miss Hoad-
ley’s wonderful disjointed move-
ments when slightly under the
influence of Haig and Haig, and
Emmett’s comments on life —
“Work is living death...”
Miss Tripp, played by Joan
Marie Hessert, was a very young
lady; one wondered how she was
capable of realizing she loved any-
one, much less the cold and equal-
Continued on Page 4, Col. 1
} :
,ers, quizzes,
relevated railroad
Malin to Explain
Civil Liberty Era
Bothered by spring fever, pap-
thoughts of finals,
comps, orals? The Alliance has
found a cure for your woes, what-
ever they may be. Forget the
troubles of a Bryn Mawrtyr and
remember to hear Patrick Murphy
Malin speak of “Civil Liberties
and World Tension” on Tuesday,
April 22, in the Common Room at
8:30.
Mr. Malin is executive-director
of the American Civil Liberties
Uni-n, snd is vitally concerned
with the problem of freedom in
the world today. He is most di-
‘rectly interested in how we car
maintain the idealistic standards
we have set for ourselves in an era
of .2.7, ecld war, and insecurity.
He w... .n-i1uie what rational pre-
cautions we i.1st take, as well as
stating those “hysterical proced-
ures” to avoid. The problem is not
one that is remote and removed
from us; restrictions of civil lib
erties affect us individually, aru
collectively influence us as a col-
lege. .
Mr. Malin was formerly a pro-
fessor at Swarthmore College,
Questions and general discussion
will follow his lecture.
LAPSUS CORRIGENDUS
Is our face chartreuse!
The first Dadadramatic Cho-
ral Group of Bryn Mawr an-
nounces with chagrin that it
omitted to announce as well as
to perform the sixteenth move-
ment of its symposium on Ra-
cine performed at Wyndham
last Friday. The title of this
movement should have read as.
“Roots of von in Phonogens
Waek. Ho! Jean, you’re fined
again!”
Heaps of apology, Tim Finne-
gan!
Essay Prize Goes
To Corrie Voorhis
Corrie Voorhis has recently won
a fifty dollar prize in an essay con-
test sponsored by the Pennsylvania
Society of the Colonial Dames of
America. She will read the paper
at an April meeting of the com-
mittee and at that time will be
presented with the prize.
The paper is about her great-
grandfather, Charles Thompson
Harvey, who constructed the Soo
Canal and was the inventor of the
in New York
City. He did not go to college
nor had he any specific technical
engineering education, but, because
of his genius, realized the necess-
ity of building the canal and suc-
ceeded im doing so despite many
obstacles. The Soo Canal con-
nects the natural resources of the
Masoli ‘Range, Calumet, and Hek.
la with the iron industry of East
Pittsburgh.
Corrie’s sources of material for
this paper were original. Though
a movie has been produeed about
Mr. Harvey, most of the material
for the paper was obtained from
her family, particularly her grand-
mother, who is well acquainted
with the importance of Charles
Harvey’s achievements and recog-
nized his genius.
The contest was announced in
Mr. Dudden’s history class and was
a state wide affair. It had to be
at least 3,000 words long and the
subject was any topic in American
History. For her essay, Corrie re-
vised her semester paper im this
course. A paper on Mr. Harvey’s
invention of the elevated railroad
will be Corrie’s project for this
semester.
Congratulations certainly are in
order for this original and thor-
ough. job.
Ford Program Aids
In Teacher Training
“Every year one hundred thous;
and new teachers are needed as re-.
placements in our elementary
school system”, Mr. Fletcher G..
Watson, Associate Professor . of
Education at the Harvard Gradu-
ate School of Education, announc-
ed in his lecture Tuesday, April §;
in the Common Room.
The urgent need for trained
teachers in the public schools is
one of the biggest problems in ed-
ucation today. In the fifty years
from 1890 to 1940, public schovk
enroiiment increased ninety-fold,:
and the need for teachers has
grown proportionately. The Har-
vard Graduate School of Educa-
tion, founded in 1922, attempts to
meet this need with a one year,
program for liberal arts -college ‘
graduates leading to an MA in Ed-
ucation.
Three programs are offered: one
in pre-school techniques, which
maintains its own kindergarten;
another in teaching in the elemen-
tary grades (first. through sixth
grades); and a third which in-
cludes seventh grade through high
school. The emphasis throughout
is on supervised practice teaching,
although courses in the philoso-
phy of education, the history of
education or a sociological study
of the American school system,
principles of teaching and educa-
tional psychology are prerequis-
ites for the degree. These require-
ments can be met through apprais-
al examinations, however, which
students are encouraged to take.
At present, through the Ford
Foundation Fund for the Advance-:
nent of Education, the Harvard
u.aduate School of Education is
ab.e to offer substantial financial
ai. .0 qualified students interested
n p.idlic school teaching. Comple-
vion of the work for the degree
will meet the requirements for
-eaching in almost every state. Mr,
.letcher added that beginning pay
«or teachers ranges from twenty-
one to twenty-two hundred a year
in the East to thirty-four to thir-
ty-five hundred a year in Califor-
nia. The fields of English and the
social studies are less in demand
than others, but in the Classics,
there are thirty openings for ev-
ery applicant.
WBMC
Thursday, April 17
9.00 Gilbert & Sullivan Hour—
Phil Stephen
9:45 Campus News—Claire
Robinson
10:00 Intermission Time—Leslie
Kaplan
Friday
Rebroadcast of WHRC.
Saturday
WFLN.
Sunday
8:00 Sacred Music.
10:30 Cafe International — Bar-
bara Kalb with a program of
foreign records,
Monday
9:00 ° Halt. the Symphony Win
a carton of ‘Chesterfields by
naming the unidentified
symphony played by Gwen
Davis.
9:15 Faculty Interview — Listen
to Isabel Frey interview our
professors.
10:00 Radio Play.
Tuesday
10:00 Folk Songs — Ruth Bron-
sweig.
10:30 Meet the Mawrtyrs—Listen
to Kay Sherman interview
your friends on campus. —
Wednesday
7:30 Battle of The Sexes.
10:00 Variety Show — Maryann
Holmes—playing the music
from Roberta, a preview of
the Maids and Porters’:
Show.
Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, April 16, 1952
Interpretations by “‘Aged’”? Comedians Delight . ENGAGEMENTS ( If )
Villanova’s Audience in ‘“‘The Silver Whistle’ Edith L. Woodruff, ’54 to Ken- Compliments of Het!
Continued from Page 3 was too coy and definitely over-|%¢th B. Kunhardt. Energy giving!
ly young Reverend Watson (Rob-| played. Anne A. Tilghman, ’53 to the
ert Allen). Her warmth and sym-| The director and set
however, beautifully portrayed.| special praise for a most enjoy- — Refreshing! |
Mrs. Sampler (Joan Theurkauf) | able performance. Pharmacy
Never enough college fi Try a
~|@ women with Gibbs | H
; ra averford, Pa.
oon secretarial training Hamburger!
Spring is coming! to meet the . J M J
With Spring come Birds!
With Birds come Bees!
With Bees come Honey!
For Something Sweet and Refreshing
Come to
THE COLLEGE INN
Bpecial Course for College Women.
Five-city personal placement service.
Write College Dean for catalog.
KATHARINE GIBBS
BOSTON 16, 90 Martborough St. NEW YORK 17, 230 Park Ave.
CHICAGO 1i, 51 E. Superior St. MONTCLAIR, 33 Plymouth St.
PROVIDENCE 6, R. 1., 155 Angell St.
HOLIDAY...
salutes
Campus Interviews on Cigarette ‘Tests
No. 38...THE WOLF
“MOST OF THEM
AREN'T WORTH
HOWLING ABOUT!”
_—
Sharp character on campus — he’s not easily
duped by deceptive devices! From the onset of
the tricky cigarette tests, he knew there
was one true test of mildness. Millions
of smokers throughout America have learned, too!
It’s the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel
Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels
as your steady smoke, on a pack-after-pack,
day-after-day basis. No snap judgments! Once
you’ve tried Camels in your “‘T-Zone” (T for
Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why...
After all the Mildness Tests...
Wednesday, April 16, 1952
THE COLLEGE
NEWS
Page Five
SPORTS
by Emmy Cadwalader ’53
Spring is here, and all that is
left to report about winter sports
1s to announce the election of next
year’s officers. Each sport ended
its seascn with a tea, at which the
repo-ts of the wins ‘and losses
were distributed. Then next year’s
captains and managers were chos-
en,
The captain, manager, and as-
sistant-manager of basketball are
Bea Merrick, Adele Fox, and Mimi
Mackall, respectively. Mag7i
Stehli and Phoebe Harvey are ¢ap-
tain and manager of the swimming
team, with Julie Williams as thei:
assistant-manager. The badmin-
ton captain and manager are Janet
/eeas and Mary Jones, and Alicia
Gardener and Katie Rogers hold
the same positions for the fencing
team.
Bard's Eye View
by Margie Page, ’55
{ caught the measles, I had the flu,
And now I’ve got spring fever
too— —
So what? What good will it do
For me?
Other people contract the infection,
But with them it seems to take
some direction
Other than moaning, moping de-
jection
Like mine,
For them the symptoms are giddy
behavings,
Telephone calls and ecstatic rav-
ings,
Fat, heavy letters and obvious
‘wavings
Of left hands.
But for me, of course, no such
signs are there;
Not for me the star-struck stare
To meet the professor's stony
glare.
ohio: ag
My gaze is one of rapt attention,
Lily Ross Taylor Leads
Classical Study in Rome
Continued from Page 1
delegate to the American Council
of Learned Societies from 1948 to
1948, and was a Faculty Trustee
of Wellesley College, from 1943 to
1949,
Miss Taylor is a recipient of
honorary degrees from Wilson
College (Litt.D., 1944), Chambers-
burg, Pennsylvania, Mills College
(Litt.D., 1947), Oakland, Califor-
nia, and the University of Wiscon-
sin (Litt.D., 1950), Madison, Wis-
consin. She is a member of Phi
Beta Kappa and has contributed
to numerous philological and arch-
aeological journals. She has pub-
lished three books: Local Culte in
Etruria (1923), The Divinity of
the Roman Emperor (1981), and
Party Politics in the Age of
Caeser (University of California
Press, 1949).
Do you want a book the li-
brary doesn’t have? Then give
your suggestion to a member of
the Library Council, or put it in
the little red notebook on the
New Book Shelf, which is the
bookcase just outside the main
desk under the stairs leading to
the reserve room.
Your suggestions will be con-
sidered by the New Book Com-
mittee which consists of Miss
Agnew, Miss Linn, Julia Me-
rew, and Caroline Smith. All
ideas will be more than wel-
come so don’t hesitate to give
your suggestions.
“Keuh”, Cries Danish Bee Carstensen
Imitating Admiring American Friends
by Ann Shocket, ’54
Assignment: Interview the twv
Danish freshmen who had such an
important part in the I.R.C. Dan-
ish party recently.
Off to Radnor, only to discover
that Kirsten is in Philadelphia cel-
ebrating her birthday. Move on
to Pem, fail to find Birgit in ber
room. “Oh, Bee’s in the quiet
smoler. She’s the cute little bru-
nette with curly hair.”
Spy appropriate party curled up
on the sofa reading. What book
is it? “It’s really a fifth rate book
for one of my courses!” Learn
that “Bee”, Birgit’s nickname, or-
iginated at home in Denmark,
where she was so lazy her friends
decided that they’d name her after
the busiest of insects, “A paradox,
you see.”
Notice the very lovely diamond
on the third finger left hand. Am
delighted to hear that fiancee
comes from Boston and that Bee
loves the city. So do I, and we
have a bond immediately. But
this 1s of individual interest, and
the college at large doesn’t share
our enthusiasm, so on to more gen-
eral topics.
“Do you want me to say some-
thing flattering about Bryn
Mawr? Actually, my impression
before I came was that all Amer-
ican colleges are worth little, but
(But not to what the doctors men-
tion).
My: notes a marvelous invention
Of design.
I’ve mid-semesters and papers,
too,
And myriad books I’ll never get
through,
But I couldm’t care less.
Is vacate.
I’ve changed my mind now. Tell
them that my first idea of Bryn
Mawr when I got here was the
wonderful way of receiving new
people and foreigners. And that’s
sincere!”
Notice her ease with the Eng-
iish language. Find that Danish
schools, all centrally controlled,
teach English starting in the
fourth grade. Her lingual talents
melude German, taught from the
sixth grade, and a reading knowl-
edge of Swedish. “I found it hard
to read at first, because I read so
slowly, but I can do it all right
now.”
What particularly has she found
of benefit in her American educa-
tion? “I’ve always been interested
in history, and I had so little about
America before. We studied world
kistory; one page for the War of
independence, one page for the
Civi: War. I had heard of Jeffer-
son and Lincoln and a few people
like that, but I didn’t know what
they’d done.”
Comments : inserted by other
Critic Glenway Wescott Analyzes German Themes
Appearing in Works of
Continued from Page 1
idea of “peak moments”, which is
an experience common to all lit-
erary people. Colette was exposed
to much Wagnerian music and was
very interested in Faust. Both of
these sources use this idea much
and they probably were an im-
portant reason for Colette’s use
of it.
The second Germanic device
utilized by Colette was the recur-
ring symbol, Mr. Wescott stated.
This special use of the symbol is
very like the re-echoing of the
All Bryn Mawr students who
wish to obtain Complimentary
tickets for the Bryn Mawr-Hav-
erford-Drexel Concert should
contact Terry Osma in Pem
West and Lucy Batten in
Rhoads before Saturday morn-
ing.
humor put interviewer at ease
right away.
“Since I came, my friends have
French Novelist, Colette
trumpet in Tristam and _ Isolde.
Also, the little boy in Le Ble en
Herbe is very similar to the boy
in this Wagnerian opera.
In conclusion, Vr. Wescott af-
firmed that Colette is perhaps the
least religious author in all litera-
ture, but that she is not a lover
of evil as are many modéfn
writers. She, like Faust, does
have a definite love of life and a
stoic acceptance of death.
April 26 is a big day. The Soph-
omore Carnival. will occupy yotr
afternoon, and “Roberta”, present-
ed by the Maids and Porters, is the
dirst of the evening’s attractions,
The show, a comedy in two acts, is.
adapted from a story by Alicé
Duer Miller, and will be given in
Goodhart at 8:30 p.m.
_Following the play, the Junior
Prom will capture all trippers of
the light fantastic, completing an
evening’s entertainment.
Don’t forget. The date is April
26. Get your dates early!
Our denim Peckmates are out for fun!
Cool and crisp, these denims in faded blue,
charcoal or blue-and-white stripes. The
rib-trimmed T-shirt, sizes 10 to 16, 3.95;
pocket-piped cuffed shorts, sizes 10 to 18, 3.95
_ 23 Parking Plaza, Ardmore
Li
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of Danish now: “mindue”, It| Ve Bee gives out with her imi- OFF
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laughter, many colorful comments, her, ag Danish. “Eeuh, eeuh, bia
and a very pleasant talk with wun Oe this — el et GRASS
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135
eine nnn araiemnen aad
(print your name) (college_and class)
i pare
(street or dormitory)
|
| Guan ; PaeB
i
Page Six THE COLLEGE. NEWS Wednesday, April 16, 1952
ae aa al oe President McBride Releases List of Recipients of Graduate School Awards
. Continued from Page 1 Scholarship—Dorothy Kiser of Lau- History—Lois Green Schwoerer of tion, University of P lvani
Continued from Page 3 rinburg, N.C; B.S. Gulitord Col|" Drexel Hill, Penna. A.B. Smith 1934. r aaraaieutiy
~ sing, Mich. A.B, to be conferred, eee ; A. candidate Bryn sollege 1949; M.A. candidate Special Tuition Scholarships
Robin Harper and Mary Atalla _Michigan State College 1952. Mawr 1952. (Mathematics) mI a Fe dhe 1952. in Social Economy: :
F : Social Economy—Carola Woerishoffer NON-RESIDENT GRADUATE Story of. Art—Ellen Mary Jones of Claire Elizabeth Wompierski of
assured their audience, however Scholarships: SCHOLARSHIPS Philadelphia. A.B. Bryn Mawr Philadelphia. A.B. to be con-
that the responsibility seems more Le gg a tenes tee veer Marsares ¥. Jones of pred cau ace peony pager ok Si? ge University of Pennsylvania
a. dD. s ynne, a. -B. Berea College os OoK- Joa.
A - 5 1958 , 1951. lyn, N. Y. AvB. to be conferred, Millie Kroll of Philadelphia. B.S,
menacing than it really is, and Artie Gianopulos of PittsSurgh,| Chemistry—Edith H. Winicov of Phil- Barnard College 1952. Temple University 1951.
that the benefits of living and} — Pennsyivania College for Women| BClPhin. | A.B. | University. ‘of | Social, Reonomylisabeth | Robinson :
é r en ennsylvania 1949; M.S. 1951. , re 2
P . 1962. Classical Archaeology— ll
learning for seven weeks with aoe Horowitz of Queens Vil- pe ey ry avertaed eee :
: age, N. Y. A.B. to be conferred, AB. t f vn M =)
people of different backgrounds University of Illinois 1952. ee .
the value of new ideas, the fun of| Spanish—Patricia Ann Bender of Car- El Greco Restaurant
rolltown, Penna. A.B. Pennsyl- -
new contacts, all make the sem- vania State College 1952. BREAKFAST
ie thrilli P eee yg of Pt ee (( ») LUNCH
ar ai thrillin Summer experl- ville, N.J. A.B. Drew Universit
a , 1952. — WALTER COOK DINNER
° Friends College fen Bryn Mawr
Watch Repairing, Clocks | )
i] aes
and Jewelry =
oP f Fiabe wince Bryn Mawr Avenue ] Eureka Cinema
EXECUTIVE ‘Tepare tor a responsible executive dhe 40th & Market Sts.
position in retailing where women ex- - Baring 2-5181 ae
CAREERS ecutives are NOT the exception. In- iT “)) April Shower of al
teresting positions open in buying, Make Your Mark in ° irraiete Gia; |
i's . \ on |
in RETAILING advertising, fashion, management, per- Businses . ae ae ad ehh ‘haintuats]
sonnel, or teaching. Specialized train. [J me ai HT | nei VOR
One-year Course ing, exclusively for college graduates, BECOME AN EXECUTIVE SECRETARY arves
covers all phases of store activity Step into an attractive, well-paid po- & A T THE GATEWAY
leads to ee ees sition soon after college! Learn sec- “ “u TO TIMES SQUARE
: : : : R .
Masters Realistic approach under store-trained retarial skills at Berkeley School in a The Lovers of Verona
faculty. Classes combined with super- few months’ time. Special Executive Fri-Sun., April 18-20 600 cheerful rooms, private baths—
vised store experience with pay. Stu- Secretarial Course for College Women. “Antoine & Antionette” radio & television Adjacent garage
dents usually placed before graduation. Group instruction. ; Personalized & ‘Als-coaditioned Dining Roem &
Co-educational. Master’s degree. placement service. Write today for Cocktall Lounge Moderate rates
Next class begins July 1, 1952. Catalogue. Address Director. “Not Guilty” BANQUET AND MEETING FACILITIES
’ 420 Lexington Ave., ‘ Mon-Thur., April 21-24 LESLIE PAUL
Write for Bulletin C New York 17, N. Y. Winners of 5 International Awards Monmaiee Pisteine
80 Grand Street, White Plains, N. Y. “Fabrique” EMPIRE
RESEARCH BUREAU FOR RETAIL TRAINING 22 Prospect Street, East Orange, N. J. . HOTEL
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH « Pittsburgh 13; Pa. BERKELEY SCHOOL i ve BROADWAY at 63rd ST.
The Assassin
ba
CHESTERFIELDS
Di
| and give you the ADDEL on ae
10 UNPLEASANT AFTER-TAST
ANIZATION
*EROM THE REPORT OF A WELL-KNOWN... RESEARCH ORG
ian
College news, April 16, 1952
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1952-04-16
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 38, No. 21
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-vol38-no21