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College news, December 10, 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)
1952-12-10
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 39, No. 10
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-no10
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, December 10, 1952
N.S.A. Clarifies Policies ;
Meeting Regards Future
Continued from Page 1
change of ideas and information
possible and emphasize the im-
portance of campus awareness in
international affairs.
On the Educational level, NSA
offers the Bryn Mawr student the
challenge to protect the “educa-
tional community” where for her a
“cooperative sharing of curiosity
and information as a constant ex-
perimentation with ideas, values
and social forms” actually exists.
NSA’s concern with Academic
Freedom, Faculty Course Evalua-
tion, Student Discount Service and
Human Relations all interact to re-
alize the objectives of this com-
munity.
On the Student level, NSA rec-
ommends the continual critical
evaluation of Student Government
and offers concrete suggestions
and methods for improving it
wherever and whenever necessary.
Most Bryn Mawr students rec-
ognize that the relationship be-
tween NSA and the individual stu-
dent government is vague. There
is a great need to define this re-
lationship in order that NSA will
actually be “the student voice on
the national and international lev-
el” and will actually stimulate and
improve democratic student gov-
ernments.
Thus NSA and YOUR STUD-
ENT GOVERNMENT has been
chosen as the basic theme through
which to present NSA to the as-
sembly.
Representatives from eighteen
colleges and universities and ob-
servers from many other non-
member schools will convene Fri-
day night, December 12 for the
first session which will be address-
ed by Leonard Wilcox, Vice-presi-
dent National Affairs, USNSA.
Mr. Wilcox, recognizing the need
to present NSA in practical rather
than idealistic terms will center
his address around “NSA and
John Q. Student,” in an effort to
make the student’s identification
with NSA a personal one.
In accordance with the NSA
stand, reaffirmed at the August
1952 National Convention that “on
campus, NSA is student govern-
ment,” and with the recognition of
student government. as the basic
functional unit of NSA and the in-
dividual student as the basic unit
of student government, this need
to define and evaluate NSA at the
grass roots can easily be recogniz-
ed. NSA can only benefit individ-
ual campuses by implementing its
}programs and relaying ideas and
‘information on all phases of stu-
dent life through an effective stu-
dent government organization. iIt
is the responsibility of the NSA
coordinating authority to channel
these programs and ideas through
the proper organization so that
they may be brought before the
individual student who must be
aware of NiSA’s functions, purpos-
es and concrete benefits.
The actual agenda for the meet-
ing is as follows:
Friday, December 12
7:00 First Plenary Session—
Common Room—Goodhart Hall.
Welcome — Regional President
Francis De Lucia and Louise Kim-
ball, President Undergraduate As-
sociation.
Welcome — Mrs. Annie Leigh
Broughton—Dean of Freshmen.
Announcements, Credentials Re-
port, Adoption of Rules and Agen-
da,
7:30 Keynote Address—Leonard
‘Wileox—Vice President National
Affairs—USNSA Questions.
9:00 Workshops—Nina Williams
—Vice President International Af-
fairs PRUSNSA.
Herman Dupre—Vice President
Student Affairs PRUSNSA.
Evelyn Jones—Vice President
Educational Affairs PRUSNSA.
10:00 Coffee Hour followed by
Bryn Mawr Square Dance to which
all delegates are invited.
10:30 Regional Executive Com-
mittee.
Saturday, December 13
9:00 ‘Student Panel — Student
Government—Administration Rela-
tionships and Higher Education.
Rona Gottlieb—Bryn Mawr—
President, Alliance for Political
Affairs.
Amy Botsaris — ‘Pennsylvania
College for Women — President,
Student Government.
Herman Dupre—Vice President,
Student Affairs—St. Vincent’s Col-
lege.
Dorothy Kasentine — University
of Pennsylvania—President, Stud-
ent Government.
Dean Seidle—Chairman Region-
al Advisory Committee—PRUS-
NSA, Lehigh University.
10:00 ‘Workshop Sessions.
11:30 Educational and Interna-
tional Affairs Program Presenta-
tions; Evelyn Jones and Nina Wil-
liams.
12:30-1:30 Lunch.
1:30-3:30 Educational Affairs
and International Affairs Panels
and Workshops.
3:30-6:00 Second Plenary Ses-
sion,
6:00-8:00 Dinner and Sub Re-
gional Meetings. t
8:00 Final ‘Plenary Session.
All workshops are specifically
designed to discuss the problem of
what NSA has become and its rela-
tion to student government using
an educational, international or
student affairs approach. We look
forward to the short range results
of making recommendations for
formulating policies and programs
on the plenary floor. The long
range results will be the effecting
of whatever programs are decided
upon as a part of this year’s re-
Choir and Congregation
Sing Traditional Carols
Continued from Page 1
Cantata No. 62: “Nun Konn, der
Heiden Heiland”’, and “Joseph
Came Seeking a Resting Place’,
by. Willoughby. This chorus will
also sing Eccard’s “Ich Lag in
Tiefer Todesnacht”, Schutz’s “For
God So Loved the World’, and
Shaw’s “Christmas, Prithee, be
thou Drest’.
The orchestra will play chorales
before and after the service. Dur-
ing the program it will perform a
Trumpet Tone and Air by Henry
Purcell. The service will close
with traditional carols sung by the
chorus and the congregation.
gional program.
As the meeting draws nearer
and as one regards NSA idealisti-
cally and practically, the crisis this
assembly faces seems more critical
than ever before. If, in taking ad-
vantage of what NSA offers—the
opportunity to meet together, the
declaration of certain basic poli-
cies and principles, the exchange
of information and ideas, the over-
all reflector of problems facing
students as students and the stu-
dent voice in national and interna-
tional affairs, we succeed in mak-
ing you see NSA as it is and not
some glorified picture of the or-
ganization, then we hope that you
will feel as we do—that NSA is
more necessary than ever before.
HEY SATISFY qe’
“always smoked Chesterfields in college just like
my friends” says New York secretary, Elizabeth
Lydon, “and here in New York it seems like almost
everyone smokes them.”
g Dirabbath Kydow DUKE 'S1
T SELLING
= AND NOW- CHESTERFIELD FIRST
TO GIVE YOU SCIENTIFIC FACTS
IN SUPPORT OF SMOKING
A responsible consulting organization reports a study by a
competent medical specialist and staff on the effects of smoking
Chesterfields. For six months a group of men and women
smoked only Chesterfield—10 to 40 a day—their normal amount. .
45 percent of the group have smoked Chesterfields from one to
thirty years for an average of ten years each.
At the beginning and end of the six-months, each smoker was
given a thorough examination including X-rays, and covering
the sinuses, nose, ears and throat. After these examinations,
the medical specialist stated . . . :
“It is my opinion that the ears, nose, throat and acces-
sory organs of all participating subjects examined by me
were not adversely affected in the six-months period by
smoking the cigarettes provided.’
Remember this report and buy Chesterfields... regular or
king-size.
6