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College news, March 14, 1951
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1951-03-14
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 37, 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-vol37-no16
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, March 14, 1951
Freshmen Go Casual And “Artsy”, Sophomores Down To Earth, Juniors
Feature Rhythmic Songs, Seniors Win Honors At Haverford Class Night
Continued from Page 3
cleverness, but the show itself
managed to break par pretty
handily, on a fairly rough course.
5—Men—5
No costuming troubles clouded
this period piece; a few of the
army reserves on campus seem to
have dug their khaki out of moth-
balls for the occasion. The five
heroes marched forth upon a mis-
sion to rescue for the army the
Swarthmore lads, growing effem-
inate ‘in a bourgeois co-educational
society. High point of the evening
was the “Swarthmore Girl’ in a
grey sweater and plaid skirt. it
was*agreed that Coote was cute.
and that he’ll never live it down.
Bryn Mawr refrained from whist-
ling.
The juniors’ A Quaker in Quet.
It Is Easier to
Stay in a Gay
Room. Brighten
up with
Flowers
JEANNETT’S
zaltenango starred Carter Bledsoe
as El Supremo, typical handsome
Latin dictator twirling a limp mus-
tache with a glazed and contemp-
tuous stare. Plot was well-con-
structed, good songs went over
with Souse~American rhythm in the
background; here’s a bouquet of
tropical bougainvillia for the or-
chestra, and the song “She’s Just
As American As They Come”.
The seniors, who as juniors last
year had triumphantly scotched
1950 to win the award for the best
skit of the evening, now assumed
the stage with considerable self-
confidence. Back went the audience
to the desert island; mistaken for
Montana, but not for long. The
Big Three—Professor Oakley, Vice.
President MacIntosh and Comptrol-
ler Casselli—were repersonified, not
|
rs
J
For a Greeting
That’s Specific
PANDA Cards
are Terriffic!
RICHARD
STOCKTON’S |
A Group of Strangers
Tired and Dejected from Wandering Afar—
Voices . .. Then Laughter, Whoopee, Din,
They’ve Come Upon Our College Inn!!
THE COLLEGE INN
in Bryn Mawr
Student Co-op :
University of California at Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
‘prize.
for it either way . .. both
narks mean the same thing.
In Los Angeles, California, a favor-
ite gathering spot of students at the
University of California at Los
Angeles is the Student Co-op be-
cause it is a cheerful place—full of
friendly university atmosphere.
And when the gang gathers around,
ice-cold Coca-Cola gets the call. For
here, as in college haunts every-
where—Coke belongs.
as the Three Monkeys, but as po-
tential cannibal victims; Profes-
sor of History Lunt was mimicked
‘but it must have been screamingly
funny to anyone who'd ever heard
him lecture. Music was superior
to story, and it seems fairly evi-
dent that the songs, and Karl
Spaeth’s singing of them in par-
ticular, earned the seniors first
Staging and choreography
could not be described as sloppy;
however, the costumes of the tribal
dance which glowed phosphorescent
under black light, and the aqua-
marine light on the sea gave very
beautiful effects. Funniest mo-
ment found the Three seated in
battered tin tubs with apples in
their mouths—as if they’d just
ducked for the apples in the tubs
BMC Music Club Hears Brilliant Performance
By Young Musicians From the Curtis Institute
Continued from Page 3
Ive passage occurred in the third
movement, when the contrast of
muted strings stood out sharply
from the loud passages of the rest
of the selection:
There was a return to the class-
ical works with the playing of the
they sat in, or, more likely, as if
they’d been mistaken for holiday
bores—uh, boars.
The Faculty Show appeared un.
rehearsed, evidently, and could not
be called less than unfunny. The
judges’ decision of the best class
skit was announced in ’51’s favor
—with solo honors to Karl Spaeth
—and the evening arrived at its
successful, if inevitable, conclu-
sion.
Beethoven Quartet in F minor, No.
11, Op. 95. It was superb. The
tone was beautiful all the way
through the piece, and the trills of
the first allegro were executed
with grace. The second and third
movements were played without a
break, and the third showed great
unanimity of attack and beautiful
contrasts in volume. The closing
larghetto-allegretto was. alive and
never showed any signs of drag-
ging, providing a marvelous close
for the concert.
Mr. Eto is to be especially com-
mended for his playing and for his
leading of the entire group, and
they in turn gave him -excellent
support, for each player was a
good musician in his own right,
and they combined beautifully.
\
or once in his life, our fervent friend admits that
“How eager
can they get?”
eagerness can be over-done! He’s alluding, of course, to all
these quick-trick cigarette tests—the ones that ask you to decide on cigarette
mildness after just one puff, one sniff, one inhale or one exhale! When the
chips are down, he realizes cigarette mildness can’t
be judged in a hurry. That’s why he made. . .
The sensible test .. . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test
which asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke—
on a pack after pack, day after day basis. No snap
judgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels—and only
Camels—for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat,
T for Taste), we believe you'll know why...
4