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VOL. XLVIII—NO. 12
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1952 Bich Laws Gallnge 1362 PRICE 20 CENTS
Extra
os
Extra
:
|
‘
dite a as
Counterpoint Shines with Fatally Satisfied Thoughts
Especially contributed by Warner B. Berthoff
Asst. Professor of English
The Winter 1951 Counterpoint announces on page one its
“new editorital independence”,
after we -penetr
means only that
an encouraging prologue even
e the ambiguity to discover the phrase
averford’s delegation to the Board has re-
signed. Two half pages from an otherwise mysterious male
poet are presumably what is left of Haverford’s stake in the
enterprise; three and one-half
mark what the new editors
hope will be ‘the beginning of more alumnae interest”; a long
faculty contribution excepted, there remain fourteen and
one-half pages of text, to speak for the muse of extra-curric-
uluar creativity at Bryn Mawr.
Four stories and two poems: ay,
slim harvest after all summer and|
fall. jWhat are we to conclude:
bad weather? a too stringent ed-
itorial winnowing? barren ground?
Let us read on and see—and, read-
er, lay a copy by, to save expense
of quoting.
First, the photographs. A rule
MARRIAGES
Gladys Beck, ’52, to Peter
Cooper.
Doris Emerson to Waller
MacNiven Conard.
Elizabeth Smith, ’48, to John
Benson.
for future Counterpoints—no pho-
tographs! The cost would be better
spent on a prize contest to bring
out contributors. The two photo-
graphs are artless: indifferently |
composed, mechanically edited (if
at all), foggily reproduced. They
will attract persons with some
prior attachment to Wittingdon’
Castle, Shropshire, half-timbering,'
or geese, i. e., persons with an ir-|
relevant interest in the subjects.
Subject: Matter:
Ut pictura poesis,—unfortunate.
iy. The subject-matter of the five
original poems is_ recognizable.
What is wanting is an expense of
craft, a labor of transformation. |
Miss Gibbs’ stanzas speak for “the|
eager mind of youth” “exiles in
nis world” and “freed from dull
Custom’s chains” which is “un
guessed by others” and unrevealed
in her poem. The Goddess, if her
month is May, must be Mary. May
ve recall for comparison R. Low-
ell’s lines about Our Lady:
“There’s no comeliness/ At all or
harm in that expressionless/ Face
with its heavy eyelids... She
knows what ‘God knows”. The
comparison is grossly unfair, but
his poem deserves any unfairness
that will get at what is wrong with
it; and unless €ounterpoint’s ed-
tors understand the kind of dif-|
ference, we may as well abandon |
hope whenever again we enter|
here. Good poems are rare
enough; we expect and forgive|
honest failures. But not preten-
tiousness.
In “The Exchange”, Mr. Thom-|:
as Mild has Donne's “Message” in|
| cut. the deadwood and see.
suggest where his true metier may
lie. “Deception” will not alter
this’ opinion. The movement of
thought is interesting, but the
poem has not yet begun to be writ-
ten.
The work of Miss Forbes and
Miss Phipps deserves more serious
comment. There may be a poem
hidden inside “Beethoven”. Let us
“Who
carves monuments must be alone
and deaf creation drags the self
through self to free worlds within
a. skull was faith to shape his
pain”. Check your copy for the
punctuation; I deliberately omit it
to permit an ambiguity or two,
notably “and deaf creation drags
the self”. That is not what Miss
Forbes wrote, but it seems very
promising; she is of course enti-
tled to it.
Metaphors Questioned
The octave of “A Window at
Chartres” makes an honest effort
to eatch in words the eye’s exper-
jence of extraordinary color and
form in a situation as booby-trap-
ped as “Some Flowers for thy
Shrine, O Goddess” with tempta-
tions to sentimentality. We must
call Miss Phipps to account for her
metaphors. The windows, she says,
capture their essential colors from
natural objects. But these are
“purest colors” and therefore brok-
en out of Light itself and there-
fore immediately significant, not
pantheistically. This is doctrinai
quibbling and gives all credit to a
good development of metaphor.
Line 7 is another matter: if the
mind. If he does not, he should chips are forged in heat, they can-
have.
The sentences are a tenu- mot tnemselves be flames. And they
ous prose; the stanza form resem-|do not cause a beauty which fol-
bles the limerick just enough to}lows; they are it; line 8 therefore
it
cannot get out of saying “to crys-
tallize a living brilliance’; woe to
che sonneteer who so nakediy de-
stroys at once the voice and the
mearing’s idiom. The sestet ab-
andors the struggle and merely
expluins to us what we are intend-
ed to feel.
The best verse in the issue is the
set of translations. The conven-
tions of translating Chinese poet-
ry are pretty well fixed; they may
be rive for change; yet it is when
Miss ‘Wei alters them in the direc-
tion of regular English metrics
and “poetical” word order that she
falters. For us the technical in-
terest of Chinese poetry is limited
to the marvelous economy of state-
ment, the arrangement of objects.
We misread it as inevitably as we
misread (with Ezra Pound’s bless-
ing) the characters themselves.
The beauties of Chinese prosody,
whatever they may be, are closed
to "us; excepting a prosodist of
Pound’s stature, the translator
should concentrate on the nouns
and their ararngement. Miss Wei
honors this first obligation.
Of the prose entries, two—and
perhaps a third—are worth respect
technically —thank God! Mean-
while, there is “Pagan Synthesis”:
the title gives it away as starting
from the wrong end, with an ambi-
tious!ly preconceived effect which
1s to flower in every phrase . It is
simply very sloppy writing. For
example: “It (a pond) must be of
that creamy muddiness that sinks
CALENDAR
Wednesday, January 9
7:30 p.m. Fencing Meet. Gym.
8:5 p.m. The Webster lecture
in History will be given by Prof.
Gordon Craig of Princeton. His
subject will be “Military Politics
in Prussia and Germany.”
Thursday, January 10
8:30 p.m. Mr. Peter Bachrach
of the Politics Department, who
is on sabbatical leave with a
Ford Foundation Fellowship, will
return to speak during the
S.D.A.-sponsored “Free Thought
Week”. His topic will be “Is
the Classical Theory of Freedom
of Thought Valid in Modern
Times?”
Saturday, January 12
German Condition Examina-
tions.
8.30 p.m. Square Dance in the
gymnasium.
Sunday, January 13
7:15 p.m. Dr. Cleland will be
the Chapel speaker.
Continued on Page 3, Col. 5
in unnoticeable underfoot: amidst
twiny weeds”. This merely resists
picturing. But “hands over the
splintery planks holding us in
oack” is more ingenious, and
would sorely tax Mr. Janschka’s ,
imagination. The editors cannot
escape complicity; the second par-
agraph should thave been blue-pen-
ciled to read: “There was no mind,
only lazy warmth emanating from
uhe soft earth, We walked sep-
arately in the narrow path, the
tour of us. Twigs crackled under-
foot. Bushes and ferns grew in
our way and trembled when birds
flew us as we passed”. Snakes,
coo, if you like. There is a hope-
ful moment when the nuns arrive,
“black veils ... pale smooth fac-
es”, It is wholly and calculating-
ly squandered: “In us is awakened
Reverence, mingled with a tinge of |
the zarefree pleasure we have en-.
joyed here”. In me by the hand iz
raised the hatchet, darkly.
Unoriginality
The setting of “The Star” 1s an
abandoned lighthouse; nothing
further in the story relaxes our
prompt distrust. The astronomer-
protsgonist is swept by feelings
which at one point must be “name-
less’—the following sentence ex-
plains why: “An unaccustomed look
in the dim little mirror over his
bed convinced him that the owner
of the unearthly white and skele-
ial face with its coal-ember eyes
would not be given much more
time to study the stars”. There is
an ironic twist at the end, unwise-
ly entrusted to two small boys who
are made to converse thus: “He
ground his own lenses, of all
things”. “The poor fool. And no
original results”.
“Mary Burton: Study in Ivy
Wreaths” is amusing, and in fact
full of good touches, the promising
stuff of satire. It is annoying pre-
cisely when Miss Price is content
to leave it in catalogue form, as in
paragraph five. The last para-
graph might be, fatal in any case:
“with the latter perhaps domin-
ant” is no more English than the
dangling participle in the next
sentence, and “All the world’s a
stage” effaces our faith in the flare
for quoting shown in “Oh Burton”
and “really brilliant and wonderful
... ”, But the sketch has already
begun to miss fire more subtly,
and the cause is primary. Any
writing, especially satire, is dif-
ficult when you don’t know that
you don’t know what you think of
your subject. You may write to
find out, but that is when you most
NEWS ELECTIONS
The NEWS takes great pleas-
ure in announcing the follow-
ing elections: SHEILA AT-
KINSON, Editor - in - Chief;
CLAIRE ROBINSON, Copy.
Editor; MARGARET McCABE,
Managing Editor; MARY
ALICE DRINKLE and JUDY
THOMPSON, Editorial Board.
FRANCES SHIRLEY was
unanimously re-elected Make-
up Editor.
need to rewrite. And we damag-
ingly suspect that Mary Burton is
what the author (and the audience
she imagines she is writing for)
would half-consciously like to be:
the Ur Bryn Mawr girl. It is a
failure of point of view.
Assumes Audience
Peint of view happens also to be
where “The Restaurant” fails,
where no story can afford to fail
hese days. Miss Ellenbogen de-
iivers her characters alive and
quarreling, and makes fine use of
the chance she has for montage;
the orchestration of talk from two
separate tables is, in two or three
places, the first really contrapun-
al work of the issue. Bravo! But
the “I” has no more integrity than
if it were writing a letter home;
there, at least, it knows its audi-
ence and can shamelessly count on
the effects it will get whatever it
says. ‘But here, forced to impro-
vise both anecdote and audience,
it imagines a fantasy-gathering of
exact semblables, as though char-
acter. author, and auditor were all
one person, and it overwrites the
endirg, it insists on a sensitivity
too big for the small pathos of the
occasion. The protagonist must
be sensitive, but not in the exact
way the author would like herself,
and us, to be.
Balanced Writing
“Lightly Turned” sets aside the
most difficult technical problem
and is consequently the best piece
so far. A girl’s struggle to fight
off hallucination is itself hallucin-
ated; the horror that finally mas-
ters her is the truth that she has
been holding apart from herself,
and Miss Holbeck from us. The
action is consistently double, so
that a statement (“She wanted to
keep the grasp on reality”) which
would be a disastrous explain-sen-
tence in all the other stories,
proves to be integral to her self-
division; she clutches the reality
of her mind to fight off the reality
Continued on Page 2, Col. 3
y 2
xtra
Extra
:
Bachrach § peaks on Freedom of Expression Jan. 10
as
a
*
f=
-¢
Page Two THE
COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, January 9, 1952
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED 'IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks)
the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing sictictainda
Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that
apps pears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part without permission
the Editor-in-Chief. a
‘EDITORIAL BOARD
Jane Augustine, ‘52, Editor-in-Chief
Paula Strawhecker, ‘52, Copy Frances Shirley, ‘53, Makeup
Sheila Atkinson, ‘53, Managing Editor
Helen Katz, ‘53 Claire Robinson, ‘54
Patricia Murray, ‘52 Betty-Jeanne Yorshis, ‘52
EDITORIAL STAFF
Emmy Cadwalader, ‘53
A.A. reporter
Nancy Fuhrer, ‘55
Ann McGregor, ‘54
Beth Davis, ‘54
Margaret Page, ‘55
Barbara Drysdale, ‘55
Marcia Joseph, ‘55
Anne Mazick, ‘55
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS
Judy Leopold, ‘53 Sue Bramann, ‘52
BUSINESS MANAGER
Sue Press, ‘53
M. G. Warren, ‘54, Associate Business Manager
BUSINESS STAFF
Julia Heimowitz, ‘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
Diana Gammie, ‘53,
Alliance reporter
Mary Alice Drinkle, ‘53
Margaret McCabe, ‘54
League reporter
Joyce Annan, ‘53
Ellen Bell, ‘53
Judy Thompson, ‘54
Vicky Kraver, ‘54
Subscription, $3.50 Mailing price, $4.09
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
Engayements
Harriet Watson Cooper, 53, to Peter Fisher.
Helen Dobbs, 52, to F. Becton Uhrbrock.
Jane Dubose, ’54, to Charles Conrad, Jr.
Helen Katz, ’53, to Burton H. Brody.
Elizabeth Liu, ’52, to John Chu.
Charlotte Gregory Nash, ’55, to James Wellman Burroughs:
Margaret Dorothea Partridge, 52, to Roderic Hall Pierce.
Mary Louise Price, 51, to Franklin Steele Coale.
Tama Schenk, ’52, to Ellis P. Singer.
June Wasser, ’53, to Steve Wiener.
A World of Magic All My Own
Mr. Berthoff Criticizes Winter Counterpoint
As Superficial with “‘Soft and Fogging”’ Light
Continued from Page 1
cf the truth. At two moments par-
ticularly the balance is handsome-
ly managed: the two paragraphs
| which turn on “My beautiful view”
and the two which turn on “Why
don’t you water the poor things,
Amelia”? These are recommended
to the other contributors’ scrutiny
—and to Miss Holbeck’s, too, since
they explain what is wrong with
her attempt elsewhere to suggest
a broken consciousness by broken
sentence fragments.
Poetical Content
There remains the piece de, re-
sistance—or, to any one made hap-
py by the other poetry, la cause de
resistance—the “Fragments from
the Aardvark in the Apple Trees”,
in its author’s best possessed man-
ner. The title is a charming sca-
tologism; surely the fragments are
not a cud the aardvark munche:*
and spits. Happily, there is little
munching and spitting in these
poems, though there is some ten-
dency to speak with the mouth
full. But the mouth is usually
full of words, real and originating,
and that is refreshing .
The work is a “scenario for a
dance”. Lacking (let us hope not
forever!) the performance, ‘we
shall comment only on the poems.
The three rondeaux pass from a
dream of pre-history (by one of
Finnegan's sleeping sons) to a cel-
ebration of the freeing of its prim-
al roots into mid-air and the sav-
ing nuptials of seminal Apri! and
flowering June. Versification is
firmly adequate to form; the first
statement is haunting, and wisely
rechanted at the final curtain:
“apterygial flight” is the paradox
we paid our money for, and “reeve”
a properly nautical verb recaptur-
ed. The first part of No. 2 is pal-
eontologically over-cluttered, but
the last stanza opens out into the
“irreversible statement” of poetry.
That No. 3 nearly rescues “June
and April” from the ash heap of
poesie measures its success; the
first reprise is craftily broken; but
I would change the last (despite
rules) to “juin et avril”. Perhaps
the change is a far too loose low
trick to play on the elegant form.
But the otherwise lapidary poem
demands this last unblemishing,
and the (when badly pronounced)
ambiguity is legitimate; we at
once enjoy an image of how to
dance the dance the poem is writ-
ten for.
Drama vs. Wit
The next group, neo-Dada, is
nicely fitted to its work of organ-
izing choreography. The first is
metrically the best; its one fault
is that the last line too closely ap-
proaches mere wit. We call the
attention of the Misses Esmerian,
Forbes, and Price to the anecdote
recited by P2: “It was out to mar-
ket ...”. Here is a model of the
essential fable in all fiction, from
which the writer departs at his
own risk, though we must add that
in the last seven lines Mr. Morris
the dramaturgist collides with Mr.
Morris the fabricator of infinitely
repellent particle-sentences. For
those interested in singing P3’s
hillbilly tune, we suggest “The
Wreck of the Old 97”. The chorus,
however, is distracting, since it is
the parody of Kipling that no de-
liberate attempt could ever have
brought off.
Lack of Interest
And so on pleasantly to the end.
We are disturbed only when the
refe:ence to Mrs. Languor and the
parenthetical “prey and host”
raise doubts that maybe this his-
trionic is really meant to involve
“the salvation of us all”. But the
jine is spoken by the Pierce-a-
phone, and he gets his. Or it gets
its. Otherwise, the ofas is worked
on, it is constructed, it moves, and
wharever you think of it, it gives
you something to do, if only boo
and riot like the scholars.
With the rest of the issue I have
felt free to be harshly critical to
a definite purpose. For Counter-
point is suffering not from a lack
of talent but from a lack of inter-
est—and I mean the contributors’
and editors’ lack of interest in the
work of writing. But what (rea-
sonable question) did I expect to
find in an undergraduate literary
magazine?
Disappointed Muse
The Pierce-a-phone delivers the
cue line: “we are minors only
playing in a new key”. Three poss-
ible readings: only‘ minors; only,
in a new key; only playing. The
first is pre-condition and accepted;
the third would be vastly encour-
aging; the second is the unforgiv-
able truth (exceptions noted).
What I expected instead were the
same discipline, solidity, and min-
imal toughness, that it supposedly
takes to break 88 in prescribed as-
signments at Bryn Mawr. The
extra-curricular muse is no
shame-faced stepsister; she is mo-
ral, legitimist, jealous of her dig-
nity, and vengeful when the free-
dom she grants is abused with
half-hearted attendance. She is no
spittoon for unmarketable distilla-
tions. For manners she has elect-
ed truth and honesty—of words,
personae, objects and enactments.
And at Bryn Mawr she is firmly
within her rights. “Veritatem di-
leximus”, say the three owls. “I
rejoice that there are owls”, said
Henry Thoreau. “Let them do the
idiotic and maniacal hooting for
men. It is a sound admirably suit-
ed to swamps and twilight woods
which no day illustrates, suggest-
ing a vast and undeveloped nature
which men ‘have not recognized.
They represent the stark twilight
and unsatisfied thoughts which all
have”. The light put out by Coun-
terpoint, like the light in its photo-
graphs, is soft and* fogging; its
thoughts are fatally satisfied; and
its readers, once past their willing
institutional loyalties and once
beyond Mr. Morris’ spirited hoot-
ing, are liable themselves not to
give a hoot.
Bard’s Eye View
by Claire Robinson, ’54
Oh what is so rare
As a day in June
In this season of reading,
Rescrve Book Room,
And slump.
The heart would jump
For joy, if it could only
See a boy once more.
But no, for papers
By the score have come
To mess up dates, and weekends
and what’s more
EXAMS loom large
Upon the scene
(That was a scream you heard, by
gad,
issuing from the padded
walls of quiet smoker)
While poker faces, frayed shoe-
laces, bare bookcases
All proclaim
That Blue Book Blight has sprung
again.
Miss Gard‘ner’s new biology
textbook has just come off the
press and will be on sale
shortly.
Government Lists
Subversive Groups
A loyalty oath certifying that
the applicant has read the names
of the following organizations and
is not, nor has been, a member of;
has not contributed to, received
literature from, or attended meet-
ings of any organization listed,
must be signed by each ——
for a federal job.
Abraham Lincoln Brigade
Abraham Lincoln School,
Illinois
Action Committee to Free Spain Now
American Association for Reconstruc-
tion in Yugoslavia, Inc.
American Branch of The Federation
of Greek Maritime Unions
American Christian Nationalist Party
American Committee for European
Worker’s Relief
American Committee for Protection of
Foreign Born .
American Committee for Spanish
Freedom
American Committee for Yugoslav
Relief, Inc.
American Council for a Democratic
Greece, formerly known as the
Greek American Council; Greek
American Committee for National
Unity
American Council on Soviet Relations
American Croatian Congress
American Jewish Labor Council
American League Against War and
Fascism
American League for Peace and
Chicago,
Democracy
American Rescue Shi Mission (a
project of the United American
Spanish Aid Committee)
American Nationalist Party
American National Labor Party
American National Socialist League
American National Socialist Party
American Patriots, Inc.
American Peace Mobililzation
American Polish Labor Council
~~“ Russian Fraternal Society,
American Russian Institute, New York
American Russian Institute, Phila-
delphia
American Russian Institute, San
Francisco
American Russian Institute, of
Southern California, Los Angeles
American. Slav . Congress
American Youth Congress
American Youth for Democracy
Armenian Progressive League of
America
Associated Klans of America
Association of Georgia Klans
Association of German Nationals
(Reichsdeutsche Vereinigung)
Ausland-Organization der NSDAP,
Overseas Branch of Nazi Party
Black Dragon Society
Boston School for Marxist Studies,
Boston, Mass.
California Labor School, Inc., 216
Market Street, San Francisco, Cal-
ifornia’
Carpatho-Russian Peoples Society,
Iwo
Central Council of American Women
of Croatian Descent, also known as
Central Council of American Croa-
tian Women, National Council of
Croatian Women
Central Japanese Association
(Beikoku Chuo Nipponjin Kai)
Central Japanese Association of
Southern California
Cervantes Fraternal Society, TWO
Citizens Committee to Free Earl
Browder
Citizens Committee for Harry Bridges
Citizens Committee of the Upper West
Side (New York City)
Citizens Protective League
Civil Rights Congress andits affiliated
organizations and branches
Civil Rights Congress for Texas
Columbians
Comite Coordinador Pro Republica
Espanola
Committee for a Democratic Far
Eastern Policy
Committee for Nationalist Action
Committee to Aid the Fighting South
Commonwealth College, Mena,
Arkansas
Communist Party, U.S.A., and its
affiliates and committees
Communist Political Association, its
subdivisions, subsidiaries and
affiliates
Congress of American Revolutionary
Writers
Congress of American Women
Connecticut State Youth Conference
Council on African Affairs
Council for Pan-American Democracy
Croatian Benevolent Fraternity, TWO
Dai Nippon Butoku Kai (Military
Virtue Society of Japan or Military
Art Society of Japan)
Daily Worker Press Club
Dante Alighieri Society (between
1935-1940)
Dennis Defense Committee
Detroit Youth Assembly
Emergency Conference to Save
Spanish Refugees
Federation of Italian War Veterans
in the U.S.A., Inc. (Associazione
Nazionale Conbattenti Italiani.
Federazione degli Stati Uniti d’
America)
ee erin Mutual Aid Society,
Florida Press and Educational League
Friends of the New Germany (Freund*
des Neuen Deutschlands)
Friends of the Soviet Union
Garibaldi American Fraternal
Society. TWO
George Washington Carver School
New York City
German-American Bund (Amerika-
deutscher Volksbund)
German-American National Alliance?
Deutsche-Amerikanische Einheits-
front), Central Organization
German-American Republican Learue
German-American Vocational League
(Deutsche-Amerikanische
Benufsgemeinschaft)
Hawaii Civil Liberties Committee
Heimuska Kai, also known as
Nokubei Heieki Gimusha Kai,
Zaibel Nihonjin, Heiyaku Gimusha
Kai, and Zaibei Heimusha Kai
(Japanese Residing in America
Military Conscripts Association)
Hellenic-American Brotherhood. TWO
Continued on Page 3, Col. 1
15 at 8:15!
Wednesday, January 9, 1952
THE COLLEGE
NEWS
Page Three
Attorney General Publishes Official List of Subversive Organizations ;
Federal Government Requires Employees’ Oaths Swearing Non-Association
Continued from Page 2
Hinode Kail (Imperial Japanese
Reservists)
Hinomaru Kai (Rising Sun Flag
Society)
Hokubei Zaigo Shoke Dan (North
American Reserve Officers
Association)
Hollywood Writers Mobilization for
Defense
Hungarian-American Council for
Democracy
Hungarian Brotherhood, TWO
Independent Socialist League
Industrial Workers of the World
International Labor Defense
International Workers Order, it sub-
divisions, subsidiaries and affiliates
Japanese Association of America
Japanese Overseas Central Society
Kaigai Dobo Chuo Kai)
Japanese Overseas Convention, Tokyo,
Japan, 1940
Japanese Protective Association
(Recruiting Organization)
Jefferson School of Social Science,
New York City
Jewish Peoples Committee
Jewish Peoples Fraternal Order, TWO
Jikyoku lin Kai (Committee for the
Crisis)
Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee
Joseph Weydemeyer School of Social
Science, St. Louis, Missouri
Kibei Seinen Kai (Association of US
Citizens of Japanese Ancestry who
have returned to America after
studying in Japan)
Knights of the White Camellia
Ku Klux Klan
Kyffhaeuser, also known as Kpyff-
haeuser League (Kyffhaeuser
Bund), Kyffhaeuser Fellowship
Kyffhaeuser Kameradschaft)
Kyffhaeuser War Relief (Kyffhaeuser
Kriegshilfswerk)
Labor Research Association, Inc.
Labor Youth League
League of American Writers
Lictor Society (Italian Black Shirts)
Macedonian-American People’s League
Mario Morgantini Circle
Michigan Civil Rights Federation
Michigan School of Social Science
Nanka Teikoku Gunyudan (Imperial
Military Friends Group or Southern
California War Veterans)
National Blue Star Mothers of
America
National Committee for
of Political Prisoners
National Committee to Win the Peace
National Conference on American
Policy in China and the Far East
(A conference called by the com-
mittee for democratic Far Eastern
Policy)
National Council of American-Soviet
Friendship
National Council of Americans of
Croatian Descent
National Council of Croation Women
National Federation for Constitutional
Liberties
National Negro Congress
Nationalist Action League
National First Party of Puerto Rico
he Friends of America (since
Negro Labor Victory Committee
New Committee for Publications
Nichibei Kogyo Kaisha (The Great
the Defense
anis\ Fujii Theatre)
f ) North American Committee to Aid
Compliments of
f ‘
th
2 Buy the Gifts That
Haverford
paces Nobody Gave You
Pharmacy
at
Haverford, Pa.
RICHARD
STOCKTON
Europe $986.00—1952
Tour prices all inclusive — eleven
countries, good hotels, all meals, Are You Looking for
Shakespeare Theatre, William Tell Jantzen & Maiden Form
Play, Folies Bergiere, limited member- Products?
ship—ages 17-25. Write for booklet, Go to
MAUD McKAY JOYCE LEWIS
11 W 42d St., New York 36, N. Y.
( ~
( ) James de Baun
To Beat the Frost INSURANCE
Knit... 225 Broadway, N. Y.
Woolen Mittens, ie '
(_ )
Scarves, Sweaters
DINAH FROST’S
EL GRECO RESTAURANT
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
See More-Spend Less
Our 19th Year
See your lecal represen
ative or write to:
_ ST yRaval aseoeiarion
AVE., NEW YORK 17° MU 7-6264
SH
Bryn Mawr 810 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR
. 4, = ,}
pn UROPE »
E 3s MISS NOIROT
06 Bagge trem $5!
Bicycle, Meter sito ak — “Gowns of Distinction”
‘Family living peek Study Sous offered by Lancaster Avenue
America’s largest organization for edu- Bryn Mawr
cational travel. Scholarships avelteble. ms
Sg
in NEW YORK
AT THE GATEWAY
TO TIMES SQUARE
600 cheerful rooms, private baths—
radio & felevision Adjacent garage
Air-conditioned Dining Room &
Cocktail Lounge Moderate rates
BANQUET AND MEETING FACILITIES
LESLIE PAUL
Managing Director
Hote. EMPIRE
BROADWAY at 63rd ST.
Spanish Democracy
North American Spanish Aid
Committee
Northwest Japanese Association
Ohio School of Social Sciences
Oklahoma Committee to Defend
Political Prisoners
Original Southern Klans, Incorporated
Pacific Northwest Labor School,
Seattle, Wash. :
Partido Del Pueblo of Panama
(operating in the Canal Zone)
Peace Movement of Ethiopia
People’s Educational and Press
Association of Texas
People’s Educational Association
(Incorporated under name Los
Angeles Educational Association,
Inc.), also known as People’s
Educational Center, People’s
University, People’s School
People’s Institute of Applied Religion
People’s Radio Foundation, Inc., TWO
Philadelphia School of Social Science
and Art
Photo League (New York City)
Polonia Society of the IWO
‘ Progressive German-Americans, also
known as Progressive German-
Americans of Chicago
Proletarian Party of America
— War Veterans of the U. S.,
ne.
Revolutionary Workers League
Romanian-American Fraternal
Society, IWO .
Sakura Kai (Patriotic Society, or
Cherry Association)
Samuel Adams School, Boston,
Massachusetts
Schappes Defense Committee
Schneiderman-Darcy Defense
Committee
sp of Jewish Studies, New York
ty
Seattle Labor School, Seattle,
Washington
Serbian-American Fraternal Society,
Iwo
Shinto Temples
Silver Shirt Legion of America
Slovak Workers Society, TWO
Slovenian-American National Council
Socialist Workers Party
Socialist Youth League
Sokoku Kai (Fatherland Society)
Southern Negro Youth Congress
Suiko Sha (Reserve Officers
Association Los Angeles)
Tom Paine School of Social Science,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Tom Paine School of Westchester,
New York
Ukranian American Fraternal
Iwo
Union of American Croatians
United American Spanish Aid
Committee
United Committee of South Slavic
Americans
United Harlem Tenants and
Consumers Organization
United May Day Committee
Union
United Negro & Allied Veterans of
America
Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln
Brigade
Veterans Against Discrimination of
Civil Rights Congress of New York
Virginia League for People’s
Education
Walt Whitman School of Social
Science, Newark, New Jersey
Washington Book Shop Association
Washington Committee for
Democratic Action
Washington Commonwealth Federation
Wisconsin Conference: on Social
Legislation
Workers Alliance |
Workers Party, including Socialist
Youth League
Yiddisher Kultur Farband
Young Communist League
Calendar (Continued )
Continued from Page 1
Monday, January 14
4:30 p.m. Chapel Committee,
Common Room, Dr. Cleland.
Tuesday, January 15
8:15 p.m. Fees Meeting.
Wednesday, January 16
7:30 p.m. Nurses’ Aid Exam,
Taylor Hall.
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests
No. 31... THE MOUNTAIN GOAT
H. thought they were trying to make him the butt-end
of a joke when he was asked to judge cigarette mildness
with a mere puff of one brand and a quick sniff of
another. The fancy foot-work didn’t dazzle him! He
knew that the pinnacle of pleasure comes from steady
| smoking .. . and that there is only one test that gives you
enough time to permit conclusive proof. Smokers
throughout America have made the same decision !
It’s the sensible test .. . the 30-Day Camel Mildness
Test, which simply asks you to try Camels on a
day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments !
Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your “T-Zone”
(T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why ...
After all the Mildness Tests...
Camel leads all other brands Sy bi//ions
ey |
al
:
of
Bo
Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 9, 1952.
Za
(j = | * ; \v
WALTER COOK Before Freshman Shows o
| Watch Repairing, Clocks Everyone Goes :
E and Jewelry for Clothes He h ad oe wish but—
Bryn Mawr Avenue from MARTIE'S » to i. glad
~~ J i
: Nor want bur—
: 0
When cold winds blow Buy Your when he thir sted pes
‘ tlt in ion go The Jolly Beggar :
Flowers
To the cosiest spot
; P Each frosty bottle of Coke is the
For something tasty
and hot! at answer to thirst...each frosty
; bottle is a bargain, too. Robert
THE HEARTH JEANNETT’S Burns would like that!
Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
‘. 4) of
( mn,
When you’re “in a state” and won't
function
. Leave your work, gals, without ) iho
Ny
: Here you'll sae Wenaied cheer an d zing BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
To toss off that paper ass gpa
like any old thing! mer
THE COLLEGE INN — THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
ea | “Coke” is a registered trade-mark, © 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
- J
=
PROPRIETOR
MILDNES
NO UNPLEASANT
AFTER-TASTE’
*From the Report of a Well-Known Research Organization -
and only Chesterfield has it!
College news, January 9, 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)
1952-01-09
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 38, No. 12
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-no12