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College news, March 19, 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)
1952-03-19
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 38, No. 19
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-no19
Page Eight
THE
0
COLLEGE NEWS
EEE Pa COREE OR NTIE RARR RI ASR NTR IE I
Wednesday, March 19, 1952
Cassidy Proposes New
Educational Expansion
Continued from Page 1
demand for political expression,
which he considers greater than
hunger. This demand, however,
does not come from the masses,
but rather from the young intel-
lectuals, people with some educa-
tion. These “five-percenters” are
the dissatisfied ones, ,and wilt
eventually be the leaders of. the
masses.
In order to solve our difficulties
of misunderstanding and misinter-
preting the Middle East, we must
follow several steps. First, we
must increase our Point Four pro-
gram to include more territory.
In comparison to our European ex-
penditures, we have actually
spent very little in this problem
area. We must attempt to drop
our mask, learn ‘more, and try to
reach the intellectuals, thereby ex-
panding ourselves while educating
them. The study of political sci-
ence is a prime necessity (China
is a good example); Mr. Cas-
sidy advocated the plan of bring-
sng more foreign students to the
Students who are interested
in applying for rooms in the
French or Spanish House next
year should make appointments
with Miss Bree or Mrs. Mar-
shall before Friday, March 28.
United States to see our politics in
action. In addition to this, the in-
formation program must be ex-
panded by extending the Voice of
America programs and_ sending
good magazines, rather than State
Department propaganda, at rea-
sonable prices to the Middle East.
CALENDAR
‘(Continued from Page 1
student admission $.60.
9:00 p. m.-12:00 p. m. Square
Dance in the Graduate Gym,
Undergrad exhibit of china in
the Common Room.
Saturday, March 22
8:45 p. m. “The Shoemaker’s
(Prodigious ‘Wife’, Goodhart audi-
torium.
10:30 p. m. - 1:00 a. m. The
Shoemaker’s Shuffle, Radio Club
dance, in the Rumpus Room and
the Common Room.
Sunday, March 23
2:30 p. m. Hall basketball finals
in the gym: Pem East vs. Pem
West.
7:30 p. m. The Reverend Mr.
Thorne Sparkman of the Church
of the Redeemer, Bryn Mawr, will
deliver the address at the evening
chapel service.
Monday, March 24
5:00 p. m. Modified Nurses Aid
demonstration in Goodhart audi-
torium.
8:00 p. m. The Art Series Lec-
ture on “The Graphic Art of
Francisco Goya” will be given by
Phillip Hofer, Curator of Print-
ing and Graphic Arts, Harvard
University Library.
Tuesday, March 25
exam in Taylor.
8:30 p. m. The French Club will
ner Workshop.
sion $1.20;
$.60.
5:00 p.m. Modified Nurses Aid
present “Andromaque” by Jean
Racine in the Cornelia Otis Skin=|
General admis-
student admission
Dynamic Unity Of BMC
Continued from Page 1
When two. strange choruses
meet. and combine the products. of
many months work, the results
ean be numerous. Princeton and
Bryn Mawr meshed in a harmonic
compatability which was general-
ly more complete in the final per-
formance on Sunday.
The Princeton Glee Club offered
three Schubert Choruses: Wider-
spruch, Nachthelle with Harry
Powers as tenor soloist, and Can
tata written in celebration of the
recovery of Irene Kiesewetter, from
an Italian poem of unknown au-
thorship, Princeton, on a whole,
was considerably more successful
on Sunday when these three selec-
tions attained more closely the
musical stature which they merit.
Mass in G. Minor. And Hecuba’s Lament Display
And Princeton Choruses
Both Princeton and Bryn Mawr
introduced small groups of singers
which followed their respective
choral portions of the program,
the Princeton Madrigal Group and
the augmented Bryn Mawr Double
Octet. The two groups sang Idylls,
Airs, Madrigals, Catches, and Pas-
torals which were unquestionably
the lighter side of the program.
The Octet, possibly because it is
larger, seemed more unified in
voice types and sang with a pleas-
ant surety that reached the audi-
ence immediately. The Madrigal
Group did not effect a balance
similar to that of the Double 9,
but on ‘Sunday sang with enunci
ation and rhythm that compensat-
ed for the lacking balance.
With a glance back over the
ELECTION CALENDAR
Con.inued from Page 1
tary, and first junior member te
Undergrad.
Tuesday, March 25
College elections: League Sec-
retary, First Sophomore Member
to Self-Gov.
Wednesday, March 26
College elections: First Sopho-
more Member to Undergrad;
First Junior Member to Under-
grad.
Thursday, March 27
College election: Alliance Sec-
retary.
weekend as a whole, from the for-
mal concert to the Open House at
Denbigh, (yes! even to the bus
rides to and fro) a good time was
had by all!
'
It was emphasized that the re-
lationship of the church and state
in this general area is not a seri-
ous problem. Its singular contin-
uation implies only a legal and so-
cial system of an archaic era, cer-
tainly not valid in the twentieth
century.
By following this program, we
will not only make our position
faculty and students invited
to
the only DaDaDramatic
Symposium
on
Jean Racine
ever to have been presented
ANYWHERE
Wyndham Hall, March 21, 4:30
ERRATUM
The News would like to correct
an error in the Flexner Lecture in
Campus Interviews
-
/
on Cigarette Tests
No.
28...
THE OVENBIRD
the issue of March 5. The Italian
philosopher referred to in the lec-
ture was Vico, not Vigo as print-
ed. Our apologies to Mr. Berlin
and also the Italian Department.
more admirable in the Middle East,
but we will combat the overtures
now being made by the Soviet
Union. It is of utmost import-
ance, however, to prepare these |
peoples for our way of life. Mr. with them, they are of no use un-
Cassidy stressed the fact that less people are equipped to use
while democracy and freedom may , them. It is our first job to makc
bring their individual advantages|them ready to accept them.
7
“The College Inn is the place for me.”
| If you're hungry for some tea,
- Where’s the place that you should be?
Rouse your voice! Shout with glee! :
Pp. Grand Master of the Royal Order of ;
THE COLLEGE INN Gourmets and Raconteurs— our outspoken .
\ x friend knows how to find the proof of the
pudding. Especially such a thing as cigarette
mildness! A “quick puff” and a “single sniff”
left him hungry for facts. Smokers everywhere
. have tried the same tests and discovered the one
| = true test of cigarette mildness!
~~
It’s the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel ‘
Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try at
Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day, ‘ : ‘
pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once
you’ve tried Camels for 30 days in your “T-Zone” j
(T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why...
¥ agi After all the Mildness Tests . . . :
Ah va teins ane | Camel leads all other brands Sy Ai//ons a
PRINCESS, 1.50 —16.00 per deaan |
23 PARKING PLAZA, ARDMORE
8