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COLLEGE NEWS
- VOL. XLIV, NO. 1
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., SEPTEMBER 29, 1947
Toynbee’s Visit,
Work for Drive
Marked 1946-47
Hilarious Faculty Show,
~ More Creative Work
Were Highlights
_ The dark green handbooks gave
you the college. The pale blue
handbooks gave you the rules. Now
the NEWS will give you the high-
Nights of one year of college life,
1946-47, so that you will have some
‘idea of what’s really in store for
ie
1946-47 at Bryn Mawr revolved
bout the “Drive,” more formally
known as the Bryn Mawr College
Fund 1946—, whose June ’48 goal
of two million dollars is to be used
primarily for faculty salaries. Not
onty was the first year’s national
quota of one million dollars passed,
but undergraduates exceeded their
$7500 quota by two thousand dol-
Jars.
To fill their quota, students did
everything from selling apples in
the corridors of Rhoads to inaugu-
rating a Junior Show,,in which
1920 bathing beauties cavorted on
the stage and the audience cheered
as swimmers. splashed down the
aisles of Goodhart, thus beginning
a tradition which will be carried
on late this. October (advt.).
A benefit concert series featured
Mischa Elman, the Paganini quar-
tet, and contralto Carol Brice.
Other proceeds came from campus
productions and novel events, in-
¢luding some spontaneous faculty-
student basketball games marked
by notorious “subway tactics.” In
the spring the wild woman of Bor-
neo and ring-a-duck helped the
Sophomore Carnival net over $400,
while the Faculty’s hilarious show,
“Top Secret,” featured among its
all-star cast glamorous Hallelujah
Bulkhead, sometime head of the
biology department, and philoso-
pher Dr. Nahm in a strawberry
blonde wig as Queen of the May.
“Spring in a Roman Garden,” with
Continued on Page 2
Solve Problems
At Maids’ Bureau
Freshmen, are you wondering
how to sew ruffles on curtains and
trim windowseat covers? Go to the
Maids’ Bureau for expert help.
There you will find slip-covers,
bedspreads, and curtains, inexpen-
sively made to order.
An ambitious. and well-planned
‘organization, the Maids’ Bureau;
situated in the basement of Tay-
Jor Hall, is open from 3:00 to
5:30 every afternoon. Jeannette
Holland, one of Pembroke’s maids,
is in charge of buying the mate-
rials, so that students may have a
large selection from which to
ehoose. Pearl Edmunds, Taylor’s
‘maid, has the arduous job of secre-
tary. They specialize in sewing, to
order, anything and everything
that students need or desire.
Porters as well as maids work in
the Bureau, also only in their spare
time. Besides making chaircovers,
bedspreads and curtains, they
make, stuff, and cover pillows,
They are expert at caning and ty-
ing springs in recalcitrant chairs.
_ Dresses are made and even design-
ed. Alterations are done quickly
and at low cost.
_ + If you aren’t en familiar terms
with a needle and thread, your so-
Jution is the Maids’ Bureau.
L
Copyright, Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College,1945
PRICE 10 CENTS
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Freshmen Find
‘Vill’ Answers
Shopping Needs
For the benefit of those of you
who have come totally unprepared
for your various needs, here is a
pocket guide to nearby shopping
facilities. “The Vill” itself can
supply almost everything you
want, and unless you’re a spend-
thrift you won’t need to venture
into Philadelphia the first week.
For that extra chair or lamp
that your bare room cries out for,
try Hobson and Owens on Lancas-
ter Pike. For wastebaskets, book-
ends and little knick-knacks to
brighten the place up, go to see
what Richard Stockton has to offer.
If you like a definite Mexican
touch, however, don’t forget to try
the Mexican Shop in nearby Ard-
more,
Mayo and Payne in Bryn Mawr
is excellent for radio repair. They
understand the woes of a D.C. ex-
istence and have converters for
sale. All the latest records are to
be had at Blackstone’s Music Store
—and needles, too.
If it’s clothes you’re worrying
about, in Bryn Mawr itself, Nancy
Brown, the Tres Chie Shoppe,
Joyce Lewis and Martie’s Shop can
all provide you with an assortment
of. skirts,..sweaters, and dresse3
with the New Look! For the ben-
efit of knitters, Dinah Frost sells
wool and knitting accessories and
offers lots of expert advice.
Flowers and Fiction
Then, to get to the more luxuri-
ous things in life, if you’d love to
have some flowers to bloom in your
room, call Jeannett’s in the Vill
or try Connelly’s farther up the
Pike toward Rosemont. For read-
ing matter, Stockton’s runs a lend-
ing library, while The Country
Book Shop, in Bryn Mawr, can sup-
ply you with all the latest fiction
and non-fiction. A little further
away, but just as effective is the
Ardmore Bookshop. And to satisfy
that hungry feeling, don’t overlook
the fresh fruit at Hubb’s grocery
store, and at Gane and Snyder’s
too. ,
You can bank money in the Bryn
Mawr Trust Company, and their
Continued on Page 3 ~
* he
By Katrina
Bright _and early Thursday
morning, September 26, the Cin-
cinnatians, the Chicagoans and all
those on trains from the West (the
first representatives of the class
of ’51) arrived in time for a break-
fast of honeydew and fried eggs.
But all day long they streamed
in—some informally in cars with
their dresses hung over their arms,
some by train in their fashion
plate calf-length suits and dark
stockings—and all showed evidence
of the higher requirements in this
college boom, for Freshman blun-
ders, a perennial topic of conversa-
tion, were too few and far between.
No Males
’b1 includes a pair of twins but
no male students that we have
seen; girls from China to the West
Indies; the socialite who breathed
ecstatically: “What, no classes on
Saturday! You mean I can leave
after biology on Friday afternoon.
Boy, wait till Jack hears that!”,
and the. intellectual who thought
Spinoza “simply fascinating read-
ing.” In the infirmary meeting,
one perturbed voice piped up:
“Please, are we allowed to study
while we are in the infirmary?”
Once again the Vill is being in-
vaded. Soap dishes and waste
CALENDAR
Monday, September 29
9:00—Open House at Soda
Fountain, Goodhart.
Tuesday, September 30
8:45 A. M.—Opening Assem-
bly of 63rd Academic Year,
Miss McBride, Goodhart
Hall.
9:30 A. M.—Classes begin.
8:00 P. M.—Parade Night.
Wednesday, October 1
5:30—Freshman meeting with
Mr.. Thon for diction, Good-
hart Hall.
Saturday, October 1 :
8:30—Freshman Dance with
Haverford, Gymnasium.
Sunday, October 5
7:30—Chapel service, Rev. H.
Lewis Cutler, of the Swarth-
Goodhart Music Room.
more Presbyterian Church,.}
‘‘New Look,’’ Brawn and Brains
Well Represented t in Class of ’51
Thomas, "49
paper baskets are becoming as
scarce as hen’s teeth, but Hobson’s
seems to be well-fortified still with
easy chairs for those who arrived
too late for what one Freshman
elegantly calls, “the rummage sale
over in Wyndham.”
The wattage rule seems to have
most of them baffled. “I can’t have
more than 60 watts in my lamp!
I’ll go blind!” said one propensive
studier. Another, either uninform-
ed or an igforamus, went down to
the book shop and asked Mrs.
Nahm if she couldn’t please buy a
double socket.
The place hardest to find seems
to be the gym. In directing one
lost Freshman, I was asked just
“how much” of a physical it was.
“I’ve already had three or four,”
she explained. Later on asking
four shivering angel-robed victims
sitting on a bench whether they
were waiting in anticipation, one
with her teeth chattering answer-
ed: “Waiting, but not in anticipa-
tion.”
Freshman Week has been cold.
Although the zinnias are happily
blooming in front of Denbigh and
the trees are still heavily green,
the annual Faculty Tea held in
Wyndham Garden of orange ice in
ginger ale was chilly enough to
congeal any Freshman who...was
not already frozen with fright at
meeting the professors.
But the class of ’51 is all too
bright. Not one has asked me yet
if I’m a Freshman, too!
Roaring Bonfire
Will be Climax
(Of ParadeNight
Fréshmen, Sophomores
To Struggle Fiercely
Around Fire
Daytime on Tuesday, September
30, may be listed as the opening
of the 68rd academic year, but the
year cannot be considered offieially
open until 8 o’clock that night,
when Parade Night begins.
Parade Night and the two or
three days preceding it are the be-
ginning of the year’s traditional
Freshman-Sophomore rivalry, this
particular brand of rivalry finding
its source in a song.
A song is selected by the Jun-
iors, sister class of the Freshmen,
to which the Freshmen add orig-
inal words, which are kept com-
pletely secret. Freshmen have
been known to swallow pieces of
paper on which appear the words
of the songs, and are often found
singing complete arias from “Car-
men” in the shower in order to
throw the Sophomore off the trail.
However, the Sophomores are like
the Marines—no holds barred—
and will stoop to any treachery in
order to conquer. Beware, espe-
cially, Freshmen, the confused girl
who comes up to you with: “I
wasn’t at the meeting yesterday.
What is the tune?”
Parade Night begins for the
Freshmen at Pembroke Arch; the
Sophomores are already on the
hockey field dancing around a huge
bonfire.
Led by the famous Fireman’s
Band, and guided by Junior-borne
torches, the Freshmen march
through the night singing their
song until suddenly they are roll-
ing and scrambling madly down
the hill towards the Sophomore-
surrounded fire. The Sophomores
are singing, at this point, a quick-
ly-written parody to what they
hope is the Freshman tune. The
band crashes louder and _ louder,
the fire gets hotter and hotter, and
the ring is broken.
Harmony again reigns, nnorarng
as everyone gathers to sing college
‘and class songs in Pembroke Arch,
and hall parties given by the
Sophomores for the Freshmen fol-
low immediately after.
Parade Night represents the
repetition of a tradition with a
long history of song snatchings
and rough-house. In the primeval
days it was celebrated with artifi-
cial materials and a violence un-
known today. In 1914 the three
upper classes dressed as weird dev-
ils, -witehes-.and.strange— beasts.
Everyone danced around the huge
bonfire on the lower hockey field
while “Froshie” was burned in ef-
figy.
You’ve learned when regular
meals are served. Now, listen and
learn how you can refresh your-
self when the next meal is hours
away, and hunger prohibits all co-
herent thought.
The League has provided the
perfect answer to \your appetite
and to the budget of the Bryn
Mawr Summer Camp, Be —
for the open house at the
Fountain tonight from 9:30 until
10:30. Join the dash to the second
floor of Goodhart for ice cream,
Goodhart Soda Fountain Plans
Elaborate Open House Tonight
milk shakes, coke, grilled sand-
wiches, hot dogs and ee
(market willing!).
If, by some misfortune, you
can’t come tonight, remember that
the Soda Fountain is open every |
Sunday through Friday, from 9:30
until 10:30. And if you’ve always
had a suppressed desire to fry
hamburgers and scoop ice cream,
*'|sign up on your hall bulletin board
‘or consult Dotty Sloan,
Sally Worthington, 49.
60, -or
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
a
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN _ 1914
Ardmore, Pa., and
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks)
in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing Company,
ryn Mawr College.
mission of the Editor-in-Chief.
The College News is fully protected by copyright.
appears in if may be reprinted either wholly or in part without per-
S
Nothing that
LoutsE ERVIN, *49
BARBARA ZIEGLER, 748
MariAN Epwarps, 50
CECELIA MAccaBE, ’50
Betty DEMpPwoLrF, ’50
GWYNNE WILLIAMS, 50
Mary BEETLESTONE,
Rosin Rau, ’50
Joan Rossins, ’49
Nancy KUNHARDT, 748
Epir— MAson Ham, ’50
Editorial Board
Harriet Warp, °48, Editor-in-Chief
BARBARA BETTMAN, '49, Copy BeTTy-BricHT Pace, ’49,-Makeup
EMiLy TOWNSEND, ’50, Makeup
Katrina THomas 749
Editorial Staff
; ANNE GREET ’50
Photographer
ROSAMOND KANE 748
Business Board
Carov Baker, '48, Advertising Manager
Subscription Board,
Avice LouisE Hackney, ’49, Manager
BaRBARA LIGHTFOOT,
Jean E tus, ’49
Gioria WHITE, 748
MELANIE’ Hewitt, 50
IrntNA NELIpow, ’50
Pat NicHOL, ’50
bo]
"49, Business Manager
Betty Mutcn, 750
HELEN COLEMAN, ’50
SuE KELLEY, °49
EpDYTHE LAGRANDE, 749
50
_ Subscription, $2.50
Subscriptions may
Mailing Price, $3.00
begin at any time
-Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office ®
Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912
To The Class of 1951
In spite of the fact that more university students than
ever before are enrolled this year in the United States, it is
still a privilege to go to college.
But unless we take full ad-
vantage of this opportunity four years at Bryn Mawr will
perhaps leave us no better fitted for an adult role in life than
the person who has not had this advantage.
“Getting the most out of college” does not involve being
either the “Cloister-oyster” or the “Rah-rah” girl, but is
‘instead a happy amalgamation of study and college activi-
' ties. Presumably we have come to Bryn Mawr for a liberal
education; to develop the powers of thought and expression
that are demanded of an enlightened adult.
The academic life at Bryn Mawr is important: it is half
the reason we came here. But, as some people never realize,
-it is not all-important. There
curricular life to enter. Nor
are friends to make and extra-
must we forget that we are
‘members of a group, with responsibilities incumbent upon
us.
qualities of mind.
ni t, al ife i “4
- And yet, although our life is at college, we must be con-. eit Shaw, noted director of the Col-
Qualities of character must be developed as well as
scious of the outside world and our subsequent place in it.
~The days of the “Bryn Mawr blue-stocking” and the “girl in
the'ivory tower’ are gone.
individuals—mature in mind
interests and ideas.
education. |
Our aim is to become balanced
and emotion, well-rounded in.
Certainly this is the goal —
\| Philadelphia station.
Vag aries of Non-Res Fiestas
epealad to Incoming Freshman
- This is primarily for consump-
“tion, information, elation or con-
solation of the temporary residents
of Rock. In short, it is directed to
those Freshmen invariably sub-
jected to the following treatment:
Interrogator: ““What hall do you
live in?”
Our Heroine:
DF De sesiaiscngsid (gently): “Oh.”
Note to our heroine: This will
go on for four years.
Beginning Tuesday morning your.
base of operations will be an all-|:
purpose nondescript room. The lo-
cation of the Non-Resident cloak
room in the Library defies all at-
tempts at exposition. The New
Wing basement is about the best)
we can do. Then just follow the
‘smoke. ~The functions of the room,
vary with the hour. Dressing Done
ing |:
“I’m a Non-Res.”
«
study hall, Junch room
room is about the order. When the;
Non-Reses finally “attain a mini-
give the room a homey touch. Of
course it all depends on from what
sort of home you came.
The Non-Residents themselves
fall roughly into two groups: Those
who do it by choice. The others.
Most will agree in more’ pliable
frames of mind that “it isn’t so
bad.” Some will shout defiantly
nor money.
The room is not merely a haven
for the homeless. Residents drop
in on occasion; the occasion is us-
ually a cigarette.
are: Cox, Caroline; Colbert, Jean;
Fleming, Eloise (Mrs.); Kurtz,
Adele (Mrs.); Hirschfield, Claire;
acagreig Ellen K. (Mrs.); Clanahan,
mum of organization, they try to
that they wouldn’t “Res” it for love
Freshman Non-Reses this year
| Pat; Morgan, Elizabeth; Ornstein,’ :
Beith; Paul, Loretta (Mrs.); Put-’
B Rotenson “GE
1946-7 Highlighted
By Toynbee’s Visit
Continued from Page 1
premiere danseuse Nepper embrac-
ing the bust of Aeschylus, was per-
haps. the hit of the evening, in
which the faculty proved the best
advertisement for their own cause.
The outstanding visitor to the
“history-haunted young ladies” of
Bryn Mawr was historian Profes-
sor Arnold J. Toynbee, author of
A Study of History, who came
from England in February to de-
liver the annual Flexner lectures.
His series of six lectures on “En-
counters Between Civilizations,”
drew visitors from as far away as
Minnesota. Other prominent speak-
ers of the year included the Brit-
ish novelist E. M. Forster, who
read selections from his own works,
Cord Meyer, Jr., and Miss Frances
Perkins, Secretary of Labor in the
Roosevelt cabinet.
Last spring Bryn Mawr even
broke into the movies. Photogra-
phers prowled the campus, hung
from the rafters and waited in
vain for the sun to come out. Al-
most every student had her chance
before the bright lights. The re-
sult will be seen this fall when the
college movie is released.
Chorus Activity
The Chorus had a full year,
\reaching a climax when the Har-
vard Glee Club joined it to present
a brilliant concert of Lenten music.
A Christmas concert was given
with Haverford, and part of. the
chorus journeyed to Vassar to take
part in a seven-college sing. Rob-
legiate Chorale in New York, con-
ducted an open rehearsal, also at-
tended by the Haverford and
Swarthmore glee clubs. The chorus
even had its radio debut over a
Creative Work
1946-47 was also marked by
Bryn Mawr’s second Arts’ Night,
-| written and directed entirely by
Bryn Mawr and Haverford stu-
dents. Two one-act plays, original
music and dancing comprised the |
program, while there was also al
display of undergraduate painting
and sculpture in the Goodhart
foyer. The demand for more rec-
ognition and opportunity in the
creative fields was answered by the
establishment of the Katherine
Fullerton Gerould Memorial
Prize, to be awarded annually to a
Bryn Mawr student submitting the
best original work in the fields of
informal essay, short story, longer
narrative, verse or playwriting.
Most unique experience of the
year: curfew before Christ-
mas ~ whe , regardless
papers, argyle socks and other
pressing matters, all college lights
went off at twelve in order to con-
serve electri ity during: the coal
And -certamly not to be over-
looked: 1 was the year with
la co-educational tosh class! |
- F
of long,
Where to Dine,
Drink and Dance
Shown by NEWS
The morale building division of
the College News has dug up the
following vital statistics as a guide
to extra-curricular activities in the
more frivolous line. As a.Bryn
Mawr Freshman you will eat, per-
haps more than you do anything
else, and we pass on to you a list
of tried and true eating places ad-
judged to satisfy the strictest
gourmet. We do not guarantee °
cure for all types of nervous break-
down, but the night-life of Phila-
delphia and vicinity is not to be
underestimated.
Within walking distance: If you
sleep through breakfast, if you are
starved after lab, or if Aunt Jenny
shows up unexpectedly for lunch
or dinner, the place is the College
Inn; and it is usually the place
most of the time anyway. For
more elaborate teas try the Cot-
tage Tearoom on Montgomery Ave-
nue or the Community Kitchen
(marvelous icebox cake) on Lan-
caster Pike. Meth’s in the Vill is
both a soda fountain and a bakery.
If you, like many, must nave
food before you go to bed, try the
Greeks (Bryn Mawr Confection-
ery) for cokes and elaborate sun-
daes. It has been newly decorated
with blue leather’ seats, Hamburg
Hearth specializes in hamburgers,
milkshakes and French-fried po-
tatoes, while the Last Straw in
Haverford is also a haven for
many.
After dark: You can dance at
the Covered Wagon and eat a most
satisfactory dinner there. The Blu
Comet on Lancaster Pike offers
sandwiches, coffee and a juke box.
More drinking than dancing at the
General Wayne and Wynnewood
cocktails at McIntyre’s Manna Bar
in Ardmore. For turkey dinners,
the Conestoga Mill on County Line
the King of Prus-
sia Inn—where Washington stop-
ped. If you must
and don’t mind sifting on the floor
between dances, you can go to Sun-
nybrook in Pottstown.
Philadelphia: Before concerts or
in the middle of a shopping spree,
lunch at the Dairy Grill in Wana-
Continued on Page 3
TRYOUTS
Are you the _ journalistic
type? Would you like to learn
how a paper is put together,
and know the latest news be-
fore it hits the smokers? If so,
be sure to try out for the Col-
1 lege NEWS. Tryouts will be
held in the News room, Good-_
hart, on Thursday, October 16,
ested, both Freshmen and up-
’ perclassmen.
House in Wynnewood; dinner or].
at 4:30 o’clock, for those inter-
List of Freshmen
|Helps to Locate
4 ee @
\Missing Friends
~The long-lost first-grade mate,.
the.girl who .told you she was tak-
ing philosophy while passing the
‘time of day beside the bulletin
board, she who gurgled her name
to you under the water of the
swimming pool: All ‘of these the
NEWS has traced to rooms amid
piles of appointment sheets and
curtains which don’t fit. The result
is printed here in the hopes that
it. will lead to a reunion.
Denbigh
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batting on thee. 3 ~
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(
News Shows Where
Page Three
Find Your F riends Dates Set for Incidentally . . . | “Wall” Answers
In Freshman List BER ange | To Dine and Dance Sickles Mote Shopping Needs
es 6 Freshman Pla Continued from Page 2 SAAD NO}
te ro age 2
Sh i ¢: —_ 63-67 ys maker’s basement, or at Whit- - The “New Look” has not | Sonthmed-tromr-Pare~2
Be Ge aii - -; _ : ; | : .
pone ae 46 Freshman Hall Plays, directed man’s, on Chestnut Street near | captured one leading light on cam- | Special Checking Account requires
Taylor | basis reer 1/2 47-51|by a committee of up oxslasem $e pus who, when asked whether she "0 minimum balance. If you break
: : : si sean P sSmeN,|/ to have your fortune told over tea “ » your glasses, Limeburner’s will fix
Wagoner, Be os... 71 {will soon he under way. Given in at the Russian Inn on Locust Wenle Prefer. 8 formal or“intormat’: A ib f that bi k
, 70 : -
_ Walkr, Jane . 1/2 22-26 |competition for the coveted silver | street. introduction to the Freshman class, ce = a ng ite 73
i a Samrrorerrereyer 1/2 16-20 anc og mol ——. plays are! For dinner you will go to the |could only splutter: “Either way, .¢) wil] put some glamour in your
Rhoads North nonnr news con Sewee veel and Nov- Bellevue-Stratford to dance be-|my skirts aren't, nearly long | shaggy locks.
mee. 1/2 451 AB Smier 1. Rockefeller’s production tween courses, to Kugler’s after enough!” Last, but not least, if your be-
BGGRGTE, WE sevvsecosess 1/2 159 AB rg Pe ne area Nenad by ootball games, to Bookbinders for | longings get dirty ‘the Merion
- M. Barrie was awarded the prize! seafood d 40 Oh 1- - : alge :
oe Se ee Cs eR ee
Foe Gaunt ; f s energetic organiza-
Bisiear, Me occ 1/2 159 AB In each hall the Freshmen will|.in. an Old English atmosphere. |, °° ° We see that the male ’50-er | on sien up, a. pin even
ie 162 |8°9n meet to elect a committee to} When you have tried these, you|'® back, who, when he as asked | stores things over the summer—a
Weothineham, M .......... 165 read and choose the one-act plays| may fall back on Stouffer’s, Broad last even Bas he would rpyarn, _ | definite name to remember. :
Wie Mn ca, 156 to be given. The directors are| Street, or Michaud’s, or Maurice’s swered: “I don’t see. how I |
ee a a 51 {members of the upperclassman|for a Bohemian atmosphere. transfer when you have to have at | —
a. 167 committee, but an@assistant direc-| Dancing is best at the Ben least “ 80, and es Bryn mee
~ Johnson, G. ee a 168 tor and stage manager are elected| Franklin or the Barclay; at the they don’t give 80's. t :
as 169 from the Freshman class. Ajl|Club Bali on Broad Street, or the-} ——————___ Phone B. M. 0996
eo ee 265 Freshmen may try out for the| Little Rathskeller at Broad and|- |
die ae eae name lays—either acting or worki n | Spruce. THOUSANDS OF POPULAR »e
DONE, Be osestnscsictsca 1/2 451 AB|P | &o ing on| Sp MARTIE
eet aati “t 63 AB| Costume committees, prop commit- a | & CLASSICAL RECORDS S
Simonds, A. .........1/2 164 AB /t2e% or business committees. There | |\| to choose from, Victor, Colum ||t | GOWN SHOP
TG Ce ncsdpaincinn 56 |’ #mple opportunity for all. ‘euce ’ cLoTHEs FOR ||| bia, Decca, Capital, Majestic &
Walker, Judith .......... 352 The Freshman Hall Plays are } Y THE other brands. Come in and look 831 Lancaster..Ave.
WOOOWOrN, 0. isaac 53 | watched with an appraising eye for /, ° { COLLEGE GIRL = aaa stock. Buy now for
| Signs of talent, to be exploited in Lancaster Ave. Xmas. ia Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Niels Minit lthe big Freshman Show. HAROLD R. BLACKSTONE
Hae : ‘ss 829 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Barmmeworeh, Aa scsi 214 rama -_ ee tos —— ———_——_—_—— —
CAANGOTEON I. iiss 203 URGERS!
HIGHEV Ws. scisiiaccuascanseani 312 Pe JUICY HAMBURG , HAIR STYLES OF TODAY
Li, As ivdnosueaahaia 309 HOBSON & OWENS MILKSHAKES!
M Bian asucansade 102
Nachen G a . DELICIOUS FRENCH FRIES! ||| REQUIRE ONLY ENDS
Continued on Page 4 Fine Furniture AT :
PERMANENT WAVED
eestaiaeenss hen gies HAMBURG
Comp. to the en HEARTH MONSIEUR RENE
an art the Year
RIGHT 1 a College Room : IN THE VILL Sis
Lancaster Bryn Mawr Offers a Casual, Becoming, Easy-to-Take-Care-
—— || of Hairdo at an Economical Price.
ichard Stockton’s |
Richar tockton’s THE |
Reshaping and Permanent Wave Ends
$12.50
CALL BRYN MAWR 2060
RENE MARCEL
853 - LANCASTER AVENUE
Welcomes
— 1951 J. E. LIMEBURNER CO.
COME TO US FOR Guild Opticians
STATIONERY
GREETING CARDS
GIFTS
William Krugler, Manager BRYNMAWR, PA.
Wile A tale
BERYL DAVIS’S NEW DISC FOR RCA VICTOR
+ It’s a. groovy group of notes—done to a turn by one of the
top of the new crop of singers.
_ Yes, Beryl Davis knows how to pick a tune .. . knows how
to pick a cigarette too. “I tried many different brands and
compared,” says Beryl Davis—“I found Camels suit me best.”
That’s how millions learned from experience that there
are big differences in cigarette quality. Try Camels in your
“T-Zone” (Taste and Throat). Let your own experience
tell you why more people are smoking Camels
than ever before!
THE
CIGARETTE
FOR ME [S
CAMEL!
er
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Faculty Nine Crushes Freshmen;
Fifty-one Lacks Magic Bat |
The faculty
met the freshmen; ity and hockey enthusiasts will
Saturday in a considerably warmer have plenty to do, what with class
but less partyish atmosphere than |
the day preceding when the chem-
istry and biology departments, aid-
ed by assorted members of the
Art, Music and Greek departments,
proved themselves worthy. of as
much respect outdoors as_ inside.
The long skirts of the freshmen,
found invaluable for warming the
calves at Wyndham Friday, seem-
ed less suitable for baseball—but
no change of equipment short of a
magic bat could have turned the
five-inning, 28-2; game into any-
thing but an utter rout.
Lattimores Comment
Chief afternoon excitement was
the discovery of a new star. Al-
though tall, blondish Mr. Goodale
has not yet appeared on the cover
of Time, it is believed that Jackie
Robinson or at least Mr. Berry
has found an opponent worthy of
attention. The music and biology
representatives slugged it out,
sending exhausted freshmen deep-
er and deeper into the outfield,
while spectators agreed with the
young Lattimores who loudly de-
clared that the freshmen “shoulda
stood in bed.”
Still Consolation
Freshmen, defeated by men pre-
sumably their betters and certain-
ly their elders—though the faculty
certainly is getting younger every
year — will have many more
chances in the athletic world this
fall. Bicycle trips are a possibil-
A Tea at the
COMMUNIST KITCHEN
is a
College Tradition
in the Vill
games, hall games, the Intercol-
legiate «tournament (to be held |
here November 1) and the varsity
game with the English team (No-
vember 22). Most popular with
the watchers are Haverford games,
when the sticks fly and it inevit-
ably rains or snows.
Tennis goes on all fall and aill|
spring. Tryouts are held at both
seasons. In the winter season
there will be basketball, swimming,
badminton and fencing. Both inter-
collegiate and intra-mural gameg
are scheduled. Fencing is steadily
gaining in popularity and the fenc-
ing team now takes (part in several
intercollegiate matches. Fencing
is principally a winter sport, but
fencers have beco so enthusias-
tic that it tas become a spring
sport as well.
Watch for the athletic calendars
which will soon appear in Taylor
and the Gym.
For the Student “Body”
Natalie Palmer
Corsets and Lingerie
Ardmore Ard. 7018
HANDBLOCKED
WOOL CHALLIS
DRESSES—
Imported From
The Famous House of Tillet
in Mexico
-— MEXICAN SHOP
Ardmore
DINAH FROST’S
MAYO and PAYNE
Bryn Mawr Cards Gifts
RADIO
AYR KITS
CONTAINING Parts ___ Repairs
WOOL AND MATCHING 821 LANCASTER AVE.
SKIRT MATERIAL BRYN MAWR
: ———
FOR YOUR EVENING SNACK
SHOP AT
HUBBS STORE
850-Lancaster Ave.
Fresh Fruit Canned Goods
Welcome to
Bryn Mawr, °51
We Have Flowers
for Every Occasion
JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr
Lancaster Ave.
For Those in Search of the New Look
Tres Chie Shoppe
The Home of Good Taste
Next to the Movies
Bryn Mawr
COLLEGE INN
se ibe only the best
is served
A for the best. ee : a
NOTICES
Freshman Song Mistress
The NEWS takes pleasure in an-’
nouncing the appointment of Jane
Horner, ’51 as temporary Fresh-
man Song Mistress.
Junior Shieie
Are you planning. your week-
ends now? Don’t forget the Jun-
ior Show on Saturday evening, Oc-
tober 25.
Chorus Rehearsal
The first rehearsal of the Bryn
Mawr Chorus will take place in the
Music Room of Goodhart, on Wed-
nesday, October Ist, at 7:15. Please
be prompt.
NEWS Offers Timely Reference List _
To Help Locate Lost Freshmen Friends
Continued from Page 3 {
MODWAPUZ, (Ceo ijsssciemrnsicse 205
PAVING. S.. Gicssiscvedacstoaveuvasncisd 208
PE OPPONCG; Rs svssavcoyscssetacss 218
PPUTNOL, Es crisstasisinstequiccise 304
Rockefeller Hall
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ISOUGOMS, Es < ssasassnnes adianiiies A1B
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DeArmond, M, ....cccseseeee 1/2 64
MDVGIBROY, DD. \sscrssvievsastiviars 1/2 16
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PUAMUONL «-Uiss oescssonesssiavesseveced 1/2 384
POLADIAUE, Be sssssvesvesservavie 39
Soderberg, B.
Hoenig, J.
Klein, M.
wn ed eee
Littlefield, J.
Lustgarden, J.
MOOWER We sinnjichosnia)
NEGISGN ZIG) “Aa viesissactecis
CUB Ta ie sian 1/2
Peterson, M.
Schoen, B. A.
Sedillo, P. H.
Sexton, W.
Silveus, S.
see eeeeeeeeeeeeeeees
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Warren, L. M.
Watumull, R.
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36
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Here’s the one I’m
really glad to put
my name on...
They Satisfy me
NALER
“SPORTS
‘CHESTERFIELD
‘A\uways MILDER
JBETTER TASTING
(COOLER SMOKING
“The SuncTatal of Skid Pong,
College news, September 29, 1947
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1947-09-29
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 34, No. 01
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-vol34-no1