Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
College news, March 13, 1957
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1957-03-13
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 43, 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-vol43-no16
# Wednesday, March 13, 1957
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Bryn Mawr Wins
At Varsity Meets
The Bryn Mawr badminton var-
sity defeated Swarthmore 5-0 and
the J.V. lost 3-2. All of the matches
were tight, and tension built up as
play progressed. Di Russell had
a -particularly exciting singles
bout that went three games, the
last-two of which were “set” (tied
at the very end and played off),
against her opponent of last year,
The matches were an especial chal-
lenge in the cases where Bryn
Mawrters replayed opponents of
previous matches or played in a
new position. Barbara Janney and
Joyce Sargent played . varsity
doubles for the first time, while
Laura Pearson and Sharon Hart-
ridge switched to singles.
Swimming
Bryn Mawr’s swimming team
beat Drexel, 87 to 17, last Thurs-
day, March 7.
When only three members of
Drexel’s team were present at the
beginning of the meet, Bryn Mawr
began to wonder if history were
being repeated. (Only half of
Bryn Mawr’s team arrived in time
for the meet last year, but they
won anyway.)
The meet was fast. Sandy Colt
won the freestyle in 29.4 seconds,
the best time this year, with Lucy
Wales -second. The back crawl was
woh by Betsy Johnson, followed by
Pat Blackmore. Bruce Connell won
the butterfly, and, but- for some
disqualifying irregularity. of kick,
‘would have been followed by Ruth
Simpson. Bryn Mawr was also dis-
qualified in the medley relay for
Revue ‘Reviewed
Continued from Page 1
with two people’s essential inabil-
ity to communicate. This story and
Miss Andromeda’s Social Inn are
the most mature in their insights
into human behavior.
Miss .Andromeda’s Social Inn is
the best written of the stories. It
also deals with the inability of
people to express themselves. The
four characters are all exiles in a
sense, cut off from their homes in
the United States by being located
on a small island, apparently in
the Caribbean. They exile them-
selves still further by going on a
picnic to a deserted plantation on
an even smaller island, and both
these places are imaginatively and
convincingly depicted. The details
of the action are deliberately given
from Kay’s point of view, and the
reader forms the same false im-
pression of Frank and Jean ‘that
she does. When the reversal comes,
however, there is the satisfying
realization that Kay’s moment of
intuition has been adroitly prepared
for. The characters of Kay and
Tom are simply suggested, since
they are foils for the others, but
the essential humanity of | Frank
and Jean, despite Kay’s revulsion
for their crudeness, is admirably
conveyed.
Standing stylistically between
the prose and the poetry is the
stroke, but won the freestyle relay,
and the diving. Sally Davis won
the latter with 152 “points, Jan
Henderson was second with 78
points and Drexel third, with 60
points.
an irregular orthodox breast
TA YLOR'S In Ardmore
CHARCOAL BROILED
SNACKS ‘N’ STEAKS
Lancaster Ave.
Below Cricket Ave.
Open Late Ample Parking
go anywhere and everywhere
this spring in your navy cot-
ton skirt or dress from
JOYCE LEWIS in Bryn Mawr
COPYRIGHT 1967 THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Dont just sit there!
Nyy
semi-dramatic fragment, An Oblig-
ing Love. The characters speak a
smooth and rhythmic prose, and
in the prayer, a smooth and rhyth-
mic verse. The themes of loneli-
nes ‘and inability to communicate
are touched upon, but unlike most
of the works in the Révue, some
cognizance is taken of forces out-
side man working on him, his gov-
ernment and his gods. Of this ma-
terial is created an ironic little
myth in which love is equated with
selfishness and ease, and life is
meaningless without death.
The shorter poems show, in gen-
eral, more discipline and restraint
than the longer ones, but they
usually deal with simpler subjects,
such as evocations of places or
things, like Night Meadow, Ane-
mones and Walking Under Elms,
or of moods or attitudes, like
Concentric Circles and Unicorn.
Technically these are all quite
skillful — the rhyme schemes of
Concentric Circles and Night Mea-
dow are especially interesting. All
the poems show an exuberant de-
light in language.
More ambitious, which is not
necessarily to say more successful,
are the three longer poems. Opus,
after a quietly witty picture of
Armageddon, raises some relevant
questions about the nature of man.
On Reading Gorgias settles down
after an extremely twisted trio of
opening lines to a thoughtful and
perceptive consideration of the na-
‘ture of reality, and those first
three lines can be justified by ‘the
essential elusiveness of the sub-
‘ ject, the-difficulty’ of deciding just
how to approach it. The Quilting
Party plays around with some no-
tions of man as being created in
time, with a sense of the past
which conditions his response to
the present. It displays a few feli-
citous phrases as in the “wander-
ing time” passage, and _ several
vital images like the “fish of hope,”
“the tongues of nature” and “the
yellow beaded sleeping voice of
love,” but it is marred by an ex-
treme eccentricity with regard to
syntax, capitalization and punctu-
ation. This may be accounted for
by the title, and the poem may be
consciously making a crazy quilt,
suggesting that existence is with-
out any real design.
The general impression created
the Bryn Mawr-Haverford
First Jobs and Summer Jobs
UNIVERSITY PERSONNEL
AGENCY
541 Madison Ave.
New York 22, N.Y.
Plaza 3-1244
Students To Talk
On Summer Jobs
The Vocational Committee in-
vites all students to a»meeting on
summer job opportunities to be
held in the Deanery on Thursday,
March 14 at 4:30.
Mrs. Phyllis Sullivan, a former
member of the Bureau of Recom-
mendations, will discuss summer
jobs in general: what jobs are
available and where and how to
find them. A panel of students rep-
resenting social work, labafatories,
department stores, and waitress-
ing will discuss their individual
summer jobs and answer questions
concerning them.
The Bureau of Recommendations
reminds students that now is ‘the
time to make plans for the summer
as most firms have a general idea
of their needs and will want to
interview students over spring
vacation.
Sea Scroll Books
Given To College
Two. new books about the Dead
Sea scrolls and their significance
have just been given to the Read-
ing Room of the Inter-Faith Asso-
ciation by Mrs. Walter Michels.
They are: The Dead Sea Scrip-
tures, in English Translation, by
Theodor Gaster and The Meaning
of the Dead Sea Scrolls, by A.
Powell Davies.
Mr. Gaster’s book does not at-
tempt a full-fledged theory about
the significance of these contro-
versial documents, but makes the
texts-available for study from any
viewpoint. Dr. Davies discusses the
importance of the texts from his-
torical and religious aspects, in-
cluding evaluations of Jesus in the
light of these texts as well as the
very relevant view of Albert
Schweitzer about Jesus.
These books are available to all
interested students, and may be
signed out from the Reading Room,
which is the last room on the right
on approaching the Common Room
in Goodhart. The Reading Room
also contains many other books and
periodicals about religious “topics,
including some written by Paul
Tillich, Dietrich Bonnhoeffer and
other distinguished authors, Every-
one is’ welcome to come and
browse!
Revue is of a small group ..of
talented people passionately con-
cerned with writing and intensely
interested in finding their own
idioms. They all seem to have a
lot. to say and to be finding ways
to say it. The one flaw in the pro-
duction is the deplorable failure to
proofread adequately.
IT’S FOR REAL!
FIREBUG*
Who—
‘me burn so merril
~ You'll er enjoy today’s copy of this publication |
much more if you'll get up right now and get
yourself an ice-cold bottle of Coca-Cola.
(Naturally, we
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF
’d be happier, too!)
t
SIGN OF GOOD TASTE
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
- THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
“Coke” te 9 raghetatad Wale enask:
_ *THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
A Sees Page 00 thet slim,
shrewdly m
lating « y my
Enflamed mo with her eyes and let
‘ Py Chester Field
smoothest natural tobacco
i smoot
be VaTe
Like your pleasure BIG?
© Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co,
| y
That when the fire was out she’d made
A perfect ash‘of me. _ *
ap bantiaanon
smo getner,
ng yas Ts le et
our Chesterfield King. Ah-h-h-h—
that feels better. Take comfort in
that regal, royal length. E wh; the
Savor the smoothest tasting smoke
: 7250 goes to Deniet J. Sullivan, Holy Cross College,
; ted for publica=
a Se ra 7.6 2 YO. Box 21, New York 46, N.Y.
Berthoff Defines
College's Goals
Bryn Mawr IS a finishing school,
as is any school, in that it at-
tempts to give its students a
enable them ‘to appraise and per-
form the jobs ahead of them. This
was the interpretation which Mr.
Berthoff of the English department
gave of his Current Events
topic Monday evening in the Com-
mon Room.
Both liberal arts and technical
schools should attempt to offer
not only knowledge rules and pro-
cedures, but also a concept of how
things are done. At Bryn Mawr
students seem to develop. because
of their necessity to adapt to a
“student culture” (dark mystery
to professors) with a self-contain-
ed set of behavior patterns which
balances academic demand.
“Tradition” Approved
On the other hand there is the
fabled tradition of the college
which Mr. Berthoff defined as “an
unembarrassed confidence in tradi-
tional liberal education founded on
humanism and .modified by the
scholarship of the late 19th cent-
ury when the school was founded.”
We bélieve, therefore, that the
“direct application of intellectual
energy and knowledge has some-
thing real and positive to do with
some future’ profession.”
or general. climate of opinion is
| away. from--this”’ tradition our
| specific type of education has come
to oppose so-called “value courses”
on the grounds that with the gain-
ing of knowledge the values will
come of themselves. For a human-
ist scholar there must be confi-
systematic scholarship. Today this
is difficult; encyclopedias and com-
pendiums no longer appear; even
standard editions of standard
works are hard to put out.
The Individual Remains
Under contemporary influence
many colleges have relaxed their
standards to conform to a pattern
of society. Bryn Mawr itself is an
interlude between the pattern of
growing up and that of adult life,
create out of our restlessness and
boredom with the first pattern an
interest in and fitness for the sec-
ond. More intellectual daring might
help us here, but the ultimate and
absolutely necessity is perhaps to
know things as they are and not
as they appear to us now.
“She walks in beauty”
with her hair styled and set
at the
VANITY SHOPPE
Bryn Mawr
Have a WORLD of FUN!
Travel with SITA
Unbelievable Low Cost
eEurope
60 deys S., trom $525
Orient
43-65 Days ,. from $998
Many tours include
college credit.
$169 up, South America $699 up,
Hawaii Study Tours $528 —
Around the World $1
y
| Cakes to Take Home.......... $2.40
Ask Your Travel
545 5th Ave.
New York:
MU 2-6544
SITA
“THE HEARTH”
NOW OPEN FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT
Daily 11 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.
Sunday Noon to 8:30 P.M.
LUNCHES FROM 60c
DINNERS FROM $1.30
Try our popular home-made cake
and delicious coffee for an-afternoon
or evening snack ae
HAMBURG HEARTH:
Bryn Mawr LAwrence 5-2314
“finish,” or cast of mind which will:
Because the trend of. the. times
dence in the worth and efficacy of ~
an interlude which is supposed to ©
Also low-cost trips to Mexico
3