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“VOL. XLVI—NO. 10
Pianists Jambor And Alwyne
y;
C
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA.,. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1961
%).Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1961, ~ PRICE 20 CENTS
Perform, With Dual Excellence
by Kristine Gilmartin
Two piano music is not as often
performed as solo works, but Agi
Jambor and Horace Alwyne re-
vealed how exciting and beautiful
it can be in their concert Friday
evening; January, 6, in Goodhart.
At their best, which was almost
all the time, the two were one in-
strument, and doubly rich in tone
and expression,
Mozart’s Sonata in D major op-
ened the program. In the Allegro
con spirito, the ‘melody of one piano
was answered by a sassy and am-
using grace note in the other. The
excellent timing was-evident in the
polished echoing of runs from one
to the other. The Andante had a
slower, singing and gradually in-
tensified theme. The final Allegro
molto was gay and spirited with a
swift, rhythmic melody.
Oriental Flavor
Arrival of the Queen of Sheba
from Handel’s “Solomon” was a
speedy processional that must have
kept Sheba stepping right along.
There was a slight Oriental flavor
about it all, and a strongly pro-
nounced soprano note seemed to
clang ifke a cymbal,
One of the evening’s highlights
was Debussy’s Petite Suite. The
first piece, En bateau, was very
characteristic of the composer with
sustained high notes under which
the bass rippled. A sense of deli-
cate power and a feeling of faint,
wistful melancholy pervaded the
’ work. The Cortege in contrast
built to a powerful climax with
chords in dotted rhythm, although
it had a quieter central section.
Menuet was a rather unusual
one, featuring answering grace
notes, and a lovely musing in the
lower register. . Contrary rhythms,
an element of Debussy’s style,
were also in evidence. The Ballet
concluded the suite with powerful
rhythms, strong chords, and a
moving, swinging final section.
Bryn Mawr Asks
Students’ Parents
To Come April 22
Parents Day will be held this
year on Saturday, April 22. The
committee for this biannual func-
tion has not yet been formed but
it will consist of representatives
of the faculty, the administration,
and the student body.
Although each Parents Day is
somewhat different, there is usu-
ally some form of faculty or facul-
ty-student discussion. In 1959 Mrs.
Marshall spoke on the Philosophy
of the Curriculum and there were
student discussion groups,
This year the Colgate Univer-
sity Glee Club and the Bryn Mawr
College Chorus will entertain stu-
dents and their guests. It is hoped
that the parents will be invited to
lunch in the halls.
After the student representatives
are elected at class meetings this
week and the committee begins to
function, suggestions will be wel-
. come.
Clarity, rich interpretation, and a
true “togethernéss” made the per-
formance of this suite outstanding.
Danse Andalouse by Infante had
the Spanish rhythmic quality. A
powerful bass from Mr, Alwyne
with striking, syncopated melodies
by Mme. Jambor over it, created
the passionate mood and move-
ment excellently. York Bowen’s
Arabesque, Op. 119 was a brief but
pleasing composition, with a series
of complementing runs.
Brilliant Ending
The fine musical evening ended
brilliantly with Rachmaninoff’s
Suite No. 2, Op. 17. The Intro-
duction Alla marcia—with the em-
phasis on the march—was wildly
organized. A soaring melody, one
of this composer’s happiest tal-
ents, grew mightily in the Valse,
Its rushes of notes were somehow
suggestive of the rustle and sweep
of skirts at a dance.
The Romance was indeed ro-
mantic and attained heights of
emotion by a powerful and insist-
ent rise. The balance of a strong
bass and a soundly articulated mel-
ody, so well achieved by Mme.
Jambor and Mr. Alwyne, was evi-
dent in the final Tarantelle which
swept to its conclusion with a
steady propulsion.
The Suite played as an encore
was charmingly modern and gay.
The delight of its suggestions of
nature and the humor of its sur-
prises were fully realized.
Students Become
Jacks-of-all-Trades
For Summer Jobs
In the. fall of 1960 the Bureau
of Recommendations made.a sur-
vey of the summer activities. of
Bryn Mawr undergraduates, Of
the group reporting (70% of the
student body) 307 had paid jobs,
59 volunteer, and the rest* were
traveling, studying, or at home.
Of those students reporting sum-
mer jobs 11 earned over $1000,
(the highest was $1400 paid to a
worker in an industrial laboratory)
and 15 from. $900 to $1000. Wages
of from $500 to $900 were earned
ately 55% of those reporting earn-
ed less than $500.
Those working in laboratories
and on Ford Foundation grants
averaged the highest earnings
($600), while those working in
publications, hotels, libraries, and
social agencies averaged over
$500. Office workers averaged
$480 and store and sales agents
$400. Those in camps and recrea-
tion centers, working for their
families, in medical services, and
in miscellaneous jobs averaged un-
der $300.
The largest number of under-
graduates (102) reported miscel-
laneous office jobs. Second high-
est (57) were camp and recreation
center workers, Laboratory work-
ers, including Bryn Mawr under-
graduates working on National
Science Foundation grants, consti-
tuted the third highest group (82).
Continued on Page 4, Col. 3
In the light and delightful spirit
of Paul Klee’s own definition of
his art as “taking a line for a
walk,” Mr, Fowle drew A Line on
Paul Klee which took an unexpect-
ed but sunprisingly logical auto-
mobile ride at the end of its “walk.”
Mr. James Fowle, Chairman of the
History of Art Department, spoke
on Thursday, January 5 at 8:15 in
the Common Room, and with the
aid of a few representative slides
was able to convey, in the short
space of an hour, something of the
spirit of Paul Klee.
Experimentation
In “experiencing” (as opposed
to “understanding’’) Klee’s art,
titles are to be used as handles.
Feeling that, in order to give of
himself, an artist should rely
upon “something within” rather
than a constructed plan, Klee con-
ducted his exercises, in terms of
line #Ad drawing, without deter-
mining the title first. The title
came into being when the exercise
was finished and the subject
emerged. The artist, for Klee, is
not a genius working toward an
end, the representation of some
particular thimg, but rather an ex-
perimenter with the formal ele-
ments of painting, dot, line, plane,
and space. The ideas within the
work emerge through the artist’s
creative experience, determining
the subject, and thus the title, of
—.--Phese-plans -are~still-tentative.| the-picture._““What_we_see before
Klee, “Taking A Line For A Walk,”
Tries To Suggest Realitu With Paint
(Paul Klee (1879-1940) began in
his early twenties to do etchings,
many of them satirical. “In order
not to be laughed at oneself, one
gives other people something to
laugh at, preferably about oneself.”
The maturity of his work came
between the wars. He gained as-
surance and public reception in
1917, and the works from then un-
til about 1925 he considered to be
his best. In 1914, already in his
thirties, he wrote, from Tunis, “I
think. I am a painter.” His devel-
opment was that of a slowly ma-
turing artist, whose work is to be
considered as his serious attempt
to make reality visible, although
at times, such as ‘in The Order of
High C of 1921, it seems anything
but serious.
An Artist’s Artist
That Klee is an “artist’s artist”
whose aspirations, if logical, are
too-lofty to be experienced by the
average person, is a claim com-
pletely unfounded, concluded Mr.
Fowle. On the screen came a ser-
ies of slides of Chrysler Corpora-
ton’s Plymouth from about 1935
to recent models. Klee’s principle
that “reality,” rather than a rep-
resentation of it, should be made
visible in art is not so alien to our
everyday experience as we might
think, for there on the hood em-
blems of the succession of Ply-
mouths, the symbol of reliability
by 112 students while approxim-|'
in the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel.
(Miss McBride, after receiving
Dr. Katharine E. McBride accepts award from
H. J. Grinsfelder, executive head of Gimbels. 1952.
Gimbel ’s Lauds President,
Stipend Given Girls’ High
Recognition of her “outstanding contributions to the field of edu-
cation for woman” was given this week to Dr. Katharine. E. McBride,
President of the college. .A scroll and a check for $1000. was awarded
to her by H. J. Grinsfelder, executive head of Gimbels, at a luncheon
this 29th Annual Gimbel Philadel-
phia Award, announced that she would turn it over to the Philadelphia
Girls’ High School for a scholarship to ‘be used at any college.
Girls’
High, she noted,
has supplied more
of Bryn Mawr’s -
European Fellow-
ship winners than
any other single
high school. |
President of
Bryn Mawr since
1942, Miss Mc-
Bride served as
Chairman of the
American Council
of Education,
1955-1956, the
Board of Trus-
tees of the Edy-
cational Testing
Service, and of
the College En-
trance Examina-
tion Board during
the years 1949 to
White Collar Men,
by Sarah Shapley, ’63
An advocate of comprehensive
unionism who approves of right-
to-work laws spoke Monday night.
Peter Paul Bergman, a senior at
Yale, outlined the possibilities for
the labor movement today. Under-
lying his positions was the concept
of the union as the only practic-
afble, as well as logical, counter-
power in our economic life, Hence,
the obvious group for action now
was the white-collar workers,
This group, although now ad-
verse to the idea because of an
aversion to the social image and
status of labor unions, would find
that wage and other benefits out-
weigh their vague and ignorant
image of the labor union, The
difference is often fourfold in hour-
ly wage. Cited was the idea that
the proletariat is fast becoming
the salariat.
The reasoning behind this phrase
and for the goal of more unioni-
zation was that the days of the
homey small shop have given way
to the impersonal gigantic firm.
In the latter an employee has no
more connection with the boss, no
more chance for advancement, no
more love for his work than does
the auto assembly line man. Thus
new only a self-conscious line of
social status separates them.
The ques#oning brought forth
a general problem: if the pay to
the white-collars is upped, would
not the firm’s profit maygin be
drastically cut, thus ing :pos-
sible investment funds? The ans-
wer was that Mr. Bergman had lit-
NEWS Elections
The newly elected members
of the College News Editorial
Board are:
Editor-in-Chief ....Suzy Spain
Associate Editor .Sally Schapiro
Yaley from Orwell Forum Advocates
‘Awake and Unite
tle faith in business taking money
from its pocket for the national
pocket. To expect a union, that
today is run much_as_a_ business
is, to take a unilateral pay-cut
was foolish, The cost of living
will rise; prices are often ridicu-
lously high; and not asking for
more is equal to accepting a cut.
General inflation, pricing our-
selves out of the world market,
and the decrease in workers need-
ed to fulfill demand are root prob-
lems. The. growimg question of
reallocation of workers (in the
South, Far West, and Northwest)
will require broad, tri-partite
planning.
As it is, labor is not the gang-
ster power towering over manage-
ment which many of us_ think.
Hoffa is one of a few and has suf-
fered very little from his expul-
sion by the AFL-CIO. Most mem-
bers presume that what is good
for their chief is good for them,
and so no push comes from them.
The recent steel strike was insti-
gated not_so much by the unions as.
by the company fearful of David
MacDonald’s power.
So that the labor force can have
a truly proportionate voice in the
coming: national readjustments,
much more than the present one-
third must be unionized. Mr. Berg-
man suggested a system of region-
al, professional societies to attract
the white-collar men, Further-
more, unions can and should do
without anti-right-to-work laws.
These induce apathy and corrupt-
ive power.
But neither should a group be
prohibited by law or violence from
urging the formation of a ‘union,
as'has been the case in the South.
There the hope is to attract in-
dustry through lower wage levels.
Unionism has a creditable record
‘and deserves a political voice. Du-
us,” he said in July, 1917, “is a
suggestion of reality .. . True real-
ity is buried . . . Art does not
render the visible, rather it makes
visible.”
"(said Mr, Fowle), the illustrious
Mayflower progressed (7?) from a
representational depiction to three
vertical lines —Speed — “reality”
made visible!
Make-up Editor ..Janice Copen
News Editor .Ellen Rothenberg
Member-at-Large
Helen Levering
im New York was cited to illus-
trate a union serving the interests
of an area’s business by giving
Continued on Page 4, Col. 5
~<
binsky’s-Lady— Garment Workers...
eh |
Page Two
THE COLLEGE. NEWS
Wednesday, January 11; 1961
A Plea for Better Balance
When a speaker on campus stands up for recognition of
Red China, a higher minimum wage, or federal aid to educa-
tion, the chances are he’ll find many in loud and articulate
agreement. If, however, his point is won because he finds
_.no-irrefutable.resistance,_it.is not. because disagreement. does
not exist. The clear voice of protest which would force the
speaker into specifics and leave his audience with a clearer
understanding of his point of view is missing, less because
of the absence of dissension than for the lack of the proper
rejoindér. The would-be contender, though present, is un-
able to defend her position. This does not mean the position
cannot be defended. Of course it can. Wall Street Journal
does it every day. But neither this publication nor the more
conservative National Review are in the Periodical Room,
and classroom treatment of their point of view does not gen-
erally point up arguments for its vehement and sympathetic
defense...
The result of this curious imbalance is that those who
came to college assuming that nobody should work for less
than $1.25 per hour may graduate without ever having heard
a reasonable explanation of why every good American | esn’t
agree, while others who for four years have harbored! dark
thoughts about something called inflation may leave college
without ever having enlightened anybody with a combination
of the two concepts into a logical argument.
Monday night Alliance brought Peter Paul Bergman, a
student Socialist from Yale’s George Orwell Forum to speak
for Current Events on problems of labor. If his viewpoint
was worth hearing, so also would that of a highly conserva-
tive politician or business man. It seems obvious that to
tully appreciate and evaluate an approach to governmental
affairs a strong presentation of the views of its detractors is
invaluable. For this reason then, if no other, it might be
interesting if, after Max Lerner speaks in March at the invi-
tation of Executive Board, Alliance can arrange to present
a conservative answer to his remarks.
A Controversy Worth Comment
This morning’s Times reports a controversy worth not-
ing between a college newspaper and'a local Anti-Communist
Committee. The paper, published at the University of Bridge-
' port, editorialized on the need to abolish. the House Un-Amer-
ican Activities Committee and supported the San Francisco
student demonstration against the HUAC held last May.
Yesterday the Connecticut Anti-Communism Committee pub-
licly denounced the editorial, entitled “McCarthyism is Back”,
describing it as a “prime example of the duping of college
students by the Reds.” ne
Perhaps the strongest argument for abolition of the
HUAC is that it infringes upon the First Amendment’s guar-
antee to the freedoms of speech, the press, and assembly,
not only through its own activities but also by setting the
pace for similar infringement by other groups. Charges like
that of the Connecticut Committee must eventually inhibit
the free expression of ideas, and, on a University campus
where ideas ought rightly to be the main stock in trade,
such an inhibition cannot even be justified by alleged demands
of national security. Whether the House Un-American Ac-
tivities Committee should be revised in form, restricted to
its proscribed legislative function, or totally eliminated, may
be subject for inquiry and debate, thet |
newspaper has the right to speak out against it without risk-
ing the stigma of a Communist label ‘should be unquestion-
able. If its existence is going to provide a justification and
example for this kind of suppression of ideas, then the Con-
necticut Committee, in seeking to defend. the HUAC, has
vividly pointed up the best argument for its abolition.
|Reviewer Praises
but whether a college
Community of Fear is a pamphlet on the arms race
published by the Fund for the‘Republic. It is a paper
designed, as its foreword says, to dispel illusions. It
"points up in vivid detail the horrors of nuclear war and
. fhe desperate need to eliminate the possibility of its
occurrence. Many problems are presented in it but no
solutions; its purpose is simply the creation of a broader
understanding of what we are up against. A pile of
these pamphlets is now on the table in Taylor. You are
‘asked to take one, read it, and pass it on. :
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Publisned weekly during tne College Year (except during
Tnanksgiving, Cnrisrmas and Easter noiidays, and during examina-
tion weexs) in tne interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore
° Printing Company, Aramore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears
in it may ve reprintes wnolly o” in part witnout oermission of the Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editorin-Chief> .. 05... ccc cece c cece eeseecsceces eeeeeees Marion Coen, ‘62
Copy Editor ....5....ssseeeeeseees yesasues eeevecee Kristine Gilmartin, ‘63
Associate Editor ........ Se eS ree esses Isa Brannon, ‘62
Make-up Editor eeegeeeeee eeeseseseseseres eeeeeeeseeeees Suzy Spain, "63
News Editor ............. ROO ae ETE uiteesesssscces JUG Suet Ge
Momber-atlarge .........cccceseeeeneeeeeenenssseesese Alison_ Baker, ‘62
side? metsen EDITORIAL STAFF
Janice Copen, ‘63; Helen Angelo, ‘63; Berna Landsman, “63; Judith. Bailey, ‘63;
Wanda Bershen, ‘64; Ellen Beidier, ‘64; Caren Goretsky, ‘64; Helen Levering,
"64; Rosabeth Moss, ‘64; Ellen Rothenberg, ‘64; Sally Schapiro, ‘64; Arlene
Sherman, ‘64; Jo-Anne Wilson, ‘64.
BUSINESS BOARD
Business Manager .......- SPRUE SVT ETT vevecveeseeeee Judith Jacobs, ‘62
Associate Business Manager ......--+--2++e++ ipaveeus . Nancy Culley, ‘63
Staff Photographers ........-+++--> Jean Porter, ‘62; Charlotte Brodkey, ‘62
co hi ckaa cbs cccgecvssneeates Margaret Williams, ‘61
S@bscription Manager .........+...esceseeeseees eeeees Robin Nichols, ‘62
Gireulation Manager .......-ssceceeeererececceeeres . Susan Klempay, ‘63
BUSINESS STAFF
Anne Davis, ‘61; Ann Levy, ‘61; Nancy Wolfe, ‘61; Nancy Culley, ‘63; Martha
Learsaon, ‘63; Sharon Mossman, ‘63; Frances Cassebaum, ‘63; Sharon
Mossman, ‘63; Roberta Books, ‘64. ;
ae —— SUBSCRIPTION BOARD
Julie Kassius, ‘61; Keren Black, “61; Lois. Potter, ‘61; Yvonne Erickson, *627~~/
Ann Levy, ‘61; Suzanne Klempay, ‘63; Jane Hettner, ‘63; Annette Kieffer,
‘61; Ubby Redfield, ‘64; Stephanie Condon, ‘62.
Subscription 33.50. Maing price. $4.00. Suoscriptior may begin at any‘ time.
Entered 8s second ciass matter at the Ardmore. Pa., Post Office, under the Act
_|tionally-resident” within the driv-
-|printed, but they changed the
Acting Versatility
In Urfoust Drama
by Enid Greenberg ’63
Successfully overcoming the
problem of acting in a foreign lan-
guage, the Bryn Mawr-Haverford
German Club also offered several
touching and powerful character
portrayals in their presentation of
Goethe’s Urfaust Friday, January
6.
Urfaust, the preliminary version
of the later Part One of Faust,
was written by Goethe in 1775 dur-
ing the German “Sturm and Drang”
literary period,. Urfaust presents
difficulties even for German actors,
for the freedom of form, a -quality
for which the “Sturm and Drang”
period is noted, intermingles poet-
ry, ordinary speech, and folk-
songs, calling for an unusually ver-
satile actor. .
Alison Baker, Theodore Hauri,
and Dietmar Haack all exhib-
ited unusual abiltiy. Alison Bak-
er played tthe major role of Mar-
garite, the innocent young girl
seduced (with the aid of Mephis-
topheles) by Faust in his quest
for complete happiness. Allison
produced a Margarite capable of
both great love and agonizing
guilt.. The final scene at the pris-
on, in which Margarite refuses to
be freed by Faust, played sensi-
tively by Edwin Haartman, reveal-
ed Alison’s careful vtontrol in
switching among fear, love, insane
guilt, and unfailing faith.
Mephistopheles received a mas-
Continued on Page 4, Col. ?
CHAPEL PLAY
The annual chapel play is to
be presented in the Goodhart
music room Sunday, January
14, at 8:00 p.m.
Directed by Virginia O’Roak
it is a 16th century Candlemas-
Day play written by an un-
known priest. Since the story
is concerned with the period
right after Jesus’ birth, the
characters include Herod, sol-
diers under Herod’s command,
Joseph and Mary, the angel, a
priest, and interested women.
Tuesday evening the Candle-
mas-Day play will be presented
at the University of Pennsyl-
vania Mental Hospital.
News Staff Votes
Suzy Spain, 1963
As Editor-in-chief
“T liké to write—mostly because
I can’t talk—and I can express my-
self when I write even if it occa-
sionally. means writing nonsense,”
says Suzy Spain, newly elected
editor of the News. “I also sell
hexboards, one of which was sole-
ly responsible for Nixon’s defeat;
I sent it to him for a souvenir.”
This is the only hint she would
give about her forthcoming edi-
torial policy but she does promise
more humor and a greater scope
for the News.
A sophomore in Rhoads, “vaca-
ing limits of the school, Suzy has
had a phenomenal journalistic ca-
reer. “I wrote some of the non-
sense for Seventeen which they
whole thing and rifined my life
for a year. But I got $40 for it.”
Ghe worked as a copygirl for
Newsweek this summer and became
very proficient at stapling, running
a mimeo machine (“I had purple
fingernails for three months”),
and collecting overtime.
A possible History of Art major,
Suzy’s great ambition now is to
have am ambition, at least one
that lasts more than a month.
“The News needs humor. and fac-
ultyparticipation; my heroine, if,
I must have one, is Emily Grang-
erford and my favorite diversion,
try.”
Writer Reports on Interest
In Abolishment of HUAC
_by Isa Brannon
~-The House Un-American--Activi-
ties Committee has been ‘the object
of an increasing amount of atten-
tion in the last month as a result of
the opening of Congress and the
expectation of a motion by Rep.
James Roosevelt (D., Calif.) to
abolish the Committee when the
House rules are readopted. The
Committee was instituted as 4
Special Committe in 1938 and was
made a Standing Committee in
1946.
The object of the Committee is
to investigate the extent of Un-
American propaganda of both for-
eign and domestic origin (especial-
ly that which attacks the form of
government guaranteed by our
constitutiom) with the view to pre-
‘paring remedial legislation. The
HUAC can conduct hearings in
any place in the United States and
at any time. It has the power to
subpoena. A person who is sum-
not have the opportunity to cross-
examine his accusers and his coun-
sel cannot speak for him, Since
the Committee is so powerful and
its purpose so vague, it has been
Contact Publishes
Prose and Poetry,
Uses New Format
by Suzy Spain
‘Ben Shahn and the College News
have been on the mailing lists of
Contact, the San Francisco Journal
of New Writing, Art and-Ideas.
Shahn wrote to the editors: “I have
received Contact and at first view-
ing am immensely impressed with
it. The first bright token of some-
thing new is the use of material
itself, and not just material about
material, The design is bright,
fresh and again, happily, without
that predigested, redigested rem-
iniscence of, something else that
seems to have become the pattern
for little magazines. On _ second
glance, Contact doesn’t even look
little.”
Contact is all Shahn says it is;
it is different and good; but expen-
sive (published four times a year
by the Pinchpenny Press at $1.50
a copy). One issue, Contact 2, con-
tained a diverse offering of ar-
ticles, fiction, photos, drawing,
poetry and letters.
Aldous Huxley, in the lead ar-
ticle, “The Final Revolution,” at-
tacked the problem of intellectual
specialization and totalitarian so-
cieties, Pigeon-holed - professors
must emerge and bridge a divid-
ing world of pure science and eth-
ics with a new language. In order
to resist the fulfillment of the
‘world he depicted in Brave New
World (which Vance Packard in
The Hidden’ Persuaders, found
frighteningly to be coming true)
a new language, which will enable
men to communicate with each
other on all levels (ethics, science,
psychology, theology, etc.), is es-
sential,
In “What is a Rhyme?” a par-
ody subtitled “T. S. Eliot, with
Customary Equanimity Confronts
Mother Goose,”: John Updike
blames in a mighty pseudo-class-
ical style, the faulty rhymes that
were fed to him in. childhood for
subsequent literary and“ emotional
maladjustments. Both these ar-
ticles are reprints from other pub-
lications and lectures.
In addition to these, there is an
assortment of vigorously written
short stories (William Stegner,
Alan Friedman); poems (Stanley
Kiesel: Notes from Kindergarten,
William Stafford, Joanne de Long-
champs, Donald Hall, Lew ‘Welch,
Harold Witt, Leonard Wolf); and
“graphics,” a photographic sec-
tion, “The Human Condition,” con-|
taining pictures of the Family of
Man variety and a series of illus-
trations by Gary Swartzburg ac-
making popcorn in the Rhoads pan-
companied by a brief biography. _
moned before the Committee does |
open to judicial criticism. Justice
the constitutionality of the Com-
mittee in the decision of Watkins
versus the U. S. He dismissed
the contempt of Congress charge
aganist Watkins on the grounds
that due process was violated.
However, the case of Barenblatt
versus the U. S. was almost a re-
versal of this decision. Barenblatt
‘was convicted of contempt of Con-
gress for his invocation of the
first amendment to refuse cooper-
ation with the Committee. . The
Supreme Court voted 5 to 4 to up-
nold his conviction on the grounds
that the rights of the first amend-
need for national security. With
this contradiction in decisions it is
obvious that the judiciary is not
going to do more toward abolish-
ing tthe Committee, Therefore
any action toward abolition will
have to be political.
Arguments for Abolition
The basic argument against the
HUAC is that representatives do
not have the right to assume a ju-
dicial role. In practice a summons
before the Committee connotes
condemnation. Those who are for
abolishing it say also that there is
no need to protect Americans be-
cause communism in the United
States is impotent, and commun-
ists are a very small minority.
The people do not need this pro-
tection because they can decide
for themselves. If the Committee
continues people will adhere to a
more and more monolithic view,
because they will be afraid to speak
out-and-because they will not hear
as many dissenting ideas. The
communists. Another reason- for
opposition to the Committee is
the ambiguity of its purpose. It
has become an inquistorial coun-
cil. It has contributed slightly to
only two new bills, The United
States does mot need another or-
ganization to seek out subversives.
It already has the FBI and CJA.
Another major strike against the
HUAC is its association with Mc-
Carthyism. It inspires other or-
ganizations to use the’same high
handed tactics, among which are
tegration.
The Case for the Committee
The case for preservation of the
committee is not so fiercely artic-
ulated because those. seeking to
preserve the staus quo need not
be militant in their approach, The
major reasons for keeping the
Committees are the presence of
communists in this country and
the subtlety of the communist ap-
proach. Congress, it is argued,
should protect the people from
communist influence and should
be particularly responsible for stu-
dents who are the objects of much
subversive propaganda. An exam-
ple of the effectiveness of this pro-
paganda, contend the Committee,
J.. Edgar Hoover and other sym-
pathizers, can be seen in the May
1960 riots in California. This,
they assert, is all a part of a
Communist-inspired “Operation
Albolition” movement to do away
with the HUAC. There is also a
group which has been founded at
Northwestern University to defend
the general investigatory powers
of Congress. The group looks wpon
the abolition movement asa seri-
ous threat to the authority of Con-
gress,
Both the detractors and the sup-
porters of the committee distort
the issue in their propaganda ma-
terial. They do so with good mo-
tives, because they want to save
their country from the terrible
plight which they believe the oth-
er side is encouraging, Somewhere
among the untruths which obscure
the question, the best way to serve
threat of communism must be con-
stantly brought before us; but in
doing so, we must not sacrifice our
freedom. «+. orgie’
the. truth .must.be found. .The.
Warren~expressed his doubt" as to”
ment must be balanced against the .
price of freedom may be a few ©
committees seeking to impede in-’
Wednesday, January 11, 1961
~e
‘THE COLLEGE NEWS
“Page Thrée
Summer Instructor Of Koreans
by Pat Ranard ’64
Last summer, while visiting my
parents in Seoul, IJ taught English
conversation to five groups of
Koreans of assorted sizes and
backgrounds.
I found the Korean students ba-
sically quite different from any
other Oriental students I have
known, Most of the Eastern stu-
dents that I went to school with in
Japan and Malaya were interest-
ing, earnest, sensitive and rather
difficult to talk with, The Korean
students, although equally earnest
about their studies, seemed more
at ease, and, in spite of rather
grim backgrounds, gayer.. At the
time of my arrival in Kored; the
students were somewhat giddy over
the magnificence of having accom-
plished a Revolution only a few
months before. During the sum-
mer they seemed to sober at the
realization of the enormity and
seriousness of the task confront-
ing their land: to establish an hon-
est (and newly bi-cameral) gov-
ernment managed /by politicians
who were almost totally inexperi-
enced; they were Democrats, the
party which had opposed Rhee’s
Liberals, ‘and during Rhee’s ad-
ministration had not been permit-
ted to hold offices.
Solemn Students
One of the most clever and
charming groups of students I
met was the Student Culture Club,
which met once a week to discuss,
in English, anything from Beetho-
ven to ROK-Japanese relations,
and from Chekhov to the problems
of Korean students returning to
Korea after studying abroad..Most
Oriental students are of rather
solemn natures; generally, they
study harder than we do, but seem
to have less intellectual curiosity.
These students, however, possess-
ed an aweing exuberance, inten-
sity, and eagerness to learn. Their
English was excellent; they were
capable not only of conducting the
entire meeting in English, but of
playing clever sorts of word-games
often outwitting the Americans
present as guests.
During Rhee’s administration the
discussions were considerably lim-
ited, since there were, in the group,
spies — mostly students wishing
money or good grades without
working for them. These students
made arrangements with the gov-
ernment so that, in return for re-|
porting anyone voicing heretic
Finds Them Serious and Alert.
ideas (heresy being anything anti-
Rhee) they would receive either
the financial support or academic
aid desired, The student reported
would be dismissed from his uni-
versity, and occasionally jailed.
Wtih a university education es-
sential to any kind of profitable
existence, students were not “so
foolish as to risk expulsion from
college. ‘Discussions were either
non-political or wpro-Rhee. But
during the summer I attended, in
the wake of -the Revolution, the}
first discussion of a political na-
ture: relations between the Re-
public of Korea and Japan, This
is, of course, a crucial, complex,
and delicate problem. Many Ko-
reans, especially the older people
and the young nationalists, are
still bitter over the near-forty
years of Japanese domination pre-
ceding the establishment of the
Republic in 1948. Unfortunately,
Korea’s only hope for economic
strength is to re-establish a sound
trade relationship with Japan. The
policy of the Rhee government
was definitely ‘anti-Japanese; many
fierce and fiery youths are still vio-
lently opposed to any kind of re-
lationship with Japan, I often
saw parades, chiefly of students,
urging the people not to buy Jap-
anese cigarettes or to patronize
Japanese movies, The-visit of the
Japanese Foreign (Minister to
Seoul, the first visit of a Japanese
government official ‘since the end
of Japanese rule, resulted in the
traditional demonstrations. How-
ever, many_of the more level-head-
ed and practical students realized
that the time for demonstrations
was over with, and the time for
constructive action at hand. As
one girl said at the meeting, with
an impatience that seems to he
spreading among the students,
“All we ever do is demonstrate.
We never do anything about fixing
up the roads or improving theed-
ucation.” And many students voic-
ed serious criticism of the old
Rhee anti-Japanese policies, an en-
couraging sentiment. since the
United States is hard at work try-
ing to patch up ROK-Japanese re-
lations for the Republic’s economic
stability. But what impressed me
more than the ideas that these
students expressed was the way in
which they expressed them. The
American ‘student, I think, takes
for granted a right to speak his
thoughts openly and without fear
Continued on Page 4, Col. 4
Available In U.S., Europe And Asia
Several organizations have re-
cently issued information regard-
ing foreign study open to college
students. One of the most com-
plete books im this field is Study
Abroad, by UNESCO, whose 1960-
1961 edition has just been publish-
ed, It lists all scholarships offer-
ed by the United Nations, govern -
ment organizations, and mnay pri-
vate scholarships available in all
member countries.
The huge book is all-inclusive,
and, if one can wade through the
maze of its organization, it might
be helpful... However, thé majority
of scholarships listed under the
United States are for foreign stu-
dents to study in America—the
four scholarships listed as being
offered by Bryn Mawr, for exam-
ple.
Various other programs are be-
ing offered by specific groups. The
Bast-West Center at the Univer-
sity of Honolulu will provide two-
year grants for Asiatic studies to
qualified applicants. The advan-
tages are a itrip to the student's
The National Student Associa-
tion is again offering a combined
study-travel summer experience.
For information about these pro-
grams in Europe and England
write to the Association, 20 W.
38th St., New York 18.
The British Universities Sum-
mer School program has already
had a representative on the cam-
pus, but the same Institute of In-
ternational Education is offering
a similar program at Salzburg and
the University of Vienna. German
is not a prerequisite but its study
will: be required. Some scholar-
ship aid is available. The Institute
is issuing applications from 1 E.
67th ‘St., New York 21.
Opposite Attitudes
Win Consideration
In- New ‘Albatross
A group of students at Swarth-
more have attempted an original
and ambitious project. In Novem-
ber they published (the first edi-
tion of the Albatross; a magazine
designed for wide campus circula-
tion.
Opinions Resound
The idea of the Albatross is to
create a sounding board for stu-
dent opinion on subjects that in-
terest and concern students. The
contributor writes a letter to some
public figure or interested person
voicing his opinion on, some issue.
The student also sends a carbon-
copy of the letter to the Albatross
to be printed. Ideally the person
written to will feel a greater com-
pulsion to answer the letter
thoughtfully when he realizes that
his answer will be printed and
read by serious students at col-
leges throughout the country. ‘
The first issue contained some
intelligent and interesting letters.
One was addressed to President-
elect Kennedy endorsing the stu-
dent youth corps proposition, A
dramatic and forceful letter by an
expelled student of the sit-in move-
ment appeals for serious consid-
eration of inequality in America,
and an African student pleads for
a greater understanding and con-
centration on American-African
affairs, The Albatross has adopt-
ed no editorial policy but rather
would be a place for discussion of
different viewpoints.
Response Needed
The success ofthis endeavor will
depend on the responses from both
students and people addressed, It
has the possibility of becoming a
very vital organ of student com-
munication if it is well received
and supported. As its circulation
grows it will command more and
more attention by national figures.
Letters are invited from all col-
lege students and should be sent
to the Albatross, Swarthmore Col-
lege, Swarthmore,..Pennsylvania.
Subscriptions will be
next semester through Judy Fran-
kle in Denbigh.
POETRY PRIZE
The Academy of American Poets
Prize of $100 ©
For the Best -Poem or
Group of Poems
By a Student
Will Be Awarded By
The Department of English
On May Day
Manuscripts should be submitted
At the President’s Office
On or before April 5, 1961
BEAU and BELLE
Late Snacks
Excellent Banquet Facilities
Open Seven Days
Next Door To Bryn Mawr P.O.
JEANETT'S 3
Bryn Mawr Flower Shop
823 Lancaster Avenue
We Wire Flowers
LAwrence 5-0570
BERMUDA COLLEGE WEEK
7 Days at one of the Island’s
leading hotels, including
round trip air fare ex New
available:
Breakfast — Lunch — Dinner
~ by Gail S. Lasdon 61
Claudette Colbert, star of the
‘past two seasons’ Marriage-Go-
Round, should have another long
Jake and Uncle Joe is a cleverly
written and well acted dramatiza-
tion of a situation with which most
Americans are probably familiar.
Julia and Jake Ryan are. two
American correspondents stationed
in Moscow in 1945, They are not
ordinary correspondents; Jake is
a drama critic writing special fea-
tures and Julia is supposed to be
doing the same. The play is based
on a book by Brooks Atkinson’s
wife, Oriana. How they happened
to be placed in this situation this
reviewer cannot say because the
abnormal congestion on the nar-
row street of downtown Philadel-
phia made her miss the opening
curtain,
Mosrow Menage
In Moscow, the Ryans live in
the ‘sumptuous’ surroundings of
the Hotel Metropole. Their one
room ménage comes equipped with
a hot plate, a faulty bathroom
door and includes a_ secretary,
chauffeur, hotel manager and sev-
eral men from the NKIVD. Miss
Colbert bears up under the strain
admirably while cooking three
meals a day for this group of
‘sponges’—cementing Soviet-Amer-
ican relations, before the breach,
writing articles for Vogue and get-
ting her husband released from
prison after he has been jailed for
spying when in reality he was
birdwatching.
The second act, in which she en-
deavors to extricate her husband
from the dangerous hands of Un-
cle Joe, borders on the slapstick.
This is particularly evident in the
scene in the American Embassy,
engagement on Broadway, ~Juliap
Polished Comedy Satirizes —
Reporters’ Life in Moscow
tual vodka swillers and a golf play-
ing Third Secretary who thought
the State Department was sending
him to Glasgow, not Moscow.
When official sources fail, Miss
Colbert succeeds in gaining admit-
tance to the chamber ‘of Uncle Joe
on the pretext of having the secret
of the atom bomb. Shg and her
husband are released “r deported
when ‘kindly Uncle Joe’ tells ‘hair-
rained Julia’ that they have some-
thing in common, They are both
schemers,
Snob Appeal
Julia, Jake and Uncle Jogags a
boon to all students of Russian
who wish to test their comprehen-
sion. In fact, this play may gain
success from the intellectual snobs
who can exclaim, “the English was
ordinary, but, my dear, those
Russian jokes!” Approximately
one-fourth of the dialogue is in
Russian. No isolated “Spasibo’s”
were enough to content Howard
M, Teichman, author of the play.
Fortunately, for those of us whose ,
Russian vocabulary is ‘limited’
there is always sufficient action to
get the point across. Ah! those
Russian love scenes dedicated to
the proposition that tractors will
never replace women.
Claudette Colbert has an excel-
lent supporting cast with the ex-
ception of a few small parts, There
is a marine, a courier, for the em-
bassy, who appears to be doing
the German goose step with both
feet off the ground. In the same
scene, the Third Secretary’s part
is too farcical, even within the
context, This is a fault in the
writing, rdther than the acting. Re-
writing and drill practice should
rectify the scene.
Julia, Jake and Uncle Joe is en-
tertaining and smoothly presented
and should be one of the success-
ful plays on Broadway this sea-
son,
the members of which are ineffec-
Classes in leading European
for Academic Credit.
MODERN LANGUAGES
--SPAIN—FRANCE.
UNIVERSITY OF HEIDELBERG
four weeks preliminary study
in RUSSIA.
sightseeing and transfers.
REQUIREMENTS.
TOTAL PRICE—$1472.00.
- tbody.
area of interest and a large pro-
portion of Asians in the student
Interested students should
contact the Director of the Center
~ at the University of Hawaii.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
York
nna : $211.00
MARCO BIANCO * ay .
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GIFTS OF DISTINCTION April 1, 2
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EUROPE 1961 STUDY AND TRAVEL
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UNIVERSITY OF PARIS (SORBONNE) French Language, Liter-
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June 14-August 31 (78 Days) (ALL INCLUSIVE PRICE—$1170.00
and Civilization—plus 7 County Tour of Europe.
June 30-Sept. 4 (66 Days) ALL INCLUSIVE PRICE—$1255.00
UNIVERSITY OF FLORENCE Art, Music, Culture, Italian Lan-
guage, History and Literature plus 5 Country Tour of Europe.
June 10-Sept. 1 (84 Days) ALL INCLUSIVE PRICE—$1499.00
RUSSIAN STUDY TOUR Russian Language and Civilization,
June 9-August 31 (84 Days) ALL INCLUSIVE PRICE—$1689.00
__INCLUDING: -Trans-Atlantic transportation by sea. All hotels,
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seri —~repanat cra ee
Page Four
“THE COLLEGE: NEWS
Wednesday, January 11, 1961
Thorne School,
Institute Keep
West House Ever In Children
by Sally Shapiro
At the corner of the campus
which is marked by Roberts Road
and. Wyndon Avenue stands West
House, a large and pleasant build-
ing surrounded by wide grounds
and many trees. Bought from the
Scull family in 1951 by the alum-
nae, West House today houses two
branches of the Education Depart-
ment—the Child Study Institute
and the Phebe Anna Thorne School.
_The second and third floors of
West House are devoted to the
Child Study Institute, which per-
forms a double function. As a
psychological and ‘psychiatric clin-
ic, the Institute provides counsel-
ing and testing services for chil-
dren between two years and late
adolescence,
According to. its director, Rachel
Dunaway Cox, the Institute’s aim
in this connection is the preven-
tive one of forestalling serious
«problems in mental health. In this
capacity in 1960, the staff saw 452
children as well as many parents
and teachers, Most of the cases
are referrals from the Lower Mer-
ion School system, which works
closely with the Institute and, to-
gether with the College, supports
it. Although most cases are noted
by the schools because of learning
problems, the Institute usually
finds that help is needed in more
basic areas of the child’s life.
The second function of the
Child Study Institute is a teaching
one. From this point of view the
Institute is a laboratory in which
students in the Education Depart-
ment can “become specialists in
the nurture and development of
the child,” as Mrs. Cox puts it.
The setting is an ideal preparation
for work with children in schools
and clinics.
The Institute is staffed by fif-
teen professionals, including case-
workers, psychologists and“ psy-
chiatrists, and by three student
fellows and three secretaries.
The first floor of West House
is occupied by the Phebe Anna
Thorne nursery school, Here the
large windows, airy atmosphere,
and outside play area seem de-
signed to meet a child’s needs. The
- rooms are equipped with child-size
tables and chairs, real-goldfish_and
turtles, books, and toys of all
kinds, Each of the thirty three-
and four-year-olds has a locker for
himself.
These children, from faculty and
other vicinity families, attend
‘nursery school every weekday.
morning during the college year.
They are taught by two qualified
teachers, assisted by two graduate
students, Like the Child Study In-
stitute, the school is used for ob-
servation by students im child psy-
chology and education. °
The school, directed by Susan E.
Maxfield, is maintained out of the
Phebe Anna Thorne endowment.
‘ncome for an earlier venture, the
twelve grade Phebe Anna Thorne
School which was closed in 1980,
overburdened by debt. With the
debt paid off and West House
available it became possible to re-
open the school. Its present func-
tion as a nursery school was decid-
ed upon because it was in that
area that the greatest needs of
both the community and the Edu-
cation Department lay.
Urfaust
Continued from Page 2, Col. 3
terful portrayal at the hands of
Haverford’s Theodore Hauri. With
great stage presence, he presented
coarseness and severity but re-
tained the role’s sensitivity.
The humorous wine cellar scene
early in the play equalled the
greatness of the final prison scene.
Dietmar Haack who comes from
Germany and is studying and
teaching at Haverford, brilliantly
created a young drunk. Three oth-
er drinkers, played by John Rob-
erts, William Dorwart, and Geof-
frey Sawn, worked with Haack
and with Hauri and Haartman, who
enter the cellar as Mephistopheles
and Faust to produce an unusually
fine scene,
Mr. Ottomar Rudolf, who direct-
ed the play, also played the part
of the old Faust in the first two
scenes, Both his acting and that
of Lois Potter, who played the
flirtatious Martha, created inter-
esting characters. Cynthia Caples
played a gossiping girl at the well,
James MacRae the brother of Mar-
garite, Tom Schweizer and Joerg
Winterer two students, and Terry
Belanger a bartender,
All through the sixteen scenes
of the play, the simple yet coordin-
ated stage props and the well-
chosen costumes were pleasing.
Dietmar Haack’s stage direction
and Frank Bowles’ handling of the
lighting are to be commended.
The audience seemed? to have
thoroughly enjoyed the presenta-
tion of Urfaust. Some of the por-
trayals of minor characters left
much to be desired, but the work
of the major characters, in spite
of the language barrier, produced
an amazingly successful Urfaust.
‘This fund ‘was also the source of
Summer
Miscellanies
Continued From Page 1, Col. 3
Those in hotels, stores and sales
agencies, publications, and family
jobs constituted the next largest
groups (from 20 to 27 in each
category). Three students had
Ford Foundation grants, five work-
ed‘in. social agencies, and eight
apiece in libraries and medical
services. Fifteen students were
in the category miscellaneous,
which included museum workers,
photographers’ -assistants, trans-
lators, teachers, a factory worker,
and a strawberry picker.
Because of the work of a student
and faculty committee under
AIRSEC five students went to
Europe for -summer jobs. Since
the program was enthusiastically
praised, the campus chapter hopes
to expand the group in the future.
Most of the volunteer. workers
were in clerical jobs, social agen-
cies, and recreation centers. Many
reported as Volunteers for Ken-
nedy. ‘Nixon volunteers, however,
were not among those reporting.
Summer study ranged from pri-
vate language lessons to summer
courses’ all over the United States
and in many foreign countries.
Twenty-two students _ studied
abroad—4 in Canada, 4 in Central
and South America, and 14 in Eu-
rope. Among these were two who
went to Russia on a grant from
the Carnegie Conporation,
Summer travel ranged through
this country and Canada, Central
and South America, Europe, and
the Orient.
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MISSING
Two ibrand new left-handed
fencing foils are missing: from
the gym. These foils are per-.
sonal property and of great
sentimental value to their own-
ers. Any, information on them
should be passed on to Miss
Clayton in the gym department.
Korean Students.
Continued from Page 3, Col, 2
for his own safety. American stu-
dent discussions are often charged
with a candid sont of spontaneity,
which sometimes deteriorates into
saying anything at. all, without
vance, or significance of what is
said. But during this discussion by
Korean students of an issue vital
to their nation’s economic and po-
titical security, I-sensed-an atmos-
No stu-
dent spoke without careful consid-
eration; the arguments, both for
phere of near-reverence,
and against, were valid and force-
ful, As one boy said soberly, “We
are lucky to be able to speak in
freedom.”
consideration of the value, rele-|
Yale Socialist
- Continued from Page 3, Col. 2
the industry reason to stay in New
York and by stabilizing tia
tion within the industry. :
The union’s prime sustication
today is economic and it has a
healthy role to play nationally.
This does not mean it should be
uncurbed.
A Concert
We Never Announced
Reprinted from: Lancaster
New Era, Lancaster, Pa., Dec.
24, 1960.
En route iby train to an engage-
ment in Kalamazoo, Mich., Madame
Jambor opened up her portable
practice keyboard in her sleeping
car berth and clacked away on the
gadget to keep her fingers limber.
(Next day, the train arrived in
Kalamazoo two hours late, When
Madame Jambor asked why, the
conductor said they had stopped
for two hours during the night to
make a fruitless search for the
source of a dangerous clacking
noise in one ve the sleeping cars.
Wardrobe camplon
Fill in the gaps at
JOYCE LEWIS
839 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr
for brochure.
Accredited by ~~
Be a PRIVATE SECRETARY
HIGH PAY, PRESTIGE FOR COLLEGE GIRLS
Add business training to your college knowledge! Let
Peirce prepare you for a top secretarial job in the field
of your choice—advertising, law, TV, medicine. Enroll
now for a short, intensive course designed especially
for college women. Write, come in, or call PE 5-2100
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
1420 Pine Street, Philadelphia 2, Pa.
| The Accrediting Commission for Business Schools, Washington, D. C., as
a “Junior College of Business”
ANNOUNCING THE FABULOUS 1961
GIMBELS BRIDE'S MAGAZINE CONTEST
ZE
WINA
FREE
LY
\
WS
oneymoon
IN BERMUDA AS ONE OF 3 FIRST PRIZRS
Special Invitation to
University Women in
Philadelphia Area Only
Gimbels invites you to enter its
fabulous new 1961 Bride Contest
now underway. Here’s your op-
portanity to win a free honey-
moon at the Princess Hotel of
Bermuda, via Eastern Airlines
“Golden Faleon” Jet DC-8B as
one of three first prizes. Or,
of many other wonderful prizes,
including 3 new Samsonite
honeymoon luggage trousseaux.
EASY TO ENTER
You'll find an entry blank in THE
BRIDE'S MAGAZINE Spring Issue
which is now on sale at most
local newsstands. Just fill in your
name and address and present
the
mbels Bridal Salon in Phila-
po hia, — Darby or Chel-
io date, April 3rd, 1961. That’s
all you have to do. There’s noth-
ing to write or solve. Everyone
has an equal opportunity to win
one of the exciting prizes.
one
Psa entry blank in person at
am before the contest clos- -
PARTIAL LIST OF
PRIZES
¢ 3 Third Prizes: Vanity
Fair Peignoir and Gown en-
sembles
@ RCA Transistor Radio
@ Electric Blanket from
Fieldcrest
© Martex Bath ensemble
Hurry and get your copy of THE BRIDE’S MAGAZINE Spring Issue and fill out your entry Stine:
Win your free Honeymoon! —
‘and entertainment. . igs
~
Picasa Ringe aitltciiseticjastifemiMiating
(Contest limited to greater Philadelphia area only. One entry blank allowed to a bride. Contest ends
April 3rd, 1961. Winning names.will be drawn by Eleanor Bradley, Gimbels Bridal Consultant, during
the week of April 3rd. Winners will be notified immediately after the drawing.)
%
CAR ny
College news, January 11, 1961
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1961-01-11
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 47, No. 10
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-vol47-no10