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, April 26, 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)
1961-04-26
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 47, No. 20
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-no20
i Noo oy, keg
—"
SATII NA Te
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, April 26, 1961
Question
“py Brooks Robards ores
The question, should the dorms
be kept open later and should men
be allowed in girls’ rooms after
6:30, has been much discussed re-
cently, I would dislike to propose
that the dorms be kept open until
12:30, but that girls’ rooms continue
to be off-limits to men after 6:30.
There are few places on campus
where students can take a date. The
rooms in Goodhart are used for
lectures and meetings or are al-
ready occupied. There ,is of course
always the library for an evening
of golden silence, or the woods be-
hind Rhoads, -but the bulk of en-
tertaining goes on in the dorms—
and rightly.
Why Smokers?
The smokers are meant to be
our living rooms and the date par-
lors are meant for dates. But the
purpose of these rooms is defeated
when the dorms close at ten-thirty.
No one enjoys saying’ goodnight
at ten-thirty to the date who ar-
rived at eight-thirty or nine, you
don’t have to stay on campus, but
a local bar or movie isn’t the ideal
place for study and conversation.
Thus it seems necessary and logic-
al to keep the dorms open until
twelve-thirty.
While it can be argued that the
girls’ rooms, the-best place to en-
tertain, should be open to men
Aater also, this is a separate prob-
lem. There are girls who like to
walk in the halls in their under- |?
wear or pajamas, and no matter
what studio couch arrangements
you have, a bedroom is still a bed-
room, and not the place for men
at night. While most would not
abuse the right to have men in the
rooms at night, one girl might.
Then the entire college would suf-
fer.
While the smokers are our liv-
ing rooms and our use of them
should not be curtailed at ten-thir-
ty, our rooms are our bedrooms
and not the place to bring a date
at night,
TT ge
‘Summer Jobs
Continued from Page 5, Col. 3
ty-five cents and “Summer Study
Abroad” is free; both can. be. ob-
tained by writing the Institute of
International Education, 1 E. 67th
St., New York 21, N.Y.
For those who are interested in
- the dance, the Connecticut College
School of Dance, which runs from
July 10 to August 20, is receiving
applications for admission. The
eost of this program is $400 for
residents, and $240 for non-resi-
dents. Applications are obtainable
by writing to the Connecticut Col-
lege School of Dance, New London,
Conn.
If all else
so well as
leather, or father’s business con-
nections. And if you find yourself
spending your summer in a ham-
mock, take advantage of the oppor-
- tunity and enjoy your vacation.
ils, nothing works
| La Sultane Suite, by Francois Cou-
. Continued from Page 5, Cal, 1
was ‘Saal and a rg con-
trast on the program.
This group then played Sonata
No. 2, a stirring composition . by
Johann Pezel. The attention to
dynamics was notable and the re-
sult was exciting. ;
The Overture and Allegro from
perin, above all made-the fine spirit
of the orchestra evident to the lis-
teners, The Overture featured fine
flute work and a woodsy feeling
that was lovely. The Allegro was
peppier and led up to a tremendous
conclusion.
William ‘Boyce’s Symphony. Num-
ber One was a pleasant work
whose opening Allegro moved along
nicely. The Andante had some prob-
lems because of uncertain entranc-
Final Orchestra Concert
+ the Vivace was a delight,
of ye olde English flavor and
ery felicitously done.
The most exciting performance
f the evening was Dvorak’s Bo-
hemian Suite, Op. 39. The Prelu-
dium had a rustic, rougher tone
and more conversation between in-
struments rather than unison work,
predominant in many of the pre-
vious compositions. The Polka was
ufll of zest and generally well
done. The Minuetto was notable
for its delicate rhythms and the
Romanza for its finely done flute
passages and singing quality. But
the concluding Furiant was’ great.
Although it had some quiet. mo-
ments, the peasantly, dance-like
theme built to a furious climax
and ended a.good concert, and a
good year’s work, on a triumphant
note.
Handkerchiefs Embroidered Linens
Trousseaux Bath Ensembles
Monograms Irish Damasks
WILSON BROS.
MAGASIN DE LINGE
825 Lancaster Avenue
LAwrence 5-5802 Bryn Mawr, Pa,
JEANETT’S
Bryn Mawr Flower Shop
823 Lancaster Avenue
We Wire Flowers
LAwrence 5-0570 —
Srawkiast 644 6s. s ae Sane
Luncheon
Afternoon Tea .......... fe
Dinner
old-fashioned shoe
a
Friday, April 28 at 8:30 P.M.
BOB
NEWHART —
also America’s
most exciting
folk singers
+ - THE. CHAD_MITCHELL. 1:
Irvine Auditorium, U. of Penn-
sylvania. Tickets $3.25, 2.50,
1.75 at Houston Hall, -U. of
Pennsylvania, 34 & Spruce
—— Phila., Pa. RESERVA-
— ext. 581.
Telephone
LAwrence 5-0386
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
Open To The Public
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
SPECIAL PARTIES AND BANQUETS ARRANGED
sevecsicee - O100-1100 AM,
cuekeus eas 12:00- 2:00 P.M.
ocecs weeee 3:30- 5:00 P.M.
5:30- 7:30 P.M.
12:00- 7:30 P.M.
eeeeveeeee
Lombaert. St. and Morris Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
INTERFAITH SPEAKER
Bec eee
ane! ts es at Sarah
Lawrence College, will speak
on Sunday, April 30, at 7:30
p.m. in the Common Room. His
lecture, under the auspices of
the Interfaith Association, will
be on “Martin Buber and Exis-
tentialist Trust.” Mr, Fried-
man is author of Martin Buber:
The Life of Dialogue, the first
comprehensive study of the
great Jewish philosopher’s
thought, and editor and trans-
lator of many of Buber’s works.
Miss McBride
Gontinued from Page 4, Col. 2.
*%
on the answer “yes” let me tell you
why I should answer “no.” Just
as forceful as the expansion of
knowledge is a different trend—
the increasing complexity of our
lives and of the judgments requir-
ed for living. These confine them-
selves to no one field. They call
for more than the expert to advise
the layman. They call for breadth,
independence, versatility and con-
tinuing power—and this combina-
tion finds its first sure start in lib-
eral education,
Have a WORLD of FUN!
Travel with f hoy: Wen
_ Ask Your
Travel Agent
Unbelievable low Cost
Europe
66-80 Days, Incl. Steamer, from $798
2, ORIENT
17-30 Days, Incl. Air, from $1,290
AROUND the WORLD
30-46 Days, Incl. Air, from $1,930
MANY TOURS INCLUDE COLLEGE CREDIT
Also low cost tours to Mexico $196 up, South
‘America $937 up, The West from $456, Africa
{from $1767. \
Siva 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, CO 6-7070
flavor...
‘Tareyton delivers the
..-make. the taste of a.ci
eR EM
p a thas really different!
The difference i is this: Tareyton’s Dual Filter gives you a
— inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, AL, definitely proved to
mild and smooth. It works together \ with _
a pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements i in the smoke.
Drodat of Me Aewivan Eleeer Caspar,
% “Sebecor is our middle name” ©4700.
6