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.
fa
VOL. XLIII—NO. 20
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1958
© Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1958
PRICE 20 CENTS
Renata Adler Receives Brooke Hall, Hinchman Awards;
Winners Of Scholarships For Coming Year Announced
Martians Judge
BMC Standards
‘Low, Unrealistic’
As a member of the Evaluation
Committee of the Martian Senate,
Barbara Pinney, May Queen and
Senior Class President, today sub-
mitted this report to the Govern-
ment of Mars on the committee’s
recent trip to a revered academic
institution on earth—Bryn Mawr
College. ”M honorable colleagues,”
she began, “the conditions there
are appalling.”
“It is shocking that in the year
2000 a.s. (after sputnik) such an-
tiquarian pedagogical practices
and techniques are employed. Old
English is still taught at Bryn .
Mawr and the students are requir-
ed to read such classics of that
language as By Love Possessed
and Please Don’t Eat the Daisies.
The Physical Education Depart-
ment has failed to bow to the de-
mands of a new era and surrender
tennis, hockey, and baseball to tid-
‘ dley winks, jacks and bridge.
“Of course there are a few re-
deeming factors at Bryn Mawr.
No classes are held since lectures
are piped into each individual bed-
room and students may listen or
snooze at their leisure. The
Continued on Page 5, Col. 5
Broughton Given
2nd Guggenheim
Dr. TT. Robert
Mawr faculty, has been awarded
a Guggenheim Fellowship for his
work in the field of Roman history.
This ig the second Guggenheim
Dr. Broughton has held.
He will use the fellowship in the
summer of 1959 in order to travel
through provinces of the Roman
Empire. Dr. Broughton
to gather information for a his-
tory of the development of ‘the
provinces.
The John Simon Gugigenheim
Memorial Foundation Fellowships
are granted to “persons of unus-
ual capacity for scholarly re-
search” and to “persons of unusu-
al and proven creative ability in
the fine arts.” This year’s grants
totalling $1,412,000, were awarded
to-322—-scholars—and- artists. — This:
is the thirty-fourth annual series
of fellowship awards made by the
foundation to citizens and perman.
ent residents of the United States
citizens of other American Repub-
li¢és, the Republic of the Philip-
pines, Canada, and the British Ca-
ribbean area.
: e
Notice
Freshmen are reminded that
they must leave their rooms
vacant in June within twenty-
four hours of their last exam.
No exception. to this rule can‘ |
be made for those. freshmen
S. Broughton,
chairman of the Latin Depart-
ment and secretary of the Bryn
intends
Two of the major honorary
awards this year “were received by
Renata Adler, a philosophy and
German double major, class of
1959,
Renata received the Maria L.
Calendar
Thursday, May 1: 6:00 p.m, Din-
ner.
6:45 p.m—Morris Dancing in
Library cloisters.
7:00 p.m.—College Theatre pre-
sents “The Knight of the Burn-
ing Pestle,” Cloisters. |
7:30 p.m.—Step Singing, Taylor
_ Steps.
Saturday, May 3: French Club
presents “Le Bal des Voleurs”
Skinner.
Sunday, May 4: 7:30 p.m.—Chapel
Address by the Reverend Dr.
Edward Steimle.
Tuesday, May 6 at 8:30, Goodhart,
A. C. film.
RENATA ADLER
Eastman ~ Brooke Hall Memorial
Scholarship given to the junior
with: the highest general average
and the (Charles S. Hinchman
Memorial Scholarship awarded for
work of special excellence in the
major subject.
Renata’s double major, recently
approved by the Faculty Curricu-
lum Committee, will allow her to
do honors work and take final ex-
aminations in both departments.
Both departments nominated her
for the Hinchman Award. She
has been active in literary affairs
as a board member of the Bryn
Mawr-Haverford Revue. She is
also Business Manager of the 1959
yearbook. (Renata, who lives in
Danbury, Connecticut, attended the
Danbury High School there.
Last year’s Brooke Hall and
Hinchman awards were also won
by a philosophy major, Martha
Bridge.
At the annual May Day festiv-
ities this morning Miss Katharine
E. McBride, President of the col-
lege, awarded scholarships and
prizes to 125 undergraduates for
the coming year at an assembly
for students and faculty in Good-
hart Hall.
Scholarships were given to 45
Marianne Moore
Comments, Reads
by Lynne Levick
Marianne Moore, Bryn Mawr’s
distinguished alumna and _ poet,
spoke in the Deanery on April 24.
Miss Moore® prefaced the reading
of some of her poems with a few
remarks on the work she has been
doing in the year since she was
last at Bryn Mawr.
Miss Moore has been invited to
speak for many groups of “angry
young men” and as Miss Wood-
worth remarked in introducing the
poet, “Miss Moore, has become a
a sibyl fo rthese young men.”
In the past year Miss Moore
has been interested in the Chinese
concept of space in which, for
example, the important quality of
Continued on Page 6, Col. 1
Panel Discusses
Child Counseling
A panel of guidance specialists
will discuss Counseling the Ele-
mentary School Child at a meet-
ing on May 8 in the Child Study
Institute. An open house and tea
will precede the meeting.
The panel members, all from the
Philadelphia Public Schools, are
Miss Emilie Rannells, assistant
director of the Division of Pupil
Personnel and Counseling; Dr.
Frederick .Allen, psychiatric con-
sultant to the Board of Education;
Miss Margaret Carson, supervisor
of counseling in the Division of
Pupil Personnel and Guidance; Mr.
W. James Drennen, principal of
the Penn Valley Elementary
School; Mrs. Lois R. Taber, social
case worker; and Mr. Robert Ta-
ber, Director of Pupil Personnel
and Counseling. These panelists,
leaders in a new area of guidance,
will have fresh concepts and tech-
niques to introduce.
_by Lois Potter
Beaumont and Fletcher’s roman-
tic burlesque-comedy, The Knight
of the Burning Pestle, will be pre-
sented in the Cloisters this evening
at 7:00, under the direction of
Kate Evans and Beatrice Kipp, as
a rollicking conclusion to the May-
day festivities.
The play has three plots, and
Beaumont and (Fletcher, in keeping
them all moving, performed a feat
comparable to juggling three or-
anges at once. A 17th century
theatre is about to put on a play
about a merchant’s daughter and
the poor but worthy apprentice
who loves her (plot no. 1). A citi-|
Knight of the Burning Pestle, Short Play
Promises A Rollicking Conclusion to Cloistered May Day
play-about..a_.grocer ..instead—a
grocer who kills lions. Their ap-
prentice is sent to play: the grocer,
and, although he never kills a lion,
he manages to run through a ser-
ies of Don Quixote-like adventures
with a damsel in distress, a giant,
and a princess (plot no. 2). The
grocer and his wife watch both
plays, commenting on the action,
sympathizing with the wrong
characters in plot no. 1, and in-
furiating the theatre management
with their fantastic suggestions
of exploits for the apprentice to
perform (plot no. 3).
~The three plots actually blend
into one for the first half of the
in Three Plots
for _a. wonderfully chaotic conclu-
sion, Beaumont and Fletcher made
full use of their opportunity to sa-
tirize the contemporary public
(the grocer and his wife), the tra-
ditional romantic comedy (plot no.
1), and the style of Shakespeare
(a flood of bombastic rhetoric).
The cast is: Prologue, Anne
Stebbins; Boy, Cisca Duran-Reyn-
als; Citizen, Sandy Scott; Wife,
Alice Turner; Ralph, Sue Harris;
Jasper, Pam Wylie; Luce, Betty
Haney; Humphrey, Trudy Hoff-|
man; Mr. Venturewell, Arleen
-|Beberman; Mr. Merrithought,
Leora Luders; Mrs. Merrithought,
Babette Rogers; Michael; Marilyn
“| May; Giant Barber, Betty. Ferber; |
juniors, 33. sophomores and 42
freshmen. The students, all of
whom are now undergraduates at
the college, come from 28 states,
the District of Columbia, and 4
foreign countries, Nine scholar-
ships were also awarded to sen-
iors and recent graduates of Bryn
Mawr for medical study in other
universities,
Renata Adler of Danbury, Con-
necticut won the top honors in the
junior class, for the highest aver-
age and for excellence in the ma-
jor subject.
The Elizabeth S. Shippen Schol-
arships for the excellence of work
in science and foreign languages
were both divided this year. The
Science scholarship went to Bar-
bara Gardner in chemisty and
Eileen. Skromak in biology. The
language scholarship was given
to two French majors, Lynn Dem-
ing and Victoria Benedict who are
both spending their junior year
abroad.
Cynthia Lovelace received the
Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Scholar-
ship for excellence in advanced
English courses. The freshman
Kilroy prize went to Toby ©. S.
Langen for her essay “The Theme
‘of Fear and Retreat in the Novels
of Sherwood Anderson.” The Kath-
erine Hepburn Scholarship in Eng-
lish drama went to Francisca
Duran-Reynals of the class of 1961.
Other national grants made to
students were renewed: the Gen-
eral Motors Scholarships held by
Kate Collins, Miriam Beames and
Hanna’ Woods, as well as_ the
Proctor and Gamble Scholarships
of Diane Taylor, Loralee MacPike
and Martha Jane Hill, and the Na-
tional Merit Awards held by Juan-
ita Barrett, Susan Downey, and
Judith Polsky.
The list of receipients and the
scholarships follow:
Scholarships to be held in the
Senior Year
Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall
Memorial Scholarship, awarded to the
member of the junior class with the
highest average, and Charles S.
Hlachman Memorial Scholarship,
awarded for work of special excel-
lence in the major subject, Renata
Adler of Danbury, Connecticut. Pre-
pared by Danbury High School, Dan-
bury, . Connecticut,
Elizabeth 8. Shippen Scholarship in
Language, awarded for excellence of
work in a foreign language, this year
divided between Lynn Tudor Deming
of Darien, Connecticut. Prepared by
Darien High School; Darien, Connecti-
cut. Victoria Carrington Benedict of
New York City. Prepared by The
Brearley School, New York City.
Proctor and Gamble _ Scholarship,
Diane Elizabeth Taylor of Berkeley
Heights, New Jersey. Prepared by
Jonathan Dayton’ Regional High
School, Springfield, New Jersey.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Susan Linda Gold of New
York City. Prepared by“Bronx High
School of Science, New York City.
General. Motors National Bohelar:
ship, Miriam Sinah Beames of Oak-
land, California. Prepared by Pied-
mont High School, Piedmont, Cali-
fornia.
Lilia Babbitt Hyde Foundation
Scholarship, Joan Marilyn Caplan of
Dorchester, Massachusetts. Prepared
Continued on Page 2, Col. 3
Notice
“Ambiguous Immortality” will
be the topic of the lecture
given by Dr. Geddes MacGreg-
or in the Common Room on,
Wednesday, May 7 at 8:30, The
lecture will be under the ‘aus-
pictures of the Philosophy Club.
'Dr. MacGregor is at present
the Rufus M. Jones Professor
“Garden Party.’
| play, but then go their’own ways,
only to be brought hastily together
P,
a
Tim, Dee Rosenberg; Princess, Sue
Lasersohn; 2nd boy, Lois Potter.
here at Bryn Mawr.
of--Philosophyand_— Religion | ___
Page Two \
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Thursday, May 1, 1958
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during
Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examina-
tion weeks) in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore
Printing Company, Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears
in it may be reprinted wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chiet.
EDITORIAL BOARD :
I ia oo e855 bas Oa ee 8S hee eee Eleanor Winsor, ‘59
RN NT SRG c ccc bigee rele scare ceeeseesscesese Gretchen Jessup, ‘58
» ail Leith heir a ec iveeeeesyeucese ys Susan Schapiro, ‘60
ois ycucue os ka elie cisecaunceesvess Miriam Beames, ‘59
So ER OSE a OW Pune Betsy Levering, ‘61
EDITORIAL STAFF
Barbara Broome, ‘60; Sue Goodman, ‘60; Frederica Koller, ‘61; Gail Lasdon, ‘61;
Lynne Levick, ’60; Lois Potter, ‘61; Judy Stulberg, ‘61; Alex van Wessem, ‘61;
Gail Beckman, ‘59, (Alliance Reporter).
BUSINESS STAFF
Elizabeth Cox, ‘60; Sybil Cohen,.’61; Jane Lewis, ‘59.
MR NN ooh in oan see teenies ec cteaanee Holly Miller, 3
Business Manager ........ 00. coves ine veees's Jane Levy, ‘59
Associate Business Manager ..............cseeeeceeceseees . Ruth Levin, ‘59,
Subscription Manager Elise Cummings, ‘59
Subscription Board: Alice Casciato, ‘60; Barbara Christy, ‘59; Susan Crossett, (60;
Elise Cummings, ‘59; Toni Ellis, ‘60; Sandy Korff, ‘60; Gail Lasdon, ‘61;
Danna Pearson, ‘59; Lois Potter, ‘61; Loretta Stern, ‘60; Diane Taylor, ‘59;
Carol Waller, ‘61.
Subscription, $3.50. Mailing price, $4.00. Subscription may begin at any time.
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office, under the Act
of March 3, 1879.
is Tesies Avid DADS
Applause and derision, exuberant cheers and silent hiss-
es, in fact all the range of reaction with which our fellows
of the opposite sex usually greet our performance of the
ancient ritual we turn this year against our fellow man, or
to be specific, ten of our fellow men, clad in white who join
us in circling the Maypole. Unfortunately they are being
offered none of the amenities which ordinarily accompany
our own solemnization—no strawberries for breakfast, no
hoops on the green, no step singing, merely a lonely rising in
the cold dawn and a long pilgrimage to Merion Green. And
why such self-sacrifice—surely not for the pure symbolic
value of Mayday? :
Reflecting upon this consideration we come to the con-
clusion that our colleagues are acting in a true humanitarian
interest, which we must place even above that of scientific
inquiry. By participating in our festivities, they not only
show concern for returning May Day to its ancient splendors,
but also they add a touch of genial civility to the rites, in-
deed even after the manner of brotherly love. We salute
them; we salute May Day and all its attributes—the pagans
of its distant past, the oxen of its more recent past, the grad-
uate dancers of the present, and whatsoever its future may
bring.
by Lois Potter
Curious Observer (to her husband):
Darling, look! Down on the green - -
Just like the picture in the magazine!
All in white,
What a sight - -
Prettiest thing I’ve ever seen.
Sophomore (on the green):
Here’s a berry, have one on me - -
Isn’t it great to be alive?
Senior:
Oh, why did I go to bed at three
‘When I had to get up at five?
Maypole Dancers:
-*Round the Maypole let us go
(Ow! You fool, get off my toe!)
Foot it neatly, foot it nicely,
At eight o’clock in the morn, precisely.
Philosophy 101 Student:
Life would be rosy, life would be peachy,
If I could finish my paper on Nietzsche.
Language Student:
. Am I worried? Me? ‘What for?
I’ve an oral, nothing more.
Maypole Dancers:
’Round the Maypole let us go
(I am getting vertigo).
(Foot it featly, flunk it fleetly,
Lift your voices, sing it sweetly.
Chorus of Merry Voices:
Sing ow happy Mayduy-song;—
Sing it all off-key,
Sing the words a little wrong,”
Sing the chorus loud and strong,
Sing it heartily.
Sophomore (to Senior):
‘Have a berry?
Freshiiian: Have a daisy?
Senior: I am going slightly crazy.
i Maypole Dancers:
. . *Round the Maypole let us go
ish (So traditional, you know).
Foot it featly, lads and lasses,
But don’t forget the ten o’clock classes. _
ag Chorus of Merry Voices: hee
For hey derry down and down dee derry,
—
Scholarship List
is a)
Continued from Page 1, Col. 5
by Girls’ Latin School, Boston, Mass-
achusetts.
New England Alumnae _ Regional
Scholarship and The Frank L. Neall
and Mina W. Neall Scholarship and
Regina Katharine Crandall Scholar-
ship, Eleanor Jane Winsor of John-
ston, Rhode Island. Prepared by
Classical High School, Providence,
Rhode _ Island.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Sylvia Kowitt of Rockville
Centre, New York. Prepared by South
Side High School, Rockville Centre,
New York.
Priscilla Hunt Scholarship, Eliza-
beth Isabelle Carr of Hartford City
Indiana, Prepared by Hartford City
High School, Hartford City, Indiana.
Bryn Mawr Club of Southern Cali-
fornia Scholarship and Leila Hough-
teling Memorial Scholarship. Ann
Wayland of Pasadena, California.
Prepared by Lycee de Jeunes Filles,
Strasbourg, France and the Westridge
School, Pasadena, California.
General Motors National Scholar-
ship and Seven College Conference
Scholarship (Honorary), Kate Stew-
art Collins of Pasadena, California.
Prepared by Westridge School, Pasa-
dena, California.
George Bates Hopkins
Scholarship, Carolyn Campbell Kern
of Boonville, North Carolina. Pre-
pared by St. Stephen’s Episcopal
School, Austin, Texas.
The Misses Kirk Scholarship, Julie
Elizabeth Painter of Baltimore, Mary-
land. Prepared by Roland Park
County School, Baltimore, Maryland.
Elizabeth 8S. Shippen Scholarship in
Science, awarded for excellence of work
in science, Eileen Marian Skromak of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared
by Nazareth Academy, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Joanna Lucy Wolter of New
York City. Prepared by Washington
ye High School, Tarrytown, New
ork.
Frances Marion Simpson’ Scholar-
ship, Joan Evelyn Smith of Ambler,
Pennsylvania. Prepared by Ambler
High School, Ambler, Pennsylvania.
Elizabeth 8S. Shippen Scholarship i:
Science, awarded for excellence «
work in science, and Trustees’ Schot-
arship, Barbara Suzanne Gardner of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared
by Abraham _ Lincoln High School,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship and Anna Margaret Sloan
and Mary Sloan Scholarship, . Jane
Lippincott Smith of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Entered on _ transfer
from Beaver College, Jenkintown,
Pennsylvania.
District III-A Alumnae _§ Regional
Scholarship, Benita Helene Bendon of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared
by the Stevens School, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. ‘
Constance Lewis and Martha Rock-
well Moorhouse Class of 1904 Memor-
jal Scholarship and George Bates
Hopkins Memorial Scholarship, Janei
Ruth Wolf of Clifton,
Prepared by Clifton High School,
Clifton, New Jersey. *
Amelia Richards. Scholarship and
Anna Powers Memorial Scholarship,
Nancy . Lee Olken of Watertown,
Massachusetts. Prepared by Water-
town High School, Watertown, Mass-
achusetts.
District IIT Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, Katherine Jean Kohlhas
of San. Mateo, California. Prepared
by Granby High School, Norfolk, Vir-
ginia,.
District IV Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, Jo Ann Aschenbrenner
of South Charleston, West Virginia.
Prepared by South Charleston High
Soe South Charleston, West Vir-
ginia.
Undergraduate Association Scholar-
ship, Ann-Margreth Krohn of Strom-
stad, Sweden. Entered on transfer
from Hogre Allmanna Laroverket for
flickor in Goteborg, Sweden.
Philadelphia Board. of Education
Scholarship, Judith Louise Beck of
Chalfont, Pennslyvania. Prepared by
Abraham Lincoln High School, Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania.
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Gillian Clare Pearson of Cham-
Memorial
bersburg, Pennsylvania. Prepared by
Kearney . High - School, Kearney,
Nebraska. :
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship and Anna Margaret and
Mary Sloan’ Scholarship, Patricia
Cecelia Anne Murphy of West New-
ton, Massachusetts, Prepared by New-
ton High School, Newton, Massachu-
setts. :
The Christian R. and Mary F. Lind-
back Foundation Scholarship, Miriam
Ann Gisolfi of Bronxville, New York.
Prepared by Roosevelt High School,
Yonkers, New York.
Gertrude Howard McCormick Schol-
arship, Eleanor Marie Easton of An-
dover, Massachusetts. Prepared by
pn Academy, Andover, Massachu-
setts,
Pennsylvania -State Scholarship,
Elizabeth Anne Schenk of Coatesville,
Pennsylvania. Prepared by Scott High
School, Coatesville, Pennsylvania.
District IIT Alumnae _ Regional
Scholarship and Florence Morse Pal-
mer Scholarship, Blair Spencer Diss-
ette of Bethesda, Maryland. Prepared
by Chatham Hall, Chatham, Virginia.
Trustees’ Scholarship, Ruth Lee
Deitelbaum of Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
vania. Prepared by Olne High
School, Philadelph Pennsylvania.
William Fran Scholarship,
Susan meee Ree 4 of tants, —
essee. repare vy aywood -
Schoot, “Brownsville;*Tennessce, a
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Paricia Joan Cain of Lake
Charles, Louisiana. Prepared by Lake
Charles High School, Lake Charles,
Louisiana.
Minnie Murdock Kendrick Memorial
en Faith J. Kessel of Phila-
delphia, ennsylvania. Prepared by
Philadelphia. High School r_ Girls,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
French Government Scholarship,
Mary’ Elizabeth Boal of Haute
Savoie, France. Entered on transfer
from ‘Institut de Crete, Haute Savoie,
ce. .
Shippen Huidekoper Scholarship and
Anna M and Mary Sloan
Scholarship, Katherine Eliza Rosen-
berger of New Castle, Pennsylvania.
Prepared by New Castle High School,
New Castle, Pennsylvania.
District IV Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, Janis Maria Win of
Akron, Ohio. Prepared by Old Trai!
School, Akron, Ohio.
Disrtict Itt Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, f HH
of Lothian land. red by
Stuart Halli, Staunton, Virginia.
we On this gay day, fey day, heyday, Mayday morn! _
New Jersey. |
Scholarship, Jean Marian Lucas of
Bridgeport, Connecticut. Prepared by
Bassick High School, Bridgeport,
Connecticut.
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Sandra Karolyn Erickson o0i
Hibbing, Minnesota. Prepared by Hibb-
ing High School, Hibbing, Minnesota.
Trustees’ Scholarship, Sally Anne
Powers of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
Prepared by Radnor High School,
Wayne, Pennsylvania.
Ella Sout Scholarship and _ Iota
Lambda Sorority Scholarship, Chris-
tine Annette Philpot of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, repared by Philadel-
phia High School for Girls, Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia Board. of Education
Scholarship, Ruth Olga Kasdin of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared
by Abraham Lincoln High School,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
Scholarships to be held in the
Junior Year
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Joanne’ Nina Field of New
York City. Prepared by Bronx -High
School of Science, Bronx, New York.
National Merit Award, Susan Bar-
bara Downey of Jackson, Mississippi.
Prepared by Central High School,
Jackson, Mississippi, _and Murrah
High School, Jackson, Mississippi.
New England Alumnae_ Regional
Scholarship and James E. Rhoads
Memorial Junior Scholarship, Martha
Stevens of Exeter, New Hampshire.
Prepared by Winsor School, Boston,
Massachusetts.
National Merit Award, Juanita Eliz-
abeth Barrett of New York City. Pre-
pared by the Spence School, New York
City.
Chinese Scholarship, May Jen of
Silver Spring, Maryland. Prepared by
Montgomery Hills High School, Silvei
Spring, Maryland.
Bryn Mawr Club of New Haven
Scholarship and Lila M. Wright Mem
orial Scholarship, Cornelia Margaret
Broekhuysen of Branford, Connecti-
cut. Prepared by Branford High
School, Branford, Connecticut.
The Presser Foundation Scholar-
ship, Edith King McKeon of Amherst,
Massachusetts. Prepared by North-
field School for Girls.
Trustees’ Scholarship and Pennsyl-
vania State Scholarship, Joan Bern-
stein of Eilkins Park, Pennsylvania.
Prepared by Cheltenham High School,
Elkins. Park, Pennsylvania.
Lillia Babbitt Hyde Foundation
Scholarship, Cynthia Ann Secor o
Franklin Park, Illinois.- Prepared by
Leyden Community High School,
Franklin Park, Illinois. '
Chinese Scholarship, Julia Chang of
Arlington, Massachusetts. Prepared b:
Arlington . High School, Arlington,
Massachusetts.
Jeanne Crawford Hislop Memorial
Scholarship and Anna Hallowell Mem-
orial Scholarship, Karen Elizabeth
Carlson of Cincinnati, Ohio. -Prepared
by Walnut Hills High School, Cin-
einnati, Ohio,
Bryn Mawr Club of Princeton, New
Jersey, Scholarship, Eva Martin of
New Brunswick, New Jersey. Pre-
pared by New Brunswick High School,
ew Brunswick, New Jersey.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Kathleen Elizabeth Schueller
of New Rochelle, New York. Prepared
by New Rochelle High School, New
Rochelle, New York.
Mary McLean and Ellen A. Murter
Memorial Scholarship; Judith Miriam
Rubenstein of New York City. Pre-
pared by The Dalton School, New
York City.
Georgie W. Yeatman : Scholarship,
Margaret Lanniee Simpson of Arling-
ton, Virginia. Prepared by Sanford
‘Preparatory School, Hockessin, Del-
aware.
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Loretta Stern of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared. }
Germantown High School, Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania.
Lorenz-Showers Scholarship, Sue
Colman Jones of Wilton, Connecticut.
Prepared by Staples High School,
Westport, Connecticut.
New England Alumnae. Regional
Scholarship and Special Scholarship,
Christina Lydon of Milton,
Massachusetts. Prepared by Ursuline
Academy, Boston, Massachusetts.
Eastern Pennslyvania and Southern
New Jersey Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Barbara Anne Broome of Mar-
gate, New Jersey. Prepared by Atlan-
tic City High School, Atlantic City,
New Jersey. :
National Merit Award and’ Seven
College Conference Scholarship (Hon-
orary), Judith Gayle Polsky of St.
Joseph, Missouri. Prepared by Central
High School, St. Joseph, Missouri.
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship and Evelyn Hunt Scholarship,
Alice Jean Newman of Chicago, Illin-
ois. Prepared. by Hyde Park High
School, Chicago, Illinois.
Mary Peabody Williamson Scholar-
ship, Roselyn Jane Goldberg of Bronx,
New York. Prepared by Bronx High
School of Science, Bronx, New York.
E. Merrick Dodd and Winifred H.
ok Beek re oe Bot of New
or’ y. Prepar y Hunter College
High School, New York City. -
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Lynne Beth Levick of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared
by Philadelphia H School for Girls,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ,
Eastern Pennsylvania and Southern
_. ais 4 pment Regional Schol-
arship an ran Marion Simps
Scholarsh oa
Atlantic City, New Jersey. Prepared
by Atlantic City High School, Atlantic
City, New Jersey.
Proctor and Gamble Scholarship
and Special Scholarship, Loralee Mac-
Elke OL aa Oregon. Prepared
y a nt High-Sehool,..P
Oregon. : ses
‘hiladelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Susan Nina Schonberg of
Philadelphia, pene ants. Prepared
by West Philadelphia High School,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Class of 1903 Scholarship and Book
Shop Trustees’ Scholarship,
Ellen _Guggenheim of. Penns Grove,
New Jersey. Prepared by Penns Grove
Regional High School, Penns Grove,
New Jersey. Ay ee
Scdamsdis, Name We: Seana
DP, a avis of
Leavenworth, Kansas. Prepared b
Immaculata High School, Leaven-
wove cae tee nt Scholarship
velyn unt oO)
Yaretton! De Molin of Park
ew Jersey. Prepar y Park Ri
High School, Park Ridge, New Jersey.
Serena Hand
Sa
Scholarship, Kate Wilson Jordan 0!
Brooklyn, ‘New York. Pre ured ‘s
Re ogee ig“omad™ ‘Lindback
* 4 an . ik
Foundation Scho D,
Sook: Kimm of Seoul,
DY "4 A : an ~
Emely
Ri
Cc M
LMR? watnee phereee iomeriel
ip, Jana Dagnija Varlejs of.
Dr. Zelma George
Talks On Spirituals
“The Negro spiritual is the
slave’s story about slavery,” said
Dr. Zelma George, sociologist and
singer, Monday night in her lect-
ure on the human relations value
of the spirituals.
Unable to bring any material
evidences of his culture on the
crowded slave ships, the slave
arrived in the United States with
“cultural baggage”—in particular,
knowledge of certain musical tech-
niques and rhythms. The planta-
tion owner deliberately bought
slaves who spoke different dialects,
so that it would be hard for them
to combine against him, and thus
their only form of communication
was music. Christianity - inspired
both the themes of many spirit-
uals and the hopeful sentiment
which prevades them—a lack of
hatred which has often been mis-
interpreted as a sign that the
Negro was “congenitally submis-
sive.” Far from being indifferent
to his condition, the Negro was
conscious that it. was wrong, but
found consolation in his music, and
an identification with the oppress-
ed Israelites of the Old Testament.
Through study of the writings
of escaped slaves, Dr. George was
able to learn how certain words
of the spirituals had been used as
a code. Canaan, for example,
which run-away slaves hoped to
f|reach. Egypt was the South, Pha-
aroh the slave owner, and Moses,
an ex-slave woman who led more
than 400 other slaves to freedom.
Dr. George frequently illustrat-
ed her points with songs, in which
she was joined by the audience.
After her talk, she answered
questions and then the group went
on for another hour, singing one
favorite spiritual after another.
As Dr. George said, “Music is the
best public relations, man the
Negro could have had.”
Interfaith
The chapel sermon this Sunday
evening. will ibe delivered by the
Reverend Edmund A. Steimle, a
Lutheran minister. His topic will
be “The Secret Name for God.”
The Reverend Edmund Steimle
has been well received at.many
colleges and universities. He has
addressed southern colleges, and
in addition has been a pastor for
the Lutherans of Wellesley, Har-
vard, Radcliffe, and M.I.T. for
twelve years. This is the first time
that the Bryn Mawr Interfaith
Association has sponsored him.
At present Mr. Steimle is a
professor of practical theology
(homiletics) at the Lutheran
Theological Seminary in Philadel-
phia.
Mr. Steimle’s preparation for
such a post consists of undergrad-
uate work: at Princeton University
and graduate work at both the
University of Pennsylvania and
the Lutheran Theological Semin-
ary at Philadelphia.
Honorary doctorates have been
conferred upon this Lutheran min-
ister by Wagner College and Muh-
lenberg College.
_ Mr. Steimle’s activities include
four years of preaching over the
radio. He has also published many
religious articles including a book
d,}entitled Are You Looking for God.
- Marriages
(Marian Radcliffe Bonner ’59 to
Andrew. Fulton III. .
‘Cicely (Robin) Hicks to Douglas
Warren Meaker.
=
Births
To Mr. and Mrs. T. Alan Brough-
ton, a daughter, Shannon Leigh
Broughton.
To Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith
(Mary Morriss Gibbs 67) a daugh-
r, Beverly Gibbs Smith.
meant Canada, the promised land +
To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rupen, _
rt
Thursday, May 1, 1958
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Teutons, Young Colts, Bashful Oxen
Figure in May Days of Bygone Past
by Rita Rubinstein
The original May Day celebra-
tion began with the Northern Teu-
tonic peoples to whom the first of
the month symbolized the passing
sung the ‘Latin hymn from Rock
Tower. The senior class presidents
have been crowned Queen of the
May to enthusiastic cheers from
the college below, and the college
Saturday Concert,
Especially Haydn
Mass, Is Lauded
by Rosemary Said
The concert given by the Bryn
Two Years of Thought and Filina:
Dresto-A Homebuilt!) Harpsichord
by Miriam Beames
“The making of harpsichords is
an art, based on all the scientific
festival to festival, and in spare
moments taking measurements
from antique harpsichords in mu-
seums all over the continent. She
as been fortified with breakfast
‘Wéfore Maypolling on the green.
Awards and scholarships have been
announced annually.
‘knowledge yet available. You are
venturing into a field, the difficul-
ty of which you will only under-
stand after many years of work.
Mawr College Chorus and the
Princeton University Choir Iast
Saturday at Goodhart Hall was
of the intensely cold weather and
the coming of the short spring and
summer of the North. But the
wrote voluminous letters back, fill-
ing in a form of vital statistics
about each instrument she visted
Bry ph read fete has a significance Occasionally there were slight|one of the finest that has been/The solution to those difficulties|and adding information about
and sad all its fone modifications. In 1918, “The omis | heard at Bryn Mawr. The singers| has occupied the lives of some of| parts which are standard on all
The idea was conceived by Evan-| sion of senior breakfast in Rocke- were all competent, the musical| the greatest instrument builders in hanpsichords, various types of
wood used, and other important
data. In a moment of excitement,
she telephoned Anne Farlow from
London, but “all we did was ar-
gue.”
In the meantime, Anne F. and
Mr. Warner were busy talking to
“the most priceless collection of
people” in an effort to find out how
harpsichords are made in the pres-
ent day. Anne read a.book on
mechanical drawing and _ spent
most of the summer making plans
and layouts, but since “every time
you see a new instrument or get
a new idea, you just have to do the
whole thing over,” none of them
was used. —
She ended up writing to Anne
S. that “in practice we’ll end up
combining a number of tried and
true features plus a couple of new
gimmicks into an instrument that ,
will hopefully be useful for con-
tinuo and chamber music purposes.
It must also be easily maintainable
and within our collective capabili-
ties to build. One very important
feature is that a maximum of the
parts can easily be changed or re-
placed in case we make a disas-
trous mistake midstream.” And
this is, in effect, what they built.
But problems were still far
from solved. Anne S. favored a
wooden instrument of the antique
type, while Mr. Warner and Anne
F. held out for metal (which they
eventually -used—‘“after all, we
aren’t cabinet makers”). \Another
major concern was the size of Pem
West’s doors: what if they built
the hanpsichord, only to find they
couldn’t get it in their room? In
the midst of fantastic plans to
geline Walker Andrews, who was
looking for a way to raise funds
for a new students’ building (to-
day’s Goodhart Hall).
The inspiration came one March
afternoon in 1900 when she was
struck by the beauty of the cam-
pus. “The Bryn Mawr English set-
ting, the rolling hills and well-
tilled fields; grey stone, ivy-cover-
ed buildings of Elizabethan arch-
itecture with spring and May com-
ing over the hills and youth, al-
most 500 strong—waiting merely
for the word—why not an Eliza-
bethan May Day?”
i Six weeks later the first such
' fete took place. And, to be sure,
the costumed Bryn Mawrters’ pri-
vacy was carefully guarded; pho-
tography and publicity were re-
stricted. A 1929 issue of the Col-
lege News commented:
“Today when we are accustomed
to see the women of all ages wear-
ing street gowns 14 inches or more
from the ground or dancing in the
scantiest of clothing—it is difficult
to realize that as late as 1900
such things were not only not done,
but storms of criticism were
aroused ibecause college girls even
ventured to wear their sports skirts
an inch above their shoetops...”
In a later part of the article
“... it was possible for a Phila-
delphia critic to say that the
Elizabethan crowd at Bryn Mawr
‘was as leggy as young colts and
: for the delightful old farmer who
came all the way from Lancaster
to drive his Ay Si belted oxen
in the pageant to exclaim as the
processions started that he never
again would allow his oxen to-see
the history of the world.
Yours sincerely,”
Perhaps._if._they had received
this letter (from a leading maker
of harpsichords) earlier, Anne Far-
low and Anne Sprague might have
hesitated before attempting such
a feat; but by the time of its ar-
rival they were far too interested
in their project to be dissuaded.
It all began one morning two
years ago as they were eating
breakfast. They had been admiring
Dr..Reese’s new harpsichord, and
with a desire to do “something,
just anything” the two Annes had
a brillian tidea: why not build
their own instrument?
Before the novelty of the idea
had a chance to wear off, they
telephoned Anne F.’s cousin, Caleb
Warner, an engineer who was in-
terested in building an electronic
clavichord. He was immediately
enthusiastic, and by summer plans
were under way.
Anne Sprague spent her vaca-
tion in Europe dashing from music
Festival Talk Gives
Views of Moscow
The World Youth Festival in
Moscow was a “study in Russian
propaganda” according to Anne
Hobson, in her illustrated talk
Thursday night in the Art Lecture
room. Anne Hobson ’56, in Eng-
land under a State Department
grant, went to work for the Inter-
national News Service when the
Russian offer was made, She was
one of the 150 Americans who paid
feller marked a departure from
tradition.” Generally, little devi-
Continued on Page 6, Col. 4
selection was very interesting, and
the performers were well-organ-
ized’ under the direction of Robert
Goodale and Carl Weinrich. ~
The opening work, an anthem by
(Richard Gree as sung by the
*
French Clubs Will
e °
Give Anouilh Pla Double Octet who were accompan-
ied by a String quartet. The per-
“We chose Bal des Voleurs be- f @ was the least satisfying
cause it is funny and easy to : :
understand for people who do not]! the evening, for the Octet did
not live up to its fisual high stan-
know French very well,” said
dards.
Joelle de Pontet, new president of
The Princeton University Choir,
the French Club.
The farcical Anouilh play, to be under the direction of Mr, Wein-
rich, followed with a very com-
presented by the French Clubs of
petent rendition of works by
Bryn Mawr and Haverford, at
Skinner Workshop on Friday and
Byrd, Hassler, Handl and Tches-
nokov. The Choir showed a well-
Saturday, is directed by Mr, Gut-
trained steadiness, combined with
wirth and Mr. Curtis, both of
Haverford; Joelle de Pontet is stu-
great expressiveness and lyricism.
The selection of works was espec-
dent director, and ‘Mr. Janschka
ially interesting.
is designing the sets. Among the
characters are three robbers (Jean-
The “Lord Nelson” Mass in D
Minor by Haydn was the climax
Charles Meyer, Nikita Lary,
Pierre Gault), a noble, old and
very aristocratic lady, of a fan-| of the concert. It was performed
ciful temperament (Mme. Simone} by the two choruses and the Bryn
Smith), her cousin, also old (Ran-|Mawr-Haverford Orchestra under
ald Noel Patton), and her two! the direction of Mr. Goodale, The
beautiful, young, _love-stricken| Mass is one of Haydn’s best works,
nieces (Natalia Gortchacow, Lo-| and it was written at the same
period of his life when he compos-
ed the oratorios The Creation and
linne Casanelles).
The Seasons. The score calls for
With the frivolity of the aristo-
cratic Madame as a point of de-
a four-voiced mixed chorus, four
soloists, and. an orchestra of
parture, the play includes several
strings, brass and percussion.
cases of mistaken identity and
The performance was _ well-co-
considerable love interest. Joelle
thought that the group as a whole
ordinated and expressive through-
out the entire work. The chorus
had shown enthusiastic tendencies,
was especially good. Its rendition
and has been co-operative to work
of the fugal section of the “Quo-
v
with, The directors, particularly,
were good, she assured. The only
stumbling blocks were technical in
such a sight’.”’
Since then, the May Day cele-
bration ‘has been held annually
according to tradition; all revered
and time-honored ceremonies have
been observed. Seniors have been
awakened at dawn by sophomores,
have given May baskets to the
College Presidents and Deans, have
nature, such as obtaining enough
help on props and make-up in spite
of other productions and papers.
Stressing the fact that the. play
was enjoyable and not at all diffi-
cult to understand, Joelle conclud-
ed: “It should provide entertain-
ment for all those who come; we
hope to have a large audience!”
singers. Margaret Goodman (so-
niam Tu Solus”, the “Hosanna”
the “Gloria” and the “Qui Tollis”
was outstanding. The
soloists were indiyidually able
Prano) had a long and _ difficult
part to sing, and her performance
of the “Agnus Dei” was very ex-
pressive. Marian Willner, alto, is
$130 for transportation, food and
quartet} housing for the entire time.
After their arrival behind the
Iron Curtain, the group was met
at every stop by a brass band and
crowds of cheering people. In the
the pictures of such scenes a guard
could often be seen in the back-
ground.
break» into.-the building, “‘some-
body finally informed us you really
could take the legs off and tip it
on its side.” They decided to keep
a record of theiraprogress, “so if it
didn’t pan out, we could write a
book.”
‘By the end of the summer they
had purchased a keyboard, decided
to be commended for some very
lyrical passages, especially in the
“Et Incarnatus”. The bass and
tenor, Bruce Adaire and Richard
‘Weeder, were less able than the
soprano and the alto, and conse-
quently the combination was not
as unified in tone as it could have
been.
The Mass is not an easy work to
perform, It: is especially difficult
Observers of the festival
couldn’t help but be impressed by
the great number of well dressed
people attending it. Anne explain-
ed this when she stated that spe-
cial issues of clothing had been
distributed before the festival for
those in» the vicinity of Moscow.
In addition, by stopping the sub-
ways, the Russians guaranteed
on the size of the frame and string
lengths (taken from an instrument
in Boston), and, with Mr, Warner
as master designer, were ready to
go to work. Built of 2 x 4 steel
tubing, the frame was made by
Thanksgiving vacation, and both
Annes spent the majority of
Christmas and Spring vacations at
the Warners’ turning out masses
“Things Are Seldom What They Seem”
And So Shall .Comedy of Errors Prove
as the Duke, and Keith Bradley as
\Aegean.
“The blocking is quite tricky,”
added Jinty. “There are long mo-
ments when nothing happens, but
Mr. Butman has done a good job
by Alex van Wessem
The president of College Theatre,
Jinty Myles, was sprawled on the
floor, surrounded with paints and
colored poster paper. ‘When ask-
ed why College Theatre chose The
‘Comedy of Errors as their spring
production, Jinty looked up ab-
sently and replied, “Actually, we
‘have two brothers who could pass
for twins, so .. .”’ She went on to
-explain that the play revolves
of it.” The sets consist of ladders
and “flats,” to suggest the hous-
es. They as well as the costumes
—‘‘based on Breughel and very
pretty”—are done in primary col-
‘length and musical content.
orchestra required as much work
to put together because of its
The
as the voices. It bravely support-
ed the singers throughout the
Mass, its only weakness lying in
thronged streets, festival and sta-
dium.
The participants in the festival
from outside the Iron Curtain
countries were allowed much free-
dom. However, since the Russian
of small pieces—“hours of sweat-
shop work, filing, drilling a hun-
dred fifty of everything.”
\After Spring vacation, it was
mostly Mr. Warner’s work; he had
Promised it for a concert on June
ors, to maintain simplicity.
As for the play itself, Jinty felt
that although it was sheer comedy,
it did have something to say, a
“Shakespeare always has a fanas-
tic understanding of the human
being.” ‘The point, if any, might of ideas did not take place was = :
be in the fact that people often that the Communist delegates had ance,” to which a contact micro-
see in others the opposite of what sii - been too well rehearsed to be spon- Phone may be added, in principle
they really are, ~-She~added-that, Election Notice ~|tancous. Hike an electric guitar. Its build-
in keeping with the tradition of 1 Since the de-Stalinization of|°™S Were worried thatit—might——
College Theatre, they are doing Russia, all the statues and pictures | ‘U'" Out sounding like one, but: “by
Shakespeare this spring; Comedy of Stalin have been removed ex-|2 Stroke of. luck, it. doesn’t.”
is rarely done by. amateurs, and} Wishnack .’69. as Chairman of| cent for those which cost the peo-| “Virginia”, as it was named
even more rarely performed in the] Freshman Week Committee. ple a great amount to erect. But,| (its generic name-is a virginal),
uncut version, The public, will}: The Curriculum Commitee an-/the greatest reminder of all,| arrived at Bryn Mawr in Septem-
have a chance to see this interest-| nounces the election of Ann Way-|Stalin’s body is on view next to| ber and has resided in the Kones’
ing-sounding production on May 9/ land ’59 as its new Chairman. Lenin’s in Red Square. He remains| oom ever since. The owners have
and 10, at 8:30 in Roberts Hall,) The French Club announces the|there more because he is a scien-| Played it constantly for substitute
Haverford. iby election of Joelle de Pontet ’60 as/tifie feat than because of any| organ and piano practice, harmony
The cry of “A conclusion, Jinty,| its new president. : popularity he may still have. It| exercises, and occasional chamber
a conclusion” fell 6n-deaf ears and} The Science Club announces the|seems the Russians have formal-| music.
piles of colored paper as everyone| election of Diane Taylor ’59 as/dehyde constantly flowing through| It was used in December in Bob
industriously returned to work.| its new president. his veins. Anne’s final comment on|Benjemin’s overture to “Waiting
and John Knight as one pair of| Arleen muttered. vaguely, “It will| The newly-formed Italian Club the bodies was: “Stalin looks good,| for Godot” at Haverford, and at
twins, Lynn Allen and Phil Miller} be jolly good fun,” whch is as good| announces the election of Diana/but Lenin’s getting alittle. : : =
“as the other set, Dick Bluestein !a conclusion as any. ~ |Dismuke "59 as its first president.
sponsors had housed the visitors
in the suburbs, they had difficulty
in going anywhere unless they were
fluent in the Russian language or
had an appointed guide, Anne said
that one reason a free introduction
the brass section.
The combined efforts of the cho-
ruses and the orchestra under the
direction of Mr. Goodale should be
especially praised in view of the
short time spent in rehearsing
the entire ensemble.
2, and “spent two or three months
assembling it long into the night.”
The completed instrument “built
entirely out of ordinary, everyday
materials” has a metal sound board
“with surprisingly good reson-
“around two sets of twins; the up-
_perclass brother has a twin who is
' the servant of another upperclass
noble ,whose servant is the twin
of the first nobleman .. . “some-
what confusing,” added Jinty
helpfully,
The play, which is based on a
a: work, - tne % Adie 0
Plautus, offers five women’s parts:
Kathy Kohlhas will play the wife
of one twin (which is another mat-
ter!) and Nina Broekhuysen. will
be her sister, conveniently paried
off with the other twin; Arleen
Beberman is a courtesan (at the
raised eybrow, Arleen added for
the benefit of the News “Sort of
geisha girl—not a really bod wom-
an)”—and Jane Parry will repre-
sent the Abbess. Luce is played
by Alice Casciato. Among the more
important men’s parts are Charles
The Coordinating Council an.
nounces the election of Angelyn
with Princeton last Saturday.
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Thursday, May 1, 1958
Proposed
Proposed by the Revisions Com-
mittee:
I, Jurisdiction
A. The Jurisdiction of the Self-
Government Association is inter-
preted as follows:
1. During the college year, in-
cluding all holidays, students stay-
ing in the college shall be’ under
all rules of the Association.
Students staying away from
Bryn Mawr shall be responsible
for not bringing criticism on the
college by their conduct.
2. Every alumna or former
student or guest is under Self-
Government regulations while
staying in the halls. Students are
responsible for seeing that their
day-guests and overnight guests
are acquainted with the rules; the
student, however, will not be sub-
ject to penalty for | the guest’s
subsequent behavior.:
B. The Executive Board re-
serves the right to act at any time
it feels that a student’s conduct is
contrary to the spirit of the rules
or brings discredit to the college,
even though such conduct may not
be specifically dealt with by the
following rules, Any action which
would bring unfavorable notice to
a student and thus lower the pres-
tige of the college, which would
damage its reputation in the pub-
lie’s eye, or which would result in
the demoralization. of the Self-
Government system, is considered
as discreditable to the college.
The Board reserves the right to
request that a guest not return to
college for an overnight visit.
‘Il. Responsibility of Members.
A. Each member of the Assoc-
iation is expected to be familiar
with the rules of the Association
and is on her honor to carry them
out atall times.
B. Each member is urged to
assume _ responsibility for at-
tempting to prevent infringements
of the rules. She may exert social
Revisions
pressure and report infringements
at her discretion. Social pressure
is an attempt to redirect attitudes
and actions which are contrary to
belief in and practice of self-gov-
ernment.
III. Registration and Absence
from College.
A. After dark, a student may:
1. (Go alone to and from the
Paoli Local.
2. Walk or ride a bicycle off
campus in directions other than
the ville only when in groups of
three or when escorted.
3. Use the P&W only when in
groups of three or when escorted.
4. Take a taxi alone from other
that the B.M. station, only if she
notifies the warden.
5. Ride a bicycle only if it is
equipped with lights and tail re-
flector.
B. A student planning to re-
turn to her hall after 10:30 P.M.
must always sign out accurately
before that hour, so that she may
be reached in an emergency. She
must state: her name, destination
in as much detail as posible, means
of return and hour of expected re-
turn. She must record the exact
hour when she returns.
1. Unescorted girls may:
a. Sign out until 12:80 to plac-
es of entertainment off campus; to
activities elsewhere on campus;
for walks on campus in groups of
three or more,
ib. Have a 1:30 permission for
a play as well as the opera in
Philadelphia.
ec. Have a 2:00 permission when
returning from a college vacation
(Thanksgiving, Christmas, Inter-
session, Spring and Summer).
d. Sign out to Goodhart until
11:30, Sunday through Thursday,
and until 12:30 on Friday and Sat-
urday.
2. A student is considered escort-
ed when accompanied by family,
friends of the family, a hostess,
To Self - Gov’s Constitution
‘or responsible friends of her own
age not in residence in a hall. A
student thus escorted may:
a. Sign out until 2:00 A.M. any
night of the week. If escorted
onto the Paoli Local she may also
return at 2:00.
b. Sign out until 3:30 for for-
mal dances off campus if she has
notified the Hall President in ad-
vance.
c, Have a 1% hour permission
after formal and informal college
dances. :
d, Sign out to Goodhart until
11:30, Sunday through Thursday,
and until 2:00 on Friday and Sat-
urday.
She must give the name of her
escort in her sign-out.
3. The hours for Skinner Work-
shop and Applebee Barn are the
same as for Goodhart.
4. -A girl may not sign out to
Dalton or Park unless she has the
written permission of a professor
and of the Director of Halls.
C. With the understanding that
the reputation of the college is
maintained, a student may sign out
for the night at any time, in care
of: her family, a private home in
care of an appropriate person will-
ing and able to assume responsi-
bility; or a respectable hotel any-
where except in Philadelphia and
vicinity.
(Permission to spend the night in
a Philadelphia hotel for a major
college weekend must be requested
from Self-Gov before the preced-
ing Wednesday.
A. A student planning to be
away overnight must:
1. Sign out in the overnight
book before 10:30 and must sign in
upon return.
2. Also sign out in the late re-
turn book, according to the rules
for an ordinary sign-out, if she is
planning to return from an over-
night after 10:30.
3. If spending the night in an-
other hall, register in the over-
night book of that hall, as well as
sign out in her own hall. She
must give the name of the gi
with whom she is staying. (Ov
night guests must also sign in to a
hall, using a permission giver).
4. Be accompanied by another
responsible person, or by another
student for an overnight baby-sit.
D. In any situation, if a stu-
dent, after leaving college, wishes
to be signed out or to change her
signout, she must telephone or
wire a Permission Giver who will
enter it in the Late Book or the
Overnight Book. If there is no
Permission Giver in her hall, she
must try in other halls until one
is reached,
If not signed out, the student
must telephone before 10:30. In
order to change a permission, the
student must telephone before the
hour of expected return of her
original sign-out. It is suggested
that all changes for overnight be
made before 12:30.
E. If a student wishes to leave
the hall after 10:30, she may do
so if she gets special permission
from the Hall President, Vice-
President, or, in their absence,
from a Senior Permission Giver,
and makes arrangements with the
‘Warden,
F. Students must telephone the
‘Warden when unavoidably delay-
ed beyond the limit of their sign-
out, They must attempt to call
the Warden before the deadline of
their sign-out and then return to
college as soon as possible.
IV. Smoking (no change).
V. Drinking. The Association
does not condone any conduct
which indicates that a student has
an
Events in Philadelphia
Waiting for Godot—Philadelphia Actor’s League production of Samuel
PLAYS:
Beckett’s play,
MUSICAL EVENTS:
opened at Academy of Music Foyer, Monday.
Barber Shop Quartet Concert—Seventh annual festival of harmony at
Academy, Saturday evening.
NEW FILMS
Cowboy—Western with Glenn Ford, Jack. Lemmon, Anna Kashfi, Brian
Donlevy, Goldman, Wednesday.
Sing, Boy, Sing—Musical, with Tommy Sands, Lili Gentle, Edmond
O’Brien, and Cattle Empire—Western with Joel*McCrea. Stanton,
Wednesday.
Another Time, Another Place—Melodrama, with Lana Turner, Barry
Sullivan. Stanley, Thursday.
Paradise Lagoon—Barrie’s “The Admirable Crichton,” with Kenneth
More, Sally Ann Howes, Diane Cilento, Cecil Parker.
Hill, Friday. ‘
Green
been drinking. No fermented bev-
erages are allowed on Campus.
Offenses will be severely dealt
with.
VI. Dress (no change).
VII. Hall Regulations.
A. Men may be received in
students’ rooms until 6:30 P.M.
The hour at which men may enter
rooms in the morning shall be de-
cided by each hall separately.
LEGISLATURE TO VOTE BE-
TWEEN THESE TWO SUGGES-
TIONS.
Fathers may be received in the
rooms until 10:30 P.M.
All men must be out of the hall
at 10:30 P.M. when the doors are
locked. The doors may remain
open, and men may be received in
the parlors until midnight on the
nights of formal dances at the
college, with the permission of the
Executive Board.
B. Other rules concerning quiet
hours, etc., shall be determined in
each hall.
VIII. Deanery (no change).
IX. Non-Resident Rules (no
change).
X. Executive and Advisory
Boards (no change).
ACADEMIC HONOR SYSTEM
No changes except the follow-
ing: ,
Concerning quizzes:
Unless it had been otherwise
stated, quizzes will begin at ten
minutes past the hour. When time
is up, students are responsible for
stopping immediately.
A take-home exam or quiz is
considered to run from the time
the student opens the exam
through the time limit specified
by the professor. Unless stated to
be an open-book exam, a student
may not use outside help. .
Engagements
Phyllis Hall ’56 to Edward King.
Elizabeth Hilgenberg ex ’58 to
David Heminway.
Kathleen Craig
Knight.
Betsy Miller ’567 to Donald Lan-
dis.
to Spencer
Marriages ©
E. C. Stimpson to Robert Ben-
nett,
Anne Coe ’56 to Lambert Hey-
niger,
Mary Kemp ’57 to Victor Beh-
rens.
e Paula Sutter ’57 to Edward
€ Fichter. .
That’s why American Express Student Tours are expertly BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN Marian Radcliffe Bonner ’59 to
planned to include a full measure of individual letsure— OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Andrew Fulton III.
ample free time to discover your Europe—as well as Breakfast ..... rel, veeeees 9:00-11:00 A.M. Cicely Hicks ’68. f Douglas
the most comprehensive sight-eocing Frdand. available LUNCHGON: SET cae ...+12:00- 2:00 P.M. (Warren Meaker.
sayenere! Visit England, Scotland, d, Holland, WOR THE SS idles 3:30 - 5:00 P.M.
Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, The Dis. is sce. Wecet, veseees 5:90-7:30. P.M. The Suberben.teavel
Rivieras and France—accompanied by distinguished 6 ge ravel Agency
: : ; te : Sunday Dinner .......... ++ eeee412:00- 7:30 P.M. SUBURBAN SQUARE, ARDMORE
= mace =-eni0y superb American service CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY Agents for Airlines, Steamship, Tours,
eh iri SPECIAL PARTIES AND BANQUETS ARRANGED Resorts
10 Special Tours . . . 48 to 68 days . . . via famous ships: Telephone -Lombaert St. and Morris Ave. NO EXTRA CHARGE TO YOU!
United States, Liberté, Nieuw Amsterdam, Atlantic, LAwrence 5-0386 Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. TEEEPHONE It ‘¥a006
Italia, New York. $1,198 up. . Complete Line of Imported
Other tours available . . . from 35 days . . . $769 up. and Handicrafted Gifts
7 You al _
i TRAVEL NOW_—PAY LATER :
Bx when you go American Express! Not sure of her size?
ota eT Give jewelry as gifts
eZ) hy Sing mie: al All styles! No sizes!
sg local Travel Agent or WALTER J. COOK
: \ oe a Bryn Mawr
: me a ay dauent hcees LA 5-0570 LA 5-0326
. or simply mail the handy coupon. JEANNETT’S /
Bryn Mawr Flower Shop, Inc
Member
Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association
Wm. J. Bates, Jr. 823 Lancaster Ave. :
Manager Bryn Mawr, Pa.
American Express TRAVEL SERVICE
65 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. cfo Trasel Sales Division _
Yes! Please do eet pe ae ete information
about 1958 Student Tours of Europe! C-56
eigenen eae aR SSS een eevee ee
NC pe DE OIE A OIE SE eG
DN hed pibld Chin idan COIs ws
Meet the Merrie Month o
May in cotton. shirts a
handmade bags from:
JOYCE LEWIS
1 PAA DAR Ay
Thursday, May 1, 1958
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
Continued from Page 2, Col. 4
Narimasu High School, Tokyo, Japan.
New England Alumnae_ Regional
Scholarship,.Barbara..Helen..Moffat of
Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared by
Girls’ Latin School, Dorchester, Mass-
achusetts.
Scholarships to be held in the
Sophomore Year
James E. Rhoads Memorial Schol-
arship, Lois Dorais Potter of Neuilly
sur Seine, France. Prepared by Paris
American High School, St. Cloud,
France. ,
Bryn Mawr Club of New Haven
Scholarship and Katharine Hepburn
Scholarship, Francisca Georgina Ayala
Duran-Reynals of New Haven, Con-
necticut. , Prepared by Prospect Hill
School, New Haven, Connecticut. ’
Bryn Mawr Club of ‘Southern Cali-
fornia Scholarship and Special Schol-
arship, Diana Marie Burgess of Pasa-
dena, California. Prepared by John
Muir High School, Pasadena, Califor-
nia.
Chinese Scholarship and _ Special
Scholarship, Amy Cassandra Cheng of
Hong Kong, China. Prepared by Dio-
cesan Girls’. School, .Hong ’ Kong,
China;
Gould Foundation Scholarship, Anne
Linda Reisch of Chicago, Illinois. Pre-
pared by Carl Schurz High School,
Chicago, Illinois. &
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Catherine Lee Clarke of York,
Nebraska. Prepared by York High
School, York, Nebraska.
Mary Anna Longstreth Memorial
Scholarship, Kathleen Ann Livezey of
Norman, Oklahoma. Prepared by Nor-
man bi School, Norman, Oklahoma.
Foundation Scholarship and West-
town School Scholarship, Elizabeth
Farson Levering of Ararat, Virginia.
Prepared by Westtown School, West-
town, Pennsylvania.
New England Alumnae _ Regional
Scholarship and William Franklin
Scholarship, Matina Souretis of Dor-
chester, Massachusetts, Prepared by
Girls’ Latin School of Dorchester,
Massachusetts.
Abby Slade Brayton Durfee Schol-
arship, Evelyn Bullitt Cardwell of St.
Louis, Missouri. Prepared by Mary
Institute, St. Louis, Missouri.
New England Alumnae. Regional
Scholarship, Nancy Virginia ORoak of
Waban, Massachusetts. Prepared by
Newton High ~ School, Newtonville,
Massachusetts.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
.Germantown..-High School,
More Scholarship List
arship, Susan Szekely of New York
City. Prepared by Riverdale Country
School for Girls, New York City.
Dorothy Davenport Scholarship,
Jane Allston Loveless of Gallatin,
Tennessee, Prepared by Gallatin
High School, Gallatin, Tennessee.
Florence and Dorothy Child Mem-
orial Scholarship, Susannah McCord
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pre-
pared by Germantown Friends School,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
District III (The South) Alumnae
Regional Scholarship and Maria Hop-
per Scholarship and Special Scholar-
ship, Carole Adair Nichols of Lake
Charles, Louisiana. Prepared by Lake
Charles High .School, Lake Charles,
Louisiana. ; :
General Motors National Scholar-
ship, Hanna Wallace Houston Woods
of Litthe Rock, Arkansas. _ Prepared
by Little Rock Central High School,
Little Rock, Arkansas.
Trustees’ Scholarship and Philadel-
phia Board of Education Scholarship,
Judith Libby Lefkowitz of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania. Prepared b
Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania.
Alice Perkins Coville — Scholarship,
Judith Rita Oolie of Spring Valley,
New York. Prepared by Spring Valley }
High School,
York.
Maria Hopper Scholarship, Barbara
Victoria Zajac of Trenton, New Jer-
sey. Prepared by Hamilton High
School, Trenton, New Jersey.
Target Rock Foundation Scholar-
ship, Irene Jane Kwitter of Bronx,
New York. Prepared, by Bronx High
School of Science, Bronx, New York.
Spring Valley, New
District Iv Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, Cary Webb Hank of
Toledo, Ohio. Prepared by Maumee
ona Country Day School, Maumee,
oO.
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Patricia Judith Probes of
Chicago, Illinois. Prepared by Labor-
atory School, University of Chicago,
Chicago, Illinois.
Cordelia Clark Sowden Scholarship,
Elizabeth Florence Hughes of Eller-
son, Virginia. Prepared by Collegiate
School, Richmond, Virginia.
Cordelia Clark Sowden Scholarship,
Lynn Sagle of Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
vania. Prepared by Philadelphia High
School for Girls, Philadelphia, Penn-
sylvania,
Class of 1920 Memorial Scholarship,
Brenda Lee Tillberg of Proctor, Ver-
mont. Prepared by Proctor High
School, Proctor, Vermont.
Ruth Fletcher Memorial Scholar-
ship, Charlotte Ann Pretty of Ard-
more, Oklahoma. Prepared by Ard-
more Senior High*School, Ardmore,
Oklahoma,
District III (The South) Alumnae
Regional Scholarship and Cordelia
Clark Sowden Scholarship, Catharine
Maner Lucas of Charlotte, North
Carolina. Prepared by Myers Park
High School, Charlotte, North Caro-
lina.
Special Scholarship, Deborah Louise
Smith of Andover, Massachusetts.
Prepared by Abbot Academy, An-
dover, Massachusetts.
Mary E. Stevens Scholarship, Re-
becca Giraud Hughes of South Pom-
fret, Vermont. Prepared by Woodstock
Country School, South Woodstock,
Vermont,
Frances Marion Simpson _ Scholar-
ship, Betsy Ann Frantz of Chambers-
burg, Pennsylvania. Prephred by > St.
Mary’s School, Peekskill, New York.
Bryn Mawr Club of Northern Cali-
fornia Scholarship and Seven College
Conference Scholarship, Patricia Lee
Jacobsen of Eureka, California. Pre-
pared by Eureka High School, Eureka,
California.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Nancy Lynn Hankin of Bing-
hamton, New York. Prepared by Bing-
hamton Central High School, Bing-
hamton, New York.
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Artemisa Rubio of Douglas, Ari-
zona. Prepared by Douglas Senior
High School, Douglas, Arizona.
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Barbara Edith Toan of Bill-
ings, Montana. Prepared by Billings
High School, Billings, Montana.
Special Scholarship, Jacquelyn Kay
Goad of Baltimore, Maryland. Pre-
pared by Towson High School, Tow-
son, Maryland,
New England Alumnae _ Regional
Scholarship, Susan Fitz Randolph
Kenny of Providence, Rhode Island.
Prepared by Lincoln School, Provid-
ence, Rhode Island.
District IIL (Washington, «Cy
Alumnae Regional Scholarghip,\ Jane
Rutherford Taylor of Falls Church,
Virginia. Prepared by Falls Church
High School, Falls Church, Virginia.
District II (Northern New Jersey)
Alumnae Regional Scholarship, Rob-
erta Carol Holder of Newark, New
Jersey. Prepared by Arts High School.
Newark, New Jersey.
District III-A Alumnae_ Regional
Scolarship, Martha Resnikov of Phii-
adelphia, -Pennsylvania. Prepared b:
Akiba Academy, Merion, Pennsyl-
vania.
Proctor and Gamble Scholarship,
Martha Jane Hill of Aberdeen, Wash-
ington. Prepared by Weatherwax High
School, Aberdeen, Washington.
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship, Janet Edith Lambor-
ghini of Plymouth, Massachusetts
Prepared by Plymouth High School,
Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Dorothy Davenport
Janet Lynn Douglass of Cleveland,
Ohio. Prepared by Glenville High
School, Cleveland, Ohio.
Medical Scholarships
Hannah E. Longshore Memorial
Medical Scholarships, Martha Sylvia
Bridge of New York City. A. Bryn
Mawr College, to be conferred 1958.
Susan Thurman Kleeman of Brook-
line, Massachusetts. A.B. Bryn Mawr
College 1956.
Jane V. Myers Memorial Medical
Scholarships, -MarJeanne Collins of
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. A. B. Bryn
Mawr College 1957. Anne Mowbray
Haywood of White Plains, New York.
A.B. Bryn Mawr College 1955.
Harriet Judd Sartain Memorial
Scholarships, Sylvia Shields Allen of
St. Paul, Minnesota. A.B. Bryn Mawr
College 1957. June Rita Edelman of
Staten Island, New York. A.B. Bryn
Mawr College 1955. Gwen Phyllis
Gentile of Lansdowne, Pennsylvania.
A.B. Bryn Mawr College, to be con-
ferred 1958. Eleanor Ann Sorrentino
of Brooklyn, New York. A.B. Bryn
Mawr College, to be conferred. 1958,
Marguerite Odette Stein. of Jackson
Heights, New York. A.B. Bryn Mawr
College 1957.
Scholarship,
Notice
Arts Council will sponsor the
British comedy “The Happiest
Days of your Life” (with Ali-
stair Sim) Tuesday, May 6 at
8:30 in Goodhart Auditorium.
Admission wil be 25c¢ per per-
son.
on every pack... your
assurance that you are getting
- EM's exclusive filtering action
Light into that
You get a more
effective filter
on todays L*M
Look for the patent number----
Smokes
cleaner
Tastes
best
Put yourself behind the pleasure
Best tastin’smoke you'll ever find!
end of an L*M. Get the flavor, the
full rich taste of the Southland’s finest cigarette tobaccos. The patented
Miracle Tip is pure white inside, pure white outside, as a filter
should be for cleaner, better smoking. ... e108 Liccerr & Mvms Tosacco Co, -_
May Queen’s
Speech
Continued from Page 1, Col. 1
‘Deans’ Office, after much discus-
sion and debate, has finally insti-
tuted a new course in the Scien-
tific History of the Economic, So-
cial and Political Significance of
Medieval Art in Contemporary So-
ciety to satisfy the numerous stu-
dent complaints about unintegrat-
ed programs. The Library staff
has determined to throw out its
rare book collection to make room
for the much more popular and
erudite “how - to - do - it - yourself”
books—a glaring deficiency in the
Bryn Mawr Library. The faculty
is contemplating raising. summis-
sima cum laude from 97.9 to 98.6
—an indication that the freshman
class must be getting smarter
every year,
“Meals at Bryn Mawr generally
consist of one vitamin—and nu-
trition-packed food capsule for
each student, but of course all
meals are required and fined so
that each girl may have the bene-
fits of the stimulating conversa-
tion.
“Serious problems and discon-
tent have arisen on the campus.
The Undergrad Association has
finally consented to purchase a
univac matching machine for per-
fect dates so that girls will stop
complaining about their lousy
blind dates,
“In view of the highly disturb-
ing situation at Bryn Mawr Col-
lege on Earth, it is recommended
by the Evaluation Committee that
efforts be made, at any cost, to
avoid the dangerous pitfalls of
that institution. At our projected
Continued on Page 6, Col. 3
Compliments
of
HAVERFORD
PHARMACY
: Haverford, Pa.
Look sweet! : Stay neat!
Spring Hair Styles at
THE VANITY SHOPPE
LA 5-1208
TYPEWRITERS
Sold — Rented — Repaired
All Makes
Suburban Typewriter Co. -
39 E. Lancaster Ave.
Ardmore MI 2-1378
eeittttas tthe, ietng, yttttnn, ations, peti gwettag yattean, rene
aa atti atti Tailed
Secretarial
Coaching
for College Women
A short intensive program of
shorthand training especially
designed for girls with college
background. Expert teaching
in an informal atmosphere
with small groups of college-
level associates assures rapid
progress, Before you know it,
you'll be a private secretary in
the field of your choice— ‘
“medicine, ~ law, “advertising, —
publishing, foreign service.
Our discriminate job place-
ment is professional—and free.
Write, call, or telephone
PEnnypacker 5-2100 for
special brochure.
Enroll Now
New Classes Forming
PEIRCE
1420 Pine St., Phila. 2, Pa.
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
‘
Thursday, May 1, 1958
Marianne Moore
Continued’ from Page 1, Col. 2
a wheel is not seen in the rim of
the wheel or the spokes, as it
would be in western philosophies,
but in the space within the spokes.
Her recently published “Dragon”
is one of the reflections from this
Chinese mood.
In “Anthem,” on another hand,
Miss Moore drew inspiration from
the music of an early contrapuntal-
ist, while “No Better Than a Daf-
fodil” was in part suggested by
a portrait of Sir Philip Sidney.
“Bulwarked Against Fate,” ex-
plained Miss Moore, is a plea for
upholding one’s convictions. “If
you know you are doing something
right, even if you can’t defend
yourself, you will be vindicated
in the end. It is not necessary to
do the fighting if you feel you
have done the right thing.”
Miss Moore also read, from her
Collected ‘Poems, “The Mind is an
Enchanting Thing” and “Poetry,”
among others.
The poet prefaced her’ remarks
on her translation of the Fables
of LaFontaine, with a paraphrase
of a comment made by Robert
Frost. “Every good poem is about
the world and how the spirit can
overcome the flesh.” This is what
the Fables are about. The Fables
include both La Fontaine’s trans-
lations of Aesop’s fables and
OFF CAMPUS
SHOPPING NOTE
Mon., Apr. 28—Early to the
Ville to my weekly browse of
the Peasant Shop. Voila! Jap-
anese Lanterns! Perfect for my
current mood of oriental lan-
guor (occidental equivalent, I
suppose for spring laziness).
Straightaway purchased a long
graceful one—$4.00. I saw it
as calm soothing accent in an
atmosphere of scholarly strug-
gle. For take home bought a
pretty globular lantern for
$2.00. An eye-pleasing oroid
ships $3.75—both drip of ro-
mantic aura. Did softly-glow-
ing lanterns detract from Ma-
dame Butterfly? Hall with a
dozen delightful plots buzzing
in head,
some of LaFontaine’s own work.
From this collection Miss Moore
read “The Hen That Laid the
Golden Egg” and the “Mountain
and the Mouse.”
Miss Moore has often been call-
ed a miniaturist, concerning her-
self with minute details about the
objects of her verse. In this writ-
er’s opinion, such assets can de-
tract from the beauty of a poem
when carried to excess, Over-con-
cern for the minute can be “seen
in “Poetry”, a work full of epit-
hets and similes which overwork
the main theme and which limit
the interpretation of the subject
matter of the poem.
It can not be denied, however,
that Miss Moore is thoroughly an
artist and a master of the poetic
medium.
May Queen's
Speech
Continued from Page 5, Col. 5
All-Union Pan«Martian University
of the Cosmos all students, upon
entrance, will be givn pre-fixed
mind-sets to enable them to par-
ticipate fully in group-thinking.
All tendencies toward objectivity,
individually and creativity will be
discouraged. We have’ learned
that students must be treated as.
the children they are, and not as
thinking, mature adults—an_ issue
Dorothy N. Marshall, Dean of the
‘College, still must face.
. “In conclusion, we strongly rec-
ommend that Martian universities
end their exchange programs
with Earthly colleges and that no
more Inter-planetary scholarships
be granted.
THE BERWYN
“Main Attraction
On The Main Line”
DANCING
Every Sunday Night Beginning May 4, at 8:30 p.m.
at the
BERWYN SKATING RINK
Berwyn, Pa.
Between Paoli & Wayne on Lancaster Pike (Route 30)
RICHARD DENNING
and his
Orchestra
FEATURING
RICHARD ANTHONY
Sponsored by
FIRE COMPANY
rwyn, Pa.
FREE PARKING
May Day History
Continued from Page 3, Col. 3
ation from the general activity and
spirit has occurred.
A News observation in 1925:
“Though perhaps the most Eliza-
bethan tendency of the undergrad-
uates today is a certain frank-
ness and vividness of speech, May
Day celebrations were in good
English tradition. Vigorous danc-
ing about May Poles, rolling of
hoops and a great many songs
about the spring, the “lIhude cukoo”
and rising early in the morning
changed the modern efficiency of
the working day campus to a de-
lightful Anglo-Saxon rowdiness.
Too often is this missing from our
blighted intellectual youth.”
“*GCOKE’? 18 A REGISTERED TRADE-MARK. COPYRIGHT 1968 THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.
Absent-minded Professor
Not so absent-minded when you get
right down to it. He remembered the
most important item—the Coke! Yes,
people will forgive you almost anything
if you just remember to bring along
their favorite sparkling drink—ice-cold
Coca-Cola. Do have another, professor!
Oyatey
SIGN OF GOOD TASTE
Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by
THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
From the novel
‘NO SQUARES AT
THE ROUND TABLE”
POD
vou NEVER GET BROUGHT THe AND 6 f bie FAVOR ‘ TASTES GOOD! caneere
T PROMISED! | TURN DESERVES
: (UL CUT OUT!
B 8,
R :
saci necsaithen ae
7 WHO WILL FREE OUR COUNTRY
FROM THE TERRIBLE
NEVER \
VOLUNTEER FOR |
_ NOTHIN’! _£\
COME BACK ALIVE AND
1, SIRE, WILL YOULL GET A PURPLE
RID OUR HEART!
COUNTRY OF :
THE DRAGON! te SIR
GOLLYS
PLAYING IT
cooL- <
SOMETHINGS
Lie ia COOKING/
N
My
E
( ms
XS) ee" XS
LOOK, DAD, THE HEATS ON. 3, WINSTON © LIKE A
At tt a ll iene
ee
BS
GAOZOOKS, M'LORD- A CRUSH-PROOF BOX, T00/
ve oe
Bre
EXCLUSIVE
FILTER! J DEUGHTFUL
College news, May 1, 1958
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1958-05-01
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 44, No. 21
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-vol44-no21