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| ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, E WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1956
: © Trustees of ki Mawr College, 1955
* PRICE 20 CENTS
VOL. Lil, NO. 11 .
Second Semester Will Bring Changes
In Bryn Mawr Faculty And Curriculum}
The beginning of the second
semester on February 7 will bring };
two outstanding new courses to the
curriculum, as well as_ several
changes in the faculty with the re-
turn and departure of professors
on leave.
In the biology department Miss
Gardiner will go on leave; her
work will be divided between Mrs.
White and Mr. Benoit.
Mrs. Berliner of the chemistry
department will change from part |:
to. full-time leave.
Miss Gamble will be teaching
her 17th Century course in English,
while the Creative Writing course
which she has been giving will be
taken over by Mrs. Berthoff. Mrs.
Berthoff has taught here before,
and creative writing is her special
interest. Miss Stapleton will go on
leave, and Miss Woodworth is to
offer her course on Blake.
This course, English 212b, prom-
ises to be especially interesting as
Miss Woodworth plans to discuss
Blake as both a poet and artist.
In preparation she has secured ma-
terial from museums and collec-
tions which will be exhibited in
connection with the course.
‘Mr. Gilbert’s Europe Since 1890
a course will be taught by
Mr. Rich, who is new this year.
iThe department also promises a
fe course. Miss Robbins is plan-
ming a seminar type class in Great
‘Historians. The students will ex-
famine critically a few works rep-
cal writing from ancient times to
‘modern,
_ In studying writers - as. histor-
ians rather than purveyors of in-
formation, the group will discuss
the purpose, methods and style of
whe historian. Their object will be
ithe reading and enjoyment of his-
(tory as great writers have record-
‘ed it; for instance they will study
a man such as Macauley for his
style of writing as well as his con-
tent. States Miss Robbins, “In a
subsidiary way the course will
teach how to read history, but as
usual it will depend upon the stu-
dents in it.” f
Miss deLaguna will resume her
‘courses in anthropology and soci-
ology.
‘Atlantic, Monthly’ Carries Article
Bu Brun Mawr Faculty Member
By Ruth Rasch
In the process of participating
in the “most wonderful feeling” of
losing a prejudice, Mrs. Fetter,
who teaches creative writing here
at Bryn mows, has become active-
ly engaged ‘in the movement for
Negro rights and_ integrated
Negro-white neighborhoods, and is
at present one of the nine unpaid
members of the Philadelphia Com-
mission on Human Rights.
problem the comission is facing
and the work that it is doing, were
described by Mrs. Fetter in an ar-
ticle in the January Atlantic
Monthly under the pen name of
- “Hannah Lees.”
In a recent interview Mrs. Fetter
explained that the prone ap
first job is aiding the NEPC im en-
forcing equal job opportunities for
everyone. As this aim is reached,
more and more Negroes are able
to move into higher cost housing,
and become “an irresistible force
‘which a traditionally immovable
body is anxiously eyeing.” As she
explained in her article, the im-
movablebody is the average white
American with a deeply ingrained
resistance to accepting Negroes as
next door neighbors.
Helping to overcome this ingrain-
ed resistance is the job the com-
mission attempts to do. As Mrs.
Fetter explained it, “the real basis
of prejudice is fear of the un-
known,” and to overcome this fear
and work for “equal opportunity in
every” area” is ‘what the commis-
sion is laboring for, and little by
little succeeding in doing.
-The employees of the commis-
sion work with the whites on the
blocks where a Negro family is
moving for the first time. They
help. absorb the hostility and pre-
‘ vent the violence which often ac-
companies integrating a Negro
family into a formerly all white
neighborhood. However, as_ the
article emphasizes, it is on the
Negro’s willingness to fight the
The| |
hostility and remain, that the suc-
cess of the committee’s work de-
pends. All the commission can do
is enforce his rights*to stay where
he is.
Mrs. Fetter feels that the work
of this commission has been suc-
cessful in Philadelphia, and is like-
ly>to continue to be. “When yo
children are in high schoe] much of
Philadelphia will be integrated,”
shé predicted to this interviewer.
Already Germantown has many
Negro families living in formerly
all white blocks without property
values falling or the neighborhood
visibly deteriorating. Despite the
talk of Germantown “going down,”
Mrs. Fetter feels that this area is
one where the committee’s work
has been especially successful. __
In discussing the problem of in-
tegration in the Southern public
school, and the action being tak-
en in opposition to the Supreme
Court decision by some states,
Mrs. Fetter said she feels that the
South is a “primitive area,” and
added that it is “not the Negro
down South who is primitive, but
the white who is depriving him of
his rights.” In order for the Negro
to achieve the civil rights he is
guaranteed, the South must be
pushed gently, but continually, to
take the necessary steps.
| In the general field of Negro
rights, the most encouraging fac-
-tor emerging from the article and
Mrs. Fetter’s remarks is the devel-
opment of the Negro, who is now
ht The
Negro who remains in white neigh-
borhoods fighting for his rights
until the hostility dies down, and
the Negroes of Montgomery, Ala.,
who are conducting a strike in pro-
test against segregation on public
buses, show that the American
Negro is willing and able to fight.
The Philadelphia Commission on
in over 60 other cities are just help-
ing these Negroes in their struggle
; for. civil rights.
resenting developments in histori- |!
Talks On Marriage
Will Start Feb. 13
The Bryn Mawr marriage lec-
tures will be given this year on six
inning February 13.
lis presented each year, in which
ithe social, psychological, physio-
logical and. practical. aspects of
marriage are presented by a group
of specialists in health, marriage
counseling and family life.
Participating in the presentation
this year are Dr. Genevieve Bur-
‘ton, of the Marriage Oouncil of
'Philadelphia; the Reverend Joseph
'P. Bishop, of the Swarthmore
Presbyterian Churen; and Dr. Eliz-
abeth Humeston, College Physician
of Bryn Mawr.
No Freshmen Admitted
Each session will last approx-
imately an hour and a half and stu-
dents enrolling for the series will
be expected to attend the six ses-
sions. Admission to a single ses-
sion is not permissible, All stu-
dents except freshmen are eligible
to take the course, although upon
application to Dean Broughton,
freshmen may be, admitted if spec-
ial circumstances warrant their
acceptance. ¢
The course offers an opportunity
to ask questions at the discussions,
and individual counseling will be
available to registrants. A _ bibli-
ography of related books wilh be
Human Rights and its counterparts |
provided, and the books listed will
The first of the Anna Howard
‘Shaw lectures will be delivered
‘Wednesday evening, February 8,
in Goodhart by Jacob Viner, Pro-
fessor of Economics and Interna-
tional Finance at Princeton. Five
‘more lectures will be given on suc-
ceeding Wednesdays. The theme
of the series is “British Social
Thought from the Restoration to
Cummings’ Works
Heard At Museum
By Debby Ham
“Maybe if my name were e. e.
cummings, 1 could introduce him
better.” Thus, on Jan. 13 the Phil-
adelphia Fine Arts Center present-
ed the renowned American poet to
a large and appreciative audience,
gathered in wne University Mu-
seum Auditorium. ¢
Mr. Cummings tulfilled every
expectation an audience could have
ol hearing a poet read his own
works. His opening. statement,
‘Writing is an art, and artists are
numan beings,” proved to be a
very apt crivicism OL his own per-
i. Viner To Deliver First Lecture
Of A. H. Shaw Series February 8
lsuecessive Monday evenings, be-|’
The series |}
the American Revolution.”
Lecture topics. include: The Man
of Property’s Utopia, Feb. 8; The
Pulpit in the Service of the Status
Quo, Feb. 22; Life, Liberty, Prop-
erty and the State, Feb. 29; The
Duties and Rewards of the Labor- —
ing Poor, Mar. 7; Some Intima-
tions of New Things to
Mar. 14.
Canadian born Mr. Viner has
had a distinguished career as edu-
cator, economic advisor and au-
thor. He has taught at the Uni-
versity of Chicago and Princeton
and served as visiting lecturer at
various other universities.
He has worked with the U. S.
Shipping Board and the Tariff
Commission and acted as consult-
ing expert to the U. S. Treasury
and Department of State, and spe-
cial assistant to the Secretary of
the Treasury. Mr. Viner was the
alternate U. S. representative to
the Economic Commission of the
League of Nations at Geneva in
1933 and is a fellow of the Ameri-
can Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Mr. Viner’s publications include
Dumping, A Problem in Interna-
tional Trade, Canada’s Balance of
International Indebtedness, Stud-
ies in the Theory of International
tormance. He read with feeling
and without the professional aloot-
ness an artist sometimes employs
be placed in the Reserve Book
Room.
The exact topics of the lectures |'
will be announced later. Last year
the subjects covered were Pre-
courtship Relationships, Courtship,
Choice and Engagement, Careers
and Marriage, Values in Marriage,.
Anatomy and Physiology of Mar-
riage, Practical Information on
Engagement and Marriage.
CALENDAR
Thursday, January 19
8:30 p.m.—Cornelius Vermeule,
ano da Pozzo and the Study of An-
tiquity in 17th Century - Rome.
With slides. Art Lecture Room.
Sunday, January 22
7:30 p.m.—Student Chapel Ser-
vice.
Monday; January 23-
Friday, February 3
(Collegiate examinations.
Tuesday, February 7
8:45. a.m.—Dean (Marshall will
speak at the assembly opening
Semester II.
9:30 a.m.—-Work of Semester II
begins,
Saturday, February 11
‘Maids and Porters Dance.
Sunday, February. 12
7:30 p.m.—Dr.. Edmund A.
Steimle, Professor.._of Practical
Theology at the Lutheran Semin-
ary in Philadelphia, will speak at
Chapel Service.
Monday, February 13 :
Marriage Lectures begin. Exact
time and location to be announced
later.
Wednesday, February 15 _
Johannes Laursen of the Danish
Information Office in New York
will speak on social welfare legis-
lation in Scandinavia. Rpengered
by the League. |
>
Assistant Professor of Classical | '
Archaeology, will speak on Cassi- |;
in addressing an audience of ad-
mirers.
| The first part of the program
consisted - of _excerpts from the
fourth of his six “Non-Lectures,”
given at Harvard over a period ot
ZU years, from 1930 to 1950. Much
tailings in the categories of war,
foreign relations and government.
“War is the science of inefficiency,
‘pnd Peace is the inefficiency of sci-
ence . . . Equality is what does
not exist between equals.” The
contradictory mode of expression
lent new color to ordinary and con-
ventional topics.
The second half of his program
consisted of a reading from a col-
lection of his own poems. Included
were “In Just Spring,” from the
“Chansons Innocents,” ‘‘Proud of
His Scientific Attitude,” “When |}.
Serpents bargain for the Right to
Serve,” “Next to of Course God,
America I,” “Anyone Lived‘in a
Pretty How Town,” “Sweet Spring
Is Yours” and “This is a Rubbish
of Human Rind.”
They were marked by a lyrical
quality and a quiet and pervading
wisdom. His delightful sense of
humor was typified by phrases
uch as, “Think twice before you
think.”
' Mr. Cummings’ terse manner of
expression: held unique charm for
an utterly’ captivated audience.
THE KATHERINE FULLERTON
GEROULD MEMORIAL. . PRIZE
- »- FOR WRITING
The Alumnae Association
again offers its annual award of
$50 to any undergraduate for
excellence in writing in the
fields of short or long narrative,
poetry, informal essay and dra-
ma. More than one entry may
be submitted. The competition
closes at 4 pm., Tues., April 3,
1956, but it is not too soon to
“woo the Muse”. Further de-
tails will appear in a later issue
ut this material satirized human}
Trade, Trade Relations Between
Freemarket and Controlled Econo-. -
mies, The Customs Union Issue
and International Trade and Eco-
nomic Development.
E. Muir To Talk
On Jane Austen
Edwin Muir, poet and critic, will
give the Shebly lecture on Febru-
ary 20th. He will discuss Jane
Austen, a subject’ on which he is
an authority.
This critic, a Scotsman, has been
described as having “A brain with
a French gift for wide and lucid
generalization” and also “A slight-
ly, Butlerish quality of mingled wit
and shrewdness.”
In addition to his poetry Mr.
Muir has written The Structure of
the Novel, and his autobiography,
The Story and the Fable.
Eric Fromm To Be
Haverford: Speaker
Eric Fromm, who is well-known
in the fields of psychology and
psychiatry, will be a Phillips Lec-
turer at Haverford Fri., Feb. 10,
at 8:15 p.m. His topic has not yet
been announced. Transportation
will be provided.
Mr. Fromm, who will be at Hav-
erford from Feb. 9-14 under the
auspices of the psychology depart-
ment, will hold a faculty seminar
on recent developments in phycho-
analytic-thought; visit classes and
lecture in psychology classes.
Mr. Fromm is now a lecturer at
the National University of Mexico
Graduate School, and is a Fellow
of the New York Academy of Sci-
ence. He has taught at Yale, Co-
lumbia and the New School of So-
cial Research, and is a former
chairman of the faculty at the Wil-
liam Alanson White Institute of
Psychiatry.
His books include Man for Him-
self, Escape from Freedom, The —
Sane Society and Psychoanalysis
of The News.
of Religion.
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekiy during the College Year (except g Tha
Christmas and Easter hoiidays, and during examination weeks)
interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing Company,
Pa., and Bryn Mawr Sollege. :
The College 3 is fully protected my, copeviat, Nothing that appear
in it may be reprinted either wholly or part without permission of thi:
Editor-in- Chief,
EDITORIAL BOARD
ving,
thy
ore,
Editor-in-Chiet PRON Sse CN VRRN EVN EUR EDUR TUL eebeONeeNe Marcia Case, ‘57
Ue FRA AN Sib eee eek ees VU bbe oes cr ee these cel Fens Epsey Cooke, ‘57
NE ilies cheers ico reeusueeereeeeee Helen Sagmaster, ‘58
SEO re errr wm rr reir Tr Ruth Rasch, ‘57
MOI ih 5 008s eda ee een Uae Cevee ees Carol Hansen, ‘57
EDITORIAL STAFF
parce Goldstone, ‘56; Anna Kisselgoff, ‘58; Joan Parker, ‘57 (A.A. Repre-
sentative); Molly Epstein, ‘56 (Book Editor); Leah Shanks, ‘56; Joan Havens,
‘56; Judy Mellow, ‘57 (League Representative); Suzanne Jones, ‘57 (Music
Reporter); Debby Ham, ‘59; Elizabeth Rennolds, ‘59; Rita Rubenstein, ‘59;
Eleanor Winsor, ‘59.
COPY STAFF
Nancy Fogelson, ‘59; Margaret Hall, ‘59; Pat Page, ‘58.
/. Staff Photographer
ee EE Oe ue Rae RRR en
Associate Business Manager
Business Staff: Virginia Gavian, ‘57; Christine Wallace, ‘57; Rosemary Said,
‘58; Judy Davis, ‘59; Ruth Deiteibaum, ‘59, Ruth Levin, ‘59.
Subscription Manager... s/c sseeescegecsceeces Lucille Lindner, ‘57
Subscription ss Effie Ambler, ‘58; Rhoda Becker, ‘58; Elena Constantin-
ople, ‘58; Joann Cook, ‘58; Connie Demis, ‘58; Jennie Hagen, ‘57; Polly
Kleinbard, ‘58; Sue Levin, ‘58; Marion Perret, ‘58; Anne Schaefer, ‘58;
Diane Goldberg, ‘57.
Subscription, $3.50. Mailing price, $4.00. Subscriptions ma
any time. Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa.,
s under the Act of March > 1879. ‘
Trial And Error
With that time of year approaching and the faces seen
around campus becoming accordingly longer, the editors of
the College News feel that they should take this doleful op-
portunity to express some truths which may no — appear
Holly Miller, ‘59
Natalie Starr
ey
begin a.
ost Office,
self-evident !
It is a generally accepted: fact that the purpose of exam-:
inations is to enable the professor to vacctle how “much of
his course:the students are absorbing?“Thé "results may be a
revelation both to the professor and the student! The for-
mer’s preconceived opinion of the latter may go soaring up or
down—or it may remain the same.
Exams are very paradoxical—the results are often quite
unexpected by and inexplicable to the student. The question |
_of which one is so sure is often the question which is unfav-
forably réceived, while that one about which “I haven’t the
vaguest idea’, turns out to be a brilliant masterpiece! Some-
times this is a good thing and very memorable, but it is a bit
disturbing as a general rule!
The examination period lasts for only two ‘ceca in
fact, two weeks from today almost all of the exams will be
over. Although this may be scant consolation, one can take
some comfort from the fact that two weeks. is a relatively
short period in the life-expectancy of the average female.
Each examination itself lasts for only three hours. In
this case, unfortunately, appearances are deceiving and not
quite as bright as they might seem.at first glance. It takes
even less than three hours to find out how miserably one can
fail to measure up to the professor’s expectations. But noth-
ing lasts forever and unpleasant memories may be buried by
che of new facts, or, more happily, by long-awaited
Easter Vacation
Easter is one of the most important religious holidays
..of the year. Like Christmas and Thanksgiving it is a time
when people attend church and observe family traditions.
This year Bryn Mawr’s spring vacation comes during the
_ Easter season. However, classes begin after the holidays on
&
“ee but we do feel that since the t
Monday, April 2. This means that it will be necessary for
all students who live any farther from college than the Phil-
adelphia area to travel on Easter Sunday. For some of us it
means’ leaving home quite early Easter morning and there-
by being unable to attend services:
A petition has been circulated among the students and
signed by many, asking that classes begin on Tuesday, April
8, and indicating how strong student feeling is on the sub-
ject. We feel that this request justifies a revision of the
schedule of second semester.
We do not feel that Bryn Mawr’ 8 spring vacation should
necessarily be aranged to coin ide with the Easter holidays,
o events happen to occur at |
~~ the same time, we “should be “to take advantage of it. To!
many of us it means a great deal to attend religious services
during Easter Week. The College believes that religious hol-
idays are important enough to Fe
es to attend services. In accordance with this policy, we feel
that it is only reasonable that consideration should be given
to the students’ desire to observe Easter Sunday.
: NEWS TRYOUTS
The News would like to announce that tryouts for the staff will
at eee ek tes Persons interested
in trying out will be asked to submit three articles. The details
and deadline will be: S sakauaoes Wednesday, bh 8. We have
Jane lewis =
‘}stead of exchanging
Stones From
A Glass House
. By Marcia Case
_ During a recent. midnight dis-
cussion in the hall we were sud-
denly aware of how much such
discussions have degenerated since
‘we were freshmen. When we were
first at Bryn Mawr there used to
be frequent loud and excited ar-
guments during which a wide va-
riety of subjects were covered
with much enthusiasm, not too
much knowledge, and no fear.
But now that we have acquired a
ew more years of experience and
learning our conversations are not
more interesting and vital, but
more trivial. Instead of discuss-
ing the problems of human rela-
tionships we discuss the faults of
Joan; instead of arguing about the
purposes of éducation we complain
abbdut papers and examinations; in-
ideas. we
merely re-state our well-consider-
ed opinions.
To some extent this is probably
inevitable as a result of arguing
over and over with one particular
group of people. After several
years of covering the same ground
with the same friends, it begins to
seem futile to discuss any further.
We can predict with reasonable
accuracy what they will say on any
given subject, as they can predict
with us. Serious discussion becomes
a sort of game of. checkers, played
to pass the time, and with each
participant moving, in turn, stead-
ily and obviously toa known des-
tination,
The obvious solution to this
problem, of course, is to acquire
stify excusing us from class- :
new friends, but Bryn Mawrters
seldom seem to do this. We spend
four years in the same dorm, often
in the same room, and although
we may recognize every face on
campus, most of us know very
few.
Perhaps our discussions have de-
scended into the realm of gossip
also because we have lived so
closely with a few people for sev-
eral years. We lose the respect
that we had for them when we
knew them less well. Instead of
wondering how people tick, we be-
gin to wonder why.
Perhaps also in our last years at
Bryn Mawr our work has become
-more specialized and advanced, so
that we find it harder to establish
a common: ground between our
friends and our work. We tend to
separate our academic work and
our relations with our friends, un-
less, of course, they are studying
the same subjects as we. But our
discussions become more an escape
from our work than an integral
part of it.
We think that this is an unhap-
py situation—one of the reasons,
perhaps, which makes the atmos-
phere at Bryn Mawr academic
without really being intellectually
stimulating. wy
Wednesday, January 18, 1956
‘An Appreciation Of Charles Rhoads
| i Bettina Linn
“
January 2 closed a period in the
history of the College. The rela-
tion of a person to an institution
that he serves is never single: it
must be something partly official,
Wétermined by the particular office
he holds, and partly individual,
marked by his own _ personality.
Mr. Rhoads’ Bryr.
Mawr had many sides. His per-
sonal association spanned the life-
time of the College to date. When
it first opened in 1885, his father,
Dr. James E. Rhoads, was its pres-
ident. (From his boyhood Charles
Rhoads remembered winter days
when he looked out of the first-
floor window of Cartref, then the
President’s house, and could see
over the high snowdrifts along
Merion..Avenue only the heads of
relation to
the horses going past.) His official
association, as trustee and director,
covered forty-eight years. For the
last twenty of these he carried the
responsibility of the Chairmanship
of the Board and the Presidency
of the Trustees, with the constant
exacting demands on his practical
judgment, his financial knowledge,
and his ability to act on a host of
different matters with discretion,
justice and foresight.
A member of the Society of
Friends, graduate of a/Friends
school and of Haverford College,
for most of his life a resident of
this neighborhood, he had _ the
strength that comes from deep
roots in a place and in a way of
living. The numbers of friends
and associates. who crowded the
Haverford. Meeting House on Jan-
uary 4 gave visible evidence.of the
affection and respect with which
he was universally regarded. His
cOnvictions as a Friend led him to
the wider area of national and in-
ternational affairs. In the first
World War he was chairman of
the Y.M.C.A. War Prisoners Aid,
and in 1918-19 served overseas as
chief of the Friends Rureau, Amer-
ican Red Cross, for relief and re-
construction in France. In the
Federal Government, during Presi-
dent Hoover’s administration, he
was Commissioner of Indian Af-
fairs, a position sometimes made
exciting and sometimes troubled
by the outside interests that were
trying to get control of oil re-
sources on Indian lands. During
the recent period of unbridled
Congressional investigations Mr.
Rhoads recalled his own experi-
ence, then, of being investigated
without the right to have counsel
and similar safeguards of fair pro-
cedure. His membership in special
organizations included the old and
learned American Philosophical
Society. Banking was his business,
and a very important part of his
service to the College was concern-
ed with the prudent and profitable
The death of Charles Rhoads on!investment of endowment funds.
those funds without which the Col-
lege could not exist.
His combination of sagacity and
goodness was rare. He was a so-
phisticated man who used _his
worldly knowledge to good pur-
pose. And he was a man of honor,
courtesy, cordial kindness and firm
oyalty. To some non-Quakers at
least, he seemed a special repre-
sentative of Quaker virtues, in his
sense of duty as a kind of calling,
his respect\for the individual. con-
science, and his quiet self-control.
Throughout his long service his
wife, Lillie, who died in 1951, was
a charming and warm. friend -of
the College community.
The labors of.an active board
chairman can be fully appreciated
only by those who work with him
week in and week out, year after
year. Only President Emeritus
Park and President McBride, some
members of the administrative
staff, and Mr. Rhoads’ fellow trus-
tees and directors, knowhow much
he did. Others were aware of; his
unremitting effort on behalf of the
College and his generosity without
public gesture. Hundreds of stu-
dents who stood before him at
itheir commencements will remem-
ber the white-haired man, hand
some and reticent looking, who sat
beside the President as she con-
ferred upon them their degrees.
Undergraduates and faculty mem-
bers, who happened to see him at
other times in Taylor or Goodhart
Hall, may not have realized how
much assistance, at any given mo-
ment, his visit brought. Rhoads
Hall bears his name, in memory of
his father. In an important sense
the quietness of his presence was
a sign of Mr. Rhoads’ good work:
fully carrying his own responsibil-
ity, he recognized the different
area of other people’s responsibil-
ity in the College, the faculty’s for
example, and respected their need
for, freedom in it.
The official side of a man’s rela-
tionship with an institution is cir-
cumscribed by rules and customs;
it makes continuity with the past,
the official history of the institu-
tion. The personal side is the vari-
able, the individual way in which
a person does his work; and this
makes memories for those who
serve at the same time. No one
at Bryn Mawr who knew Mr.
Rhoads, if only a little, will forget
him. His memory will be a source
of strength and understanding.
CHAPEL SPEAKER
A student service will be held in
Chapel this Sunday. On Sunday, '
_| Feb. 12, the speaker willbe—Dri——
Edmund A. Steimle, Professor -of
Practical Theology at the Lutheran
Seminary in Philadelphia.
_ Dr. Steimle was educated at
Princeton and the University of
Pennsylvania, as well as at the
Lutheran Seminary. For five years
he had a parish in Jersey City, and
for 12 years he was the Lutheran
minister to students at Harvard,
Radcliffe and M.I.T. He has done-a
great deal of radio work -in the
past year on the Radio Protestant
Hour and the National Radio Pul-
pit. : | )
His topic for February 12 will
be “As It Was In The Beginning.”
“=
‘Miss Frederica deLaguna.
+ The library requests students
THE COLFEGE NEWS
Wednesday, January 18, 1956
sali
Page Three
—
Lectures, Plays, Grants, Conferences, Forums Included
In Diverse Highlights Of BMC's 1955-96 Fall Semester
Alliance Sponsors Conference On Africa
Several Bryn Mawr Faculty Members
Publish Books During Recent Months
Members of Bryn Mawr’s fac-
ulty have had several books pub-
lished during this semester. The
most recent,publication is Chugach
Prehistory: The Architecture of
Prince William Sound, Alaska, by
This
study was published by the Uni-
versity of Washington Press.
Richmond Lattimore is the author
of Greek Lyrics (University of
Chicago Press), a translation of
various works from the Golden Age
of Greek poetry.
The Art and Architecture of Jap-
an was written by Alexander Soper
and Robert T. Paine, Assistant Cu-
rator of the Boston Museum of
Fine Arts, and published by Pen-
guin books. Mr. Soper deals with
Japanese Architecture from archaic
times to the Edo period of Japan-
The reserve room and reading }.
room of the library will be open
Saturday night, January 21, and
possibly ‘Saturday, January 28,
until 10 p.m.
to return reserve books to the
library on time. Books taken
out overnight are due at 9:10
a.m.
ese history, while Mr. Paine cov-
ers the art of the time.
Mr. Soper is co-author of anoth-
er study which will appear soon,
The Art and Architecture of China.
Mr. Soper’s work on this book will
cover Chinese architecture from
its beginnings to early in the pres-
ent century, and the art will be
studied, by Laurence Sickman, Di-
rector of the Nelson Gallery of Art
in Kansas City.
Joe K. Adams is the author of
Basic Statistical Concepts (Mc-
Graw-Hill), and Henry J. Cadbury
has written the Book of Arts in
History (Harper.)
A revised and enlarged edition
of Les Formes de la Vida Catalana,
by Ferrater Mora, has appeared re-
cently. This second edition is pub-
lished by Editorial Selecta, Barce-
lona.
Also published within the last
few months is Miss Angeline Lo-
grasso’s work, Dante E La Ma-
donna (Marietta, Rome).
Fair Wind to Virginia (MacMil-
lan) is a work by a former Bryn
Mawr professor, ‘Miss. Cornelia
Meigs.
Upperclasmen will be interested
to know that last year’s Flexner
lectures on The Homeric Odyssey,
by Denys Page, have been publish-
ed by the Oxford University Press.
Christian Organizations of Philadelphia
Will Confer on Students’ Estrangement
Student estrangement on the
campus, particularly as it involves
overseas and American students,
will be the topic of a conference in
Germantown this Sunday, Jan. 22,
from 3 to 7:45 p.m. Sponsored by
the Christian organizations ‘of -col-
leges in the Philadelphia—area,-the-
‘conference “Will center around a
talk by the Rev. Richard Shaull,
Secretary of the Brazilian Student
Christian Movement, and a panel
of students from six nations now
studying in American colleges.
They’ will consider the accusa-
tion made by an increasing num-
ber of overseas students in our uni-
versities that they are overwhelm-
ed with friendliness but unable to
communicate with U. S. students
on deeper levels. This does not
necssarily result from their being
“foreigners” but seems to be a per-
vading characteristic of American
society at large.
-
h
Mr. Shaull, a graduate of Prince-
ton Theological Seminary, worked
for 10 years with the Protestant
youth of Colombia and with the
adult literacy movement. Since
1952 he has been on the faculty of
the Presbyterian Seminary at
‘Langer, Seznec, Bond
Recent Term’s
Speakers
A review of the oustanding
events of the past semester at
Bryn Mawr reveals that there have
been two conferences, a number of
distinguished speakers, innovations
and changes in the practices of
campus organizations, and of
course, the Ford Grant. A day 7
day summary follows:
Thursday, Sept. 29—164 fresh-
men of Class ef 1959 arrive, find
modernized book store, traditional
teas and interviews.
Tuesday, Oct. 4 — Bryn Mawr
opens Tist academic year with
largest enrollment in history, 795.
Monday, Oct. 10 —Jean Seznec,
Marshal Foch Professor of French
Literature and Fellow of All Souls
College, Oxford University, and
che Mary Flexner Lectures for
1955, begins series of six lectures
on “Diderot and Antiquity.” |
Tuesday, Oct.
fist Andre Trocme speaks on “Ter-
11—French paci-
Thursday, Nov. 10 — Horace
Mann Bond ends two-day Alliance
Conference on Africa with a
speech on “The Emerging States
of West Africa.”
Tuesday, Nov. 15—College Leg-
islature unanimously votes to ac-
ror and Repression in North Afri-
ca.” Y
Wednesday, Oct. 12 — President
Betsy Dugdale announces Athletic
Association will show six foreign
films during the year.
Saturday, Oct. 15— Pem East’s
production of “The Potboilers”
wins award as best freshman hall
play.
Wednesday, Oct. 19—Plans for a
Coffee Gallery on Lancaster Pike,
specializing in French pastries and
assorted teas and coffees, an-
nounced.
Saturday, Oct. 22—Junior Show,
Knock on Rock, presented. News
reviewers praise acting and set,
feel plot is “inadequate.”
Wednesday, Oct. 26—News For-
um indicates that faculty and-stu-
dents favor small college.
Tuesday, Nov. 1—J. Robert Op-
penheimer speaks at Haverford,
discusses science as a humanity.
Wednesday, Nov. 2 — George
Munger, Head of the Department
of Physical Education at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, attempts
to make the finer points of football
clear to a group of 100 Bryn
Mawrters.
Wednesday, Nov. 2—Editors of
Bryn Mawr’s Counterpoint and the
Haverford Revue announce merger
of the two literary magazines,
hoping to raise quality and cir-
culation.
Sunday, Nov. 6 — Bryn Mawr-
'|Havreford College Community Or-
chestra holds first of informal con-
certs in Wyndham. Tea is com-
bined with music.
Sunday, Nov. 6—Announcement
is made of the receipt of five gifts,
amounting to $185,000, for Bryn
Mawr’s new science center.
-Campinas;-Brazil-~He is the auth-
or of Encounter with Revolution, a
study of the “revolt of the disin-
herited” in the world today.
Mary Boulos-Hanna, Bryn Mawr
foreign graduate
Egypt, will be a member of the
panel.
The sponsors of Sunday’s pro-
gram are very anxious to have a
delegation from Bryn Mawr, and
anyone who is interested should
contact Sallyann Burgess or Su-su
Jones in Rock, or Maty Boulos-
Hanna in the Grad Center. It is
hoped that transportation can be
provided.
scholar from’
DP Scholenahie s
To Be Candied
The Undergraduate Association
is considering the problem of DP
scholarships. The student body has
always maintained two DP schol-
arships, with the cost going on pay
day. Last year the cost was $4.00
per student, with $1.00 being plac-
ed on each pay day from February
through May.
Undergrad President Sarah Stif-
ler reports that Undergrad mem-
bers will visit each hall to discuss
the scholarships with the students.
cept straw-ballot election system
for college officers.
Wednesday, Nov. 16—News For-
um on extra-curricular activities
at Bryn Mawr finds they are
pthised for scope and independ-
ence, criticized for poor organiza-
tion, ipso facto membership and
apathy of student body.
Thursday, Nov. 17 — New York
Woodwind Quintet, with Vera
Brodsky pianist, performs in first
of newly-organized Bryn Mawr
Friends of Music concert.
Wednesday, Nov. 30 — Mrs. Os-
wald Lord, United States repre-
sentative on the Commission on
Human Rights of the UN, speaks
on economic and social work of the
UN.
J. Robert Oppenheimer Speaks At Haverford
Saturday, Dec. 3—Bryn Mawr
and Haverford drama groups pre-
sent Much Ado About Nothing.
Miss Gamble, in News review, says
that production “came closer to
professional competence than any
other recent production.”
Sunday, Dec. 11—Annual Christ-
mas Carol Service, highlighted by
a performance of Bach’s Cantata
140, opens week of Christmas fes-
tivities at Bryn Mawr.
Tuesday, Dec, 13—Ford Founda-
tion announces gift of $594,000 to
Bryn Mawr to help raise faculty
salaries. Bryn Mawr calls grant
“one of the largest the College has
ever rceived for endowment.”
Thursday, Jan. 5—Dr. Frank
Graham, chairman, opens Bryn
Mawr’s two-day conference on
“Woodrow Wilson and the World
of Today.” Visiting historians,
professors, graduate students join
with Bryn Mawr in hearing speech-
es by Arthur Link, William Lan-
ger and Eric Goldman.
Drama Clubs Present “Much Ado About Nothing”
WBMC’s _ recently-signed con-
tract with Lucky Strike cigarettes
went into effect Sunday night, Jan-
uary 8, according to station man-
ager Elizabeth Thomas. The agree-
ment provides for 15-minute world-
wide news and popular. music pro-
grams, the former originating over
United Press teletype from Villa-
nova; the latter from on-campus.
The news is presented at 8 p.m.
Sunday through Thursday, while
the music is heard on these days
10:15-10:30 p.m.,. and Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday at 11:30-
11:45 p.m. -
News programs of this type have
WBMC Signs Lucky Strike Contract
Provides-For-Fifteen-Minute-Programs
not been broadcast from WBMC in
over three years, at which time a
similar contract was in effect, co-
signed, however, with Haverford.
At the moment there are only four
commercial agreements — with
Lucky Strike and three local busi-
nesses.
Elizabeth noted one. additional
modification in the WBMC sched-
ule: classical music is heard at
8:15-8:30 p.m. instead of 8-10 p.m.
Sunday through Thursdays. Other
than these changes, programs are
as listed in the December 15 Col-
lege News.
Page
age Four
——
THE COLLEGE NEWS
League To Sponsor
e *¢e *
Fund Raising Drive
, The Bryn Mawr League Activi-
ties Drive will be held this year
on February 28, 29 and 80. The
Drive constitutes the sole financial
resource of the organization.
The money meets a_ two-fold
purpose: to support the education-
al program sponsored by the or-
ganization and to defray running
expenses of the various activities
and projects which the League un-
dertakes, particularly the Bryn
Mawr Summer Camp.
The Activities Drive is distin-
guished from the United Service
Fund Drive in that the proceeds of
the latter are donated to nation-
ally and internationally sponsored
_ welfare organizations. The United
Service Fund Drive is sponsored
jointly by the League and. the Al-
liance.
kept secret.
Oklahoma Choice
Of Maids, Porters
The Maids’ and Porters’ Show
this year will be a production of
the musical comedy, Oklahoma.
The show, which will be produced
by the maids and porters with the
sophomore class, will be perform-
ed April 11. Sue Opstad is direct-
or.
The maids’ and porters’ spiritual
concert has been cancelled because
there is not time to rehearse for
both the concert and the show.
The Maids’ and Porters’ Com-
mittee will hold a dance the
maids and porters Feb. 11° John
Whitaker’s Band will provide mu-
sic. The decorations are being
Pat Moran, who is
head of the committee, expects the
dance to be as successful as was
last year’s.
Judy Mellow is in charge of the
Breakfast
Luncheon .
Dinner
Sunday Dinner
Telephone
LAwrence 5-0386
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
OPEN TO THE’ PUBLIC
—9:00 - 11:00 A.M.
———_——]2:00 -
Afternoon.Tea ——.3:30- 5:00 P.M.
——12:00- 3:00 P.M.
CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY
SPECIAL PARTIES ‘AND BANQUETS ARRANGED
2:00 P.M.
5:30- 7:30 P.M.
Lombaert St. and Morris Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
dance, and Polly Lothman is dec-
orations chairman. Anita Kaplan,
Pat Moran, Judy Harris, Peggy
King and Polly Lothman will be
student hostesses.
BMC Takes Part
In Bridge Contest
The Athletic Association has an-
nounced Bryn Mawr’s participation
in the Wational Intercollegiate
Bridge Tournament to be held here
on campus during’ the week of
Feb. 19-26..
Each pair of players. will play
16 previously arranged hands, so
that success may be counted a mat-
ter of skill: rather than luck. Miss
Chowning has agreed to serve as
tournament chairman, and it will
be she who receives the fixed hands
and all the rules from the National
Directors.
Regardless of national place-
ment, the winning. .team-. and the
runners-up will receive prizes
awarded by A.A. In addition,
there is the chance of placing
among the national: winners.
A sign-up list will 8e posted this
week on the A.A. bulletin board
in Taylor. )/There is an entrance
fee of $.50 ‘which goes to the Na-
tional Committee.
Because of the examination
period,. The College News will
not be published again until
Wednesday, February ,15.
is no small advantage.
Wednesday, January 18, 1956
VARSITY BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
DATE TEAM SPORT
Jan. 17 Pa. State Bi Ri
Ogontz Center
Feb. 9 Rosemont Bad.
Feb. 9 Penn B. B.
Feb. 14 Chestnut Swimming
_- Hill
Feb. 14 Drexel Bad.
Feb. 15 Drexel 1 aaa”
PLACE TIME No, of TEAMS
Home 7:30 Squad
Rosemont 4:00 2
Penn 4:15 2
Home 4:15 2
Home 4:00 1
Home 4:15 2
Inter-Hall Basketball Tournament Finals
Feature Pembroke East And Graduates
‘As the Inter-Hall, Basketball
Tournament swings into the finals
this week, an astute observer
might notice the fever of excite-
ment which grips the finalists. One
particular group, which is report-
ed to have been hard at practice
since fall, has almost exhausted it-
self in decorating huge red pen-
nants and coilecting one of the
loudest and most _ enthusiastic
cheering sections seen in the gym
in a long time. The Graduate Cen-
ter, in its first appearance in re-
cent times in inter-hall competi-
tion, walked off with all the honors
—or nearly all the honors. It still
has to meet Pembroke East in the
finals on Friday -afternon.
It is only fair to report that the
| Graduate School is co-ed. And this
Neverthe-
less, Rhoads came near to beating
them in a fast and well-played
game, which ended in a 5-4 victory
Mt
7
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The other games, too, were good
and showed excellent spirit. Pem
West beat the Non-Reses by de-
fault, and then lost to Denbigh,
which had previously beaten Mer-
ion 14-8. Denbigh then lost to the
Grad Students, 5-7. Meanwhile,
Rock beat East House, whose play-
ers, though lacking in experience,
almost matched the Grad Center
in spirit and Sunday practice.
Rock, in turn, was defeated by
Pembroke East (7-9), which first
beat Radnor 15-2.
ENGAGEMENTS
Barbara Pennypacker to Dean K.
Worcester Jr. ma
MARRIAGES
Jane S. Stone to John Pratt Jr.
AT THE MOVIES
BRYN MAWR
Jan. 18—Girl in the Red Velvet
Swing, Green Fire.
19-21—_To Catch a Thief.
22-23 — Target Zero, Naked
Street. ’
24-26—Rebel Without a Cause.
27-28—Man with a Gun.
29-30—I Died a Thousand Times,
Lawless Street.
ARDMORE
Jan. 18-21—I Died a Thousand
Times.
22-24 — The Big Knife, Shack
Out on 101.
24-31—The Tender Trap.
SUBURBAN
Jan. 18-21 — The Desperate
Hours.
22-23 — Born Yesterday, Petty
Girl.
24-28—The Deep Blue Sea.
29-30—The Flame of the Island,
The Vanishing Americans.
ANTHONY WAYNE
Jan. 18-21—Good Morning, Miss
Dove.
22-23 — The Desperate Hours,
lrarget Zero.
JAMES.L. COX
Sport Shop
931 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa. LA 5-0256
Filter Tip Tareyton, the filter cigarette that smokes
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Bermuda at Easter
Plane Reservations
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SUBURBAN
TRAVEL AGENCY
Suburban Square
27 Coulter Ave., Ardmore
Wednesday, ied 18, 1956
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
BM. Accepts Grant
Of $5000 From Esso
Bryn Mawr has received a $5,000
grant from the Esso Education
Foundation. Bryn Mawr was one
of 193 privately supported institu-
tions to receive unrestricted grants
for undergraduate education. Hav-
erford College also received a a6
000 grant.
The Esso Education Foundation
was set up last October by the
Standard Oil Company, New Jer-
sey, and a group of affiliated com-
panies. The Foundation has also
awarded grants to colleges and
universities for building and capi-
tal projects, and for research proj-
ects in the physical sciences.
A. Maclntosh Acts
As H’ford President
Archibald’ MacIntosh has been
appointed acting President of Hav-
erford College to replace Gilbert
White. He will serve until a new
permanent president is chosen by
the joint faculty-board which is
now in the midst of reviewing pos-
sible candidates. .
Mr. MacIntosh is a‘ Haverford
graduate who holds a Ph.D.
Psychology from the University of
Pennsylvania. He is at present
Chairman of the College Entrance
Examination Board, an Overseer of
the William Penn Charter School,
and a trustee of Episcopal Acad-
emy.
Gilbert White, whose resignation
became effective on Jan. 1, has re-
turned to his alma-mater, the Uni-
versity of Chicago. He has been
re-appointed professor of Geogra-
phy and chairman of the Geogra-
phy Department. He had formerly
held the postion of associate pro-
fessor in the same department.
in
“The Philosophic Relevance Of Logic’’
Is Stressed In Lecture By H. Leblanc
ELY ROOM, JAN. 16.—The fact
that logic is a part of philosophy
and that logic can and should do a
great. deal for many branches or
parts of philosophy was maintain-
ed by Hugues Leblanc in his lec-
ture, The Philosophic Relevance of
Logic, delivered to members of the
Philosophy Club.
The two main purposes of logic
are to construct standardized lan-
guages and to formulate various
rules for carrying out infererices
of inductive and deductive-natures. [
Mr. Leblane feels that both. of
these functions are applicable be-
yond the confines of mathematics.
Every-day language, and the
languages of ethics, aesthetics,
metaphysics and epistemology, and
the various sciences have nothing
to lose and much to gain from a
process of formalization.* At pres-
ent, they are irregular and ambig-
uous. They would be more clear if
(a) the vocabulary of the language
were set up in terms of a certain
number of primitive terms, with
all other words introduced. as
terms defined by means of these
primitive terms; and’ (b) the gram-
mar of the language were stated,
in order that it might be perfectly
clear which statements are logical-
ly meaningful and which are not.
The formulation of rules of in-
ference is becoming increasingly
important in the sciences, where
observation must be supplemented
by induction and deduction. ©
Parenthetically, Mr. Leblane
spoke out against confining the
study»of philosophy to the study
of the history of philosophy. He
feels that the value of the history
of philosophy is over-emphasized,
in view of his belief that problems
change and solutions to past prob-
lems have little applicability to to-
day’s dilemmas.
A liyely discussion, in which
the philosophic validity of Mr. Le-
blane’s contentions concerning the
formalization of philosophic lan-
guages and the value of a histor-
ical approach to -philosophy were
seriously questioned, followed the
lecture.
Denbigh Will Hold
Annual Hall Dance
Denbigh Hall’s annual March
Opeéh House will take place at an
earlier time this year. Feeling that
all concerned would derive greater
benefits if the dance were held in
the beginning of the second sem-
ester instead of in the middle, the
Hall has set the night of February
10 as the date for the dance.
Denbigh’s dance last year at-
tracted over 150 men from all col-
leges in the area.
This year’s event will follow the
same-pattern: that of a stag dance
with refreshments, theme and en-
tertainment, It will last from 9:30
p.m. to 1:30 a.m. The theme de-
cided upon is “Queen of Hearts’.
Lynne Sherrerd is in charge.
The week following the Denbigh
Open House will be the date of
the traditional
week-end... Plans for the formal
dance that takes place after the
show on Saturday night include en-
tertainment by the Yale Augment-
ed Seven and music by Eddie
Clauson’s band. The dance will be
2;
There are also rumors that the
formal dance held after the Maids
and Porters Show in April, will de-
viate from the traditional pattern.
Home talent will be searched for
as entertainment, instead of turn-
ing to the-outside.
Freshman Show
held on February 18 from 10 till
Alliance Planning
“aculty-Led Tours
AboutPhiladelphia
The Alliance has announced that
it will again sponsor student tours
to points of interest in Philadel-
phia. The tours will be guided by
faculty members, and will include
historical, social and _ political
sights of the city. So far, profes-
sors Arthur Dudden and Roger
Wells have agreed to lead expedi-
tions to the City of Brotherly
Love.
The tours will be held in Febru-
ary, and students who are inter-
ested will be given an opportunity
to sign up on the Alliance bulletin
board. There will be no cost.
Last year the tours. visited such
places as Independence Hall, the
Betsy Ross. House, Fellowship
Commission, the mayor’s office, a
prison, housing developments, and
slums.
PALL LOA ORO lO”
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818 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Breakfast, Luncheon, Dinner
Soda Fountain Refershments
Hamburgers
Children — Pre-teens
NANA
829 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn. Mawr, Pa.
J. Laursen To Talk
On Danish Welfare
Johannes Laursen of the Danish
information Office in New York
will speak at Bryn Mawr on Wed-
nesday, Feb. 15, sponsored by the
League. “He will discuss social
welfare legislation in the Scandi-
navian countries.
The purpose of the Danish In-
formation Office is to disseminate
information about Denmark in the
United States. In connection with
this work, Mr. Laursen has often
addressed classes in political sci-
ence, economics and sociology. He
conducted a lecture tour in the
spring of 1953.
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JEANNETT’S
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Wm. J. Bates, Jr. Manager
823 Lancaster Ave Bryn Mawr
LAwrence 5-0570
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: pape Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 18, -1956:
NT MOVIES The Undergraduate Associa-
EVE S IN PHILADELPHIA Studio: I Am A Camera, Julie Harris, Laurence Harvey, Shelley Winters | tion wishes to remind all stu-
THEATRES Randolph: Guys and Dolls, Marlon Brando and Jean Simmons
Locust: The Innkeepers, Geraldine Page, Darren McGavin
Schubert: The Boy Friend
Forrest: The Ponder Heart, David Wayne
Hedgerow: January 18-21, Androcles and the Lion, Jasper Deeter
January 25-28, Ghosts, by Henrik Ibsen —
é aden \
dents that they are ipso facto
members of the organization,
and that their ideas and criti-
cisms are welcomed by the Un-. .
dergraduate Board. If you have
MUSIC
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uary 20 and 21, George Szell conducting a program of Weber,
Beethoven, Ravel and ‘Debussy. a gripe or a suggestion, speak ‘
Friday and Saturday, January 27 and 28, .Sir Thomas Beecham con-|. to the Undergrad members of
ducting the second concert in the Mozart Cycle. ' your hall.
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colors! Automatic transmission, two tops, power Phonograph —the Columbia ‘360”"K—in
steering, radio, white side walls. Act now and win! beautiful ogany!
_Plus 10 RCA Victor Color TV Sets to the college organizations designated by the 10 Thunderbird winners!
NO OTHER FILTER LIKE VICEROY!
No cotton! No paper! No asbestos!
No charcoal! No foreign substance
of any kind! Made from Pure Cellulose—
Soft... Snow-white... Natural!
It’s easy to name this amazing Viceroy Filter when
you know what it’s made of . . . why it’s superior. ..
why Viceroys give you that real tobacco taste you
miss in every other filter brand!
~Remember, the Viceroy
Filter is made from 100%
pure cellulose—a soft,
natural material found in
many good foods you eat! _
anes of any kind! There are no impurities in
the Viceroy Filter. So nat-
~}-—aurally_it lets the. real to-
bacco taste come through!
Name the Viceroy Filter!
Enter this $50,000 con-
test, today!
JUST FOLLOW THESE EASY RULES!
ICEROY
| Se eet fee NG
Youth om ro i yO a Tg ester ag serme gg ag mye g rebel Filter Tip
D Mail your entry to underbird dei Comt 0, ox, ne ee CIGARETTES
Mowat Yrgon 1, New York Wr your maling adare umd © willsiso be permited to desute the school organuations to KING-SIZE
Submits many nes sou et backs RCA Viclor Color TV'Sets! Wate the name of te organisation se |
‘i of two (2) Viceroy packages. ——
College news, January 18, 1956
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1956-01-18
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 42, No. 11
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-vol42-no11