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=
VOL. se Ne 3
BRYN MAWR, PA.
__ERIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1963
© Trustees of Bryn Mawr Conese,
1963
20 Cents
.-
‘Chased’ B. M. é. Innocent _
Wins Bouquet at Goodhart
A bouquet of roses is sitting
on the mantel at Merion Hall as
a trophy of victory in the Fresh-
man Hall Play Competition held
Friday and Saturday, ‘October 4
and 5; at Goodhart,
The eight plays presented were
_ judged by Miss Rodgers, Mr. Bro-
derick and Mr. MacKay.
The winners presented an ori-
ginal —. entitled ws Classic
The Inn Is Open Nights.
For Television and Coke
The College Inn, «which func-
Spring. resumed seivices for stu-'
dents at night again at the begin-
ning of the year. The Union was
opened last year to provide a
place for girls to buy something
to-eat after 7:30 (when the public
Inn closes,) to set aside an area
for watching T,V,, and for inter-
dorm socializing. ~
The Student. Union was_first
opened Freshman Week for
Princeton Mixer, This proved very
successful. The Union provided
not only a relief from the crowded
mixer, but also a place for Hans
- Princeton and. his date to sit,talk,
and congregate with friends, The
Union also continued kitchen serv-
~~ {ces until -12;30°-p.m,- for-a short —
post-Mixer get-together,
The Student Union.is open every.
“Monday, .Wednesday, and Friday
from. 8:30. until 12:00 p.m. It is
hoped that the Union will be used
not only as_a restaurant, but as
a center for post-lecture dis-
cussion, for T.V., andfor campus-
wide inbaventa,
; . Harcum,
tioned as a Student Union last. \
Melodrama; or, A “Day. in the
Life of a Bryn Mawrter.”
Soon after her arrival on cam-
pus, the innocent Bryn Mawr fresh-
man ‘meets a. suave Princeton ~
man, After his attempt to tempt
. her with an apple fails, he chases
her, The plot thickens when a
* Haverford freshman, sporting-his
beanie, arrives on the scene,
The Bryn Mawrter appeals to
him for protection, and a three-
way pursuit ensues. ~Whenthe
innocent freshman thinks she has
captured her Haverford hero, he
is enticed away by a siren from
The play was accom-
panied by such appropriate au-
dience reactions as hisses for the
villain. and“ cheers.-for the hero.
_ The traditional parts were play-
ed by Lynne Moody (the villain,
Hans Princeton IV), Susan Bis-
hop (the. heroine, Prissy Pure),
Gwen Prosser (the hero, Harvey
Haverford), and Caroline Dudeck
=
(the siren, Christine K, Harcum, '
JY.
Klausner, and Nimet-Habachy play-
ed the piano accompaniment, Les-
lie Spain directed.
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention was awarded
to*Pembroke West.for their pro-
duction of Saint-Exupery’s ‘The
Prince.”
~The other’ plays* were Girls ~~
Must Talk” (College Inn and Spa-
nish House ); _ ‘*In _ Philadelphia
Nearly Everybody...Or Ring Your
Own Lardner’ (Pem, East); ‘Mind
Over Matter’? (Denbigh); ‘¢A Wo-
man of Character’? (Radnor); ‘‘Six
Who Passed While the Lentils
Boiled’’ (Rock); and ‘‘The Rehear-
sal’’ (Rhoads), :
The narrator was -Elana™~.
‘Buckner And Bunshaft Winners
In Self Gov., Undergrad Votes
Bryn Mawr sophomores, juniors
and seniors elected Bates Buckner.
vice-president of Self-Gov andGill
Bunshaft Secretary of Undergrad
at a fall election October 8,
They also elected the four final
candidates for the Arts Council
presidency--Barbara Wyler, ’65,
Cally MacNair, ’65, Debby Arkush,
66, and Jane Berezin, ’66.
Barbara has -been on Arts Coun-
‘cil since: her freshman year’ and
has acted as temporary president
this fall. | Cally, prominent* in
Gill Bunshaft, new rere of Undergrad, and Bates Buckner,
“new vice-president of Self-Government discuss responsibilities,
~ Documentary and
Interpretive Work
“Highlights BMC Arts Council Show —
The. present. exhibition of photo-
graphs at the. Bryn Mawr Art
“Gallery; in Goodhart until-Octo-
ber 26, does not overwhelm the
observer with the, force of a show
of brilliant abstract canvasses or
a display of: modern —?
~WHRC and WBMC Join Radio Wires |
Schedule News and Music Broadcasts
By Mako Yamanouchi
On Friday, Oct. 4th, ‘the line
between Haverford’s WHRC and
WBMC, Bryn Mawr’s radio sta-
tion was installed by the Bell
Telephone Co, Ever since, the
technical department of WHRC has
been working on the wiring to
each dormitory from the’ WBMC
studio,
They ran into difficulty because
the WBMC ‘transmitter is in yery
bad condition and. it will take
time, effort and money to get it
working, If everything ‘goes well,
the Bryn Mawr campus will be
‘, able to tune in on Thursday;Oct.
10th, -However, this* ts- Still un=
_ certain.
~~ ‘The ‘programs “will include a
daily Bryn. Mawr campus news
announcement from 6;15 to 6:30. * : a
Make Yamanouchi, otganizer of the: ‘WBMC revival, mans the ' :
‘(Sundays 6:00 to 6:10) and Under-
grad may provide radios in each
Hall Smoker §0 that people who .
do not own radios will be_ able
to listen and go directly to dinner.
If this works out satisfactorily,
it may replace Hall Announcers
next year, .
Other programs iiiieinsias per-
sonality shows to Classical Music,,
‘Sunday. Funnies, and tapes at lec-.
tures both .on. Bryn Mawr. and
_ Haverford campus, and many other .
+campus special events, In all, it.
promises variety, quality, and ed-
ucation, with hopes for improve-
_ ment all the time,
microphone, undazed by Pem basement aura.
The Main question is the fin-
ances. In the past, WBMC, has
been entirely self-supporting by
means of local advertisements. -
However, this car no longer be
done, and due to uncertainties
about expenses, we were not in-
cluded in the Undergrad budget,
Costs _will_ include, the installa-
tion of the ‘Tine and monthly service *
charges; doctoring on both ends
(transmitters & wiring etc.,) main-
tenance and ‘records; and trans-_.
‘portation to and from Haverford,
The Student Council meeting held _
on Monday, Oct, 7th, suggested a
50° cent voluntary fee from under-
graduates per. semester which will
cover all costs till concrete plans
are made for 1964,
_Ever since the small dusty radio
station in the Pem East basement
was discovered last year, plans
_*began to reactivate it. The main
difficulty was’ in the fact that
WBMC has stopped broadcasting _
< =
959~due to a lack of interest,
at the technical equipment
was in very bad shape and there +tation sare works by Richmond.
=f Continued on page 4, col. 2)
engineering department.
_ poses,
However, the photographs con-
tain, in a subdued way, the same
power and interest that would-be
found in more instantly impres-
sive works,
The works fall in two general
categories, In one, the photo-
graphers: have examined subjects
which in themselves have 4artis-
tic, dramatic, or social signifi-
cance, In the other, the photo-
egrapher has used his camera like
a.paintbrush, explored its many.
Possibilities, and tried to inter-
* pret rather than merely. depict.
In the first group are a series
of photographs by Mr. Theodore /
Hetzel, member of Haverford’s
In ‘At
for example,
Barrow, Alaska,’
~-hnine-small Alaskan children are
lined up before the camera, ob-
viously posing for the photogra-
pher, . Their typically child-like
their ageless faces with
alternately humorous and pensive
expressions, are represented
-Cleanly and clearly. ‘
Tribal Event’
In ‘‘Mulagatuk (Blanket Toss),
Barrow, Alaska,’’ a dramatic tri-
bal event is presented at the peak
of its. intensity. Upturned: faces
of Alaskans focus on a dark figure
silhouetted against’ the sea and
-sky.--The: expressions.of the by--
standers and the tense nitscles
of a-man who has just been hurled
into the air and is about to des-
cend, reveal the emotional inten-
sity of this rite, :
“Horace Levy carves a cere-
monial mask...’ is another re- ,
presentative- rather than inter-
pretive work, The Indian face,
with the characteristic flat nose
and brdad cheekbones of the race,
wears the craftsman’s serious and
intent expression,
Photographic Gap
Straddling the gap between rep-
resentation and artistic interpre-
(Continued on page 4 col. 4).
teen
College: Theater, is one of the
four Junior Show directors.
Both’ Debby and Jane served
as their freshman hall reps ‘to
Arts Council last year,
The final election for Arts Coun-
cil took place today. Since it was
a fall ele®@tion, the candidates ran
quickly, without the. traditional
platforms and dinners.
‘There just wasn’t time to get
to know the candidates ,’’ explained
‘Undergrad Vice-president Gail
Walker, who ran the elections. ‘‘At
this point Arts Council needs a
president, not a platform.’’
The need for fall elections arose
when the three officers elected
last spring decided not to return
“to school.
Bates, a senior in Rockefeller,
has just returned from a junior
year. in Germany. She replaces
Nancy Geiger as Self-Goy -¥icex
president,
Gill, a junior .and “a biology
major, .is a chorus officer. and
class» song writer (‘*Bibemus
Amici’’ and “The Mademoiselle
Song.’’) She replaces Prue Kappes,
former Undergrad Secretary,
now married.
Under the rules of Self-Gov.
freshman and returning junior-
year -abroaders, who have not yet
taken the Self-Gov Exam, couldnot
vote inthis election.
*‘That .means,’? said’ Gail wist-
fully, ‘that only sophomores,
juniors and seniors don’t, under -
_ stand what it is to vote in _pre-
ferential order .
asco Moves
To Increase Dues---
To Fifteen Dollars
It was moved at the Monday
night meeting of-Undergrad that
yearly dues be raised from eleven
to fifteen dollars per student.
There will be an open meeting held —
next Monday, October 21, to dis-
cuss the motion, and the Executive
Council will then vote on the issue.
The treasurers of all organiza-
tions. receiving money from the
common treasury are now prepar- -
ing budgets to be explained at the
meeting. The following is a list -
of tentative budgets and the parts
of these provided by the common
treasury:
Athletic Association--$900, ‘700
Alliance--$1150, 950.
Arts Council--$810, 560
League--$1000, 560
Self-Government--$680, 380
_Undergrad--$4,160, 4,025
The.totad-common treasury.dues
are $7,436, with 676 students pay-
ing eleven dollars each. Students
interested in hearing the budgets
explained and in- participating ‘in
the discussion of the proposed in-
crease are-urged to attend the next
Undergrad meeting. The time and
place will be announced in the halls.
SPLASH!
The. Gym. pool will be open
Tuesdays and Thursdays for
women’s. recreational. swim-
ming from. 5:15 to'6:15; Swim-
‘mers are asked to bring their
own towels andcaps. _ -
-
Page Two 7 | “ ,
. THE COLLEGE NEWS
? }
Friday, October 11, 1963
--“@
The Summit
The Summit convened here on Monday night,
and, as it was fitting to the first meeting of
“the year, a statement of purpose was made,
The history of Summit Conference winds its
way deep into our past, At first, there were
‘private meetings with the Big Five, but it was
decided that a college council, at which all
representatives were presented could provide-a—
more relaxed and forthright-atmosphere for the
discussion of common problems,
This, then,. is the principle upon-whieh the
summit conference rests: the discussion of
common problems,
that the Summit Conference is the best path.
. towards progress,
_ to allow the
The Summit DOES prove the solution to some
of the problems of communication, but it does
not seem always to provide the best path: to
progress,
The problem of who should be: ~enneseated
was décided long ago. Since that time, anumber ~
of groups who feel they have the right to be
represented or at least the right to present
‘represented; the Summit seems quite hesitant
infiltration of new members,
Certainly the Summit, has a tradition behind
_it to consider, but it would seem that it must
remain a diplomatic facade if it truly is as
hesitant as it appears to invite new members
or at least listen with an open mind to the
problems of groups which are not members,
Hyde Park Corner
According to a story in Sunday’s NEW YORK
TIMES, a criminal subversion case brought last
spring against three Indiana. University students _
has produced wide-spread repercussions on the
university’s campus, .
With the indictment of three officers of the
Young Socialist Alliance, the university has
instituted a new strategem to both protect the
freedom of political minorities and its own
interests as a state-supported institution. The
strategem is a three-acre plot. of land, dubbed.
‘as: **Little Hyde Park Corner,’’ for anyone
interested in debating or demonstration, The
university forbids such gatherings elsewhere on
campus, .
The site has been pelerced to as a. “public
relations gimmick . . . for quacks,’? which ©
would discourage rather than foster freespeech—.-—-
The. establishment of a student center aj
which minority viewpoints. may be expressed
without interference is certainly a werthwhile
project, However, -it is unfortunate that such
discussion must be limited in this way, Indiana
functions by means of state-supplied funds and
is therefore under state anti-subversion laws,
but it is a sad day when a ‘‘Little Hyde Park
Corner’? must be established.—
According to the TIMES article, faculty an-
tagonism’ to the site was dismissed. with one
professor’s explanation: ‘‘They think it is good
for their moral fiber to think somebody is
attacking their integrity. It is a hangover from
the McCarthy days. They are walking around
with a guilt comp. ex ~
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED. IN-1914 —..
blished weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving. Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination: weeks)
the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Regional Printing Com-
pany, Inc., Bryn Mawr. Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
a Col - News. ‘is ‘fully ‘protected by. copyrig t..Nothing that appears. in -
or in part “without -pcraission -of-the- Editor-in-Chief,
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor-in-Chief aise c sSavdpiacsaaiense Caseclasooeeteliss C. Brooks Robards, ’64 :
Associate siesccusitak sSeansisss edibvacreuisbiaeie Anne Lovgren, °66
Copy Editor ...... .. Charlene Sutin, "64
Make-vp Editor ........ os Lynne Lackenbach, ’66 :
Member-at-Large = Const=nce Rosenblum, "63
oo Editor ......,. bicep egdiheansatgechcavdi aster cues saaaner iste To Be Elected
c ‘Duting Editors «0.0.0.0... ‘Sheila Butiker, 64; Patricia Dranow, °64
Business Managers ........ .....:............... Terri O. Rodgers, "64; Margaret: Ausiey, 64
je in aa ta anaser wwinte Celia Coates, ’64
_To ‘Be Appointed
’. BUSINESS STAFF. :
“June Boey. °66; Eve aces 66 :
EDITORIAL STAFF
Fog H. Warfield, 64; Sue Ja
e Kerbin, ’65; Dia uller,
Elizabeth Greene, °65; isty E ne. Seeaies
anes “63; Nancy Geist,
“66; V Gratstro Lynne Lackenbach, °66;.Edna_Pcrkins, °66; Liesa _
A Paik tee a Joan Cavallaro, "66; ‘Sandra_ Shapiro, ’66; Karen
. ~
‘SUBSCRIPTION BOARD . :
65; Bonnie ighannon, 65; Donna’ Daitz--
SRC ST A,
pean, 8 “c, S 00 suby-r pt may begin at any time.
» Pa., Post Office, under
Ses
7 ** : eka 4
nae * sg
1) Sian Srp lad mace 0 allied De A oe EP LOOT
SO PEM TTR er ce
Private meetings between
‘ group representatives still exist, but it is felt
themselves to the’ Summit; Yet they:are not—-
Modern Literature
Courses To Fulfill
BMC Requirement
Tradition has been bent at Bryn
Mawr. with the changing: of the
literature requirement last spring
for the Class of 1966 and following
classes, ’
This requirement, formerly ful-
English, Latin, “Greek, and Bibli=~
cal literature; as well as-by-Greek -
I, can now be met by courses ‘in
modern literature as well,
Bryn. Mawrters, are now cone
sidered “literate”? with English
101, any 200 English course ex-
cept Chaucer and Representative
‘English Novelists; “French 201,
202, and 300 courses; German 202
and 300 courses; and Greek 101,
201, 203 (Greek Literature in
Translation), and 301, Greek I
oho longer fulfills the literature
~requirement,:
Biblical Literature, Italian 201, {
202, 303, and $04, Latin 101 and
201, Russian 300 courses, and Spa-
nish $00 courses are also accep-
table. x» ?
“We .live in a changing, incréa=
singly modern age,’”? commented
a junior (Juniors are not affected
by the change) sophomorically on
_the changed requirement,
¢
| Mitchell Writes
“Students Raise Cry ‘To Armchairs! ’--
Abolish Library’ $ s Curfew. Wi
. By Jane e Walton
This has ‘been a a year of non-
violent protest. We have seen
' sit-ins,'kneel-ins, stand-ins, and
lie-ins, each posture protesting
‘Some Limitation of rights,
student Tight -- the right to study —
~when-one pleases -- is being cur- .
tailed by the library’s early clos-
‘ing hours. Tere is a rising cur-
rent of dissatisfaction threaten-
ing to break into a stormy wave
of open protest.
~-. Among deyices considered--ac- .
_ cording to rumor--to gain sym-
pathy for the later-hours cause, is
an ‘all-night library sit-in, or
study-in.
London Times
Deplores Rare Text Shortage’
(Ed. Note: The following let-
ter was written by Charles
Mitchell, Professor of the His-
tory of Art, to the LONDON
TIMES.) | ‘
Sirs *
The plight of the scholarly and
university librarian ‘is nowadays
not..only - or_even.essentially. -
due to shortage of cash, Many
of the common working-tools of
scholarship, once to be: found in
every learned library, are now
virtually unobtainable. for love or
money: they are out of print and,
barring chance = laborious sass
‘all snapped-up. ~~. 7
This © difficulty will apply
especially to the libraries of the
Applebee
what-the devil do you think
about the subject of’strong drink?
remember. when our dear m. cary
let the girlies all have sherry?
and then the :
prohibition clamped,
and ‘no one’s. lips
at eve were damped.
and the dark ages settled in,
and no one could. make bathtub gin, ‘
and ere: showed on all our
facys
or-in-Chief. — in ‘we-were old enough
for lacy’s.
_. but then some.hope began to flicker.
(we worked for sherry-not for
likker)
and sherry camp to. christmas
dinner.
,
the hope’ soon grew into.a glimmer...
and now. we’ll make another try -
to keep tradition strong.
~ (we'll work for sherry - not for rye)~-
and-progress is our. song,
so.concentfate on progress now,
. work for our nighttime Sherry.
if our petition | works - then wow!
we'll all be. sherry merry!!
‘nic-up,
applebee
~~quickly—
‘new British universities, as it al-
ready applies to many smaller
college and newer university
libraries in the United States;
and to make things worse: they
will all now be competing for
more or less the same books at
the same time. Nevertheless, the
new universities will be obliged
to ~build=“up--working
libraries for_current teaching and
research comparable to those of
; the older universities, unless they.
are content to be second-rate
scholarly institutions.
The solution, I suggest, is for
a central organization to be set
‘up--with -public.funds.-.- -possibly
' in connection with H, M, Stationery
Office - fdr the reproduction by
Xerox or other methods of such
books and peyiodicals as prove
to be inscholarly demand, however
limited. The initiative would
probably have to come from the
“Vice-Chancellor of the new uni--
versities, if they are interested;
and the initial staff-work might
perhaps be done ‘through a
competent committee, under the
auspices: of the University Grants
Committee. Grave problems of
« copyright, &c. would, of course,
have to be faced; but these, with
good will on the part of copy-
right holders and owners of scarce
items, and a proper scale of re-
production fees, © should ee be
insuperable.
Such . reproductions aia not
be ‘very: cheap; but they would be
obtainable, and a steady, if limited
number of eager subscribers would
no doubt come forward from all
countries. The results, in terms
of the advancement of learning,
would be enormous; and with such
a. prize to. win, university
librarians would indeed have a.
watertight case for seeking funds
_to.take advantage. —
“Yours, &c.
_ Charles Mitchell, :
Bernheimer Professor
of the History of Art,
Bryn .Mawr College,
a Pennsylvania -
>
_ THE COLLEGE NEWS wishes
_| to express its deepest sympathy
‘in the recent death of Edward
Briggs; well known’ to Bryn
“Mawr students. as the gentleman
‘| who -transported them to and
from Haverford in the college
station wagon.
ys Rae ee a nh . EA.
ith Sit. in
en am .
The question, “Do you tavor
civilly. righting the wrongs wrought
by. early library closing hours
through such non-violent means as
all-night carrelling?’”’ brought re-
plies ranging from, ‘‘---- --
<----,and_ you can quote. mel’ te
toa simple Huh?”
The NEWS wondered about: tne
feasibility of this plan, which would
‘require wide-scale support from
a notoriously apathetic student
body.
sample of students,
The grass-roots idea was sub-
sequently dropped in favor of fur-
ther speculation on practicality of
the move. The participants would
be pioneers; so far as we know,
no campus has successfully held
A Ghou!' in School?
Dangers facing the students
would be great, The library itself
would deter all but the bold--who
knows’ what» lurks in the towers,
coming down to roam at night?
Also, the sitters would be pla-
gued by those infamous chairs,
unbearably hard for more than.
fifty reserve pages. And how
would one sign out?) Sit*in on
campus? pacer
But if protest is to be made, 3
someoné must do it... Someone
must seize the banner of study
rights, grasp, it firmly in both
hands, march past the library -
staff and the Lower Mérion Ca-
nine’ Corps, and. raise it -- un--
furled to the brisk. breeze of
academic freedom -- atop the
library .towers. - Surely there are
a few Mawrters left.
Barkara Thacher
Works In Turkey
On AFS Program
Barbara Thacher went into
training for the arduous~job- of
Pem fast hall announcer by spend-
‘ing the summer in a work camp.
Through the auspices of the
American Friends Service Com-
mittee, she stayed for two months
inagthe small Turkish village of
Tekeliler where she helped build
a school, About thirty-five students.
from seven countries participated
in this project. - y
The village wasextrefhely prim-
itive and.isolated, It was an eight.
hour walk to the nearest town where
things could be bought. The vil-
“lagers raised wheat ahd tobacco
primarily and had to turn over
half of their — to their
‘landlord.
The students at the camp lived
in tents near the. village. The
Turkish government, who did not
want foreigners to see the poverty,
had a pipe for running’ water in-
stalled, Previously water ‘had been
brought from a hole about twenty
minutes. away’ on the backs of the
women. ne
The most dramatic event of
Barbara’s_stay came late one night
when she and a Turkish student
We therefore consulted a .
nurse were called upon to assist ,
in the. birth of a-baby....
ed, tiny hut where no preparations
had been nade. A rope had simply
been strung across the. room for the
mother to lean on, The baby had
trouble ‘Breathing at first and
probably would, have been con-
' sidered dead if there had’ no
one to help get it started.
Barbara’s chief souvenir. of the
’ summer: jis--an iron wedding band
with various characters stamped
=)
~ on it. These rings were made during ~
the Turkish Revolt and were given
to people who turned. their gold
wedding: bands in for government.
use.
ws
"Phe birth -took-place-in-acrowd-——- Se |
Friday, October 11, 1963 —
°
THE.COLLEGE NEWS
/~
Page Three
_ Cleverly dintaien Forces To Assess Ff ellin’ s Eight And A Half
Fantasy =
. Peter, Paul And Mais,’ s New. Album
. By Waverly Cleverly
and J. H. Pollock
Peter, Paul, and Mary, says Bob
_Dylan_ on the covev-oftheir newest
L.P., have ‘‘grown,’’ The contents
“of the album-aren’t the -best-ex-
amples ‘of Dylan’s conviction, but
there is some evidence of ex-
perimentation: within their latest
i%-bander, ‘¢In the Wind,”’
Feeling somewhat biased and
‘ incompetent to review the Trio’s
efforts, I recruited the assistance .
of a fan, and was surprised to
find our views very’ similar,
The album: opens with a‘spiri-
tual on the well-worn judgment
day theme with nothing specta-
~“Gillar about “it except” “a \hefty,~
rhythmic guitar background ay
Peter Yarrow. **Ro¢ky Road,’*
medley of. lines from gs a
set to music, showed a goud deal
of fine and "varied instrumental
work,
En toto, the first side of the
record was nothing to write home.
about until the last cuts**Polly
Von,’ a beautiful ballad rendered
in a typical but lovely manner
with. fine musicianship evident
all the way. The second side. of
the disc was a yawn-maker with -
the exception of Paul Stookey’s
fine treatment of his babys; **Don’t
NSA Plans trip
To Southeast Asia
For U.S. Delegation.
-_ A-delegation- -of- ten American
students, . sponsored jointly by
United States National. Student
Association and the Institute of .-
International Education, will de-
part in mid-December
Participants will visit univer-
-. Sities,. major.-cities,”and= rural —
communities, meeting with leaders
in each locality.. The program’ is
under the auspices of the United.
States Department of State,
_..-Participants will.include under-
" graduates. with leadership qualities
demonstrated
pation. -in- student--organizations,
They must have.a thorough know- .
ledge of international affairs and
the ability to discuss articulately
American society and student life.
Those-selected for participation
will be given reading lists and
will be expected to develop an
extensive knowledge of the country
to. be visited, All necessary ex-
penses of the trip will be paid.
The deadline for submission of
complete application is November
- 1. Applicants will be reviewed by
a selection committee appointed °
by USNSA. Applicants: may be asked
to appear for oral interviews.
Application forms may be obtained |
‘Nby contacting Marj Hélier,; Den-
bigh, or Mr. Melville Kennedy.
SUBURBAN HARDWARE ~
‘BRYN MAWR, PA.
Household Articles
through . partici-—
LAwrence 5-0894 » LAwrente 5-7350 |}. .
—~ Ye ‘carry a complete line-of-—=4-——
Think Twice.’’
“P P- & M have begun to ex-
plore . different styles without
. losing their own way witha song.”’
~-my—assistant said, To this { can
- only. add, experimentation doesn’t
always end “i rigs ‘but “you'd ~
best not bet tuo heavily on suc-
cess, But ‘there is no doubt in
my, migd that the dyed-in-the-
burlap fans of this threesome will
find-more than afew things to
justify -the- purchase: price of pad
album. :
‘Play's s the Thing’ at BMC, H’ford;
Entire Cast Assembles Next. Week
‘The play’s ‘the thing!’? agree
the members of the Bryn Mawr
College Theater and the Haver-
ford Drama Club. as they begin
preparations for the combined pro-
duction of HAMLET to be given
on -November--21,-22;-and-23, in
Roberts. Hall, Haverford,
Since it will be a completely un-
cut: version (a quite unusual
undertaking). Osric’s “fop’’scene;
not usually persented, is one
example of what will be seen in
the full-length version. College
Theater’-President Roian Fleck ~~
estimates the cast at thirty-four,
and expects it to run close to
four hours in length.
Casting has taken place, and the
principals begun rehearsals this
week, while next Monday the full
cast and production crews will go
to work. The principals are:
Hamlet, Munson Hicks; Claudius,
Terry Van Brunt; Polonius,
Howard Bush; Horatio, John
Pierce; Gertrude, Jane Robbins;
Laertes; _Peter Moskowitz;
(Continued from page 1)
was no one on campus with enough:
experience to -start-anythings-—
Our, first step was to get in
touch. with the Haverford WHRC
- members and a trip to their studio ~
“to see how-their station was being: + -
‘ aperated,
. Members were not only very cor-
‘The WHRC Council
dial in showing, us their beautiful
new equipment and promising to
help us with:our equipment == but
they also suggested that we join
WHRC by taking part in the. WHRC
programs .and wiring it to the~
“This would give ‘
us. a ehance to work in a studio-
BMC : campus,
and give ‘all the girls the training
that- was absolutely-necessary be-
fore we could evén think of broad-
casting from WBMC,
All of us in radio sincerely
hope that you, our audience, will
understand our earnestness i un-
dertaking this big project and we
believe that you will benefit from
it toos
© MUSIC o—
Tonight Thur. Oct. 14
JUAN SERRANO
world famous flamenco guitarist
—and—
THE JOHNSON CITY 3.
Si : (Old Time Music
ITHE 2ND FRET
-1902_SANSOM STREET, LO 7-9640-
NIGHTLY: 9:15, 11; FRI, & SAT. 8:30, 10, 12:
HOOTENANNY EVERY TUESDAY
x
“TELEPHONE.
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
BREAKFAST....... bidseet side vee ees9 00: - 11:00 A.M...
LUNCHEON....... re Sambncsanesy ees 12:00 - 2:00 P.M.
APTERNGON TRA. oo oS 3:30 - 5:00 P.M.
DR ER vas peisiccsinceardesreseteoees pistext 5:30 - 7:30 P.M.
SUNDAY DINNER.......-0-ceccseeeeees 12:00.- 7:30 P.M.
a = UNCHEON ‘PLATTERS. FROM .50 |
: DINNER PLATTERS FROM $1.05
NIGHT, SNACKS served Monday - Wednesday - Friday 8: 30 to 12
SPECIAL PARTIES AND BANQUETS ARR ANGED -
LOMBAERT ST: AND MORRIS AVE.
“LAWRENCE 5-0386
BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA.
ie : ST
«
Ophelia, Wendy Westbrook.
Stage Managers are Roian Fleck
and Bob Munger, while Lighting
is headed by Sue* Weidel and Bill
Dean, and Marj Heller and Bob
Galloway will be in charge of
~-Business;-Other- committee heads
. are, Rowena Licthenstein, Cos-
- ‘Phe. play, directed hy Robert:
Butman, will begin at eight o’clock, |
tumes,° Marge Aronson, Makeup,.
Lois Magnusson and Kent Higgins,
Props, and Gail Walker and Dan
Lerner, Publicity.
It was announced at the Monday
night’ Undergrad meeting that a
survey is to be held concerning
Students’ job earnings during the
school year. The survey, which will
begin this week, will be conducted
by the Undergrad representatives -
in each hall.
Students will be asked to submit
a weekly report of earnings to their
hall representative, This includes
outside jobs, as well as those
* handled through the comptroller.
The survey has been organized
by...Miss.-McBride and the deans,
_ who wish to stress its importance.
The information obtained through
the survey is needed for records
and for reports made to various
scholarship and loan foundations.
It’ does. not affect individual
scholarship opportunities.
Undergrad meeting was that of the
Haverford Art Series and movie
series. Bryn Mawr students may
hand knit ragged
Mexican Sweaters
1011 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PENNA.
7 ~YOUR FRIENDS FOR FUN, SELF-
A-second-topic discussed-at the-—
Combines
By C¢ Brooks Robards
The finest artistry’ often ema-
nates from the individual’s ex-
' ploration of the creative process.
Federico’s Fellini’s ‘*Eight and a
Half,’’ which is playing atthe Bryn
Mawr. Theater, is- the: product of
_ just ‘such an exploration,
‘ The central character, played
by Marcello Mastroianni, is a
movie director obviously fash-
ioned after Fellini himself, “Eight
. and a Half’*.is a record-of- this
director’s. attempt. to~ instill his,
_ of the movie, as Fellini suggests,
work with meaning.
Within this framework, the film
creates a mixture of fantasy and
reality which reflects an
intensified level of everyday exist-
ence, It leaves the audience with
a sense of the fulness of life;
its comedy, its confusion, its seri-
ousness.. -
For some, it may be difficult
to follow the swift shifts, for ex-
is ample, from the director's very
Dean To Begin Work On Survey
Exploring Our Earning Capacity
now obtain tickets to separate
events in the series from Dorothy
Meadow, president of Undergrad.
After next week, they are asked to
contact the president of Arts
Council for tickets and information ©
about the series, ie
La
LEARN TO BOX!!
BE A MASTER IN THE ART OF
SELF-DEFENSE. EXPERT TRAIN-
ERS’ SECRETS CAN BE YOURS!
NO EQUIPMENT -NEEDED, .FORM
A CAMPUS BOXING CLUB AMONG"
CONFIDENCE AND REAL--PHY-
SICAL FITNESS. COMPLETE BRO-
CHURE AND LESSONS ONE DOL-.
LAR. SEND TO: PHYSICAL ARTS
GYM, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Istand, New York.
Ss
LA 5-0443
LA 5-6664
James P. Kerchner Pharmacist
30 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr. Pa.
Reality,
real problems of communication
with his wife, to the delusion of
himself as the tyrant lordof harem.
Furthermore, the audience must,
have at -least an understanding
if not. an acceptance of the film’s
Italian point of views.the husband~.__
wife-mistress triangle, the emo-
tional furor, the pervasive influ-
ence of Catholicism, perhaps even |
the spaceship colussus which is
so central and so Italian animage. .
' A second, even a third viewing
will help to give the reality-fantasy
shifts a greater cohesion. It will
enable the audience to develop
wn understanding of the director’s
reiationship to his wife and mise >’
tress as well as tothe other women
in the film.
Finally, the film’s syihbolism, :
including the figure’ of the prosi-
tute dancing on the beach and the
little boy leading a band of clowns,
__will_come into Sharper focus, _
But the first viewing should be—
for fun, because **Eight and a Half’
is a delight as well as a serious
work of art,
ae
|PARVIN’S PHARMACY |
shaggy shirts
by peggy evans
leather jerkins
by fred braun ~
handwoven jackets
by adele mulrooney
handmade jewelry
Earrings and Pins
Necklaces and Pendants
Cuff Links and Tie Bars
THE PEASANT SHOP
1602 Spruce St. Philadelphia
845 pansy. Ave. Bryn Mawr
Paperback Book Shap
22 = LANCASTER AVENUE, ARDMORE, mae
MIDWAY 9-48.88 ;
BARNES AND ‘NOBLE COLLEGE OUTLINES
Call us to pagar books
date..
**COCA-COLA’’ AND **COKE’* ARE Reaisterco TRADE-MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCA-COLA CONPasH,
«slate...shower...
shave...nick...ouch...
s
...dress...rush. ..rip...
change...drive...speed
-flat...fix...arrive...wait —
»-Wait,..pause...
= Cth © =
Bottied under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by?
*4
’ / ee:
. THE PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA*BOTT LING CO.
Friday, October 1, 1963
- Barefooted NEWS Editor
Wins In Glamour Contest
A letter written last year in
conjunction with the Glamour ‘‘Ten _
- 8est Dressed’? Contest has brought
college News Editor Brooks Ro-
vards a windfall of unexpected
wealth and inahionewhrld noto~
otiety. :
When -notified of her award last
week Brooks described her. im-
mediate reaction as ‘‘unprint-
Campus Events
Friday, October 11
7:30 ;
Lantern Night, the traditional wel-
coming of the Freshman Class,
will be held in the Library Clois-
ters. General Admission will be
$.60 student admission, $,30. In
the. event of rain it will be held:
on Saturday, October 12, at 7:30
om. !
8:15 p.m..
‘The Student Madrigal Chotr of
Muenster (West Germany) .pre-
sents. a free program of sacred,
secular and folk music at Roberts
Hall, Haverford.
Saturday, October 12
1;30 p.m.
_ Football game -- Haverford vs.
Dickinson -- will be held at Wal-—
~tor Field, Haverford.
8:15 p.m. '
Charles Rosen, pianist, wilPpre-
sent a program of Beethoven,
Babbit,
—w-
Hall, Swarthmore College. There
will be no admission charge.
Thursday, October 17
8:30 p.m. :
‘Paul Kristeller, Professor of Phil-
-Osophy at Columbia University,
will give a Class of 1902 Lecture
on. §*Renaissance. Thought: and-the~
Mediaeval Tradition’’ in the Com-
mon Room,’Goodhart. :
Saturday, October 19 ~
8:00 b
The Junior Show, ‘‘Getting There
Is Half The Fun,”’’ will bé presented
in Goodhart Auditorium. Tickets
__will be on sale during the week ..
previous to the performance and
' will also be sold at the door.
Debussy, Shoenberg and
Schumann at Clothier Memorial |.
at ne
able.’’ A word of sinllanakion ~-'the
harried editor had just groped her
way to her mail box after some
ten hours at the printer and sus-
pected the announcement to be a
rather cruel joke on.the-part .of.a
fellow NEWS member.
Then- Brooks was faced with a
difficult choice of prizes. Offered
was either a three day visit to
New York, planned and chaperéned
by Glamour editors, or a $250 _
cash award. Brooks chose the
, money. ,;
At first, ae would not disclose
the plans she has made for dis-
posing of her newly acquired
wealth. Remarked Brooks, ‘*That’s
unprintable- too.”
prodding, however _ several
schemes emerged. Now she is
faced with the decision of whether’,
to donate the award to the N EWS,
blow it ona trip to Nassau, use it
to installia c1stom designed mani-
fold system in her vintage ve-
hicle.. . . . or merely change it
into one dollar bills andrun through
it in’ her ey bare feet.
fy ,
LAwrence 5-5802
825LoncasterAve. Bryn Mowr, Pa.
Afté further —~-~
THE COLLEGE NEWS
_Ellen Gross Leads
Self-Gov. Discussion
Of Freshman. Week
Freshman week was the main
topic on the agenda at.an open
meeting of Advisory Board on’
Tuesday night. More than fifty per-
sons atterided, including Miss
McBride, . Mrs. . Broughton, ..and
s. Pruett. ;
‘The goal-of Freshman Week, to~
provide the quickest introduction -
to the College, and to thus »make ~
the entering students as independ-’
ent’ as possible, is undisputed.
However, as Self-Gov. President
Ellen Gross pointed out, much
. can still be done to increase ef-
ficiency. The problem of exactly
how much orientation information
the Freshmen should. be expected
to digest upon their arrival at Bryn
Mawr was. discussed at length.
This weuld of. course. involve.
“the quéstion of how much material
should be sent to them in advance,
and-in what form. The possibility
of consolidating the Freshman
Handbook and the Self- Gov Consti-
tution into one volume” was. criti-.
cized by some on the grounds that
-the more casual, chatty tone ofthe
former and the more formal at-
mosphere’of the latter would create
a dissonant effect.
Ellen also announced that leading
essay questions on the upcoming
Self-Gov exam would be posted
next week so as to allow for prepa-
ration.
|e FLOWERS BY WIRE
le DE ‘LINGE.
Bryn Mawr
Flower Shop, Inc.
@ CUT FLOWERS |
@ UNUSUAL GIFT ARRANGEMENTS
823 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pd.
LA 5-0326
wad s
THE BRYN MAWR
TRUST COMPANY
BRYN MAWR,.PENNSYLVANIA.
aii ae F DIC
Sah ae
~" Heed. the still, small voice of conscience cs
_ Call home now! It’s easy, it’s iniexpensive, and a
folks‘ love you for it!
@
Variety Marks Photo Show
could be entitled ‘Portraits by ee
the Photographer as an Artist.’’'
A study of two -heads’ by Griffith
Smith of Haverford, the lighter
one in the background abruptly
eut off by the darker one in front,
and the whole surrounded by heavy
shadows, is about as near to a
carefully constructed cubist work
asa Photograph can be.
(Continued from page 1)-
Lattimore and Joseph Berry. In
Mr. Lattimore’s ‘‘Chapel at Pen-
’ telli’’ and Mr. Berry’s ‘‘Perspec-
156,’ the observer -
tive, Peru,
has a sense not only of the signi-
ficance of the scene represented,
but its esthetic: appeal as well.
In ‘Perspectives,’? a wall of
‘@losely planted trees casts wa- —
vering gray shadows in the’ path
between. The quiet’ solemnity
of the scene is vividly porirayed,
but even more powerful is the ab-
stract pattern created by the hori-
zontal shadows flanked by series
of sturdy brown perpendiculars
and culminating in a Jackson Pol-
lack-like mass of green foliage.
Mr. Berry and Baseball
Another example of this ap-
proach is Mr. Berry’s ‘‘Decision,
Philadelphia, ’63.’’ He has~ cap-
-tured--the -dramatie~-second: when
the runner’s sliding toe touches
the base-mat, accompanied by a
dense cloud of dust.
A numbér of works in the show
~GANE & SNYDER
834 Lancaster Avenue
& punkins & cider »
=
Marco Bianco Jewelers
Gifts of Distinctian
‘Watch & Jewelry Repairs
814 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LA 5-4597 .
Jeannett’s, |
oe
Joyce Lewis
Reversible Parkas
Stretch Pants
839 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Just Released
Peter, Paul and Mary
“IN THE WIND”
featuring DON'T THINK TWICE
BLOWING IN THE WIND
MADS
9 W. Lancaster Ave. Ardmore, Pa.
MI 2-0764
gaya
WOMEN’S FLANNEL BLAZERS
in navy and a new hunter green
Fhis-classic-blazer;-madeon-our~boys
model with brass buttons, welted edges
and center back vent, is but one of our
many Fall highlights for girls. There’s a
new navy wool chinchilla coat for campus,
a new Chesterfield for dress, new outer-
coats for weekend wear...and of course
our traditional sweaters and shirts. Illus-
trated catalog upon request. -
4
atone mnpehamnaninneney mem atins Sheva preenneareraamesewantennare tie
ry
THI
- Meus Furnishings, Hats ¥ Shoes
346 MADISON AVE., Cor. 44TH ST., NEW YORK 17, N.Y.
en NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY sT., BOSTON 16; MASS.
‘PITTSBURGH * CHICAGO * SAN FRANCISCO * LOS: ANGELES~
bl
Friday, October 1, 1963
- Barefooted NEWS Editor
Wins In Glamour Contest
A letter written last year in
conjunction with the Glamour ‘‘Ten _
- 8est Dressed’? Contest has brought
college News Editor Brooks Ro-
vards a windfall of unexpected
wealth and inahionewhrld noto~
otiety. :
When -notified of her award last
week Brooks described her. im-
mediate reaction as ‘‘unprint-
Campus Events
Friday, October 11
7:30 ;
Lantern Night, the traditional wel-
coming of the Freshman Class,
will be held in the Library Clois-
ters. General Admission will be
$.60 student admission, $,30. In
the. event of rain it will be held:
on Saturday, October 12, at 7:30
om. !
8:15 p.m..
‘The Student Madrigal Chotr of
Muenster (West Germany) .pre-
sents. a free program of sacred,
secular and folk music at Roberts
Hall, Haverford.
Saturday, October 12
1;30 p.m.
_ Football game -- Haverford vs.
Dickinson -- will be held at Wal-—
~tor Field, Haverford.
8:15 p.m. '
Charles Rosen, pianist, wilPpre-
sent a program of Beethoven,
Babbit,
—w-
Hall, Swarthmore College. There
will be no admission charge.
Thursday, October 17
8:30 p.m. :
‘Paul Kristeller, Professor of Phil-
-Osophy at Columbia University,
will give a Class of 1902 Lecture
on. §*Renaissance. Thought: and-the~
Mediaeval Tradition’’ in the Com-
mon Room,’Goodhart. :
Saturday, October 19 ~
8:00 b
The Junior Show, ‘‘Getting There
Is Half The Fun,”’’ will bé presented
in Goodhart Auditorium. Tickets
__will be on sale during the week ..
previous to the performance and
' will also be sold at the door.
Debussy, Shoenberg and
Schumann at Clothier Memorial |.
at ne
able.’’ A word of sinllanakion ~-'the
harried editor had just groped her
way to her mail box after some
ten hours at the printer and sus-
pected the announcement to be a
rather cruel joke on.the-part .of.a
fellow NEWS member.
Then- Brooks was faced with a
difficult choice of prizes. Offered
was either a three day visit to
New York, planned and chaperéned
by Glamour editors, or a $250 _
cash award. Brooks chose the
, money. ,;
At first, ae would not disclose
the plans she has made for dis-
posing of her newly acquired
wealth. Remarked Brooks, ‘*That’s
unprintable- too.”
prodding, however _ several
schemes emerged. Now she is
faced with the decision of whether’,
to donate the award to the N EWS,
blow it ona trip to Nassau, use it
to installia c1stom designed mani-
fold system in her vintage ve-
hicle.. . . . or merely change it
into one dollar bills andrun through
it in’ her ey bare feet.
fy ,
LAwrence 5-5802
825LoncasterAve. Bryn Mowr, Pa.
Afté further —~-~
THE COLLEGE NEWS
_Ellen Gross Leads
Self-Gov. Discussion
Of Freshman. Week
Freshman week was the main
topic on the agenda at.an open
meeting of Advisory Board on’
Tuesday night. More than fifty per-
sons atterided, including Miss
McBride, . Mrs. . Broughton, ..and
s. Pruett. ;
‘The goal-of Freshman Week, to~
provide the quickest introduction -
to the College, and to thus »make ~
the entering students as independ-’
ent’ as possible, is undisputed.
However, as Self-Gov. President
Ellen Gross pointed out, much
. can still be done to increase ef-
ficiency. The problem of exactly
how much orientation information
the Freshmen should. be expected
to digest upon their arrival at Bryn
Mawr was. discussed at length.
This weuld of. course. involve.
“the quéstion of how much material
should be sent to them in advance,
and-in what form. The possibility
of consolidating the Freshman
Handbook and the Self- Gov Consti-
tution into one volume” was. criti-.
cized by some on the grounds that
-the more casual, chatty tone ofthe
former and the more formal at-
mosphere’of the latter would create
a dissonant effect.
Ellen also announced that leading
essay questions on the upcoming
Self-Gov exam would be posted
next week so as to allow for prepa-
ration.
|e FLOWERS BY WIRE
le DE ‘LINGE.
Bryn Mawr
Flower Shop, Inc.
@ CUT FLOWERS |
@ UNUSUAL GIFT ARRANGEMENTS
823 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pd.
LA 5-0326
wad s
THE BRYN MAWR
TRUST COMPANY
BRYN MAWR,.PENNSYLVANIA.
aii ae F DIC
Sah ae
~" Heed. the still, small voice of conscience cs
_ Call home now! It’s easy, it’s iniexpensive, and a
folks‘ love you for it!
@
Variety Marks Photo Show
could be entitled ‘Portraits by ee
the Photographer as an Artist.’’'
A study of two -heads’ by Griffith
Smith of Haverford, the lighter
one in the background abruptly
eut off by the darker one in front,
and the whole surrounded by heavy
shadows, is about as near to a
carefully constructed cubist work
asa Photograph can be.
(Continued from page 1)-
Lattimore and Joseph Berry. In
Mr. Lattimore’s ‘‘Chapel at Pen-
’ telli’’ and Mr. Berry’s ‘‘Perspec-
156,’ the observer -
tive, Peru,
has a sense not only of the signi-
ficance of the scene represented,
but its esthetic: appeal as well.
In ‘Perspectives,’? a wall of
‘@losely planted trees casts wa- —
vering gray shadows in the’ path
between. The quiet’ solemnity
of the scene is vividly porirayed,
but even more powerful is the ab-
stract pattern created by the hori-
zontal shadows flanked by series
of sturdy brown perpendiculars
and culminating in a Jackson Pol-
lack-like mass of green foliage.
Mr. Berry and Baseball
Another example of this ap-
proach is Mr. Berry’s ‘‘Decision,
Philadelphia, ’63.’’ He has~ cap-
-tured--the -dramatie~-second: when
the runner’s sliding toe touches
the base-mat, accompanied by a
dense cloud of dust.
A numbér of works in the show
~GANE & SNYDER
834 Lancaster Avenue
& punkins & cider »
=
Marco Bianco Jewelers
Gifts of Distinctian
‘Watch & Jewelry Repairs
814 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LA 5-4597 .
Jeannett’s, |
oe
Joyce Lewis
Reversible Parkas
Stretch Pants
839 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Just Released
Peter, Paul and Mary
“IN THE WIND”
featuring DON'T THINK TWICE
BLOWING IN THE WIND
MADS
9 W. Lancaster Ave. Ardmore, Pa.
MI 2-0764
gaya
WOMEN’S FLANNEL BLAZERS
in navy and a new hunter green
Fhis-classic-blazer;-madeon-our~boys
model with brass buttons, welted edges
and center back vent, is but one of our
many Fall highlights for girls. There’s a
new navy wool chinchilla coat for campus,
a new Chesterfield for dress, new outer-
coats for weekend wear...and of course
our traditional sweaters and shirts. Illus-
trated catalog upon request. -
4
atone mnpehamnaninneney mem atins Sheva preenneareraamesewantennare tie
ry
THI
- Meus Furnishings, Hats ¥ Shoes
346 MADISON AVE., Cor. 44TH ST., NEW YORK 17, N.Y.
en NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY sT., BOSTON 16; MASS.
‘PITTSBURGH * CHICAGO * SAN FRANCISCO * LOS: ANGELES~
bl
College news, October 11, 1963
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1963-10-11
serial
Weekly
5 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 50, No. 03
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-vol50-no3