Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
%,
&
VOL. XLVIII-NO. 22
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY,.MAY 8, 1963 |
2 Trustees of Bryn Muwr. College, 1963
PRICE 20. CENTS
Wells. To Botive In. June,
Will Teach at MacMurray
_.Roger-H.-Wels, Chairman~of the
Caroline McCormick ‘Slade Depart-
ment of Political Science at Bryn
Mawr, will retire in June. Dr. Wells
*.+-has been a member of the Bryn
Mawr faculty” since 1923. “During
1963-64, he will be Visiting Profes-.
sor of Political Science at MacMur-
ray College,. Jacksonville; Illinois,
where —he.-will-- teach . ‘comparative --
government and political theory.
Dr. Wells graduated from North-
western University, received his
M.A. from Harvard Univegsity in
_ 1921 and his Ph.D. in-1923.-He-join-
ed the Bryn Mawr faculty in 1923
as an Assistant Professor of Poli-
tical Science.
ciate Professor in 1927, a Professor
in 1933,-and was appointed chair-
man of the department in 1940.
many, Dr. Wells served. for two and
‘a half years, at: the close of the
‘Second World War, as Consultant
‘and ‘Deputy Director of the Civil
Administration Division, U.S. Office
of Military Government for Ger-
many. He was.a member of the
U: S. Military Government delega-
tion’to the International Conference
of Local Authorities which was held
in Paris: the same year. For his
“services to the Military Government
in Germany, Dr. Wells was awarded
the Medal of Freedom. by General
: ey =
So ~In~ 1951, Dr. Wells was granted
leave of ‘abeerice’ from Bryn Mawr
in order to take up for a year a
State Department position as Chief
of the -Historical Division of the
~ Office of the YJ. S: High Commission-
er for Gernfany. During this time
Dr. Wells
merous mopfographs and documents
on subjecfs ranging from “West
Banking System” to
“Press, Radio and Film in West
Germany.” Dr. Wells. has also
served ‘as vice president of the
Government - Affairs Institute’ in”
-“Washington — «an agency which
_assists the Department. of .State
with German, Austrian and Jap-
anese exchange program.
Among the. books Dr. Wells has
combe, 1926), German Cities — A
c
—~and American’ Local Government
- (1939). His most recent. book,
BMC To Receive
Control: Of Estate
From Hale Family
-An--estate of more. than four
~ million dollars left by Mrs. Rachel
Cameron. Hale will eventually go
to Bryn Mawr. Mrs. Hale, who
“died on April 18 at the age of
ninety-two, left the bulk of her
estate to her-daughter, Mrs. G.
Howland Chase of Washington.
Mrs. Chase is an alumna of Bryn
Mawr and a member. of the Board
ef .Direetors.-Mrs:- Hale’s_ will--sti--
_ pulated” that after Mrs. Chase’s
“death: contro}: of the - estate is: to.
be. given. to. the _ trusees | of Bryn.
eae | Tae pant
‘In addition, Bryn crpers “will
receive’ financial -aid*in 1963 from
“Mobil Oil Company thtqugh—the
ns
sylvania. schools, - including. Hayer-
ford, will alte, receive. cute
=e)
we gh Biyn nue haere
seats ste aren sensed
He became an Asso-—
‘A. well- known authority on Ger- ~
rew up and edited nu- —
published are: State Government in
oe the United States (with A. N. Hol-
Study _of~-Contemporary. Municipal--
Politics and Administration (1932),
~—Foundation- For Independent--Col-~
‘. leges, Inc. Forty-two other Penn-
samedi apo disie pie pic Se are an eT a meee
“=A Study “in Federal-State Rela-
tions 1949-1960 (1961), reflects his
current interest in federalism and
iw. the integration of Europe.
Friends call Dr. Wells “an ex-
treniely warm; generous person to
work with . . . a very kind-hearted
person. He is also a very dedicated
‘man, always available to students,
"always available to_everybody, real--
ly. A person of immense knowlédge
—this strikes you immediately. °
shall just miss him: dreadfully.” |
te
= ‘Roger H. Wells, Chairman De-
partment of Political Science.
Revised Schedule
For 63 Graduation
-Features Luncheon:
The Bryn Mawr Commencement.
will be scheduled this -
activities,
year on two consecutive days, June
2 and 3, instead of the usual three
days. It is hoped that the two-day
schedule will -be..more convenient
for parents coming from ‘far away.
There willbe a. luncheon on
Sunday given “by the College in
honor of the Senior Class,
which senior parents and members
ofthe faculty will be invited. The =
luncheon, once a regular part of
the graduation festivities, will be
revived to take the place of Gar-
_ den’ Party.
The: Baccalaureate Service will
Kiseley, University Professor of
Anthropology and the. History: of
Science at the University of Penn-
sylvania, will give the: address.
On Monday morning, the Con-
ferring of Degrees will take place
on Radnor Green. The exercises
will be ‘held at ten o’clock
In the event of rain, Commence-
ment exercises will. be held in
Goodhart Hall. Because of space
limitation, only holders of special
tickets can tbe admitted. Other
guests -will -be. accommodated... in
the Reading Room of ‘the Library
where the proceedings will be
broadcast over a loud~ speaker
system. :
Three Professors at Bryn Mawr.
Receive Awards for Scholarship
to--
' Technology
Two Bryn Mawr professors have
~ been awarded Guggenheim Fellow-
ships, it was announced last week.
Of the 269.scholars, scientists and_-
artists who received Guggenheims,
Sylvia W. Kenney, Assistant Pro-
fessor of Music, received one for
the study of the style and form of
‘the 15th century motet, and:Frank
B. Mallory, Assistant Professor of .
Chemistry, received a Guggenheim
to study organic photochemistry.
Miss. Kenney plans to delay her...
_Guggenheim while she. serves as
Visiting (Associate Professor at
Yale University. Then she will go
to Italy to begin work ~on her
study ‘of the sshenliad motet in Ox-
_ be held Sunday evening at ‘eight * ford.
o’clock-in-Goodhart, Loren C.
; Mr. Mallory clases next
year at the California Institute of
investigating recent
developments in. photochemistry,
the. study of chemical changes
brought about by irradiation with
ultraviolet light. Work in this field
has been in progress at Bryn
Mawr for the past six years, and
one of Mr. Mallory’s objectives for
his year in California is to~ plan
the direction of future research in
photochemistry at Bryn Mawr.
The Guggenheim . Founda-
tion’s ‘Fellowships are granted to-
persons of the highest capacity for
scholarly and scientific research, as
demonstrated* ‘by their previous
Student Demonstrators Protest Segregation i in Cambridge
vin Attempt to Secure Greater Civil Liberties for Negroes
by Leslie Coen, ’66
About 20 miles from Washing<
ton, D.C., and only 150 miles from
Bryn Mawr,. the town of Cam-.:
. -bridge, Maryland. stil]..praétices.al-.-
most total segregation, Its bowl
ing alleys, public swimming pool,
and-al-but-one-of its restaurants
do not serve to Negroes; its movie
theater requires that Negroes sit
in the last three rows of the
balcony.
But-more—important~-than~ that,
40% of the Negro ‘working force
is unemployed, and Negroes make
up. 30% of the .town’s population
of 15,000. Those jobs \open for
ad Negroes are usually part-time, do-
State in West German Feder a or unskilled — the mean- -
est least, attractive work in the
‘town’s - seasonal industries.
With: these poor prospects for
employment: after graduation,
Cambridge’s ‘Negro high school of-_
fers no: commercial courses. Con-
sequently, Negroes will remain_un-
trained: for better jobs, should they.
come along.:.No Negroes attend
the white high-school, although
the. schools are officially integra-
ted from the fourth’ grade through
the twelfth grades. Schooling is
arranged according to districts,
and since the districts have been
gerrymandéred to create one that
is exclusively Negro and four. that
are ex¢lusively white, Negroes
must apply for
“White “schools.
fall, but the three that got in
‘could “not bear the tension and’
h ent; nd SO as after nine-.-
Eee : Unemployed . men has developed.
days;
OFFERED.FEDERAL AID
aid for urban--renewal- last -year,
and turned it ‘down, yet most
streets in the Negro section have
no sewers and are flooded all’.
“ih Rcd
_with CNAC, whose. program
~¢ludes™ demonstrating, *
admittanée to
Nine applied last
ae =
seca carpal has als
spring. This district is very poor,
with . dilapidated. houses. and un-.
paved. Streets. The poorest. whites
are. much better - off than all the
Negroes.
‘Eleven girls from Bryn Mawr,
I among them, wert. to Cambridge
‘these lJast two.Saturdays, to help
the Negroes. :The local NAACP is
a conservative, unsuccessful .body.
Anything that has been done in
the last year to advance: integfa-
‘tion has been doné through CNAC._
—The Cambridge Non-Violent Ac-
tion Conimittee—started. by. Bal-
timore Negroes and~ whites, now
supported by. groups from Swarth-
more, Haverford, Goucher, Lehigh,
We worked
in-
and Maryland State.
picketing, ~
boycotting discriminatory busines-
ses, and -voter education and re-
-gistration.
DEMONSTRATORS ARRESTED -
More than 60 desaciteaters
have been .arrested so ‘far, on ar-
-bitrary,. trumped-up charges. that
range from “disorderly conduct”
to“swearing at.an officer,” Thirty-
two were arrested at one time for,
assaulting. an. officer: (All. 32 “as-
“ saulted” the same officer, who was.
seen the next day, in perfect phy-
sical condition). It is a non-violent
group, that surprises ‘hostile
policemen, who threaten arrest,
by making no moves of resistance’
“they. sing, and pray. They—have
“made some progress, but it is still
-insignificant—a few-jobs are now:
open; a large, integrated union
and a voter . registration drive,
‘last year; helped defeat a strongly
Cambridge was offered federal .
pro-segregation county official. SS
There js a lot of fear in Cam:
‘bridge. Arbitrary arrests of—Né- -
groes have created a sense. of hos-
to. the -ia¥. on si and
tgistcah ee
eres
Aes RO it GER
mn peed tp i AG ote ee
whites Won't go alone into each
other’s districts, separated, appro-
priately enough, by Race. Street.
Employed Negroes won’t join .
“-CNAC for fear of losing their jobs.
The unemployed have nothing to
‘lose, and some, with many young
people, have become extremely en-
thusiastic about CNAC. Most old- -
er Cambridge Negroes, thinking
that action on their part will cause
an eruption of a Mississippi-type
crisis, are-reluetant-te—move;-They ~
could. easily” register to vote; it
seems to me that CNAC’s most.
valuable ~ project. is ‘making this
known, in an individual, door-to-
door, voter education. campaign.
DOUBTFUL AT FIRST ~
._I_went down-to-Gambridge cer-
tain of the need for integration,
but dubious of these methods. Like
most Bryn Mawrters: I’ve talked
- with, .I..doubted. the efficacy, and
‘advisability, of having car loads ©
of college students descend on a
town, to Help older, and more ex-
perienced citizens in an. “internal”
_matter. I feared a presumptuous
attitude on the part of the stu-
dents, andsresentment*in the town.’
But after: joining hand-in-hand
with Negroes” and whites in the
most. spirited singing that I’ve
éver-heard; after having my pick-
‘et line spit on and jeered at; and:
especially,’ after -helping. in .a per-
fectly integrated, crowded cchureh
“kitehen, to serve hot dogs, potato
salad, and Cool Aide to what seem-.
ed like thousands of. enthusiastic
people, I ‘ealized that this i is. what
‘must be done.
The support of the itilees stu-
dent, both Negro and white, is
needed to: generate a desire for
progress among Negroes who are
deprived of their
Continued on Page 4, pe a
sere teh ty
ee sp Ra Sgn
5.2 ae deciatatbacntansy Sc ia aah as Whaisaikccbs te aasmnmipnbaieia
ont
fundamental ;
persons of unusual and proved cre-
ativity in the fine arts. Through the
grants, Guggenheim Fellows are
able to-carry on Studies ia” their
fields.
In addition to these Guggen-
heims, an award from the Manu-..
~ facturing Chemists’ Association
has’ been presented to—Ernst- Ber-
liner, of the Bryn: Mawr Chemistry
Department. The purpose of the
award, which includes a medal, a
citation, and a check for $1,000, is...
to-recognize and honor outstanding
chemistry teachers at the under-
graduate level, Mr: Berliner has
led the Bryn. Mawr Chemical: Col-
loquium and lectured. at Harvard ©
University. in 1947 and at the*Wni-
versity of. Pennsylvania in._1962.
Library Will Open
» @ y Q
Until Eleven p.m.
For Spring Exams
The library will be “kept open
until a later hour during final
exams, as it was in the January
exam period.
According to a statement made
by the administration, “The privi-
lege of using the. library until
11;00--p.m,—is -extended—- to Bryn
Mawr students for an experimen-
tal. session during final examina-
tions beginning May 19th. The.
eee . reading room, reference room, re-
contributions to knowledge, and to g , 4
serve room and art study will be —
‘open to undergraduate students in
the M. Carey Thomas Library. The
Scierice ‘Library will also be open
__for the same period.” PAE
Because members of “both the
faculty and the administration are \
how. working. together on propos-
-ed plans for an extensive remodel-
ing of the building, they are hesi-
tant about adopting a new, -per-
manent, system. at this time..
The success of the experimental
i Lchipe hye. library during ex-” '
ams -will lafgely “determine the
extension of ‘library hours néxt
. year. The-.administration has sta-
ted. that “the opening of the li-
brary during exams is experimen-
tal. If-—students~take unfair” ad=~
‘vantage of this,. there will .be no
possibility . of later hours. next.
year.” :
Another idea nee found support
- on campus — having a smoking
room for resident undergraduate
students in the library building.
At present they. must go into the
Cloisters or completely outside the
building to smoke.
‘The suggestion of opening the,
graduate: seminar rooms to under-
graduates (graduate students may =
smoke in the seminars), original-
‘ly. made by Undergrad., has-been »
rejected because of the’ inconveni-
ence to the . graduate students *
that would result: dlesale use :
of the “non-resident room would
unfair to non-resident students.
Plans have been advancéd, how-
ever, to. change the present non-
resident room into a smoker for
resident undergraduates “when
Erdman Hall is *opened ‘and fhe
non-resident. students -move..into
new rooms.in that building.
The .M. Carey Thomas Prize}
of $100 is given..for the best | °
prose writing submitted by a |.
senior. Seniors wishing to sub-
mit manuscripts should bring
copies to. the President's Office | ~~~
“by May 17th. Each contestant | °
‘may submit one entry, a manu-—
‘| Seript written in the ‘nenior. year.
ps PE.
* be reprinted wholly
Page Two
-
a genes THE COLLEGE NEWS
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914 i
Published weekly during the College Year (except during
Thanksgiving, Christmas and fester holidays, and during examination
weeks) in the interest of Bryn Mawr-College at the Ardmore. Printing... A G f Mil -
‘ Company, Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. $ vest 0 ; e.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may” ~
or in part wtihout permission of the. Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL. BOARD ;
Bllderdn-Chlet ii Ne cere cece cece enna ta gpegenaes Brooks Robards, ‘64
Associate Editor .)........-. 06. e sees SER av ae SERA Pauline Dubkin, ‘63
Copy Editor ......-..-.+5:- LES TS HT EERE ETE RL OR. Charlene Sutin, ‘64
Make-up Editor ....5... 0.5 sce s eet ee eee tert e eee eaees Elien Rothenberg, ‘64° ,
Member-at-large .........0-5-- STC ENT BERT Constance Rosenblum, 65
Campus News Editor .....-..-..scees esse anes RonooU oc Anne .Lovgreh, ‘66 «
“Contributing Editors 05.0... ee eee Sheila: Bunker, ‘64; Patricia Dranow, “64
- ~ Business Managers...... pene aaa res Terri Rodgers, ‘64; Margaret Ausley, ‘64
_Subscription-Circulation Manager ........+++++> vee RE CLES US Linda Chang, ‘65
Photography ........0 cece cence eee n nse teen ee tee eytaees Diana Koin, ‘65
BUSINESS STAFF
June Boey, “66; Eve Hitchman, ‘66.
; EDITORIAL STAFF”
‘Diana Trent, ‘64; Mary H. Warfield, ‘64; Sue Jane Kerbir, ‘65; Diane Schuller, ‘65;
Barbara Tolpin, ‘65; Elizabeth Greene, ‘65; Diana Koin, ‘65; Christy Bednar, ‘66;
Nancy Geisi, ‘66; Vicky Grafstrom, ‘66; Lynne Lackenbach,- ‘66; Edna. Perkins, ‘66;
Liesa Stamm, ‘66; Anri Bradley, ‘66; Joan Cavallaro, °66;: Sandra Shapiro, “66;
Karen Durbin, ‘66;-Gretchen Blair, ‘66.
Eritered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office, under the Act
of March 3, 1879.
v
= Library Hours -
For the second time, the administration is experimenting
with a policy of extending evening library hours until 11:00
during exam week. The success of this experiment is condi-
tional upon the amount of student response: if an encourag-
aS eho
om ‘ r
“ing number ‘of students take advantage of the open ~library~
facilities (the reading and reserve rooms) the plan may become.
permanent. —
In view of th
this trial plan, it seems
>
students will take advantage of the later hours,
“plan will eventually be adopted on a permanent. basis..Because . _
of the lack of quiet study areas during exams and the
the agitation that preceded the adoption of.
hopeful that a sufficient number of
and that the
“rush”
on limited reserve books, we urge adoption of this plan.
_- Sonnet to the Parting Year —.
What time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves from typewriter hang
When unextended papers turn me old, -
A bare ruined choir where once the sweet keys sang.
In me there lies the shadow of a gay
And relatively carefree, barefoot sylph
a
Now-smothered in the cruelest month of May, ,
By daily bookshop, finals and skim milk.
The cloister pool has damped my one-time fire
And in the sun at work? Asleep. I lie
And dream of Haverford until I tire
Of studious boys. Something’s passed me by.
But how can I perceive when I must think
‘And strive. to. swim to wisdom.ere I sink... 002...
With the able assistance
of William Shakespeare-- “
and KE. G. : bat
Decision On Smoking Rule Alteration
Deferred Till Beginning of Next Term
To the Editor: J
On Tuesday, April 30th, Miss
McBride met with Ellen Gross,
Rachel Brown, Pauline Dubkin,
fine smoking to the more public
rooms -in_.the rmitories. - The
board also felt thdt health was. of
major concern, In other words,
and Caroline Peck. At that time the Board does not wish to _en-
she reported the consensus of the
Board of Directors’ meeting of
_. last: month, on.the_stydent. opinion
poll about smoking regulations in
Rhoads and Erdman.
The feeling, but not the final
decision, of the Board was that
despite the fire resistancy of
Rhoads (ie: resistant but not fire-
proof), - fire would still endanger
more than one student’s life. For
this reason, it still wished to con-
| Graduation Issue
This is the last regular issue
of. the College News until Sep-
tember. oe
The Graduation Issue will be
published on June 3. If you
would like to hate a copy of it
form below and send it to the
College News, Goodhart, via cam-
pus mail. : =
I~ You: will, be charged -25¢ on.
the first payday in the fall. (Sen-
iors must enclose their -money |
issue on Graduation Day.)
sent to your home, fill out‘ the |}
+ eh “the “fornig of purchase® the pet
courage inéreased smoking — in
light of recent cancer and” heart
research. The third point raised
was that such a rule would-be con--
trary to the college’s emphasis. on
equal. situation and privilege for
all students. ~
", Because this was a consensus.
and not a final decision, the Exe-.
cutive Board of Self-Government
has been asked to present to the
Spoor of Directors ‘a more com-
plete and definitive statement. of
campus opinion.. The Executive
Board feels that this report can-
| .-not..be. compiled before exams, be-
cause more time is needed to_in-
sure an educated ‘and responsible
vote on the part of the members ‘of
the Association. Therefore, 1e
Executive Board will continue fs
work on the question early in-the
fall. “ 1
: Ellen Gross, President
Nancy Geiger, Vice-President
for the Executive Board
of the Self-Government .' .
— Association | wih
was not mentioned: inthe list of
award ,winners published in The
News last week. eee
‘Louise won the Elizabeth Du-
ane Gillespie Scholarship in
American History. -She lives in
Rock and .comes ‘from Lincoln,
‘ye
hy
Mass. .
Posse
paicinibey sa
st ey mistake, Louise F. Herman =~
Senior Plans Trip
To European Cities
As one of the, twerity winners of
-the magazine’s annual College Board -
Competition, Jane Goldstone will
spend a week in Switzerland during
the month of June as.a Guest Edi-
tor of Mademoiselle magazine.
The twenty Guest Editors, accom-
“panied by several of Mademoiselle’s
top editors, will fly via .Swiss-
air to Switzerland on June 18 for a
week of sight-seeing and social ac-
tivities: They will yisit Zurich and
-.Geneva, as well as some of the fam-
ous winter and summer resorts, and
_.will_ meet leading dignitaries of the
country. They also will be enter-
tained at parties given in their
honor by government representatives
and by representatives of U. S. in-
dustries that have European bases.
“Whiléin Switzerland; -the-€ucst of “String Quartet,-Opus-127.”. The—-
Editors- wilt model ski clothes for
a photograph to appear in Made-
moiselle’s August College issue,
which they help edit during. the
month they spend with the maga-
zine, ---—~-r se
Jane Goldstone is.a senior French.
major who lives in New York.
Wednesday, May 8, 1963
: os Events of the Week :
Wednesday, May 8
7:10 p.m..
Silent Worship will be conducted
_by the Inter-faith Association in the
Meditation’ Room. s
7:30 p.m. ,
W. Paul Jones, Assistant. Profes-
sor of Religion, Princeton Univer-
sity, will speak on “Religious Exist-
-entialism from Kjerkegaard-to the-
. Present,” under the auspices of the
Interfaith Association. =§-
8:00 p.m. ue se
Murry Gell-Mann, Professor of
‘Physics, California Institute of Tech-
nology, will lécture on “Elementary
Particles,” in the Common Room
of Founders Hall, Haverford.
Thursday, May 9
po 8:15. p.m.
ictor Zuckerkandl
Melody, the Myth of Creation,”
with Beethoven’s sketches
lecture, co-sponsored by the music
departments of Haverford, Swarth--
more and Bryn Mawr, will be held
at the Meeting House, Swarthmore —
‘College.
Friday, May 10_
8:30 p.m. a
Three one-act plays, The Sand-
Frisch Farce, The Chidese Wall,
by Elizabeth Greene
The Chinese Wall, a “farce” by
Max Frisch, begins ‘with a man and
_a blackboard. The man is a con-
temporary intellectual, as he tells
the audience, and ‘he. is drawing the
Chinese Wall, which. was: built in
the time of Hwang. Ti, a Chinese
. dictator.
“It was planned as a defensive
‘Yampart,” says the man, “an attempt
to hold back time. As we know,
time will not be held back.”
Frisch deals with the cycles of
time and: history and relates them
to the modern dilemma of: the bomb.
He -creates a, timeless whole by us-
ing a melange of historical-and-fie-
tional characters such as Napoleon,
Columbus, Pontius Pilate, Don Juan,
Romeo and Juliet and Cleopatra,
Historical Figures Portrayed
He has carefully selected ~dicta=-
tors, lovers, corrupters, idealists
and adventurers to show that his-
tory, and the progress of time are
unalterable... Sesinacs ah
* Once he has established the masks, ~
the historicak figures, Frisch pre-
sents the situation in the China of
his ‘play and shows its parallels in
history.
Hwang Ti, the Son of Heaven, He
Who Is Always Right, has solidified
his dictatorship by .conquering the
last threatening: group of barbari-
ans. His only remaining enemy is
“an unknown man naifeéd° Ming’’Ke,~~
the Voice of the People, who turns.
out to be a mute.
Frisch shows, by. long ‘speeches
and brief action, that both the voice
of the people and of the intellectual
are powerless against the dictator.
Only a dictator can overthrow a
dictator.
When: Hwang’ ‘is “overthrown: by-~
¢
NEWS Error Cited
sc By USNSA Rep.
To the . Editor:
In the May Day issue, the News
stated the NSA representative to
the NDEA discussion as being W.
‘Dennis. Shaul, President, USNSA. —
Dennis was unable to attend, as
I stated then; and was replaced ~
by Tim ‘Manring, National Affairs -
Vice-President) USNSA. .
continued - cooperation between
the News and the NSA, so that
- the NSA comes to be of vital sig-
nificance to Bryn .Mawr. -
_ Marj Heller, ’64
ores nerrn eer eee P
Cis ides
“against the Chinese background.~~~
‘As NSA Coordinator, I appre-—
ciated the otherwise accurate re-—
» porting of the discussion: .I--hope. .
. that the fali will bring further and _
: ‘ : BSS eT
” Rex hr. * ‘ % seer rae res
ee sh, EB anna ae ea
~ Deals With Time and The ons
his. prospective son-in-law, the in-
tellectual says, “Come, it is time to
begin the farce again,” and the
farce begins again, line for line.
The. only resolution comes with Ju-
liet’s ““Oh, God! To live is all!”
and with the intellectual’s last
words: “We staid here in our time
- and the world rolls forward over it.”
Theme Belabored
The experiment with time and
with -history is interesting and the ~
parallels ring true. The great fault
of the play is Frisch’s use of long
and didactic’ soliloquy —to hammer -
in.an already obvious point. These
soliloquies seem to be too much for
the actors as well; They mouth the.
lines, making dull speeches even dull-
er. ;
The play's message; that no side~
can win a modérn war, may have
been fresh in 1946, but is now a
cliché. ae
Despite mediocre acting and pas-
sages of monotonous dialogue, The
Chinese Wall has exciting moments’
-when history is unified into the one’
cycle, when timelessness spans the
two thousand years: that separate
the characters.
The Chinese Wall is playing at
— +s
the Society Hill Playhouse, 507
South Eighth Street, until May 25.
ill lecture
“box, by, Edward Albee, Passion, Poi-
son and Petrifaction, by. George Ber-
nard Shaw, and A Marriage Has
Been Arranged, by Alfred Suteo,
willbe presented by the Bryn Mawr
College Theater and the Haverford
College Drama Club under the direc-
tion of Robert Butman. Tickets for
both performances, $1.50 and $1.00
(students) will be available at the
“Bryn: Mawr box office during the.
preceding week between 1:30 and
. 3:00 p.m. The plays will be-pre-
sented at Roberts Hall, Haverford.
. 8:30. p.m.
Josh White will sing at Mitten
all, Temple University. Tickets are
vailable at the Mitten Hall Great
Court for $2.00 and $1.50. ~~
Saturday, May 11
Early —
Alliance will sponsor. a group
which will help with voter registra-
tion in: Cambridge,-Maryland.. ..
: 8:30 pm.
~ Three one-act plays will again be
presented ‘in Roberts Hall, Haver-
ford.
’ Sunday, May 12
ere 4200 p.m. _ —
Haverford . Student-Faculty pro-
gram of chamber and choral music,
featuring selections from Brahms,
Chopin, Satie, Monteverdi, and Rob- -
ert Palmer will be given in the Com-
mon Room, Haverford. ~
ae Oe Dales ite
Folk Singing Concert featuring
Bob Rosenthal, will be presented at
the Phi Delta Sigma fraternity,
1014 -Clinton, Street, Philadelphia.
Admission 75 cents.
Tuesday, May 14
4:00 p.m.
Marianne Moore (Bryn Mawr ’09),
will read from her poems under the
auspices of the Department of Eng-
lish. The reading will be held in
the Deanery and is open only by in-
vitation.. , ee
Wednesday, May 15
_-7:10 p.m.
Silent Worship will beheld under-—~
the auspices of Interfaith in the -
Meditation Room.
Hale Plans Work =
~~ As Political Aide.
Miss Judith E. A. Hale, a junior
‘majoring in political science, has
been awarded a political internship
in the office of Senator Thruston
- Bo Morton for the’summer of 1963.
_- Judy, who comes from New Albany,
SIndiana, is a Republican. This will
be her first experience as a politi-
cal interne.
The internship program is spon-
sored by the Pennsylvania Center
—for Education ~in--Potities—which—is-
supported by the Maurice and Laura
Falk Foundation.
Geology students who took part
tional songs of the college.
“On the first day of’ field trip
"| On the second day of field trip
On the third-day of fieid-trip
On the fourth day of field trip
On the fifth day of. field trip |
On the sixth day of field
T On the seventh day of fiel
Dr. Dryden gave to me —
Dr. Dryden gave to me
On the ninth day of field trip
_On the tenth day of field trip,
On the eleventh day/of field. trip
me — 60-filthy
New Lyrie Song
This parody became the marching song: of sixty-odd ‘first year
institution of the Geology Department: the Spring Field Trip. The
NEWS would like fo suggest that it be included as one of the tradi-
Foci en soe Ping 0a iesipat siesta
Dr. Dryden gave to me — a fern fossil off a fern tree.
‘Dr. Dryden gave’to me 2 hick towns~ard 4: fern. fossil off a fern tree.
“Dr. Dryden gave to me — 3 Haverford boys, etc.
Dr. Dryden gave to-me — 4 bus breakdowns, etc.
“Dr. Dryden gave-to me — 5 peneplains, etc.
trip
Dr. Dryden gave to me -— 7 trilobites, etc.
1m a
brachiopods, etc.
On-the eighth day of-field-trip.-. - ae
8 lumps of coal, etc.
Dr. Dryden gave to mg@— 9 bargain meals, ete
Dr. Dryden gave. to/me — 10 topo maps, ete. =
Dr. Dryden gave to/ me -- 11 lovely views, etc.
-|-On the twelfth day of field trip .. ;
slobs, etc. i
last weekend~in the—time-honored -
. vs
Wap Ay Seay
Saye
ts
Se eA mca ee TES mere tera oe
Se on Be Ot EO Se SL OER TS Sy
J
Wednesday, May 8,.1963
THE COLLEGE. NEWS.
F489 Theee
-- 1963- 1964 Alliance
Plans Conference
For Area Students
Bryn Mawr will have a chance at
something really big next year. Al-
liance is planning a 3-day confer-
ence, or study seminar, which far
surpasses anything attempted at
BMC for many years. .
Tentatively the topic is race rela-
' tions in the U.S. and-the impact
» sentatives. of the vario
_4 Views. of. three or four=spekears, Ale...
of the Negro on modern society.
(A less verbose rendition of same
would be ‘gladly: accepted.) Repre-
é views on
the value of the “civil rights” move-
ment will be invited, of course, But
there is more to this movement than
Black Muslims and Southern Senat-
ors.” There is the whole cultural
impact of the movement on our so-
ciety, especially in the fields of mu-
sic and literature. -
This will riot be a study of the
liance~ tentatively:+ plans multiple
speakers including panels.and de-
bates.
small. discussions..groups.-on_ specific
subtopics. With the help of the so-
cial committee, guests from neigh-
boring colleges, whom we expect in
great numbers, will be invited: to -
informal teas and coffee hours in
the dorms. My ;
This convention will’. be =e
Plenty of work: for everyone to’ fill
those moments of copious free time.
There is a sign-up list posted in Tay-
lor for volunteers. Please don’t be
shy. Many jobs require only a lim-
ited I.Q. We need your help if this
is to.be a success.
Please give suggestions for speak-
ers or panel topics to your hall Al-
liance Rep. or to Kathy Boudin.
And please share your enthusiasm
with your Undergrad Rep. This must
~ be a school-wide project.
Planners have been underestimat-
ing Bryn Mawr for a long time.
Next year ‘we’re going to move for-
ward -with great. vigor..__We’ll- be
competing scholastically with auth-
orities in many of these fields. In-
dependent preparation will make
.-the~~-conference” just that much
‘more worthwhile.
vimaiin IN FLOWERS & PLANTS
Jeannett’s Bryn Mawr
Flower Shop
823 Lancaster Avenue,’ Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LAwrence. 5-0326 LAwrence 5-0570
These will be followed by: |
’ funny
Members Florists’ Telegraph Delivery
Tonite thru Monday
- RAMBLING JACK ELLIOT-
and
_ REV. GARY DAVIS
the legendary street singer
| THE OND FRET
STARTS
NIGHTLY. 3.15
A Dirge: “Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May, -
‘Before All Our Maypoles Are Whisked Away!
For the first time in three years,
the sun made-an appearance for the
annual May Day festivities. The
appearance was brief, however,
and snow in the late afternoon
¢
“,
necessitated the postponement un-
til Thursday of the May Day play
and madrigals.
Also for the first dime in meciaal
years, attempts by Haverford un-
“Seniors Awake Without Mourning’... . “
Satire on-Pseudo Society
Provides Wit and Hilarity
By Jane Walton, ’66
and Anne Lovgren
“Give us your tired, your poor,
your thhomeless, and we will. ex-
ploit them” adequately keynotes
the conflict between the turn of
the century British bourgeoisie and
naive aristocratic. . idealism in
G. B. S.’s Widowers’ Houses.
The play, Snaw’‘s first, is: being
presented for the first time in the
area by the Philadelphia Drama
Guild .at their playhouse on Delan-
cey Street at 17th.
The play itself is a ‘hilariously
exposé .of _pseudo-upper
class society, exemplified by the
. slum lord Sartorius, and its profit-
-plan... of. shelling . shillings -from-—__
the poor.
’ Dr. Marry Trench, second son
of an -“Aristocratic” family, is
“appropriately horrified to discover
his prospective father-in-law’s
sourece—of- income, and, moreover,
that his own pounds are plucked
from the same pigeons.
The situation is complicated by
semi-schizoid Blanche Sartorius
and Harry’s companion and talk-
ing~ etiquette book
Harry, bad form”) Cokané: Al-
though. the plot. contains many a ~
Shavian twist, the outcome is—to
quote _ Cokane— “inevitable, Har-
ry, inevitable.”
The direction. by Louis Lippa
was” excellent, » particularly in
‘blocking, and all the actors were ~
competent. Deserving special men-
tion, however, is Harold Rayvis, a
diabolically suave Sartorius, exud-
ing evil gentility from every pore.
. Mustachioed Clothier Maloney
played the garrulous arbiter ele-
gentarium William DeBurgh Co-
kane. The hapless rent collector
S
Tickets ‘a~ Box Office: $2.50, $1.50,
Philadelphia 47, Pa. Phone KI 5-4400
Ym/ywha Arts Council presents:
from San Francisco
First Philadelphia appearance!
Author of “A Coney Island. of the Mind”
LAWRENCE ‘FERLINGHETTI
POETRY READING _ See
Sunday Evening, May 12th, 8: 30 p.m. ae
students $1.00
Mail orders with self-addressed, stamped envelope to - *
YM/YWHA-ARTS COUNCIL,/Broad & Pine Streets,"
Lickcheese, cinderellized into a
cape-carrying nouveau-riche, * was
played. with near-perfection by
John Edwards. Trench (Richard
Maloy, WFLN disc jockey) was
particularly convincing in the last
act wher confronted with the pros-
pect: of , becoming a -nouveau-
pauvre.
However, Kay Wareing
(Blanche) at her best distinctly
reminded us of Debbie Reynolds
throwing a temper tantrum; and
we would hate to see the tray-rat-
tling parlour maid Libby Morris
employed in our household.
The play runs through the com-
ing Sunday, and ticket informa-
tion may be’ obtained by calling
LO 38-3137.
(“bad form?
«
Come in and Browse
PAPERBACK
BOOKSHOP
Good Reading at
Inexpensive Prices
22 E. LANCASTER AVE.
*- ARDMORE
MI 9-4888
Qpen Wed. & Fri. ‘til 9 P.M.
-
¢
BREAKFAST .
LUNCHEON
AFTERNOON: TEA
DINNER_
SUNDAY: ‘DINNER
_ TELEPHONE
LAWRENCE .5-0386
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
~ OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
LUNCHEON PLATTERS FROM .50
DINNER PLATTERS ROM. $1.05
"OPEN 7 DAYS WEEKLY
“SPECIAL PARTIES AND BANQUETS ARRANGED
LOMBAERT\ST. AND MORRIS AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA
&
p>
dergraduates to abscond with the
maypoles were successful,
The siege of the Bryn Mawr may-
poles began early May Day morning,
when. two: regiments of organized
Haverford students amassed: behind
tne hockey field and near Applebee,
int} their projected double-attack’ on™
Bryn Mawr. The group behind the
hockey field skulked towards Rad-
_ nor armed with- water sling-shots,
detoured behind the Gym and
crawled into. the Merion ditgh.
Contrary to rumor, the group did
not make its entrance through the
_underground pipes of Bryn Mawr’s
heating system. The group which
had~ convened ~ between Yarrow
and Applebee, ‘cut directly across
the .campus..through Senior Row,-
and approached Merion Green
from the opposite side.:
... Throughout: this elaborate> ma-~
noeuvre, policemen in cars. were sta-
tioned in the Deanery and Merion
parking lots... However, when the
police tried’-to--leave the parking
lots after “Séeing “the béys, they.
discovered that the entrances to
both of the parking lots had™been
blocked by chains.
At four a.m. fireworks were set
Off outside of Pembrcke, and, during
this diversion, the maypoles were
seized and triumphantly carried off.
One maypole was taken off campus
via the back of Rhoads North to-
wards Merion Avenue. The other
was carried through Pem Arch
down Lombaert Avenue.
A group from Merion went to re-
trieve the missing poles Jast Wed-
nesday evening and after getting
’ involved in a water fight, succeeded
in recapturing one pole, which is
now on Merion porch.
=
Dead Since 1959,
-Revitalized WBMC
Is Floating on Air
The first attempt since 1959 to
broadcast over "‘WBMC was made
last Monday night. Masako Yama-
nouchi and: Pauline Chu. were on
the: air from 7:30 to 9:00. Only Pem-
broke East and West were’ able
to“ pick up the brWadcast, due -per-
haps to a faulty transmitter. The
“transmittér, borrowed: from Haver-
ford far the occasion (they had or-
iginally borrowed it from us) had
not been tried until that evening.
In spite of difficulties, the broad-
cast was a_ partial success. “The
‘microphone and record players work-
ed well, and minor repairs in the
broadcasting system should. enable
WBMC ‘to function regularly next
year.
WMBC, Vhich broadcasts at -
megacycles AM; is wired for Mer-.’
One |
ion,_Denbigh, and Pembroke.
plan which ‘will receive immediate
attention is ‘to> extend the wiring
to all the dorms on campus and
possibly to\the Inn.
If-a tape(recorder is obtained;-the
reactivating committee hopes to
tape lectures and concerts given at
Bryn Mawr and play them back over
the air. Debates, world and campus
news ‘are scheduled for next year
in addition to a program of classical ©
and popular music.
WBMC is located in the basement
of Pem’ East. The equipment for
broadcasting is set up and ready, -
backed up by a few hundred rec-
ords. All we need is the interest.
MAD S
~ COLLEGE STUDENTS!
“You can now learn
SHORTHAND
in 8 Weeks through as So
SPEEDWRITING”
ated Begins on a
MONDAY, JUNE 24 ~
Typewriting Included -
Visit, write, or telephone Office for details
ROCHESTER BUSINESS INSTITUTE.
1g Chintew AVE: Se
HA 6-0680
™e0ca-CoLa’’ WT **OOKE!* ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY,
Sa.m.calculus...late
rush...arrive...quiz...
Eng...read...write...
correct...
—peyehotic..neurotic
~ Pavilov...bell...lunch |
_ whew-patise
take a break “ . things g0 better with Coke
Botied ender the ‘saunas of The Coca-Cola eeeey by:
=F. 4 Gene:
k SY fr ee ain Be > oe pega hee
The Philadelphia |
Coca-Cola. ne comer?
s
Fs ae ree a
t
4
's-
i
ty
‘7
“sports=fans~ -among~-the»pasty faced tte
_used more often.
future.
Page Four
“THE COLLEGE NEWS
Wednesday, May 8, 1963
by Nina Jean Greenberg, ’63 °
The last concert of the year by
the Chamber Music Ensemble under
the direction of Mme. Agi Jambor
_ sive playing.
The melodic lines of the Fraygk
are long and rich and call for a-
fullness of tone which -Miss Dancis:
was given Sunday afternoon in the~*approached only in the lowest range
Music Room in Goodhart Hall and
included the very wonderful piano
playing of Mme. Jambor as well as
a performance of Brahms’ Third
Sonata for Violin and Piano, whose ©
‘fineness places it-on a léve] seldom: :
reached in performed music at Bryn
Mawr.
The program opeiied:: with the
Sonata in A Major for Violin and
Piano by César. Franck, presented
‘py Barbara Dancis, ’64, and Mme.
Agi Jambor. There.didn’t seem to
be much conviction behind Miss Dan-
cis’ phrasing, but in ‘spite of this
and the fact that the violin’s intona-
f the violin, while the rest. of the
notes had. a’ decided edge. There
was not always a feeling of convic-
tion behind any phrasing which came
through, -which_.was_al]. the- more
clear; > since Mme:
with so’ much expressiveness.. In
spite of this andthe fact that the
violin was often out of tune, Mme.
Jambor’s superb playing brought
out the lyricism of the. music.
The second work on the -eoncert
was the Allegro and the Larghetto
from Mozart’s Quartet in E flat Ma-
jor, K. 493. .The performers were:
Harriet Swern, ’65; violin; Susan
tion was not always of the best, tte ~ Morris, ’64, viola; James -Garson,
beauty of the music was brought. out —
by Mme. ‘Jambor’s * superbly expres-
"65, ’cello; and Mary Perl, ’64, piano.
~The two movements were ereditably
Do Only He-Women Enj joy Athletics?
_ AA Urges Sports for the Past y-Faced
“by Viola ‘Wathen, 66,
aS ae Correspondent
. The Relaxation course may have
made the lives of a select group of
Bryn Mawr students, but this year’s
A.A. board is sure that more re-
habilitation is~ necessary.
Ellie Beidler, this yedr’s’A. A.
| president, hopes that we can find a
way to make our facilities more
available. so that more people: will
be able to enjoy some exercise when
they want it. If equipment is easy
to get at, then, hopefully it will be
If the effort and
time expenditure involved in getting
. ready to play badminton are not too
great, then maybe the: average,
semi-convulsed- Bryn Mawr student. .
will have a game once in a while.’
One of the major problems has
been the retiring nature of the
A.A. Everyone has assumed that
there-was no hope ofanyone-but-a==-— “=
few he-women enjoying athletics at
- Bryn Mawr, so very little-has been
We think: that there
said -about- it:
are ~ many thwarted athletes. or
ranks and’so we would like to bring
‘them out of. their shells by letting
them know what. A.A. is doing.
There aren’t-many-more_activities
left this year.
However, next> year -will--be-very
active. There will be an expedition
se e ee,
Cambridge ©
Continued from Page 1, Col. 4
rights, In Cambridge, this support
is given in-a modest, unassuming
manner, Leadership. is shared
among Negroes and whites, ad-
ults and students. What I ‘was
‘impressed with most at that hec-
tic church supper was: the perfect-
ly relaxed’ atmosphere of friend-
ship and é¢quality, which, I believe,
can be said to be typical of the
- whole CNAC movement, This at-
mosphere, certainly, must be
spread through the whole nation,
if integration moves. made. now
‘are ‘to have any success in the
Trttittt
Arbeitgeber bevorzugen junge Da-~
* men mit einer GIBBS Ausbildung.
t. datori d’impiego preferiscono le
ragazze istruite da GIBBS.
Les employeurs préferent des jeunes
filles ayant l'entrainement GIBBS.
tos patronos prefieren-a-tas seno-
ritas instruidas en GIBBS.
SPECIAL 8¥2-MONTH COURSE .
~. FOR COLLEGE WO!MEN — :
Write. College Dean for
~ GIBBS_GIRLS, AT WORK =
KATHARINE GIBBS
© SECRETARIAL
BOSTON 16, MASS. .. 21 Harihoroegh Street
“NEW YORK 17, N.Y... 230 Park Avenue”
MONTCLAIR, N. J. . "33 Plymouth Street
PROVIDENCE 6, R. 1. © . 155 Angell Stfeet
run. by the Inter €ollegiate Outing
Clb. in the-Adfrondacks in the first
two weeks: of September. For infor-
mation call Jane Rediger in Pem.
East! Hockey camp will start Sep-
tember 19 and anyone is welcome to”
come”down to, the field during the
come during the first days of
school.
Jambor. played:
Madame J ambor’ s Chamber Music Group
Closes Year With Brahms, Mozart, Franck ,
played and any-lack of technique
which might have hindered the free-
dom of the performance did not pre-
-vent the spirit of the music from
emerging.
The concert, closed -with Brahms’
Sonata No.“8%m D Minor for Violin
and Plano, wild was played&by Ber-
.nard J. Berman, a junior at Haver-
‘. ford; and Anna Norberg, a sopho-
more at Bryn Mawr... Miss Norberg
and Mr. Berman. played together
with a great deal of understanding
and flexibility. Miss Norberg’s fine
musicianship was joined to «a mas-
tery of the music to create, for ex-
ample, such extremes as the light
opening of: the scherzo movement
and the grandeur of the last move-
ment. 4
To say that Mr. Berman’s violin
playing. was a pleasure to hear is
an understatement, for not only did
his violin sound: beautiful; it also
became apparent that he is an iritel-
ligent and interesting instrumental-_
ist, ‘one who had given most careful
thought to the musi¢ ‘he was play-
ing. The Adagio was especially
-wonderful -and~was~ played’. With. a
warm ’tone which somehow was..vi- -
. brant and delicate at the same time.
There is really just one way to de- .
scribe Mr. Berman’s playing of the
Brahms which includes everything
which ought ty, be said: he is truly
a musician.
. ) and Around Dhi adelphia
Johnny Mathis will appear at the Academy of Music on-Friday, +t 10,
at.7:30 ‘and 10:00,
The ‘Royal Ballet, formexiit ‘the Sadler’s Weils, ig scheduled for two per-
formances at the Academy. “On May 22, the program will be Les.
Sylphides, Elektra. (Premiere), and Sleeping . Beauty (Act 8). Swan
Lake will be danced in full on ma 23.
oJ
ee ae
THEATER on
The Sound of Music is continuing at the Shubert until Fon: 15. ~ “\ :
The Buéks ea Playhouse in New Hope, Pa., will feature Jan M ray
ie OO Mindy C arson in Critic’s Choice, from Moy 13 through May. 95.
Jean Kerr’s comedy hit Mary, Mary returns once again to the Forrest
Theater for a limited engagement beginning May 20.
FILMS.
-The Trial, starring tana Perkins, is playing at the Bryn Mawr.and_at..
the World. This. is Orson Welles’ version of the Franz Kafka drama.
A revival.of Giant, Edna Ferber’s story of Texas, with Rock Hudson and:
Elizabeth Taylor, begins Saturday, May 11, at the Stanton.
The Cossack spectacular, Taras Bulba, is playing at the Ardmore through
Sunday.
‘Robert Ryan and Peter-Ustinov star in Billy Budd: which begins at the :
Suburban. in Ardmore on ‘Wednesday.
The. ‘Wayne Avenue . Playhouse continues _ its Niemay Bergman Festival,
featuring Through A Glass Darkly and Devil’s Eye on Wednesday-and -
IHicit Interlude and. Three-Strange Loves on Thursday and Friday.
Among Philadelphia’s museums are the Academy.of Natural Sciences, on
Parkway at.19th Street, open 10:00 to 5:00 Monday through Saturday,-
and frora 1:00 to 5:00° on Sunday; and the Franklin Institute, 20th
and Parkway, which features. daily demonstrations and a planetarium.
.. The museum is open 10:00 to 5:00 on Tuesday through Saturday, and
‘.noon to 5:00 on Sunday. The Rodin Museum, 23nd and Parkway, has
the‘ largest collection of Rodin’s works outside of France. The Uni- .
versity Museum, one of the foremost archaeological museums. in the
country is located on 38rd and Spruce Streets, and is open Tuesday
through Saturday from 10:00 to 5:00, and Sunday from-1:00 to 5:00.
Something you may never learn in school :
It is so important to know how to’care for the beautiful silver you will own some day. Discover Pacific Silvercloth. ‘This
scientifically developed cloth keeps silver bright and shiny ‘without the need of polishing. It really works—that is why
yowdon’t have to! Pacific Silvercloth is embedded with tiny particles of silver that trap the tarnish producing elements "
in the air. It is easy to recognize by the rich brown.color and the famous name Pacific stamped on the fabric. Ask
for Pacific Silvercloth, available in bags, wraps, rolls, chests. and by-the-yard at fine jewelry and department stores.
A
ee
Silver: Firelight pattern by Gorham
%
aa 7 ‘ i os aaa a 4 % . i ‘
APES x For free booklet
‘ =a , oh
on care of .
; your silver beotn
and name of
your nearest dealer,
, . _. Write Dept. “C”.
\ ‘ + x
. Lastutomemigam : ~ the work-free way togleaning eo :
Sees . _ WAMSUTTA®/PACtEIC® INDUSTRIAL FABRICS 1430 BROADWAY, NEW YORK)18, NEW YORK
* a Se ae ts ma & ieee eee cpsssen Slicapimaneat ee gare septa. ™ res Ha 2 sass a ealeaee Shed 3 eR Vis : - ics sey Paes
:
Se Se are
College news, May 8, 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)
1963-05-08
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 49, No. 22
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-vol49-no22