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College news, February 19, 1965
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1965-02-19
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 51, No. 13
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-vol51-no13
aw.
°
Page Four
COLLEGE NEWS
February 19, 1965
Last Place Team
Enjoys Wilson Playday
by Anne Godfrey
A.A, President
In. the midst of Hell Week, Bryn
Mawr sent bowlers, swimmers,
fencers and basketballers to Wil-
son to participate in a playday
with Goucher, Penn State and Wil-
son, After little sleep and a long
- ride the teams put up a valiant,
though not too successful effort
in the day’s events,
The bowlers, some of whom had
only seen the large balls on tele-
vision, had an average of 93 - which
for those of you who have not
bowled with big balls is far from
outstanding. However, they were
at Wilson to swim and not to
bowl. In the proper sport, they
fared much better, They won the
medley relay and Sue Orbeton
came in second in the butterfly.
The Wilson pool is only 15 yards
long and this necessitated three
laps rather than the usual two,
costing Bryn Mawr many valuable
seconds,
The basketball team was
amazingly consistent:
_ Penn State 29 BMC 8
Goucher 34 BMC 7
Wilson 33 BMC 8
The Bryn Mawr team had only
six players while the other teams
had many substitutes. Though very
weary, our team struggled to the
end. ;
The fencing was not. much
brighter. It was anindividualelim-
ination rather than team compe-
tition. Three of the fencers won
their first bout only to lose their
| Campus Events
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22
As part of the Interfaith series,
Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, Judge
o. the International Court of Jus-
tice, The Hague, and former Pres-
ident. of the United Nations Gen-
eral Assembly, will. speak on
**Islam’* at 7:30 p.m. in the Com-
mon Room,
The Ann Elizabeth Sheble Mem-
orial Lecture will be given by
C. Day-Lewis, English poet and
critic, on ‘‘Heroic Elements in
‘the Poetry of Yeats.’
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28
The Bryn Mawr-Haverford Col-
lege Orchestra, under the direction
of William H. Reese, and the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology Symphony Orchestra, under
the direction of John Corley, will
present a joint concert in Good-
hart at 3 p.m. The Program will
include Brahms’ Symphony No, 1.
ey in
Guadalajara, Mexico
The Guadalajara Summer School,
a fully: accredited University of
Arizona program, conducted in coe
operation with professors from
Stanford University, University of
California, and Guadalajara, will
offer June 28 to Aug. 7, art, folke
lore, geography, history, language
and literature courses. Tuition,
board and room is $265. Write Prof.
Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227,
Stanford, Calif. :
oo
EE cea see
second. Thus they drove for three
hours only to fence twice. Sue
Greanoff, who lost her first bout,
Won her next three and so won the
Consolation,
The results of the ptayday left
Bryn Mawr fourth.
Freshman Show...
(Continued from page 1)
In the opening and closing
scenes, Janet Kole was convinc-
ingly coy as the hero’s secretary,
Icebox. In the first scene, she
gave a sparkling performance of
the song ‘Think Evil,’’? which pro-
vides a witty answer to Prome-
theus’ worries about his future
once he has removed all evil
from the world. The spies neces-
sary to every spy story lurked
in a properly sinister way through-
out, and their individual accounts
of how they fell into a life of
crime were very entertaining.
One scene takes place in the
studio of Vincent van Gogh as the
search for the apple nears the
_end, This scene is somewhat handi-
capped by a.tendency of the script
to sacrifice comedy to further
the plot, but Cindy Ayers as the
artist and Margie Westerman as
the model with purple kneecaps
made the most of the material.
Among the other noteworthy per-
formances were.a fine caricature
of a beauty contest M.C. by Robin
Johnson; .a seductive solo during
a dance sequence by Amy Dickin-
son; and a beauty contest sketch
with Pat Winter as Miss Neander-
thal and Susie Teeter as Miss
Paleolithic, helped by a chorus
of contestants, displaying vocal
talent as well as —beauty—in—a
lively song ‘*Play It Cool.’?
Mention should also be made of
the costumes which were well
thought out and which included a
particularly handsome dinosaur.
The class of ’68 seems to have
‘an abundance of talent. The songs
were fresh and entertaining, the
dancing was -polished and well
choreographed, and the orchestra
was excellent.
At the curtain call, the entire
cast sang one of Prometheus’ lines,
“7711 come out all right.’? Their
show certainly did.
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21st St., The 2nd Fret, 1902 Sansom St. Mail Orders: FOLKLORE PRODUE-
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- BMC-H ford, MIT
Will Pool Talents
For Joint Concert
The MIT Symphony will. col-
laborate with the Bryn Mawr-
Haverford Orchestra February 28
for a program of classics and
a 20th-century Russian work,
Returning a visit made by Bryn
Mawr and. Haverford a year ago,
the MIT group of 49 boys and
nine girls will arrive Saturday,
conduct three rehearsals, and per-
form Sunday at 3 p.m. in Good-
hart.
With John Corley of MIT and
Dr. Reese of Haverford alternately
conducting, the combined groups
will perform The Leonore Over-
ture #2 of Beethoven, Brahms’
First Symphony, and the Lieu-
tenant Kije Suite by Prokofiev.
Harriet Swern, co-president of
the Bryn Mawr Orchestra, is es-
pecially excited about the last
selection, since they were suc-
cessful with another modern Rus-
sian composition, the 5th Sym-
phony of Shostakovich, last year.
The advantage of this combined
concert is the greater versatility
of these two small groups with a
larger range of instruments.
Saturday night after the réhear- ©
sal, the MITers will have achance
to relax. .The girls are planning
to spend the night at BMC, but
first they hope to meet some
of the students here at aninformal
get-together in the Common Room
around 10:30,
BRYN MAWR’S. °
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BRYN MAWR, PENNA.
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Bryn Mawr
‘Reform or Revolution’ Topic
Of Amherst Rights Conference
The necessities for organizing
the poor and for developing through
them .a new sphere of power in
order to gain civil rights were
emphasized last weekend at acon-
ference ‘*The Civil Rights Move-
ment - Reform or Revolution?’’
held at Amherst College, The im-
pressive array of speakers ranged
from actor Ossie Davis through
S. Aronwitz, of the Committee
for Full Employment, Jesse Gray
and B, Strickland of GORE, and
Tom Hayden of the Students for
a Democratic Society (SDS),
through Noel Day and professors
from Haverford and Boston U,
The absence of Malcolm X, and
Michael Harrington made the con-
ference less spectacular than
hoped for, but gave more opportu-
nity for close discussion with lec-
turers and studénts,
Views on the question **Reform
or Revolution?’? ranged widely.
Several speakers supported plans
such as Urban Renewal in the
fight for civil rights.
Student speaker Tom Hayden
saw the conflict as an economic
problem. Negro blue-collar work-
ers, said Hayden, are laid off
not because they are Negro but
because automation replaces their
jobs. Thus: they have no economic
bargaining power.
new sphere of power.
The SDS goes into poverty
stricken areas. and tries to or-
ganize the people to work through
existing channels in city govern-
ments which should be available
for redress of grievances. Rent
strikes and sit-ins are also used.
Eventually, if. these people create
a powerful force they may run
candidates in local elections, thus
‘Obtaining local power, to effect
the necessary changes.
Ideological alienation from the
dominating - convictions of our
present society is necessary for
leaders working for any basic
change in the Negro’s situation,
said more radical speakers Arono-
witz and Strickland. These leaders
could not work within an existing
local power structure, as the US
government does when it gives
War on Poverty money to an al-
ready established, successful or-
ganization, They must start from
the grass roots and work up. They
must also guard against usurpation
of organizations they have built
up by those seeking to graft these
onto the present unsatisfactory
society, _
The question ‘*Reform. or Rev-
olution?’’ was not answered, but
clearly many want radical reforms
involving creation of an entirely
M. S.
.
“ai
if George had known
RAPPAH A
: PAM knoe
Today, George could mail his money across
the river — much easier,
had a Bryn Mawr Trust
© Subsunbserm _
oo ACCOUNT
much safer — if he ©
‘Economical and handy, too. Stop in and let
us explain how little it costs,
Our 75th Year of Service
2 , BRYN MAWR TRUST
COMPANY
seasoen (Se el ee
_ The Main Line's Own Bank HAVERFORD - BRYN MAWR- WAYNE
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