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CAMPUS GREETS CLASS OF 70.
Dear Freshmen:
Congratulations! You've finally-
made it. All the planning, pre-
paring, hoping, and waiting have
culminated here -- on the Bryn
Mawr campus. So this is COL-
LEGE; right? Well -- not exact-
ly, not yet...
We can promise you that you?ll
never spend four days like these
ever again.in your college career.
You see, before you settle down
into the routine of the ‘‘barefoot
intellectual’? (or whatever the Bryn
Mawr girl is supposed to be at
the moment), we wanted to intro-
duce you to the sides of college
life that aren’t contained in the
‘catalog. As you, are discover-
ing, that’s an awful lot to cram
into four days,” but we’re doing
our best!
As it turns out, Freshman Week
may be the closest you?ll ever
come: to army boot camp. (Would
you believe sandal camp?) Your
program includes long hikes over
rugged terrain (just try to tra-
verse the stretch between Erd-
man and the Grad Center with
a bedboard on your back), en-
durance tests (Mother, Please...),
strategy sessions, and war games,
which are euphemistically known
as mixers.
We admit, this doesn’t quite
leave you with the image of Bryn
Mawr as a sedate women’s col-
lege, but you?ll discover, as we
have, that there isno single image,
description, or definition of Bryn
Mawr. In fact, that’s why we let
you relax after Fresiiman Week --
to let. you have four years in
which to formulate your own ideas
about college in general, and Bryn
Mawr in particular,
The official brass (or, Fresh-
man Committee) is eager to pro-
vide you with additional brains
or brawn, Their names will be
posted in the barracks -- oops,
dorms -- and at strategic loca-
tions on campus, Please give them
something to do!
So, as they say, ‘*Ten-shun!??
And if no one gets a chance to
tell you, let us say from the
Start, ‘‘We’re glad you’re here.”?
Lise, Melanie, and Esther
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Vol LU, 1
BRYN MAWR, PA.
September 16, 1966
C Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1966
25 Cents
Seahenn Week heads: Esther Stefansky, Melanie en and Lise
Cohen.
Bryn Mawr, Haverford Soiree
Features Dinner and Dance
Instead of the usual drippy wet
picnic on the Batten House lawn
with the Haverford freshmen, this
year’s Bryn Mawr Freshman Week
Committee and the Haverford Cus-
toms Committee have planned a
fancy dinner-and-dance for Fri-
day night,
The budget for this event is
expected to run around $509, ac-
cording to Jeff Gamble of the
Customs Committee.
Originally it was to be set up
with a theme of a Trip to the
Zoo, with the Haverford men be-
ing. gorillas and monkeys and the
Mawrters being pigs. . However,
there may not..be enough money
to decorate for this theme, and
also some of the planners didn’t
really appreciate the humor of
it.
As it is now planned, the 150
Haverford freshmen, the Cus-
toms men, and any available up-
perclassman back for football,
soccer, or cross-country practice
will come to Bryn Mawr to meet
the freshmen girls in their dorms,
Then they will go back together
either in the bus or by foot to
eat a catered buffet dinner in
Founders’ Hall on the Haverford
campus. This dinner: will be un-
like any other meal in Found-
ers, with all the boys in suits
and ties and white and gold table
Talk and Tradition
To Mark Opening
Of Academic Year
The College will begin the
eighty-second academic year with
an opening assembly in Goodhart
Hall Monday at which Miss Mc-~
Bride will speak,
Classes will begin immediate-
ly following the convocation. ~~
Tuesday evening is the tra-
ditional Parade Night, an infor-
mal welcome to campus life to
the Class of ’70. The secret song
of the freshmen and a step sing
are the order of the program.
cloths on the tables.
Dinner will be around 6:30 or
7:00 p.m. Hopefully, it will still
be light enough for the girls to
see the campus. Gamble wants
to prevent an increase in the
number of girls who have seen
Haverford only in blackness. Then
there will be a choice of either
attending a dance on the quad-
rangle in front of Stokes or going
to the Haverford Common Room
for talking and cokes, The dance
will feature live music from the
Stomp Jackson Quartet, a Haver-
ford group. If it rains, the dance
will be in the gym.
The committees are trying to
make the event as nice an affair
as possible. Gamble stated that
from the girls’ point of view, they
will see enough of Haverford men
in sweatshirts without making their
first encounter that casual; and
from the boys?’ point of view, they
will have the opportunity to be
with a Bryn Mawr girl long en-
ough to get to know her,
Class of ’70 Weighs in at 222;
Admissions Office Offers F igures
Miss Elizabeth Vermey, Bryn
Mawr’s Director of Admissions,
has released many of the vital
statistics on the Class of 1970,
As seems to be true with every
new entering class, its records
and College Board scores are
higher than the year before. Two
students may even enter as
sophomores this year,
Of the 222, 153 scored 590
or better on a language achieve-
ment exam, thus fulfilling a Bryn
Mawr language requirement,’ Miss
Vermey hastened to point out that
the other 69 were not necessarily
linguistically inept; they may have
either taken the exam in their
junior year (in which case it
wouldn’t count for language exemp-
tion), or perhaps had chosen not
to take one of the language exams
at all,
The geographical distribution of
the class is wide, even though a
majorityof the class, 52%, is
from the middle Atlantic states,
Bryn Mawr’s admissions policies
do not require any set quotas from
any particular area, As a result,
the heavily populated areas have
a correspondingly greater repre-
sentation,
There are 15%
eastern United States and 13%
from the south, Fewer than 17%%
live west of the Mississippi River,
from the north- ©
Veronica Diaz, also from Lima,
and Bevinda Noronha, from Mom-
basa, Kenya, will enter Bryn Mawr
as members of the sophomore
class,
Two-thirds of the Class of 1970
attended public schools; The fig-
ure seems to be growing larger
every year, The number of scholar-
Ships awarded comprises a third
with 9% from the midwest, 4% \ Cot the class.
from the southwest and 4% from
the far west, Finally, to complete
the cultural blending, 3% are from
schools in foreign countries, either
Americans in schools abroad (two
in Switzerland, one each in France,
Norway and Belgium) or foreign
citizens,
The six entering foreign citizens
will be in both the classes of
1969 and 1970, Enrolling as fresh-
men will be Beryl Fernandes of
Zanzibar, Tanzania; Julia Kartsoni
of Athens, Greece; Renee Levy
of Lima, Peru; and Elizabeth Del-
mar of Tangier, Morocco,
a0
A freshman arrives in true form Thursday morning.
Cooperation With H’ford Reaches
Academic, Extracurricular Efforts
The Class of °70 already un-
derstands the importance of Hav-
erford College as Bryn Mawr’s
most likely source of social life,
But coordination and cooperation
between the two schools extends
much more widely -- into aca-
demic and extracurricular activi-
ties -- with a great deal more
significance than any catalogs or
bulletins have probably revealed.
To wit:
In 1965, the Economics Depart-
ments of each school were fed-
erated so that, with the excep-
tion of thé introductory. course,
‘there are no- duplications of of-~
ferings. In other departments,
Bryn Mawr girls are free to take
courses at Haverford and vice
versa,
College Theatre is a joint en-
deavor, as are the Orchestra and
Renaissance Choir. Haverford
Class Night and Bryn Mawr Arts
Night and Dance Concert are now
bi-college activities. WHRC also
invites coed participation. Even
the COLLEGE.NEWS and _ the
Haverford News combined for a
joint issue last spring, and hope
to continue running such issues
at varioug-éntervals,
The recent, much publicized fast
for Vietnam was another joint
program, There were Bryn Mawr
girls on the Haverford yearbook
staff last year, and Haverford
boys on the Bryn Mawr ‘junior
show crew. The Bryn Mawr Curri-
culum Committee meets with
members of the Haverford Edu-
cational Policy Committee and
Academic Flexibility and Stand-
ing Committees.
A special bus service runs daily
between the two schools, Bryn
Mawr campus mail is now de-
livered to Haverford, and a meal
exchange system also is in ef-
fect. Students from both. cam-
puses may freely use the other’s
library.
These examples are only the
major ones; the interaction® of
Haverford and Bryn Mawr has
reached a stage of innumerable
intricacies, combining the best
of the two institutions and sup-
plementing any gaps that may exist.
Princeton’s
Aré’”?’ said Bryn Mawr is prac-
tically. married to Haverford,
Whatever the case, mutual efforts
in all spheres of college life are
opportunities of whichevery fresh-
man should begin to take advan-
tage.
“Where the Girls.
Summers Abroad
Aid Archaeology,
Language Studies
Professor Brunilde Ridgway of
the Classical and Near Eastern
Archaeology Department has been
appointed director of the 1967
summer session of the American
School of Classical Studies in
Greece,
Beginning June 28, the six-week
session is to include trips in the
vicinity of Athens and an excur-
sion to Sparta and Olympia, A
visit to Crete is scheduled for
late July, and one to Macedonia
as well, A northern tour to Delphi
and Thermopylai is set for early
August,
Bryn Mawr College is associated
with several other summer pro-
grams abroad, namely the Centro
de Estudios Hispanicos in Madrid
and L/’Institut d’Avignon, This
summer, at the latter, the success
of the public lectures is illustrat-
ed by a 180-person attendance at
a talk on French painters and
Provence by Maurice Sérullaz,
Conservateur au Musée du Louvre,
In Italy, Professor-Kyle Phillips
of the Archaeology Department
began in July new excavations. at
Murlo, a small provincial Etruscan
town not far from the city of Siena,
In . southwestern Asia Minor,
Professor Machteld Mellink again
was working at the sitenear Elmali
in the interior of Lycia and will
continue there until November,
Her excavation and Mr, Phillips’
are: providing field training for
Bryn Mawr students,
Frochmen:
The Freshman Week issue
of the COLLEGE NEWS,
Bryn Mawr’s’ independent
student newspaper, is a com-
plimentary copy. to the Class
of ’70, members of which are
cordially invited to join the
reporting, advertising, or
business staff. ;
“Watch for announcements
of the COLLEGE NEWS tea
next week, or drop in to the
newsroom on the second
floor of the College Inn any-
time.
&;
{
Page Two >
THE COLLEGE NEWS
LN
Friday, September 16, 1966
T "RHOADS HALL -
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Subscription $3.75 — Mailing price $5.00 - Subscriptions may begin at any time
Entered as second class matter at the Bryn Mawr, Pa. Post Office, under
the Act of March 3, 1879, Application for re-entry at the Bryn Mawr, Pa. Post
Office filed October Ist, 1963,
Second Class Postage paid at Bryn Mawr, Pa.
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination
weeks in the interest of Bryn,Mawr College at the R.K. Printing
Company, Inc., Bryn Mawr, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is fully. protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in
it may be reprinted wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
MMO NNINE 4 0.65 bp ueba cee becca st ¢ 0+ 0000+ sNanette Holben ’68
Associate Editor... 00. ee 8% eye ie ee + ++ «Laura Krugman '67
Aenesin MEMES 6 0 025 066d 40 8 01h 6 8 a4 ye A «eee eKit Bakke '68
Cc ee chews ¢¢eeeeee «Eleanor von Auw ’68
MINTER OTION 5 0 beh st ce ess ewes ee Darlene Preissler ’68
Member-at-L arge eeeeeeeeeee . eeeeves « «eee Robin Johns on ’68
COMWIOUTING BdlfOhecs cos eee cs oe eee ee wee eee eEmily McDermott '68
Business Manager........+ CROUCV CREPE Cee Ube ee + + «Fern Hunt '69
Subscription Managers. ........ .Madeleine Sloane '68, Mary Ann Spreige1 '68
PORN ONUOONS 666 ois back Sao bse aces 600s sce ss Diane Ostheim ’69
Oh Oh '70!
Your four years before the mast are-about to begin, Welcome
aboard! But (and now you have to tolerate yet another voice of ex-
perience), let us give you a few tips as to what to expect as an un-
dergraduate Mawrter, :
People inevitably will ask you what college you are attending, and
of course you will reply in your best Welsh, ‘‘Bryn Mawr,’’ Here are
the responses you can anticipate:
‘Is that a two-year or a four-year college ?’’
‘‘How wonderful! And how do you like Virginia??? __
Then there are the more knowledgeable ones who will say to you:*
‘“‘Bryn Mawr, That’s where Harcum is, isn’t. it?’
‘*Don’t you like boys?’
But don’t despair, Bryn Mawr really is a well-known place, James
Michener immortalized her name in CARAVANS, with the story of the
student who ran away to Afghanistan and ended up collecting camel.
dung, TIME magazine informed the nation that we area body of
muscularly athletic females, And Princeton’s ‘‘Where the Girls
Are’? warned our dating prospects that we enjoy talking about only
romantic poets and existentialism, :
Lest you begin to wonder what you’re doing at Bryn Mawr (as you
will wonder many times in the next few years), know that you are
dearly beloved maidens, oh children of Athena! At this very moment,
we promise that there are at least 247 Haverford boys paging pas-
sionately through your freshman picture book, 24 faculty members
just dying to teach you introductory courses, and 178 sophomores
overjoyed that a younger class is finally here,
And now we come to the- happy subject of hygiene lectures, These
are a series of weekly talks on sex and psychology, followed by an
examination which must be passed by the senior year, (A more com-
plete discussion of this requirement is found in the college catalog
under ‘‘Academic Integrity,’”) We can only recommend that you take
these lectures with a grain of aspirin,
But let’s face it, You freshmen are. in one of the most enviable
positions on campus, You’re the angels, and you get coffee ice cream
and raspberry sherbet at Miss MGBride’s, In a year or two or three
you’ll understand our nostalgia, so while you can, enjoy that first
year,
And welcome,
Mail Subscriptions
A note to parents and friends: please accept this con iplimentary
copy of the COLLEGE NEWS as your introduction to Bryn Mawr’s
independent student newspaper. A weekly publication, it contains.
full coverage of activities on campus as well as commentaries on
the world outside. In addition to joint issues with the Haverford News,
special issues and supplements are among our /projects this year.
We are supported solely by advertising and subscriptions, and we
earnestly hope that you, too, will support the NEWS-- and enjoy it,
Please Send Me One Year’s Subscription To .
THE COLLEGE NEWS
cn, EELS EP PET
ADDRESS
OT bawkennen nents <
Please Bill Me
JUST CLIP THIS COUPON AND MAIL TO:
MISS MARY ANN SPRIEGEL
SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER
THE COLLEGE NEWS
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE |
BRYN MAWR, PA. 19010
College’s Nei Foreign S tudents
Start Year With Tea, Shopping
Among the first Bryn Mawr-
ters to arrive on campus this
year were two who had perhaps
traveled the farthest to get here,
Beryl Fernandes and Elizabeth
Delmar were met Tuesday by the
Foreign Student Committee, to be
shown the Bryn Mawr campus,
have tea with the deans, and even
go shopping in Ardmore,
Beryl and Elizabeth are both
freshmen and in this country for
the first time, They come from
opposite sides of the African con-
tinent; Elizabeth from Tangier,
Morocco, and Beryl from Zanzi-*
bar, Tanzania. Before arriving
at Bryn Mawr, however, both
lived for a short time with Amer-
ican families,
The family Beryl stayed with
were personal friends of her
brother, who met a son of the
family while working at a sum-
mer camp here. Beryl’s brother
(she is the middle child of a
family of five brothers and one
sister) is now studying at Yale,
‘and she says it was he who first
recommended that she go to Bryn
Mawr. She wants to study Eng-
lish here and also is enthusiastic
about participating in sports,
Beryl’s family is among the large
group of Indians who centuries
ago began to go to Zanzibar to
trade: her parents are from the
former Portuguese colony of Goa,
which she has visited three times.
Beryl was surprised to find that
Bevinda Nordnha, whoarrived here
the same day Beryl did, also has
a Goan background, ‘‘All my life °
in Zanzibar I never met Goans,
but I am in this country a‘ few
hours and already I meet one!?’
Beryl’s_ introduction to the
United States was at a country
house on @ lake in Maine: Eliza-
beth’s was somewhat more rugged.
She stayed with a family in Brad-
ford, Pennsylvania.
Her first adventure came as
she, an only child, had to learn
to get along with a family of six
children, Her second came when
the family decided to take Eliza-
beth on a trip to Niagara Falls,
near where they camped out in
the woods and huddled up in blan-
kets around a portable T.V¥, set
watching the - Miss America
Pageant.
Elizabeth was born in Casa=
blanca (which she says is not
quite as romantic as it always
has been in Hollywood’s eyes),
and moved to Tangier when she
was about 12 or 13. She at-
College Theatre
From Extremes
A season of College Theatre
travels in multiple directions,
along Lancaster Pike from Haver-
ford to Bryn Mawr and along the
more crooked route from Shake-
speare to Dylan Thomas toO’Neill.
Last year, the student company,
under the direction of Professor
Robert Butman, sought and found
a varied slate of productions.
Shakespeare opened the calen-
dar, as RICHARD II came to Rob-
erts Hall. A classic study of king-
ship, the play featured a Richard
whose performance, according to
COLLEGE NEWS reviewer Joan
Klein, Bryn Mawr lecturer in Eng-’
lish, ‘‘transformed’’ the play
‘‘from literature to drama,??
The season’s secondtffering,
Dylan Thomas?’ UNDER MILK-
WOOD, was a sharp change. The
lyric play spans a typical day in
the Welsh town of Llareggub, with
svemsenidanesersas ciceesastie a large -cast-that *required dou-
bling up of parts by the actors.
Imaginative staging techniques
and percussive accompaniment
were called upon to express the
experimental nature of the play,
UNDER MILKWOOD represented
one of the most ambitious and
pe,
tended a French lycée there but
later transferred to an American
school which she enjoyed very
much once she had moved into
advanced English courses.
Both girls discussed with the
Foreign Student Committee the
changing aspects of modern Afri-
Ca, its far-reaching political and
cultural changes, Elizabeth and
Beryl both could describe the vis-
ible contrasts of Arab parents in
traditional robes saying good-
bye to their children, dressed
.4n Western clothes, who leave to
go study in America or some other
Western country,.. ‘‘something
which (the parents) would not have
conceived of doing 50 years ago,’?
as Elizabeth said.
When Bevinda Nordnha of Mom-
basa, Kenya, arrived after an ex-
hausting trip on Tuesday, she had
not had the chance as several of
the other. foreign students had to
get slightly acquainted with life
and customs: in this country (or
with the much stranger ones on
this campus.), She attended school
in Mombasa, and originally planned
to attend a British university, She
therefore took the two years of
advanced (post-high-school) study
required for entrance to a uni-
versity in England--or one in East
Africa operating on the British
system. Her plans were changed,
however, when she heard about
Bryn Mawr from €X=-Mawrter Har-
riet Adams, who had become
friends with Bevinda’s sister while
both were working in Uganda, |
Bevinda will enter Bryn Mawr
aS a sophomore, and wants to study
English here. Even in her first
few days here has found people
friendly: in fact she Says that
Bryn Mawr seems io be ‘
ite impressions: ‘‘I’ll tell you in |
a week’s time,’?
Joining the three African
students on Wednesday were two
South Americansfrom Lima, Peru,
Renee Levy was born-in-Paris-and:
(Continued on page 4)
Dance Club Reorganizes
To Increase Programs
Bryn Mawr’s Dance Club has in
past years presented a concert
in April as the culmination of a
year of study and experimenta-
tion with modern dance.
Last year for the first time
Haverford dancers participated in
one of the most successful con-
certs the club has ever given, and
this year Dance Club hopes to
attract still more active student
participation and to wigen the scope
of its activities.
Programs for the year are still
very tentative, but the club’s chair-
man, Jackie Siegel, ’68, wants to
put_less emphasis in-the-year’s
~ work on preparation for the spring
concert, and more on working with
various forms of dance for the
sake of experiment alone. The
club hopes to schedule several
workshops in dance during the
year, open to the student body, as
opportunities to discuss techniques
and to evaluate new work choreo-
graphed by the club’s members,
Another project under con-
sideration is a concert of music
and dance to be presented just
before Christmas vacation with
the Rehaissance Choir, Such plans
point up another of the club’s
goals for this year: wider coopera-
Year Draws
of Dramatics
adventuring steps taken by Col-
lege Theatre.
The final selection of the year,
Eugene O’Neill?s LONG DAY’S
JOURNEY INTO NIGHT, demand-
ed an experiment of a different
nature, Instead of a large cast,
this autobiographical study of the
playwright’s tortured family life
presented a small cast with the
opportunity for intensive charac-
terization,
The finely focused production
provided an evening of serious
drama, but it failed to exhaust
the talent and theatrical interest
on the Haverford and Bryn Mawr
campuses,
Spring saw the birth of Little
Theatre, a College Theatre off-
shoot that hopes to absorb the
energy untouched by its ambitious
parent, rt
The inaugural performan¢e of
“Little Theatre was a production 6f ~
THE MAN WHO CAME TO DIN-
NER, well-timed as a pre-spring-
exam-period recreation, The
lighter .play is indicative of the
aspirations of the group, which
Plans to add musical works to its
beginning repertoire,
tion with other performing-arts
groups on campus. The partici-
pation of Haverford dancers will
be continued this year from the
start, Jackie even wants eventual-
ly to present a concert on the
stage of Haverford’s Roberts Hall,
as well as one at Goodhart.
Membership in Dance Club, last
year’s chairman Alice Leib, ’67, ©
has said, is open to whoever has |
--regardless of previous training
or experience--‘‘the stamina and
interest to stick with it.’’? In or-
der to arrive at a ‘‘nucleus’? of
members able to give their full
attention to dance, Jackie hopes
to be able to change the regular
Monday night meeting time for}
Dance Club to Tuesday esa
to m3ke it impossible for any- ;
one to join both Dance Club and ©
College Chorus, Jackie thinks that
Monday night could be-.-used as
rehearsal time for ‘workshop
preparation groups’? and other
special purposes.
The club will probably announce
an open meeting early in the semes-
ter to meet new members. How
ever, Jackie will be on campus
during Freshman Week (in Rhoads /
North) and hopes very much to
talk to all potential members to.
find out their interests, ex-
perience, and suggestions. She also
encourages anyone interested in
working on publicity for the group
to contact her; last year’s ad-
vertising campaign helped draw
such a large audience to Good-
hart for the spring concert that
_this year’s concert will have an (
extended run of two nights,
As a final inducement to new
members, Jackie says that the
stage at Goodhart. has been newly
refinished. She hopes’ that in-
creased Haverford participation
and a ‘‘community effort?? wi
other groups at Bryn Mawr wil
make Dance Club’s production
as recognized as those of Colle
Theatre,
WELCOME
ee
Py)
9
Hmm
Friday, September 16, 1966
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Typical Year for Self-Gov Involves
Legislation onMen, Smoking, Autos
Bryn Mawr’s Self-Government
Association has executive, judi-
cial, and legislative powers with
regards to each student’s life, It
can even go as far as to recom-
mend a student’s expulsion from
the college, However in the last
few years, its main activities have
involved increasing the freedoms
a Bryn Mawrter enjoys,
Two years ago, an amendment.
was passed allowing girls to keep
cars while at school. Before, the
privilege was granted mainly to
campus organizations, Now any-
one may have one, provided it is
registered with Self-Gov’s Execu-
tive Board, and provided the stu-
dent has found a permanent off-
campus parking place for it. Cars
may be kept on campus overnight
but only if they are removed by
8:30 the next morning,
More recently, Self-Gov passed
a._bill stating that girls maysmoke .
in their rooms in Rhoads and
Erdman, These two dorms are
relatively fire proof, and by a
vote of their residents and of
END «
the entire campus, this amend-
ment was passed last year,
The subject of men in the rooms
has always been a controversial
one, Two years ago, the Trustees
of the College put into effect a
two-year trial period of allow-
ing each dorm. to make its own
hours within the period of 9 a,m
and 10 p.m, every day, *
This is not to be confused with
the rule letting men into the down-
stairs public rooms until 10:30
on week nights and- 12:30 a.m,
on weekends,
Last spring the ruling came °
up for a final vote and the stu-
dents were polled on their reac-
tions to the system, Some stu-
dents opposed having men in the
upstairs rooms because they felt
they were less free to run around
in the halls in their bathrobes, and
also because they did not like
the idea of ‘‘what might. be going
on in the next room,’? Others
argued that it was unreasonable
to be upset by one’s own im-
agination and besides ‘‘what can
"WAR
VIETNAM
Cannon balls .or oranges?
Vietnam Protest Fast Illustrates
Political Involvement of Campus
Politics on the Bryn Mawr cam-
pus are often limited to college
issues--who should be elected
social chairman, until what hour
should boys be allowed in the
dorms, or what Self-Gov’s posi-
tion on automobiles should be,
However, once in a while, stu-
dents find the politics of the world
outside taking on an overpower-
ing importance,
Such was the case last February
when about 140 Haverford and
Bryn Mawr students and faculty
members started an eight-day or-
ange-juice-only fast to protest the
United States growing involvement
in Vietnam, In conjunction with
the fasting was a series of speak-
ers, films and discussions cen-
tered around U,S, Vietnam policy
and ranging to U,S,-Latin Ameri-
can affairs andthe racial problems
in South Africa,
{ The technique of fasting is a
‘dramatic one, and it spread to
other colleges: University of Penn-
sylvania, Swarthmore, Rosemont,
Cornell and the University of Wis-
consin, to name a few. The NEW
YORK TIMES carried several ar-°
ticles on it, and a TIMES report-
er, visiting one of the discussions
late in the eight-day period, ex-
pressed surprise that so many
students were still on the fast.
Of the local papers, the MAIN
LINE CHRONICLE was as dis-
paraging as it usually is on any-
thing in which Haverford is in-
volved. Bernard Kramer, editor
and publisher of the Chronicle,
said on the subject of higher edu-
cation: ‘‘In.my opinion, these hun-
gerniks and Vietniks are mostly
oddballs ... But with an initial
exposure to higher education, they
believe themselves wise enough to
come up with the answers to all
ocial and political problems.’’
In the experience of those in-
volved, the fast was not meant to
a
provide any answers, nor did it. It
was a demonstration of suspicion
of President Johnson’s then highly
publicized ‘‘peace offensive’? and
of doubt of the validity of the U.S,
position in general, and finally
of a desire to focus attention
on an issue that was unorganized
and disjointed in many student
and faculty member minds,
happen between 6 p,m, (the old
curfew) and 10 p.m, can happen
just as easily before 6 p.m,’’ Fin-
ally it came down to a discussion
of the problems implicit in any
residential student community, -
where a group of people are liv-
ing together,
The Trustees passed the 10 p.m
limit in their final vote, Self-
Gov’s basic position was to re-
mind students that although there
are no explicit rulings on what
one may or may notdo behind a
closed door, it is important to
remember that this is a com-
munity and that the. feelings of
one’s dorm mates are to be taken
into consideration, A movement
to make the social aspects of the
Discredit Clause more specific
was unsuccessful, :
A scene from the Class of '68’s Freshman Show.
Upcoming H all Plays Anticipate
Freshman Show Next Semester
In about one week the Class of
* 1970 will present its first drama-
tic productions as a class in the
- Freshman hall plays, But perhaps
the biggest project they will ever
work on as a class will be the pro-
duction staged just twoweeks after
the beginning of the second semes-
ter; Freshman Show,,
Freshman Shows remain among
the most important identifying
characteristics of a class of Bryn
Mawr--at least until Junior Show,
when everyone who was not there
for Freshman Show gets a first
idea of the class’s talents and of
what its members think is funny,
Freshman Shows, however, are as
a rule better than Junior Shows.
This is because everyone works on
Freshman Show, The show is (and
is intended to be an. opportunity
for freshmen who can write, di-
rect, act, dance, sing, design sets
and posters, invent props out of
cardboard, pull curtains, sell
tickets, or handle animals (see
below), to work together (that they
get to know each other goes with-
out saying) on something that is
fun and slightly ridiculous,
For sheer entertainment value
the shows can be as good as any-
thing produced on campus all year,
The Class of 1970 is fortunate
(or unfortunate) in having three
other classes on campus who pro-
duced ‘‘better-than-average”’
Freshman Shows, going back to
Administration Reveals
Plans tor New Library
Plans for a $4,000,000 ‘‘modern
library’’ are currently under de-
velopment to supplement the now
overcrowded M, Carey Thomas
Library, the College announced
last spring.
Members of the freshman class
can expect to witness the growth
of these plans until construction
begins, as soon as the necessary
funds are raised, As of lastspring,
there was already $1,500,000 set
aside for the library from funds
raised during the three years of
the matching grant from the Ford.
Foundation,
Miss McBride described the
prospective five-floor library both
and have a considerably enlarged
space for art and archaeology.
The plan is being designed by
O’Connor and Kilham of New. York
City, who are responsible for the
Firestone Library at Princeton
and the Robert FrosteLipetty at
Amherst,
The concept of a ‘‘modern li-
brary’’ is that it brings books and
readers together ‘instead of hav-
ing books one place and readers
another, Thus the new library
will facilitate 699 readers in study
space close to books and journals
-- that is, directly in the stacks.
This library will also contain typ-
ing and smoking rooms,
the Class of ’67’s study of auto-
mation called ‘‘Whirr-Pfoing!’’
The Class of ’68, now nervously
trying to top all Junior Show rec-
ords, produced a genuine hit,
**Rotten to the Core--Another
Prometheus Bond Thriller’? came
months before all the James Bond
parodies of 1965, It featured the
great Prometheus Bond--‘*48
Pounds of Solid Hero’’ in short
pants and long socks, possessed
of a thorough awareness of his
own greatness, but also of apurity
of character (onstage, anyway) that
would put Batman to shame--who
almost succeeds in stamping out
‘tavery last little smidgen of evil’’
in the world until (to his own
relief) he is thwarted by a lot
of applesauce from the Garden of
Eden, Probably any member ofthe
class can sing on request the
show’s rousing hit songs ‘*Think
Evil’? and ‘‘I’ll-Come Out All
Right,”?
The Class of ’69’s ‘show,
‘¢«Persecute Us Tomorrow--We’re
Busy,’? was much more seriously
surrealistic, It was a fablewritten
around a theme of Color--about
a rather unusual janitor called
Fantod who, according to a com-
puter (which comes complete with
a Dea ex Machina emerging at crit-
ical points) is more suited to be
a politician. The Dea provideshim
with constituents (some black a.d
white pop-art statues in a museum)
and a campaign platform (providing
them with the benefits of Color
by making some Red, some Green).
The Greens, of course, find it im-
possible to live with Reds, and
Fantod must arrive at a multi-
colored peaceful solution,
About halfway through all these
shows, however, the ingenuity of
the writers must pause and let
Tradition take over, All Fresh-
man Shows MUST HAVE some-
where worked into -their plots
(1) an-animal: any animal as long
as it can be concealed on campus
’ for a day before the. production
and can be brought out on stage
during the show’s intermission
when the Sophomores call for it,
(If anyone wants to know, ’68’s
i gS
if BRITISH AND
(
i
; SCOTCH WOOLENS
as ‘‘the new library’’ and as ‘‘a 0 : tl
major extension of the present I Shifts 1
, Pp LA 5-0443 LA 5-6664] fh Skirts
library,’’ since the two will be 3 b : i
used in close conjunction, It Parvin S Pharmacy bi Kilts i
will provide 100,000 square feet : 0 Jerseys {
overall and be placed next to the James P. Kerchner Pharmacist i Sweaters i
Thomas Library, which will con- 30 Bryn Mawr Ave. 0 Tams i
tinue to be the center for faculty Brendes P es I ’
offices. and some, seminar rooms, . - , 4 sabes aimee
a — ) § Peasant Garb;
>é VISIT — NEIGHBORHOOD BOOK SHOPPE ‘ if i
5 oes eg hima AVENUE, Cleveland, Ohio 44108 ; b 868 Lancaster Ave. f
: = Pda ” “KNOW” »§ b Bryn Mawr
$ ia Sheet to Sy 1 OD *.. 1602 Sprwce St Ny
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t We Specialize in Negro History Books, Folklore and Novels ; b Philadelphia Oo
a ee a a a
«
anim31 was a goat which was hard-
er to return than to keep on
campus, and ’69’s was a friendly
protozoan projected on a screen
onstage.); (2) some mention of this
animal in the show (‘You old
goat!?’? says character A to charac-
ter B, and so on)--this mention
really ought to be cleverly con-
tained in (3) the Animal Dance,
a required production number
somehow. or another involving ani-
mals and generally coming right
before intermission,
All these conditions are set ‘to
satisfy the Sophomores, who have
all during the last few days of
rehearsal not exactly been mak-
ing things easy for the hard-work-
ing freshmen. Freshman Show is
therefore always dedicated to the
sympathetic Juniors,
Swingline
RAMEN
Mo/p Ut Do they have
a 4th of July
in England?
(Answers below)
[2] Take two
TOT Staplers
from three
TOT oo
oat ‘e
you have?
This is the
Swingline
Tot Otamier
98°
“(Including 1000 staples)
Larger size CUB Desk
Stapler only $1.49
No bigger than a pack of gum—but packs
the punch of a big deal! Refills available
everywhere. Unconditionally guaranteed.
Made in U.S.A: Get it at any stationery,
variety, Rook store! —
iiryean pue
Long Island City, N.Y. 1110
Apuey os a1, Aayy jwayy jo om) Buraey
8,31 ‘sa1deIg LOL euo Buiaey uBy) J3}}0q
sui @uOo S$! 2194} jt asnedeq ‘evap! peq
8 jou st bo ar yoo} nok ssaideig LOL
om aut ‘Z jAeq souspusdepuy a83Q92
*J92 3,u0p ko ang ‘esng “| SUIMSNY
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Friday, September 16, 1966:
Freshman Hall .
COLLEGE INN
LA 5-9062 ©
Lowenthal, Ruth
Segan, Tene
Watters, Susan
- DENBIGH
LA 5-8500, LA 5-8501
Bowser, Renee
Chilton, Sara
Dudde, Norma
Foa, Sandra
Gard, Maryo
Gibson, Eleanor
Hain, Leslie
Metzler, Maria
Nelson, Christine
Pettengill, Lisbeth
Samples, Carlotta
Santasiera, Christine
Schwartz, Stefani
Squibb, Elizabeth
Weinberger, Deborah
Werner, Sharon
Williams, Diane
Yestrumskas, Judy
ERDMAN HALL A
LA 5-4352
Casegfio, Karen
Gerstman, Susan
Hambalek, Marie
Jonassen, Ida
Lamont, Maureen
Mahon, Joan as
Reimherr, Joyce
Roberts, Paula
Schuchat, Dorothy
Taft, Cynthia
Todd, Anne
ERDMAN HALL B
LA 5-4352
Dickstein, Deborah
Gilberg, Jacqueline
LeFevre, Susan
Miller, Dolores
Scheuer, Marian
ERDMAN HALL C
LA 5-4352
Brockert, Irene
Delmar, Elizabeth
Elk, Barbara
Fox, Rebecca
Garms, Ruth
O’Connell, Patricia
Resch, Claudia
Schloss, Roslyn
Snyder, Alice
Yee, Mary
GRADUATE CENTER
LA 5-1473
Anderson, Eleanor
Dimschultz, Sally
Jarin, Ruth
Love, Myra
Miller, Mary Ellen
Morris, Lea
Schor, Deborah
MERION
LA 5-2225
Clark, Deborah
Cobb, Judith
Davis, Beverly
Hanson, Judith
Horn, Toby
Koch, Katherine
Lautin, Susan
Lehr, Elizabeth
Mautner, Nancy
Meyer, Judith
Monka, Carolyn
Pickard, Joan
Saftlas, Ellen
VanBroekhoven, Nancy
Waserstein, Aida
Woll, Christine
PEMBROKE EAST
LA 5-2801, LA 5-2802, LA 5-2803
Chasan, Alice
Culbertson, Nancy
Dahill, Elizabeth
Ginsburg, Alix
Glaseroff, Aleta
Greenfield, Faith
Jefferson, Brenda
Kidder, Susan
Lewkowicz, Susan
Marsh, Elizabeth
Parker, Mary
Radcliffe, Jerilynn
Rowe, Clarissa
Foreign Students Join Campus
(Continued from page 2)
moved with her family to Lima
when she was very young, and so
she says she haspractically grown
up speaking French, English, and
Spanish. She has been in this
country before; last year she va-
cationed with relatives in New
York for several months,
Renee spent the rest of last
year, following her graduation
from high schoo} in Lima, study-
ing at a school in England, She
had planned to concentrate in
languages during her four years
at Bryn Mawr, but now she is less
sure and wants ‘‘at least to try’?
economics.
Veronica Diaz, also of Lima,
has_ studied two and a half years
at the Catholic University of Peru
and so will enter Bryn Mawr as
a sophomore, After studying her
introductory two years of humani-
ties, she enrolled in the Faculty
of Social Sciences at the univer-
sity and began to study seriously
in her major field, which she hopes
>eYBWIW YT YH BTWEWEGT*AWVWW|WA
UNUSUAL GIFTS}
LARGE SELECTION r¢
GREETING CARDS $
RICHARD
STOCKTON |
851 Lancaster Ave. {f
“STATIONERY CARDS 9f
MADS
DISCOUNT RECORDS
9 W. Lanéaster Ave.
Ardmore
MI 2-0764
Largest Selection Folk Music
Pop - Classics - Jazz
GIFTS = SOCIAL - > ff
to continue here: sociology, with
the emphasis on social psychology,
perhaps alsoinvolving social work.
The Experiment for International
Living placed her this summer with
the family of Norman Shea, a well-
known Pennsylvania politician, at
the Sheas’ farm in Pennsylvania,
As the frantic round of appoint-
ments and meetings began on
Wednesday for these students as
well as for the other new Bryn
Mawrters, only one of this year’s
foreign students had not yet
arrived: Julia Kartsoni of Athens,
Greece, who has a connection of
her. own here on campus, since
her cousin, Sylvia Kartsonis, is
now warden of Erdman.
_ Stokes, Anne
Strong, Patricia
Warren, Constancia
Westerman, Cynthia
Zimicki, Susan
PEMBROKE WEST
LA 5-2801, LA 5-2802, LA 5-2803
Armsby, Leslie
Di
Dick, Mona
Flint, Constance
Gimbel, Victoria
Hamilton, Christina
Hooker, Ellen
Li, Jade
Metcalf, Lee
Rose, Julie
Rosenberg, Anne
Rosenfield, Patricia
Rothchild, Alice
Schaefer, Goodwin
Seygal, Kathryn
Sheldon, Edith
Shelmerdine, Cynthia
Strandfeldt, Karolyn
Warren, Barbara
Wilcox, Jean
Wilson, Leslie
Witting, Nancy
Zimmer, Sharon
RADNOR
527-0323
Bassin, Joanne
Becker, Beth
Carre, Marie-Henriette
News Agency
Books Stationery
Greeting Cards
844 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa,
Ne
MAGASIN DE LINGE
LAwrencé 5-5 802
} eee iT ees
|
| pha > |
'
ig etc.
money doing interesting work.::
Apply Collegiate ie
ee ee Eee ess |
nar aan
Sty New York, N. Y.
Crosby, Maggie
Curtiss, Carol
Dale, Catherine
Detamore, Karen
Dubois, Serena
Gibbs, Mary
Harris, Janine
Holby, Margrethe
Jackier, Carol
Jordan, Diane
Manheim, Lynn
Matson, Emily
Patt, Wendy
Pittman, Holly
Poindexter, Patchechole
Rudd, Elizabeth
Shiskin, Carol
Sturgess, Charlene
Twyman, Ora
VanBeveren, Jean
Wang, Amy
RHOADS HALL NORTH
LA 5-3544, LA 5-3545, LA 5-3546
Berol, Wendy
Biederman, Marcia.
Boss, Amelia
Canaday, Jean
Dahlgren, Jane
Fernandes, Beryl
Fry, Gloria
" Henefield, Linda
Kagan, Julia
Keith, Sarah
Keller, Bess
Levin, Mina
May, Joanne
Mercer, Marilyn
Miller, Laurel
Norelli, Linda
Petty, Barbara
Post, Andrea
Walker, Susan
Willner, -Jane
RHOADS HALL SOUTH
LA 5-3544, LA 5-3545, LA 5-3546
Anderson, Eleanor
Bailey, Donna
Burkley, Sharon
Cole, Cheryl
Delacorte, Erika
Doughty, Tatyana
Gabaree, Susan
Guss, Barbara
Heaps, Andrea
Hofkin, Susan
Levy, Renee
Lightle, Mary
McNamee, Dardis
Preston, Martha
Ross, Margaret
Starr, Laura
Stern, Edith
HIGH INCOME.
JOBS ON CAMPUS
~ Get a high paying job in sales,
‘ distribution or market research
right on your own campus. Be-
“ come a Campus representative
Cc
“: for over forty magazines, Amer-
ican Airlines, Operation Match,
and earn .big part-time
right away!
Marketing, Dept. H, 27 E. 22:
10010,
Who is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed
computer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.
Your ideal date — such a person exists, of course.
ite
isa
i
ES
=
-ectory
Tropp, Caroline
Wallach, Marina
ROCKEFELLER
LA 5-5420, LA 5-5421
Akins, Jacqueline
Atkins, Dallas
Barnard, Janice
Blakely, Gail
Bob, Susan
Briccetti, Joan
Cohen, Barbara
Comassar, Gene
Crowther, Prudy
Dean, Margaret
DeWitt, Judith
Dolan, Sheila
Gordon, Lucy
Hyman, Randy
Kartsoni, Julia
Kennedy, Mary
Knight, Barbara
Langer, Michele
Lansky, Ellen
Linden, Carol
Lipp, Astrid
McGarry, Peggy
Mondano, Cheryl
Morgan, Mary
Mulligan, Luciel
Oppenheim, Janet
Read, Cynthia
Shields, Susan
Smith, Anne
Thorner, Susan
Wright, Marcia
ROCKEF ELLER-ANNEX
LA 5-9006
Laquer, Erika
Perryman, Pamela
SPANISH HOUSE
LA 5-90§0
Silverblatt, Irene
Weil, Susan
TY-BACH
LA 5-0727
Bartlett, Sara
Fajans, Jane
Kotler, Lou
‘Lucey, Kathleen
Vandepol, Christine
WYNDHAM
LA 5-9183
Archer, Barbara
Humphrey, Dorothy
FOLK-BLUEGRASS-FUN
THE COUNTRY
GENTLEMEN
& MIKE COONEY
COFFEE CABARET
OPEN THU. thru SUN.
874 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr
kko
_ FINLAND
arime
816 LANCASTER
BRYN MAWR
527-0222
QQ besign |
wpe
ee ines
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Friday, September 16, 1966:
Freshman Hall .
COLLEGE INN
LA 5-9062 ©
Lowenthal, Ruth
Segan, Tene
Watters, Susan
- DENBIGH
LA 5-8500, LA 5-8501
Bowser, Renee
Chilton, Sara
Dudde, Norma
Foa, Sandra
Gard, Maryo
Gibson, Eleanor
Hain, Leslie
Metzler, Maria
Nelson, Christine
Pettengill, Lisbeth
Samples, Carlotta
Santasiera, Christine
Schwartz, Stefani
Squibb, Elizabeth
Weinberger, Deborah
Werner, Sharon
Williams, Diane
Yestrumskas, Judy
ERDMAN HALL A
LA 5-4352
Casegfio, Karen
Gerstman, Susan
Hambalek, Marie
Jonassen, Ida
Lamont, Maureen
Mahon, Joan as
Reimherr, Joyce
Roberts, Paula
Schuchat, Dorothy
Taft, Cynthia
Todd, Anne
ERDMAN HALL B
LA 5-4352
Dickstein, Deborah
Gilberg, Jacqueline
LeFevre, Susan
Miller, Dolores
Scheuer, Marian
ERDMAN HALL C
LA 5-4352
Brockert, Irene
Delmar, Elizabeth
Elk, Barbara
Fox, Rebecca
Garms, Ruth
O’Connell, Patricia
Resch, Claudia
Schloss, Roslyn
Snyder, Alice
Yee, Mary
GRADUATE CENTER
LA 5-1473
Anderson, Eleanor
Dimschultz, Sally
Jarin, Ruth
Love, Myra
Miller, Mary Ellen
Morris, Lea
Schor, Deborah
MERION
LA 5-2225
Clark, Deborah
Cobb, Judith
Davis, Beverly
Hanson, Judith
Horn, Toby
Koch, Katherine
Lautin, Susan
Lehr, Elizabeth
Mautner, Nancy
Meyer, Judith
Monka, Carolyn
Pickard, Joan
Saftlas, Ellen
VanBroekhoven, Nancy
Waserstein, Aida
Woll, Christine
PEMBROKE EAST
LA 5-2801, LA 5-2802, LA 5-2803
Chasan, Alice
Culbertson, Nancy
Dahill, Elizabeth
Ginsburg, Alix
Glaseroff, Aleta
Greenfield, Faith
Jefferson, Brenda
Kidder, Susan
Lewkowicz, Susan
Marsh, Elizabeth
Parker, Mary
Radcliffe, Jerilynn
Rowe, Clarissa
Foreign Students Join Campus
(Continued from page 2)
moved with her family to Lima
when she was very young, and so
she says she haspractically grown
up speaking French, English, and
Spanish. She has been in this
country before; last year she va-
cationed with relatives in New
York for several months,
Renee spent the rest of last
year, following her graduation
from high schoo} in Lima, study-
ing at a school in England, She
had planned to concentrate in
languages during her four years
at Bryn Mawr, but now she is less
sure and wants ‘‘at least to try’?
economics.
Veronica Diaz, also of Lima,
has_ studied two and a half years
at the Catholic University of Peru
and so will enter Bryn Mawr as
a sophomore, After studying her
introductory two years of humani-
ties, she enrolled in the Faculty
of Social Sciences at the univer-
sity and began to study seriously
in her major field, which she hopes
>eYBWIW YT YH BTWEWEGT*AWVWW|WA
UNUSUAL GIFTS}
LARGE SELECTION r¢
GREETING CARDS $
RICHARD
STOCKTON |
851 Lancaster Ave. {f
“STATIONERY CARDS 9f
MADS
DISCOUNT RECORDS
9 W. Lanéaster Ave.
Ardmore
MI 2-0764
Largest Selection Folk Music
Pop - Classics - Jazz
GIFTS = SOCIAL - > ff
to continue here: sociology, with
the emphasis on social psychology,
perhaps alsoinvolving social work.
The Experiment for International
Living placed her this summer with
the family of Norman Shea, a well-
known Pennsylvania politician, at
the Sheas’ farm in Pennsylvania,
As the frantic round of appoint-
ments and meetings began on
Wednesday for these students as
well as for the other new Bryn
Mawrters, only one of this year’s
foreign students had not yet
arrived: Julia Kartsoni of Athens,
Greece, who has a connection of
her. own here on campus, since
her cousin, Sylvia Kartsonis, is
now warden of Erdman.
_ Stokes, Anne
Strong, Patricia
Warren, Constancia
Westerman, Cynthia
Zimicki, Susan
PEMBROKE WEST
LA 5-2801, LA 5-2802, LA 5-2803
Armsby, Leslie
Di
Dick, Mona
Flint, Constance
Gimbel, Victoria
Hamilton, Christina
Hooker, Ellen
Li, Jade
Metcalf, Lee
Rose, Julie
Rosenberg, Anne
Rosenfield, Patricia
Rothchild, Alice
Schaefer, Goodwin
Seygal, Kathryn
Sheldon, Edith
Shelmerdine, Cynthia
Strandfeldt, Karolyn
Warren, Barbara
Wilcox, Jean
Wilson, Leslie
Witting, Nancy
Zimmer, Sharon
RADNOR
527-0323
Bassin, Joanne
Becker, Beth
Carre, Marie-Henriette
News Agency
Books Stationery
Greeting Cards
844 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa,
Ne
MAGASIN DE LINGE
LAwrencé 5-5 802
} eee iT ees
|
| pha > |
'
ig etc.
money doing interesting work.::
Apply Collegiate ie
ee ee Eee ess |
nar aan
Sty New York, N. Y.
Crosby, Maggie
Curtiss, Carol
Dale, Catherine
Detamore, Karen
Dubois, Serena
Gibbs, Mary
Harris, Janine
Holby, Margrethe
Jackier, Carol
Jordan, Diane
Manheim, Lynn
Matson, Emily
Patt, Wendy
Pittman, Holly
Poindexter, Patchechole
Rudd, Elizabeth
Shiskin, Carol
Sturgess, Charlene
Twyman, Ora
VanBeveren, Jean
Wang, Amy
RHOADS HALL NORTH
LA 5-3544, LA 5-3545, LA 5-3546
Berol, Wendy
Biederman, Marcia.
Boss, Amelia
Canaday, Jean
Dahlgren, Jane
Fernandes, Beryl
Fry, Gloria
" Henefield, Linda
Kagan, Julia
Keith, Sarah
Keller, Bess
Levin, Mina
May, Joanne
Mercer, Marilyn
Miller, Laurel
Norelli, Linda
Petty, Barbara
Post, Andrea
Walker, Susan
Willner, -Jane
RHOADS HALL SOUTH
LA 5-3544, LA 5-3545, LA 5-3546
Anderson, Eleanor
Bailey, Donna
Burkley, Sharon
Cole, Cheryl
Delacorte, Erika
Doughty, Tatyana
Gabaree, Susan
Guss, Barbara
Heaps, Andrea
Hofkin, Susan
Levy, Renee
Lightle, Mary
McNamee, Dardis
Preston, Martha
Ross, Margaret
Starr, Laura
Stern, Edith
HIGH INCOME.
JOBS ON CAMPUS
~ Get a high paying job in sales,
‘ distribution or market research
right on your own campus. Be-
“ come a Campus representative
Cc
“: for over forty magazines, Amer-
ican Airlines, Operation Match,
and earn .big part-time
right away!
Marketing, Dept. H, 27 E. 22:
10010,
Who is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed
computer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.
Your ideal date — such a person exists, of course.
ite
isa
i
ES
=
-ectory
Tropp, Caroline
Wallach, Marina
ROCKEFELLER
LA 5-5420, LA 5-5421
Akins, Jacqueline
Atkins, Dallas
Barnard, Janice
Blakely, Gail
Bob, Susan
Briccetti, Joan
Cohen, Barbara
Comassar, Gene
Crowther, Prudy
Dean, Margaret
DeWitt, Judith
Dolan, Sheila
Gordon, Lucy
Hyman, Randy
Kartsoni, Julia
Kennedy, Mary
Knight, Barbara
Langer, Michele
Lansky, Ellen
Linden, Carol
Lipp, Astrid
McGarry, Peggy
Mondano, Cheryl
Morgan, Mary
Mulligan, Luciel
Oppenheim, Janet
Read, Cynthia
Shields, Susan
Smith, Anne
Thorner, Susan
Wright, Marcia
ROCKEF ELLER-ANNEX
LA 5-9006
Laquer, Erika
Perryman, Pamela
SPANISH HOUSE
LA 5-90§0
Silverblatt, Irene
Weil, Susan
TY-BACH
LA 5-0727
Bartlett, Sara
Fajans, Jane
Kotler, Lou
‘Lucey, Kathleen
Vandepol, Christine
WYNDHAM
LA 5-9183
Archer, Barbara
Humphrey, Dorothy
FOLK-BLUEGRASS-FUN
THE COUNTRY
GENTLEMEN
& MIKE COONEY
COFFEE CABARET
OPEN THU. thru SUN.
874 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr
kko
_ FINLAND
arime
816 LANCASTER
BRYN MAWR
527-0222
QQ besign |
wpe
ee ines
College news, September 16, 1966
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1966-09-16
serial
Weekly
5 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 53, No. 01
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-vol53-no1