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.
ok tata
@o
=
sol. L No.5
BRYN MAWR, PA.
“OCTOBER 22, 1964
©) J Lustees of Bryn Mawr SOUS hes. Atl
5 Cents.
~ Hecause every dorm
College. ‘Announces Wage Hike .
For On-Campus Student Jobs ©
A new college wage increase,
affecting both skilled .and non-
skilled workers, will go. into ef- '
fect November 1.
Rate for unskilled labor, which
‘ineludes~ stuffing envelopes, read-
ing aloud; and beginning -library-
work, will be$.80 an hour.
Skilled work will be paid from
$.90 to $1.25.an hour. Jobs affec-
ted by this change include lantern
slide projecting, -waiting on tables,
and typing.
The rates for bells, since the
job is considered a skilled. one
board, will be $.90 an hour.
College office work will be paid
- at rates of $.90 to $1,25 an hour”
for typing, and $1.50 ifa knowledge
of shorthand is offered.
Certain*wage .rates will remain
unchanged. These include musical
accompanying. at $1.25 an hour,
-waitressing in the halls at $1.50
per meal, waitressing inthe Dean-
ery at $.90 an hour plus a 10%
bonus, and private tutoring, which
varies from $1.50 to $3.00 an hour
’ for undergraduates,
The science departments will
set their own rates for work that
their departments are involved in.
These jobs include washing test
tubes, for whichthere is a tentative.
rate of $.80 or $,90 an hour, and |
tissue cultures, for ~ *
preparing
which the tentative rate is $1.00
an hour.
> “Thésnew rates will ‘an be retro- .
active; October checks from the
Comptroller’s office will be based
Undergrad Studies
Students’ Attitudes
- Toward Traditions |
By Marcia Young
Undergrad ~ president Betsey :
Pinckney and Harrison Spencer,
president of the Haverford student
body, are .working in the joint
councils to study the attitudes
of both student bodies toward tra-
ditions. Recent events have caused
‘these traditions. to be matters
of serious discussion by Under-
grad.
The. best example of good spirit
\and attitude in a traditional activi-
ty, as described by Undergrad
President Betsey Pinckney, was.
this year’s Parade Night. In spite’
of the drought we had one of
the.-best parade nights ever.
Betsey contrasted this to
Lantern Night. On Lantern Night
forty Haverford men broke through
ie *the ushérs in the library and
climbed to the roof. They stole
lanterns, broke windows and
..furthermarred the solemn beauty
of Lantern Night.
The lanterns cost-$5.50 a piece
and are difficult ‘and expensive
to replace. Betsey also pointed
out the-humanitarian aspect to the
lantern thefts. Girls were denied
_the privilege of _ putting their
lanterns. on the. mantlepiece in
traditional form. One girl’s fingers
were cut when her lantern was
Snatched from her hand.
However, Undergrad does_not
_ consider BMC blameless. Several
Bryn Mawr girls went to Haver-
ford Columbus Day to be ‘‘vestal
- Virgins.’’ Undergrad felt that this,
like last year’s Mayday riots, does
not- show. ‘the supposedly mature
inking of a Bryn Mawr girl.
ae ; z %.
tg P
has*ccewiteh==
on the old onalk ‘
The new wage scale was first
considered in answer to a com-
plaint from Charles . Mitchell,
chairman of the history .of art
department, that it was becoming ”
increasingly difficult to find lantern
slide operators for art and arch-
eology courses.
The decision to overhaul the
entire college wage scale was dis-
cussed and executed by Miss Mc-
Bride, her assistant, Mrs. Wheli-
han, and Mrs. Crenshaw of the
Bureay of RUCEERENE RE TON.
ee
oO eet ee
he Jibre ar
y? :C onsideration,
* Person al Integrity Emphasized
By Karen Kobler -
Undergrad is scheduling a re-
quired and fined open meeting
to discuss ‘the library, as a re-
sult of the recent commotiow over .
removal of. reserve books from
the reserve room, failure to re-
turn reserve books on tire, and
removal of books from the open
stacks.
Undergrad representatives have
also held meetings inthe residence
halls to discuss, among. other .
things, the use of the Library
in relation to the honor system.
A ntony and Cleopatra’
Seeks Return to Bard
Steve
Left to right, icks
block a scene for College
College Theater’s current
Shakespearean offering, ANTONY
and CLEOPATRA, promises to be
a far cry from the sensational ap-
proach lately popularized by the
inimitable Lizandick, according to
Director. Robert Butman, :
**As soon as you have the brass-
bra-and-navel Cleopatra, poetry
goes out the window,’’ Mr. But-
man said, adding that College
Theater’s object will be to mini-
mize sex in the costumes and
action, letting it come from Shake- .
speare’s lines.
“This necessary discipline
will have-the advantage of allow-
ing the prose-and the characters
to be interpreted in depth,’’ the
director explained.
Jane Robbins, playing &mfemale
lead, described her role:With en-
thusiasm, ‘‘Cleopatra is dninfinite
challenge to me,’’ she said, ‘‘as
she herself possesses an ‘infinite
variety.’ I see her exploring even
the most minute feeling to its own
infinite depths and expressing it
in a voice that is always musical.
I-love her. especially because, at
heart, she’s a — vaaai Jane
added.” :
In addition to Jané as Sledpates
and Munson Hicks as Antony, the
cast includes: Steve Bennett, Oc-
tavius Caesar; Howard Bush, M.
Aemilius Lepidus; Terry Van
Brunt, Sextus Pompeius; Derek
Evans, Domitius Enobarbus; Pam
Goold, Octavia; Hilary Hosmer,
Charmian; and Wendy Wassyng,
Iras.
Music will be used in the pro-
duction to denote location in Rome
and Egypt and to set the mood in
various. scenes. There “will be on-
stage singing in ofie particular
scene, the drunken~ carousing of
Theater’ ‘ Antony and Cleopatra.
Bennett, and Terry Van Bru
the soldiers,
In addition to the campus pre-
sentation November 14 and 15 in
Goodhart, | ANTONY and CLEO-
PATRA is scheduled for December
‘4 and 5. at Irvine Auditorium, by
special invitation-of the University
of Pennsylvania. Penn’s invitation
came following College Theater’s
warmly received production of
HAMLET-there last year.
Although the problem should not
be minimized, according to Miss
-Agnew, there has been a good
déal more. general complaining
than actual reporting of. specific
missing books. There have been
only three reportedincidents. of
reserve books’. being taken; one
of them was taken by a graduate
student, who didn’t realize at the
time that the same rules about
reserve books for undergraduate
students applied to her also, Stu-
‘dents who are unable to find a
reserve book on the shelf or signed
out should . -mention this to the
librarian; the book has not neces-
sarily been, ‘‘stolen.’? There is
the possibility that the student
looked for the book in the wrong
section, or that the book was
misshelved. ae
In the. case. of the open stacks,
books were missing when the in-
ventory was taken, As in the case
of the reserve room, the books
may not have been taken wilful-
Mawrters and
ly. Because of.lack of space, the
Library system of cataloguing
books is fairly chaotic at present;
as a result there are several
reasons why a student is unable
to find a book. First 6f all, she
may not.beentirely.familiar with
the Library system. And, because
there are so many different sec-
tions, not to mention the various
departmental Libraries in dif-
ferent .buildings, the book may
easily have been misshelved or
-moved.to.a different Section, _
Regarding the use of the Li-.
brary, Undergrad stressed the im-
portance of individual integrity. —
When, for. example, a girl who
signs out a reserve book prefers
to pay the fine rather than return
it, she is showing the highest
incorsideration*for other students.
It is also extremely important
that all students be thoroughly
familiar with the Library rules,
which are fully explained in ed
Student Handbook.
Haverfordians
Unite for Sophomore Weekend
Bryn Mawr .sophomores join
Haverford for the first time in
_ presenting Fall Sophomore Week-
end October 30 and 31. Highlights
of the weekend are a folk concert
by Odetta and a cruise up the
Delaware River complete with band
and dance. ,
Odetta will perform Friday night
at Roberts Hall, Haverford, Her
concert is part of the Haverford
nt Art Series of events. The cost
is $6,00 a couple.
A showboat, guaranteed heated,
will cruise the Delaware River
Saturday night. It will carry a
rock and: roll band plus a folk
singer’ for dancing and enter-
tainment.
are $2.50 a couple.
Buses for the boatride will leave
Rock Arch at 8:15. Soph Presi-
dent Mary Delaney promises that
the time will not interfere with
the election night rehearsal for
Undergrad Airs Problems
Of Columbus Day, Library
Undergrad President Betsey
Pinckney and Self-Gov President
Emily Bardack concurred at the
Undergrad meeting last Monday
that the attempt at making a Col-
-umbus Day tradition of dumping
a plaster bust into Haverford’s
Duck Pond was a complete fiasco.
From alt-- reports “it -was—in-
adequately organized and poorly
publicized. As a result, only fif-
teen Bryn Mawr girls,. dressed in
sheets; ,attended the ceremony.
However! ‘Ghany ‘Haverford boys,
as well as a reporter from the—
BULLETIN were also on hand.
Pishing and shoving resulted
‘in one boy being thrown in the
pond. The BULLETIN magnified the
story, saying that 125 Bryn Mawr
girls attended and that the whole
affair was rather questionable.
In-answer to a possible solution,
Betsey concluded that ‘the college
does. not want to check all hall an-
notncements in order to curb such
activities and that although it is
only the one time in a hundred
that such a situation gets out of
hand, this one tends to destroyany
Lan ens nha peemenennrtcnt
‘element of responsibility: in the
community’s image of Bryn Mawr.
The other discussion involved
library rules, and whether or not
the library should be taken out of
the administration’s hands and put
on the honor system under Self-
Gov.
for this year’s Self-Gov Exam,
and as such it has-now come to
the attention of the freshmen.
The problem simply is that the
library rules are broken far too
often. . Maliciously damaging or
stealing library property or-pur-
posely breaking library rules is
grounds for expulsion.
Graduate and Haverford students
who use the library are not under
Self-Gov’s jurisdiction; and for
another, Self-Gov does not relish
handling infractions that carry such
harsh penalty as expulsion,
Undergrad concluded that, al-:
though the administration was hav-
ing difficulty coping with the li-
brary problem, handing the situa-
tion ovér to Self-Gov would also
prove unsatisfactory.
2
eee a FS me fy % ‘ >
Pali c 1h VRIES me
eigenen
Tickets for the - Tide °
This is the essay question
N.B.C, in _Philadelphia that after-
noon.
Last May the sophomore class,
after hearing the scheduled plans ~
from. Haverford Sophomore Pres-
ident John Blair, voted to con-
tribute $300 ‘and share thé profits
of the weekend.
“Committee chairmen for the .
weekend are Mary Delaney for
publicity, Beverly Lang for tickets,
and Sue Bishop and Kat McVeagh —
for -dance decorations, These
decorations will follow, ap-,’
propriately enough, a Halloween
theme,
Tickets for the boatride are on _
sale this week between 1:30 and
2:00 in Taylor.
Campus Organizes
For Election Night
Bryn Mawrters who signed upto
help compile returns on election
night must attend a series of re-
hearsals scheduled next week. Fur-
ther work. on the election'project
is urgently requested by the Bureau
of Recommendations,. who must
have approximately 10,000 en-
velopes stuffaf and labels typed
by Saturday. The Bureau will pay
$1.50 afi hour to fhose willing to
help,
Betsey Pinckney, President of
Undergrad, reported Monday night
that all girls who signed up have
been assigned in groups to various
«Election Night. jobs, The first re-
hearsal for these groups will be
sometime Thursday night, Oct: 29.
The first rehearsal in Philadel-
-phia__will be ‘Saturday, Oct. 31.
Lunch will be early so that buses
may leave Bryn Mawr. at about
12:15, They will return by about
5715.
On November 3, all classes (ex:
cept for senior comprehensive con-
ferences, which must be resched-
uled individually) will be over be-
fore 5. Buses will Jeave at 5:15,
and a brief final rehearsal will.
last until about 8, shortly before
heavy returns will start comingin, -
Most girls should be back shortly
after 1 a,m., but many will have to
stay later.
“
fhe ae
r . : +
October 22,: 1964
Page Two
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 weeee
the Act of March 3, 1879. cation for re-entry at the Bryn M P
Office filed October 1s Liss * Sere meee eee
Second Class*Poscageaugid—- ee
: FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weckly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
piving: Christmas and Kastcr holidays, and during examination weeks)
the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the ne onal Printing Com-
ro Mawe; Re.
pany, Inc., Bryn Mawr. Pa., and Bryn Mawr Collicge.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that rch in
t may be reprinted wholly or in part without pcr.uission of the Editor-in-Chief.
=. EDITORIAL BOARD.
Editor-in-Chief = "66
‘Associate Editor ‘ ore "65
Mondo, Editor af Lynne Lackenbach, °66
Oy Editor . Betsy G 65
nt ey . Pam Barald, 67
Member-at Large Karen , 66
Sostname Wohues ditor wiabenve SiMossscoacousiuabte Margery Aronson, 65 and Peggy i hl ‘S
Jean Howarth, ’65 anda oon Wenk
Business Ma
Subseription-circulation Manager Mary Wolfe,
EDITORIAL STAFF
Charlotte Huntley, '66, Edna Perkins, °66, Pilar Richardson,
Walton, °66, Sally Carson, °67, Suzanne Fedunok, '67;
Susan Kleus, '67, Laura Krugman, °67, Marilyn Williams, £67, Jane Wolman,
Kit Bakke, ‘68, Laurie Deutsch, '68, Ginny Gerhart, '68, Erica Hehn, '68,
Nanette Holben, '68, Robin Johnson, °68, Jeanne La Sala, '68, Mary Little, '68,
Andrea Lurie, ’68, Barbara Mann, ’68, Dari ene Preiss er, °68, Marion Scoon, ’68,
Roberta Smith, '68,. Peggy Thomas, '68, Jacqueline Williams, °68, Sheryl*
Winsby, °68, Carol Garten, '68, Marcia Young, "68.
°66, Jane
Karen Kobler, '67,
wauoes f Nopresent Nab Siialoet bi tap emripe otisurtel boerds
—- We Cast Our Ballot
The Presidential election of 1964 may be a coats ae first in
twelve years where issues, rather than personalities.of e candidates,
decided the outcome. Antithetical stands on the civil rights issue and on
extremism, whether in defense of liberty or not, have gathered clear-
‘cut groups behind each candidate.
The role of the issues inthiselectionis causing many voters to cross
party lines, as ‘have’ the Southern Democrats for Goldwater and the Re-
publicans for Johnson, Personality, however, IS anissue in this election,
as it has been in the three preceding ones, and some of the voters cross-
ing party lines are doing so atleast partly on this basis, for the charac-
ter of a leader, no matter how competent or responsible his followers, is
of the utmost importance to those affeeted by his power. The wiedet
Cabinet, Supreme Court and Legislature (and, human beings being falli-
ble, this combination is unknown in American history), cannot counter-
balance an irresponsible President. Nor can they, en manne, fill a gap
left by an elected figurehead.
_The_age does not demand an image. We must not be led by a man of
impulse, a glittering speaker of contradictions, who, as Goldwater ad-
mits of himself, ‘‘shoots from the hip’’ and tries to reconstruct the
pieces the next day. We need, rather, a man of caution, not the brilliant
. figure, but the unspectacular consolidator, The President must be a
worker, not a symbol. The COLLEGE NEWS believes that Johnson is
this sort of consolidator, an unspectacular, but competent and respon-
sible leader, and, for these reasons, supports him for the Presidency.
- Wage Hike
After months and perhaps years of quiet but Gnopiieis complaints
about college salaries for student jobs; a new campus-wide wage in
crease will go into effect next-month,
This is a ‘boon not only “for students’ who were paid sub-standard
wages for work that involved certain skills or training, but especially
for those who depend. on campus employment to pay for books, entertain-
ment, or even.a part of their tuition,
- We are grateful to Mr. Mitchell, whose difficulty in procuring lantern
slide operators spotlighted the problem of low wages on campus, and
to Miss McBride and Mrs. Whelihan for recognizing the extent to which
this was an all-college problem, and for presenting an immediate and
satisfying solution, ~~ ;
Low wages on campus have been a major source of complaint among
students; the major and senSibly-scaled increases should satisfy every-
one involved.
S °
The: Dance That Wasn't
The failure the Junior Show dance last Saturday night indicates
some rather facts about the social situation here, the most dismal
‘of which is the apathetic attitude of what appears to be the majority of
students on campus, 2
Granted, we’re not a social institution by nature, and people who really
“do prefer Aristotle on -a-Saturday—night—to—a-more tangible, less
distinguished male companion can do so without fear of the ‘‘What,
you don'ts have a date?!’ . stigma that haunts many a State U. coed,
‘reins: too, that Saturday night’s dance was not all it might have
_been, The real frug band, while an attraction for some, probably
e@
scared off a goodly number of pce igi And the ——— in the .
ves much to be desired.
e dance was unsuccessful partly because not: enough
it anything else. The people who complain loudest
gym: certainly
Nevertheless,
people cared to
about ‘‘what a“drag’”’ campus social events are do little or nothing to
, make them livelier. After all, it’s much easier to shrug the whole
problem off and wait for an invitation to some other, more enjoyable
place. That people are apathetic is nothing new, and neither is the
attitude just described. Bryn Mawr has always had its share of that.
The chemin is, it’s never 2a nce quantities before.
- books have the..same endings, the. -
* world.
~
--Brave -souls whov..did- go. said-that--—---
_the comments of students who
or that tables and chairs be set up
COLL EGE NEWS
pg
Mental _ —s
PR a
4 To the Editor: :
‘“what?s new??? i hear one senior The ¢¢Mental Mixer’’ recently
saying to another as i perch on the proposed by Yale seems to us one
elephant swing in the deanery. they
' of the best new-variations-on-an-
agree that nothing isnew,thesame ojq-theme ever to come out of
the ‘land ‘of Bilis
EPMO
same- boys have the-same predic-
table quirks and what they: really.
want is some excitement in the
200 miles away and, since only
fourteen bright Bryn Mawrters
have been requested, most of us
will have to seek intellectual and
social pleasures in other, less
remote places -- i,€., at Home
Sweet Home,
And why not? It seems to us"
that ample opportunity for both
social and **intellectual’* good
times can be found here - and
easily put in practice. Bryn Mawr-
ters have been looking for a good
collective use for Haverford (and
vice versa) for a long time. It
is generally agreed by both sides
(and especially since the confirma-
. tion by -MADEMOISELLE) that all
most of us have in common, be-
sides bare feet and too’ much
hair, is ‘*intellect.’’
However nebulous this quailty
is, we feel it can be the basis for
a new departure in social gather-
ings - a kind of -Bryn Mawr-
Haverford ‘Brain Trust Bust.’
Our critics may argue that this
would be no fun - and more like
a meeting of Mensa Junior than
a social outing - but this difficulty
can be counteracted by providing
lively and interesting pastimes as
well as passive discussion,
Since pure social functions, e.g.
last weekend’s dance have failed,
perhaps this combination of the
social and intellectual will. fill
the void; In this light we pro-
Poorly Attended Show Dance
Indicates BMC Social Apathy
By Karen Durbin
_ Saturday nignt, pryn Mawr Col-
lege tried to have a dance,
It had a band and a place and
decorations and food.
Know. what it didn’t have? -
People.
Miss Charlotte Howe, Director
of Halls, estimated that no more
than 40 couples attended the dance.
f they s seem somewhat unpleasant-
ly surprised whén a political sci-
ence major joins them and starts
talking excitedly about three world
crises, a bomb dnd a three-man
spaceship, but then four years
here comprise an inward-turning
experience, and often perfectly
normal people turn to snail shells,
spiralling inward ++» it really
‘seems unlikely ‘after a while here
(and i have been here many years
..) that there is any place where
people really do judge strangers
by their surface appearance, where
almost everyone reads the news-
papers, the snail-shelled mawrter
finds that stringy hair and an in-
tense love of early christian basil- _
of ‘the world than she had thought
but when, (mawrters no longer)
they come back to the deanery in
green suits and silver hair, most
of the once-cloistered show asur-
prising acclimation to their new
environment. they talk animatedly
about politics, the new science
and babies like anyone else, and
only an occasional furtive glance
at trees and sky shows a trace
of the mollusks they once were.
gather ye oak leaves,
applebee
in the gym if necessary. ;
Caroline. is now investigating
the possibility of dances in the
Common Room or’even better, the
College Inn. She added tht she
would welcome suggestions for’
bands that play both frug and tra-
ditional music.
Loo Visits, Teas
there were seldom more.than ten
couples in the gym at one time.
The results are obvious. -- the
Junior Class lost money, quantities
of refreshments went begging, and
Bryn Mawr’s_ social reputation
dropped another notch.
Why was the dance such a roar-
ing failure? Caroline Willis, social
chairman, and the COLLEGE
NEWS questioned students of all
four classes and came up with a
variety of answers, the most fre-
quent of which was the bogey
which stalks the BMC campus --
apathy.
A large number of the students
questioned said they didn’t go to
the dance because ‘‘they just didn’t
feel like it”? or because it was
too much trouble to.-make the
necessary dating arrangements.
‘‘Dances here aren’t much fun any-
way,’? added one girl, but declined
For Bio Majors :
By Pam Barald
Devotion to science is now only
one of the reasons Bryn Mawrters
choose biology as a major field,
Besides the modifications that
“have linked modern biology closer
to chemistry. and the physical sci-
ences, there .are certain small
modifications in Bryn Mawr’s de-
partment which make biology def-
initely ‘‘a human science.” .
One of these is the yearly visit
taken by the students in Biology
201 (the Biology and Physiology
of the Vertebrates -- or to the
initiated, ‘‘Vert’’) to the Phil-
adelphia Zoo.
This year’s visit is scheduled
twelve members of the class, ac~
to say why she thought so or what. companied by Miss Jane M., -Op-:
ould: be done to improve them. pénheimer, and Mrs. Eve Mac-
This .opinion was reflected in' Donald, lab assistant, will spend
an afternoon in Philadelphia
made other plans, either in the ostensibly studying the zoo’s in-
area or at other schools, because habitants, but -~ as those who
they didn’t think a Bryn: Mawr have been before testify -- ‘enjoy-
dance ‘‘was worth staying egound ing themselves as well.
for.’’ — Another feature of Bryn. Mawr’s
More constructive and specific. biology department which
objections jificludedthe atmosphere. the fear of-non-scientists about
of the gym and the type of band, the white coated, genetic code.
advertised as ‘‘genuine frug’’ var- ; and physiology spouting inhabitants
dety, although ‘this last was
Caroline said several people the fifteen minute pause in a four
suggested that the dances be held hour lab and during which gastron-
in smaller, more intimate places omy takes precedence over his=>
tology. u
PRR Be aren peri
"Eee et Si ae a aa ne ae oy et Bea
ete arn stscnienigj dade Spies Ra eeioree weenie Reosnne se tee es pe
x ag estat
a cic ¥ ast ‘ 4 Foon, Sain ven rae
is Ba igen Des
ERE “CUS cae ore Seen CE SMI
; eee eee s
pose,
However, (alas) the vidtes « are
Ulterior Motives —
for the ninth of November. The °
“line, and té~~do
[LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
for the first Haverford-
Bryn Mawr mental mixer -- the.
recitation of EuripideghQqdinus »....2
Rex (in Greek, of course) accom-
‘panied by the “real, frug band.’’
(name withheld by request-ed,) :
(Copies of this letter’ appeared
in the Main Line Chronicle, the
Main Line Times, the Philadel-
phia Inquirer and the Philadelphia
Bulletin in response to an article
and picture in the October 8 Main
Line Chronicle -- ed.)
_Dear sir: ad
‘The responsibility of a news-
paper is to report the news, not
to create it. We therefore appeal
‘to your paper“to expose the- unjust - .
and scurrilous attacks in the Main
Line Chronicle directed at sup-
porters of the President of the
United States.
In the October 8, 1964, edition,
a Chronicle account of Senator
. Galdwater’s Ardmore visit label-
led a Students for Johnson group .
‘‘commie’?.
““pinkies?? carrying
Slogans, A placard painted ‘*‘DON’T
be Red or Dead -- Vote for LBJ”’
was photographed to read; ‘Be
Red or Dead -- Vote for LBJ.”?
_This flagrant distortion manifests
the .very extremism that the paper
attributed to the students. Such
nslaught of epithets and mis-
reppesentations is at once an in-
sult to the intelligence of the
reader and a violation of the re-
sponsibility. ofthe press. =
we hope that the Chronicle
‘brain trust’? will cease its mud-
slinging in’.time to unveil. the
campaign issues that it seems
reluctant to discuss.
Sincerely;
Gail Sanger ;-President-—
Bryn Mawr Students for Johnson
Virginia Kerr and Mary Thom
Co-Chairmen, Bryn Mawr Social
Action Committee
WHRC
To the Editor:
This’ is meant: te Be) both an.
explanation and apology for. the
fact that Radnor Hall still cannot
receive WHRC radio...
WHRC’s transmission to Bryn
Mawr College is achieved by first
--gending an. audio-signal over. spe-
cial telephone lines from our stu-
dios at Haverford College to each
dormitory at Bryn'Mawr. This
audio signal is then fed intotrans-
mitters at each dormitory, using
the AC wiring as the antenna |
(known as Carrier-Current Trans-
mission). This allows us to reach |
each dormitory with our signal
and still comply with FCC, regu-
lations concerning non-licensed
AM transmission. 3
We presently have transmitters
working in Rhoads, Rockefeller,
Pembroke East and..West, Den-
bigh, and Merion. The problem
with Radnor is that the telephone
company has no available wires
going into Radnor Hall for our
use.’ They are, however, required
+o supply us with-.such-a phone.
eolns to re-engineer their wiring
at Bryn Mawr College, possibly
more dollars, We at WHRC have
a transmitter waiting to be in-
* stalled as soon as the phone line
is in, The telephone company, to
date, has given us no estimation ©
for a completion date for their
work, but as soon as it is done,
we will install the transmitter.
We. hope you will understand
delay.
Sincerely,
Randall C, -White
WHRC Technical Director ' ;
sence RSS «
ROGCZES pene ee white carats rece
| er
sisi Ramee Mia a ee
maine >
wet
y “this ‘they are —
—eosting them_several thousand or —
.
*
October 22, 1964
COLLEGE NEWS ~
Page Three
Mr./€
Brand tackles knotty problem of Slavic origins with reference
to map of Europe in the time of Charlemagne.
Byzantine Empire ‘Nirvana’
For Medievalist C. M. Brand
By Marian Scoon
Some people escape from the
problems of a hectic existence by
drinking, others by smoking opium
-- but not Charles M. . Brand,
Bryn Mawr’s new Assistant Pro- “
fessor of History. ‘‘Maybe it’s
a form of escape,’’ he says as he
delves ever deeper’ into the com-
plexities of the Byzantine Empire.
The first draft of his book-to-be
will appear by the. értd of next sum-
mer. It will deal with the Byzantine
Empire from 1180 to 1204, from
the Emperor Kumenis to the begin-
ning of the’F 2u:.u: Crusade.
The grandson of a biologist-and
glassblower , son of a history pro-
fessor, Mr. Brand studied at Stan-
‘ford, Uffiversity and later at
Harvard. He has taught at Harvard,
and says, comparing the two
Schools, ‘“The atmosphere at Bryn
Mawr is much better for runder- ©
graduate study -- classes are
- Smaller, discussion is encouraged,
ba
and is possible in the smaller
classes.**~-He enjoys ‘ greatly the
student-faculty contact, remem-
bering, ‘I saw my professors an
average of only twelve minutes
per year out of class.’? The Bryn
Mawr Library, however, does not
equal Harvard’s Widener --.al-
though of the books it has, ‘‘They
are all the right books:’
Apologizing like a true scholar,
Mr. Brand says, ‘‘I’m afraid when
my wife and I go to the movies
we like something entertaining --
such as. Peter Sellers’ comedies
-- we haven’t seen miany DEEP
movies lately.’? Bryn Mawrters
need no longer blush as they hesi-
tatingly admit the same. Anthony
Trollope and Lawrence Durrell
occupy Mr. Brand’s ‘‘leisure’’
reading time, and-Robinson Jef-
fers occasionally takes him from.
his historical efforts. When pos-
sible-he-and his wife enjoy attend-
ing ballet performances.
.By. Robert L.. Patten
Lecturer in English
The Class*of 1966 served up
its macedoine of talent, TUTTI
§ FRUTTI, on, Saturday night in
Goodhart Hall. Mary McDowell’s
publicity committee had left no
stone unchalked in its efforts to
curtain time, however, so many
in the audience missed the. open-
ing moments of the show.. Like
undergraduate productions through
the ages, TUTTI FRUTTI proved
a blend of cleverness, talent, and
vulgarity.
Act One opened in the office
of Miss Penelope Plumb, the Ann
Landers ofa metropolitan news-
paper. Both here and in sueceed-
ing acts the. sets, designed by
Vicki. May. and Lynn Scholz, and
costumes, created by a commit-
tee under the direction of Nuna
Washburn, were colorful and serv-
iceable, and received deserved
applause. Into this office comes
one Bartlett Pare, amnesia vic~-,
tin, seeking helpfrom Miss Plumb
S. D: S. Seeks to Improve\.
Conditions in South Philly
By Sharon Swingle, '67
Improvement of ghetto-like liv-
ing. conditions in South Philadelphia
and the awakening -of- community.
interest there are the goals this
year of local members and asso-
ciates of the Students for a Demo-
cratic Society. aa
SDS members and friends from
Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarth-
more are continuing work which
began this summer with a South
Philadelphia organization called
the. Philadelphia Community Pro-
ject.
The project is one of eight~in
,the country now being sponsored
and run by SDS, a national political
and service organization concerned
with giving an economic and politi-
cal voice to inner-city problem
areas.
Project members here are visit-
ing the South Philadelphia area,
talking to the people, asking ques-
‘tions, and discussing problems.
Conversations usually revolve —
Penn Prods ction of "[Tempest’
Fails to Get Off the Ground
By Peggy Wilber
This weekend’s. production of
THE TEMPEST by the Penn-
sylvania Players of The University
of Pennsylvania, unfortunately
never quite got off the ground.
One cannot overemphasize the rel-
evance of this phrase, for it is
THE TEMPEST’s rare combina-
tion of earthbound realism and
haunting fantasy which demands
that it do just that. The actors
should always hover delicately just:
a few inches above stage level,
and the viewer’s level of emotion-
al receptiveness must always rise
one or two degrees in.any success -
ful production.
The Players unfortunately failed
to. realize this necessity: thé al-
most uniformly wooden delivery of
lines was the most painful mani-:
festation of this fault. Consider
the lyrical potentialities of Ferd-
inand’s ‘‘This music crept by me’
upon the waters ,’ and the bitter -
“sweet wisdom that canbe conveyed
in Prospero’s ‘‘I lost my daughter
in a tempest.” The effect of these
_ and many other lines, not: just the
allegedly ‘*memorable’’ ones, was .
‘lost in a mundane maze.
Ronald Hunter, over-bearded,
made up as too elderly a man,
and’ slwaya aubject, to over-extra-:
vagant blue and silver light effects,
emerged as more of a Lear,
visually, than a Prospero, and al-
though he attained several times
to the aforementioned combina-
tion of sagacity and fantasy, he
could not sustain this level of
‘delivery for very long.
- In-spite of her graceful move-
ments, Lorna Campbell was a
hyperactive, impatient Ariel, and
Daisy Pickman’s lifeless Miranda
was easily the play’s most unre-
warding character. Her “brave
new -world’? speech was distin-
guished, but for its inamity and
lack. of. conviction, rather than its
incredulous perception, Only John
Bland as Trinculo, the jester, and
the buoyant, enthusiastic Nikki
Edes as Stephano, the drunken _
butler, excelled in their respec-
tive roles, especially in their en-
counter with Calaban ‘‘disguised’’
as the “‘most delicate monster.’’
Alan Levin’s sets were glar-"
ingly overdone; they seemed more
suitable to Bali H’ai than THE
TEMPEST, The. play’s musical
accompaniment, however,
ranged by Daisy - ‘Pickman, was
-delicately and_ sensitively pre-
sented, especially in the off-
stage guitar melodies, and was the
one area in which the proper trans~
CANONS x was achieved,
|___SOLID COLORS
ar<'
around election issues, schools
and drop-outs, vacant lots and
garbage, rats, crumbling walls,
empty rotting ‘houses, unemploy-
ment and automation.
Through the project, blocks will
soon begin to hold open meetings
to elect leaders and discuss com-
“munity: problems. Realizing that
they and their neighbors have simi-
lar problems, the people are in-
terested in .working together.
~The .South_Philadelphia _resi- —
dents hope eventually to develop .
sufficient political power to pres-
sure the city into fulfilling respon-
sibilities in such matters as gar-
bage. collection and relocation of.
evicted tenants.
The SDS project is also organi-
zing a tenants’ council in a large
public housing project. Through
the council, tenants will be able
to make their own rules and act
as a complaint board. to the man-
agement. ‘
The... Philadelphia _ project sup-
ports itself and its full-time staff
entirely through -personal-dona-
tions. Interested Bryn. Mawr stu-
dents knowing of possible sources
of money, office supplies, or food
or wishing to work can contact
the Social Action Com mittee.
«tigi
MAGASIN DE LINGE
LAwrence 5-5802 :
825 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
2 2
MUGS
CHINA MUGS
‘POTTERY MUGS
WHITE
. PLEASANT DESIGNS
THE PEASANT SHOP
: 1602 Spruce St. Philadelphia
. 845 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
er eas
* adequately as
Py |
POR
in determining his rightful iden-
tity. She recognizes him as, her
long-lost husband, who left their
home thirty years earlier to buy
a can of f, Wearenenee and never
Over dinner that ovenang in a
Gypsy restaurant (Act Two) they
publicize the performance; at the~ try_to recover their lost years;
‘last minute somebody changed the
the process includes the revelation
of some questionable behavior by
Miss Plumb, who by means of
her undraped form at an undraped
window has attracted the friend-
ship of three courtly garbage-
men.
Act Three takes place the “next
morning at the newspaper office,
now besieged by those who have
recognized Bartlett’s picture in
‘the ‘paper; his own past is brought
graphically before him by aparade .
of wives and children, hobos, and
nudists with whom he has con-
sorted during his thirty years
of wandering. For. causing
commotion
she appears ‘on the-point of losing
her husband as well as her job,
when, as in THREEPENNY.
OPERA, a ‘‘happy ending’? sud-
denly develops, engineered by a
St. Bernard DOGGUS EX MA-
CHINA whom Bartlett once be-
friended, and who has now left
him. millions of dollars and a
controlling iriterest in the news-
paper.
The script, by Susan Burkhardt
and Joanna Lewis, lacked dyna-
mics. in its plot, . but_it.served.
a vehicle for an
endless series of fruit puns
(**They were a very happy Pare’’),
rewordings of slogans: (‘*People
who like people, Dial’’), and cameo
talent acts, The Juniors were for-
tunate in having Madeline Feld-
man as Penelope Plumb; though
and vivacious throughout. They
were equally fortunate in Mary
Daubenspeck, who played Bart-
lett Pare with assurance, subtlety,
“and style. In minor roles Joanna
Lewis portrayed a husky-throated
devotee of the Late Show, Karen
Durbin sang a torch song with
appropriate heat, Pilar Richard-
son delivered two’ parodies on
Gypsy ballads, and Jane Walton
and Carolyn .Wade, as Pare’s de-
cadent Southern wife (Daddy, you
never~ read “Erskine Caldwell- to-
iss Plumb-is fired;.
‘she was too girlish, she was lively.
‘iecadaiae of Talent’ Tutti Frutti
Blends Cleverness and Vulgarity
Te Tames
us any more’’) and hip-shooting
Texas spouse respectively, ‘were’
easily recognizable. Others in the
supporting cast included Diane,
‘Sampson as Miss Cridge, a flut-
tery, -nosey.. -secretary,.-Elizabeth.....--
Roueché who doubled as Adolph
Goldwasser and a headwaiter with
problems, Charlotte Huntley, Hea- ~
ther Stilwell, and Joanna Lewis,
who despite. some. confusion in
accents remained recognizably
individual garbagemen from those
well-known European countries M,
F, and I, Celia Rumsey, a fussy
editor, and Lynne Lackenbach, the
lawyer for the DOGGUS,
Vicki May’s direction, like the
script, was uneven: although the
blocking was often rather static,
she did manage to obtain a fast
pace, to incorporate appropriate
business, and to get from her cast
ah infectious senge-of high spirits,
especially in the last act.
The musical numbers were not.
among the highlights of the show,
lacking memorable melodies, and,
in the case of the ensemble num-
bers particularly, needing more
rehearsals. Goodhart’s extreme
length»contributed to making some
portjons of dialogue and song in-
audible or incomprehensible from
the rear, and it also complicated
the make-up problems for Carol
*Cain’s crew, who while striking a
good balance on most characters,
made ‘Penelope an astonishingly
well-preserved fifty. Lighting and
technical effects throughout com-
plimented the action and were
well coordinated.
All in all, the audience indicated
by its laughter and applause that
it enjoyed and appreciatedthe Jun-
ior Class’ entertainment, One won-
ders whether that applause might:
not have been directed in part to.
the underlying—-theme of-TUTTL
FRUTTI, that men are in such
desperately short supply even a
Bartlett Pare can be-a husband
and father many times over. Rer-
haps TUTTI FRUTTI was delib-
erately aimed at propagandizing
certain neighboring schools,
“BRYN MAWR’S
Smart Eating Place:
KENNY’S
WHERE EVERYONE
ON THE MAIN LINE MEETS
24 N. Bryn Mawr Avenue
~-LA_546623.4 ios Weneenetarse
~ NIGHT DELIVERIES —
A College Student Service of The Main Line’s Own Bonk
‘WAMPUM?
“NOI”
“| want_topay by check
like
Bead money went out with
tomahawks. Just like older
folks, young men. and wo-
men going to college should.
have their own Checking
Accounts.
- We're sympathetic ‘with teen-age
‘ideas here at Bryn Mawr Trust. And
“we have a new ree a Account, -
especially designed:
people — a
everybody _else!"’
Can't blame you a bit!
young
Book —no charge.
THE
CHECKING ACCOUNT :
It’s time-seving gad economical. It shows you how
fo manage your funds-correctly and economically.
Come in and ask about it. Handsome Wallet Check
BAYH MAWR Ba
A gah
Seen eee
Page Four
“
COLLEGE NEWS |
October 22, 1964
Students Urged to Contribute
_Jo BMC Literary Magazine
‘Signs urging students to “‘come
review the REVIEW’ were. the
first symptoms of the annual drive
for subscriptions and contributions
to Bryn Mawr’s literary magazine.
"The ‘tea last Thursday;: heralded:
by these signs, set off the campaign
in earnest, giving interested stu-
dents an opportunity to meet the
staff of the publication and learn™
the criteria for cgntributions.
The first issue of the REVIEW
will appear in January, and willbe
followed by a spring edition to be
published in May. The deadline
for submitting material for the
first edition is November 13.
~ Material submitted to the RE-
VIEW may include any sort of
. experimental and creative writing.
Editor-in-Chief —-
Faith Lewis -
pofnts out that this means not only
' poetry and short stories, but also
in
Drawing or other art works should
_be in black ink on good quality
i
“creative critical writing,” in-
cluding book or movie reviews, and
critical essays, Short plays, or
any other’ form of non-academic
writing, may be submitted, (This
year the REVIEW.will not include
any academic papers.) ars
In addition to literary works,
the REVIEW will include numerous
examples of graphic art. These
may be drawings, wood-cuts,
scratch-board, stipple board, and
possibly -even etchings; They
should be full page size or.smaller:
Manuscripts should be typed and
given to Faith Lewis (66 Pembroke
East) or sent to her through campus
mail, They should be marked with
the name and dorm of the author
(the name will be covered when
the manuscript. is read by the
editorial board), but will not be
returned unless specifically re-
quested. Works may _ be turned
and printed anonymously.
paper.
Subscriptions _to the. REVIEW
may be charged to Pay Day by
sending your name to Managing
Editor Madeline Berry (Pembroke
West). The cost for both issues is
$2.00; they will also be sold in
the book store. for $1.10 each,
At ‘Menta! Mixer’
A contingent from ‘The Bryn |
Mawr Brain Trust’? will venture
to Yale this weekend for the first
Mental Mixer in B.M.C.’s history.
The fourteen girls will arrivein'
New Haven by 2:30 p.m. at which
time they will go. to the home of
Ellen.. Patterson..’66,. who. is..or-
ganizing the weekend. Ellen’s fa-
ther is. the master of Morse Col-
lege at Yale. First on the agenda
is a lecture, possibly by Reverend
Coffin or Bernard Ashmole, keeper
emeritus of the Elgin Marbles.
This will be followed by atea given
; by _Ellen’s | parents for the girls,
‘the™ Yalies, “and. the guest lecfurer.
In the evening the Bryn Mawr
“Brains’’ will be dined in the
Morse dining hall, and then will
go to a dance at the college, or as
Ellen said with a smile, perhaps
on a private date with some devas-
tating Yalie met that afternoon.
The $11 train trip ticket should
be just about the only expense,
since the Bryn Mawrters are being
put up without cost at the homes
of New Haven members. of The
Bryn Mawr Club, who will also
serve them breakfast on Sunday
mornings The girls plan to return
by-around 4 0’clock Sunday after-
noon, (Ellen has offered them a
campus tour for that morning.)
Social Chairman Caroline Willis
-~-has-suggested-that- girls’ who find—
ssuitable companionship at Yale
may remain-a little longer-onSun-
day.
‘Compendium of Humor’
Bryn Mawr-Haverford radio
' station WHRC is adding a Sunday-
hight innovation to its programs
' with a ‘‘compendium of humor’’
-- Show., as. described--by- its pro-
ducer Marcia Ringel. _
Scheduled for 7:30- 8, ‘the com-
ical concoction will include soap
operas, light readings and general
corn--ideal. to procrastinate
freshman comps another half-
hour. The series will begin Poee
ber 25.
Engineer for the show inGaakes
Bell, a Haverfordian.
Marcia, who was the spontan-
eously farcical Belinda in the
Rhoads freshman play ‘‘Rape of
the Lock,’’ expects to organize
a permanent staff and a: floating
_ Staff, to be supplemented by guest
_ writers,
guest performers and
other contributions.
- Any Bryn Mawr or Haverford
- Student wishing to participate or
offer su
MADS
.. DISCOUNT RECORDS
>. 9W. Lancaster Ave:
ey ____ Ardmore
ica MI°2-0764 - .
Largest Selection Folk Music q
Pop - Classics - Jazz
op ak aa Revenant ny aw rag
~—
cUE BURBAN HARDWARE
BRYN MAWR,- PA.
| LAwrence 5-0894 - LAwrene “".7350
We carry a complete My
Household Articles
~ f Unique Office Supply Co. |--
Office & School Supplies
, Greeting Cards
_}- -26.N. BRYN MAWR AVE.
IBRYN MAWR, PA. LA 5-982
en RETR me
stions should contact -
- To Join WHRC Schedule
Marcia in Rhoads South within
the next week.
Revealing more specific plans
for the program’s content, Marcia
intends to-air hints for freshman
comp writing, Sunday funnies,
Thurber passages, mangled weath-
er reports and electronic music.
The gist of the: show, however,
will hopefully be the original writ-
ing of students--short plays,
poetry, stories, dialogues--pre-
ferably in a humorous vein.
Suggested as titles to date are
**The Crass Menagerie’? and‘‘The
Rancid Duck,’’” but anyone may
submit others to Marcia, who visu-
alizes the show’s prospective con-
tent as simply **DUH.”’
DELTONE RECORD SHOP
824 LANCASTER AVENUE__—i|
(Bryn Mawr Theatre Arcade)
BRYN MAWR, PA,
PHONE 527-0163
FEATURING
Golden: Discs of the Past
in ROCK "N ROLL |.
~ Closest t to the Campus
Students Until October 31
22. N. Bryn Mawr Ave., Bryn Mawr
LA 5-9126
BMC Brain Trust
Meets Yale Mates.
10% Discount To “Bryn, Mowe
Mitre’ foie, Re
He . — ‘is.. s
wk. =
B.M.C, girls take time out from studies to enjoy the fall weather, pick apples, and,. of course,
visit the pony at Rhoads F
Hockey Team Has Winning Streak
Caving, ‘Apple Picking Finish Week
Hockey sticks are swinging at
BMC this fall. The first team tied
Penn 3-3,catching up the second
half to Penn’s 2-point lead at the
end of the first half on October
6. Goals were made by Lynn Tho-
mas, Sally’ Boy, and Amy Dickin- °
sen, The second team. lost 0-3.
Both “hockey teams pourded
Arts Council Culture Vultures
‘Drexel 1-0 and 3-0 on October
13, _Last year Drexel won 5-1.
The game with Swarthmore on
October 20 ended with a 5-1
Swarthmore win.
The team’s next game is here™
with Rosemont Oct. 27 at 4. |
The odds vs. evens game turned
out to be seniors and freshmen
Plan ‘Prometheus,’ Arts Night
. Arts.Council plans for the com-
ing semester include increasing
the availability of tickets to con-
certs and plays in ,Philadelphia,
setting up a poster committee,
and sponsering the Art Gallery
_and an English language perform-
ance of ‘‘Prometheus Bound.’
Notices of coming events on
the bulletin board in Taylor us- -
ually mean that students can make
reservations for particular per-
formances of cultural events, Arts
Council will with this system en-
able-_those--who-cannot--use one
of the Monday night concert tickets -
to offer them for sale, —
Another service—being— offered:
is the” printing of posters for
College organizations willing to
furnish materials. The Council
hall reps will be happy to accept
poster orders.
Student artistic activities will
soon be in abundant evidence, with
a November exhibit of student
FOR SALE-
Sears Portable Electric Typewriter,
identical in all respects with Smith-
Corona portable electric: Features:
twelve inch _- carriage, automatic
keys. Has)\some special characters
suitable for scientists. Prof. J.M.
Anderson, Phys. Sci. Bldg. 137.
LA 5-6664.
PARVIN’S PHARMACY
James P. Kerchner Pharmacist
LA 5-0443
= ct
> FIESTA
HAVE A
_PINATA —
eT
1011 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PENNA.
Tonight.thru Monday
THE SIMON SISTERS
- also —
Jessie Collin. Young
SORNTLY: 9:15, 11; PRI. & SAT. 8:20, 10, 12-
WOOTENANNY EVERY TUESDAY |
he
Classified Ads|
® = Mawr’ Ave. Bryn Mawr. Pa. :
Main Line Photo Service
830 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PA.
LA 5-4440
FREE FILM
for every roll left for develop-
ing and printing. Kodacolor or
black and white. ent 620-1 27-
;,120.
|. Cameras - Projectors - Sereens.
Sale and Rentals
Photostats - Camera Repair
Dark Room Supplies
We ‘devetop our own black ~~
and white film. ~~
ey
work .in the. Roost, the presenta-
tion of ‘*Prometheus Bound’* on
November 21,
early in December. ——"
Tryouts of: Pyometheus
“Bound,” : ch has parts for both
‘Haverfordians and Bryn Mawrters,
~ will be the last week in October.
Director Connie Maravell prom-
ises the distinction: of special. ef-
~ fects; so she is also- looking for
volunteers for the stage crew.
Tryouts will be Dec, 5-7 for
Arts Night, which will feature
poetry, drama, instrumental mu-
sic, singing, short plays, and any-
thing else creative or entertaining
thes students wish to offer.
GANE & SNYDER
834 Lancaster Avenue
CIDER AND APPLES
against juniors and sophomores
with the first group winning 3-1.
Another odds and evens game is
planned for this coming Wednes-
day or Thursday. All girls inter-
ested are.asked to contact. Ann
Godfrey in Rhoads. 3
Five members of the Dance
Club: performed. at..Penn.on..Octo-...
ber 8, The group and a Penn group
did improvisations to poetry.
Four brave spelunkers, Susan
Pasley, Cathy Simms,
Rotroff and Mary Ann Beverly,
went caving with a greup from
Lehigh headed by~Al Attermeyer
on October 18. Temple Cave and
Chauffeur Cave near Reading were
and’ Arts Night; those visited for an exciting, if
not spooky, day. Another caving
trip. is being planned around
Thanksgiving time.
If one smells apples burning in
Pem she should know that home-
Susan _
made applesauce is the result of .
Sunday’s bicycling trip to Rhoads
_ Farm, owned by the college. Seven
girls made the 3/4 hour’s trip to
romp in the fields and pick apples,
The faculty- student ‘tennis
matches are still being played.
Ann Godfrey asks that ‘‘all girls
who have not played their faculty
member yet, please do so,’’
Future events planned by the
.
Athletic Association include sail-
ing with Princeton on Chesapeake
Bay October 23-25, a Winter Week-
end of hiking, caving and rock
climbing at Wilson October 30
to November 1, and. the Vassar
Square Dance November 1-8.
Remember: you’re “expected home”’ at 10
Home by phone, that is. When you set a regular
_ day and time-to.call your parents, you're sure of -
reaching them. Why not make a definite arrange- -
ment next time you phone home—like tonight. f
Li {
\
a Sree SON Ta ge Si ci a
College news, October 22, 1964
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1964-10-22
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 51, No. 05
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-no5