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College news, December 11, 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)
1964-12-11
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 51, No. 10
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-no10
Page Eight
COLLEGE NEWS
r
)
December 11, 1964
Outing Club Entertains Guests
With Square Dance, Song-Fest
Byvyn Mawr was host for Outing
‘Club members from various
Eastern. colleges during its Out-
ing Club Week-end, December 4,
5, and 6. Over 100 students from
other schools attended, and the
week-end was a great success,
according to Mary Turnquist.
Friday night was occupied with
people arriving and _ getting
settled. Later that night there was
a song-fest. A number of activi-.
Campus Events
Sunday, December 13, CHRIST-
MAS SERVICE, Scripture reading
by the Reverend David B. Water-
mulder, Minister of the Bryn Mawr
Presbyterian Church. Christmas
music, including the ‘‘Concierto de
Navidad’? by Paul-Csonka, will be
sung by the Bryn Mawr College
Chorus. Goodhart Hall, 8- p.m.
PASSION ACCORDING TO
SAINT MATTHEW, by Claudinde
Sermisy. Main Reading Room, Li-
brary; 12:15 p.m.
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY.
Wednesday, December 16 to Mon-
day, January 4,
Monday, December 14, BURKE
MARSHALL. A representative of
the Civil Rights division of -the
Justice Department will speak on
the 1964 civil rights legislation.
Common Room, 7;30 p.m
Wednesday, January 6, INTER-
FAITH SERIES. Robert i Good-
ale, Professor of Music, will speak
on ‘Contemporary Religious
Music.’’ Common Room, 7:30p.m.
SUEDE LEATHER
BY.
FRED BRAUM
JACKETS
VESTS
©. SKIRTS
1602 Spruce St. Philadelphia
845 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
7
Harper’ 5
pECE '
Simone de Beauvoir
explores
THE QUESTION
OF FIDELITY
In a revealing self portrait pub-
lished for the first time in this
country, “the high priestess of
existentialism” describes her
thirty-year relationship with Jean-
Paul Sartre, and reveals her per-
' sonal exploration in Chicago’s
slums; on a riverboat‘ cruising
down the Mississippi, in New |
Orleans’ French Quarter and in
Mexico City. Adapted from :the
forthcoming volume of her
autobiography, The Force of .
Circumstance.
ON YOUR
NEWSSTAND NOW!
os
THE PEASANT SHOP|
ties were scheduled for Saturday:
there ‘were “iniking trips at
Frenchman’s Creek--a state park
in the area--and Valley Forge;
a caving expedition; swimming in
the Batten House pool, and rock
climbing, All Outing Club members
were invited to dipner at Applebee
Barn, and sailing movies were
shown. Saturday. night there was
a square dance held in the gym, .
‘open to all students. The caller,
Bill Blake from Temple, called
circle dances in addition to
standard square dances. After the
square dance was a highly suc-
cessful song-fest. Sunday morn-
ing students were served breakfast
before they left.
Among the Suest Outing Club
members were boys from Yale,
Syracuse, Princeton, University
of Pennsylvania, Lafayette, Lehigh
RPI, and other schools, They were
housed in the Graduate Center
gym. The girls who came were
from nearby schools and didn’t
have to spend the night at Bryn
Mawre
[STATION CLEANERS}
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W itty Editor of The Hudson Review .
Enlightens
By Laurie-S. Deutsch
* Frederick Morgan, a founder and
editor of The Hudson Review, ex-
pressed pleasure in being, at Bryn
Mawr for the first time since his
“undergraduate days at Prince-
ton.” He smiled; ‘*In those days
I derived a - different kind of
pleasure here,”’
The organization of The Hudson
Review. sprang from a creative
writing class at Princeton. By
_ their senior year; the students .
from the class were the editing
body of The Nassau Literary Ma-
gazine, which **we made into a
showcase for our own writing, in
the best tradition of small maga+
zines.”? The enterprising young
editors called in dance hall girls
from New York to help with circu-
lation: -The ‘girls were picked up
for breaking the college regula-
tion against peddling.
Two of the three present editors,
including Mr. Morgan,-were inthat
college class. The third editor
_ dotes,
_ got its name, One of the other
JOHN A. BARTLEY
Jeweler
Theatre Arcade
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LA 5-3344
is the Review’s former business
manager,
When the Review was in-
corporated in 1948, its purpose was
“to cover literary. development
in a,systematic way.’’ At the be-
ginning, the editors wrote to
writers whom they wanted to
appear in the magazine, They (the
editors) were under the influence
of Alan Tate, their former Prince-
ton professor, and the New Criti-
cism, Their new aim is to dis-
cover. and encourage new writers,
A balance is maintained between
works printed..by new writers and
thgse of already established
authors. There is also an equal
distribution,among the three types
of writing: poetry, fiction, and non-
fiction (essays.)
Mr. Morgan told other anec-
such as how the Review
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It acts as a protective skin similar to the
and coordinating with the printers.
Literary Bryn Mawrters
founders looked out the window and
said ‘‘What. about the’ Hudson Re-
“ view???
Apologizing for *‘departing from
the subject, which ( he saw as)
“Problems Of Editing a Literary
Review,’’ Mr, Morgan explained
that ‘*Everything to do with’a
literary review is a problem.’’
More specifically, he cited the
problems of money, (‘‘our, main
problem’’), . selecting material,
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