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VOL. XLIX NO. 10
\ "BRYNMAWR, PA, -
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1963. © Trustees of
Dirk Rezelman, Dr. Rubin
Discuss Apartheid Policy —
By Jane Wolman
The Alliance for political Action.
. sponsored ‘a debate on apartheid
in the Union of South Africa last
Monday night.
‘¢Debate’”’ is somewhat ofa mis-
nomer for the interchange between
Mr. Dirk Rezelman, of the South
African Information Bureau, and
Dr. Leslie Rubin, of Howard Uni-
versity,
South African Parliament. They
were hardly-talking about the same
thing. —
In his preliminary statement,
Rubin declared that he did not want
to” argue fival theories, He pro-
posed to slibake the question on the
‘thigher, moral level,” to “apply
the ultimate test to see ifasystem
is ‘desirable and beneficial; what
it does to human beings under it.’’~ °
Rubin observed that in South
Africa today, under the machinery
‘of apartheid and the legislation of
Prime Minister Vrevoort’s gov-..
ernment, eleven million Africans .
are deprived of ‘‘the normal rights
of individuals ina civilized world,”’
His examples supported Rubin’s
conclusions that the policy of apar-
theid. is ‘*morally indefensible,
economically unsound, and politic-
ally disastrous,”’ and that the Union
of South Africa can only resolve
its problem through violence,
In defense of his’ government’s
position, Rezelman — explained
*¢quite honestly’? that it is the aim ..
' of apartheid to. maintain control
of their own political destinies for
South Africa’s white minority;
-.Reminding listeners that white
South Africans consider them-
selves a separate African nation,
Rezelman stated that no nation is
prepared ‘‘to barter its political .
freedom.’’ Citing Israel, Ireland,
and Pakistan, he said that although
partition is never an ideal answer
--it has proved to be a. practical
one; The creation of ‘Bandtstan
(separate black African states) is
the only realistic solution, since,
in Rezelman’s opinion, “the politi-.
former member of the.
.cal personalities of white and black
: Africans (as disparate eroupaya: are
irreconcilable.’’
Rezelman. explained that whites
in South.Africa are .‘*not.blind,
unconscious, or insensitive to the
very real dilemma,’’ but he did
not* consider the moral issue
central to the argument, merely an
unfortunate byproduct ofthe trans-
oe Mawr College, 1963
20 Gents
“Acting, Dancing wid Folk Music
Ma This Year’s Arts Night
_. This year’s Arts. Night will in-
clude a French play, performances
of various types of folk music,
dancing, and several frankly ‘ex-
perimental pieces.
French club will present ‘*Le
Maitre,’?. by Eugene Ionesco, a
theater-of-the-absurd satire on
Dirk Rezelman, (left), representing the South African Information
Bureau, and Dr. Leslie Rubin, (right), of Howard University, engaged in
itional period leading to anultimate
partition.
He made no further reply to:
Rubin’s charge that apartheid is
‘‘morally indefensible,’? Even when
the audience; (obviously largely in
sympathy with Rubin’s position),
directed__specific._questions—re-
garding the human rights aspect
of the issue to Rezelman he limited
his answers to political statements,
Although the moderator, Dr.
Frank Loecher, general secretary
of the U.S, - South Africa exchange
program and professor of sociology
at Temple University, made a
valiant attempt to direct the dis-
cussion towards the consideration
of: possible answers, the results
of the’ debate were inconclusive,
- a spirited debate on apartheid, moderated by Dr. Frank Loecher (center).
leadership’ and blind _obedience.
It will be directed by Beverly Keith,
The actions of a southern belle
at a dance are the subject of a
humorous monologue to be pre-
sented by Jane Robbins. =
An assortment of Have rford
boys, Bob Gallway, Pete Peterson,
and. Stu McDougal, will play folk
music. on an assortment of instru-
ments, including guitar, banjo,
lute, anddulcimer, Selections will
probably include some bluegrass,
some ‘ethnic’ folk songs, and pos-
sibly- some ‘Appalachian - ballads.
Everyone who has heard them play
is confident that the performance
. will be good no matter -what they
choose,
Folk music of a different kind
will be sung by Dick Morris, who
- plans to sing spiritualsas if he
were ‘‘in the cotton fields under
the bright sun.’’
The Renaissance Choir, for-
merly known as the Madrigal
Singers, will also be on hand.
Modern Dance Club is preparing
two short pieces, ‘*Persistance of
' Vision,’? choreographed by Senta
Driver, and ‘Vibrato I and II.’*
The audience at a recent Dance
Undergrad Accepts Budget,
Forms Financial Committee
by Anne Lovgren
A final séttlement of this-year’s
Common. Treasury. Budget, the es-
tablishment of a Collége Financial
Committee to facilitate review and
revision of future budgets and the
selection of Freshman Week
Chairmen headed the. agenda of
last night’s Undergrad Executive
Board meeting.
The board voted to eliminate
items from-variousorganizations’
proposed budgets totaling $1039,
This leaves the budget for the com-
ing year at $7856,.assessing each
Unemployment Hits Hazard Miners;
BMC, Havertord Students Give Aid
By Leslie Coen, 66
Chronic unemployment -- the na-
tion’s most nagging problem dur-
ing a period of general prosperity.
Nearly six per cent of our labor
force is without work and has lit-
tle prospect of finding it, for the
unemployed. are usually also the.
unskilled, Automation has givenus
many benefits, but it has ruined
the lives of many humanbeings.
Among the most badly hit inthis —
serious, nationwide. problem are
the coalminers of Hazard, Ken-
tucky, whom students in Bryn Mawr
and Haverford are trying to help:
Automation has put about 50 per
cent of these miners out of work,
ahd the resulting” enlarged labor
supply has made it easy for mine-
owners to cut wages and neglect
safety and health precautions,
~ They have succeeded in destroy-
‘ing Hazard’s once strong union.
They have also succeeded in avoid-
ing the Federal Mine Safety Act,
which ‘applies togmines employing
The ext issue of THE]
i COLLE
pear Tuesday, January 14.
oy
GE NEWS will ap-}
ay ge
15 or more men, While sub-leasing
small units of the mimes to many
people, the mineowners. can. have
14 men in each mine and still en-
joy huge profits.
It is not necessary to protect the
lives of coalminers in Kentucky.
If one -is- killed; there are plenty
of then, desparate for work, who
will gladly take his place, Those
who do work in Hazard earn as
little as three to four dollars a day.
- For-a-year now, the miners have |
been on strike, against innumer-
able odds. Berman Gibson, the
strike’s leader, is free on'$10,000
bond, having been charged. with
INTENDING to .blow up a bridge, -
°The FBI entered and searched his
home: without Warrants. He was
also. charged with assault with in-
tent to kill and-hauled into jail on
Election Day: morning, ‘The follow- ©
‘ng day, some people, who evident-
ly didn’t know of his arrest, ac-
cused him of bribing voters, during
the very time he was in jail! He
faces°22 years in prison,
’. Mr. Gibson has been. offered
free legal aid, and his case willbe.
appealed if necessary. ‘Still, a tre-
mendous*amotin .. 2. xdy is need-
ed, for other legal fees and for °
general aid to the area, The late
President Kennedy sent Franklin
SP eg Tae ON OR RET PRT EN OHNE BS
Roosevelt ‘Jr, to Kentucky to in-
vestigate the Situation, Roosevelt
was appalled by what he saw and
recommended a $45 million dollar
aid program, to help ‘the miners
through: the winter. Congress.
turned it down, but someone must
act,
Present aid programs don’t work.
Kentucky is so controlled by the
mineowners that even those whose
job is to dispense federal food will
give it to those who won’t strike,
scabs, .
The area is so poor that the min- .
ers lack the means-to distribute
federal’ aid, There is a school
lunch program, which would give
children their one’ good meal a day,
but Hazard children don’t have the
clothes to be able to go to school.
There is a carton in every hall,
.for of@ clothes tobe sent to Hazard, .
Please contribute whatever you
have. This week-end, Haverford
and Bryn Mawr students will be
canvasjng the neighborhood, asking
for food, old clothes, and money.
Some students will spend Christ- .
mas in Kentucky, to’help in dis-
_ tributing the aid, and to study.the
problem for themselves, A great
deal must be done, Please give ae
old clothes and time. ©
student. $11.65 for Commot Treas- 24
ury dues,
The ‘board struck $125, to be
used to reimburse athletic team
members for meals missed be-
cause of team activities, from the
Athietic Association budget. A $100
item on the same budget used for
Hockey Workshop was accepted for
this year, although the board rec-
ommended that it be reconsidered
in the next budget. The College will
now plan and finance the Em-
ployees’ Dance, formerly admin-
istered by League. The deletion.
of this item marked a $290 de-
crease in the League budget.
“Other cuts in the budget in-
cluded a $180 decrease in NSA
funds, a $20 decrease in the Col-
lege’ In Committee budget, and
the withdrawal of WBMC’s re-
quest for a $384 grant. .
The board voted to establish a
College Financial -Committee,
elected from members of the Exec-
utive _Board who were not sub-
mitting budgets, This board will
review organization budgets with
the various club presidents and
revise the budget accordingly. It
will then ‘submit the. completed
budget to the Undergrad Executive
Board’ for Approval, The Common
Treasurer will act as Chairman
of this committee, with the pre-
vioys Common Treasurer as an
advisor. ~
Diana Hamilton and Popie Johns
were elected Chairmen of the 1964
Freshmen.Week, Pilar Richardson
-and Apne Lovgren will act as
Freshman Handhook Editors.
Other campus problems were
discussed, including the Admin-
istration rule of Vacation signouts,-
a’ proposed open meeting on Li-
brary changes, a shitable method
for populating Erdman with upper-
classmen, and the question of room
‘prices, Undergrad President Dor-
othy Meadow urges students: with
opinions on.these -- or other --
problems-to make them known -
-.to their Hall Undergrad Reps so
that. they may receive attention,
Club rehearsal seemed deeply:
moved by~-the“‘unreal--and dis-
turbing*? quality of the perfor-
emance, which they said, ‘‘is one
of those things that goes =
through you,’
Bob Baskerville and Chris Kaut-
man will sing Slavic folk songs,
accompanying themselves on the
guitar, Their style of singing and ©
playing was described by one mem-
ber of Arts Council as ‘rich, not
squeeky and plunking.’? :
Pam Mulac plans to dance to
the accompaniment: of a poem read
by Pheobe. Knox, with no music,
Two boys from Haverford, Steve
Bonime and Ed Hazzard, will play
two short pieces of medieval music
“on a guitar” anda recorder. Steve
also whistles,
Ed Hazzard will-also.play the
oboe as accompaniment for aread-
ing of her own poetry by Sallee
Horowitz. The oboe music is ex-
pected to serve as a fitting back-
ground for her haunting poems.
The members of Art Council
who have been working on Arts
Night are all very excited by ex-«
cellence of this years perform-
ances, They hope to make it more.
than: just a collection of unrelated |
presentations,
Arts Night begins . sromplty at
8 o’clock this Friday in the Skinner
eee
Late Closing Hour
For Second Trial
The Library Committee has an-
nounced that the library will con-
‘tinue to remain open ~ until
midnight on .evéry night except
Saturday. The extension of library .
hours is still ona trial basis,
however.
The. trial period will probably ~
continue thrétgh thé midyear ex-
amination period,
The administration decided on
the extension because of doubts
that the earlier trial period was
- long enough to be an accurate
reflection of student interest,
If a sufficient number of students
continue to use the library at
night, it is hoped that the new hours
will become permanent,
‘As before, the reserve room will
close at 10 o’clock, but users of
reserve books signed out for the
night will be able to return them
at midnight, thus avoiding anearly
morning trip to the library,
Everyone using’the library after
10 must sign in and out, to provide
an indication of the total amount of
time spent in the library.
A report on the first'trial period
was compiled by Carol Jones,
’65, and submitted last week to
Miss MtBride. An open. meeting
has been proposed for January or -
February to discuss a variety of .
problems and plans in connection
with the library, and the meeting
‘may include a further exploration @
of library hours, Officials have
said that it is hoped. the decision-
of whether or not the hours are to
be, extended permanently will be
made ‘around the time ofthe ore
meeting, if not before,
The Library Committee saan
complaints .of noise during the
10-12: hours, and has urged that »
night: studiers -
» respect for the rules as @uring -
the day,
~
pee
‘shows-.23_ —_
_ Page Two
NT
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
4
Friday, December 13, 1963
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 ‘reentry at the Bryn Mawr, Pa Post
Office filed October ist,i9ed.
Sy
f ~ FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weckly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
‘pany, Inc, Bryn Mawr. Pa., and Bryn Mawr Collcge.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in
it may be reprinted wholly or in part without pcr.ussion of the Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor-in-Ch'et "64
eeeeeepenenes
a on Brooks Robards,
Associate Editor ‘ Anne Lovgren,)’66
— ' a;
a= Copy. Editor DTT Tn Lait ait eG jamw~ Charlene Sutin, "6+
Mane-up Editor. apassiehinti sabtns Lynne Lackenbach, 66
Member-at-Large ........: i és Constance Rosznblum, '65
CAMPUS NEWS EGIGOr oo... so cscseecccescseescssees soteesensgeenstisiesensgeeerageen cote “Elizabeth Greene, ‘65
Soence themes mere Se atrsieleaeier ae ‘i aiy i pie 4; atest. Pr: news 3
pre anve a wating err. ers, argare usley, "
acetmutnlie tnt eee ee Manager , elia "Coates, ‘64
~ BUSINESS STAFF ;
June Boey, ’66; Eve Hitchman, ’66.
EDITORIAL STAFF sectors :
Diana Trent, 64; Mz. ony H. Worfield, ’64; Sue-Jane Kcrbin, 65; Gail Sanger, °65;
Mary H. Smith, 65: Peggy Wilb-r, ‘65 Ann Bridley, 66; Joan Cavallaro, "66;
Karen Durbin, ’66; Vileky Grafstrom; Edna P-rkins,-’65; Pilar Richardson,
"66: —e Shapiro, °66 7 esa Stramm, "63: Jane Walton, 66; — Berrald, 67;
Suzanre Fedunok, '67; Nanck Gellman, ’67; Babs Keith, ’67; Klaus, 67;
Karen Kobler, '67; Laura, usm, "Sh. Alison Newhouse, * SRuth Rodisch,
an, enny Sma ndrea ark, “67; Bar E ‘
ait 67; Marilyn Williams, *67; Jane Wolman, ’6?. i arc ney
“ | "SUBSCRIPTION STAFF
Dabney 1 Park, Rock; Gail Herman, Pem West; Gail Chavenelle, Pem East; Gites.
air, Rhoads; *Connie Mzravell, Denbigh; Lynette Scott, Spanish’ House;
Re, Pe nce erion; Barbara Sachs, Radnor; Ruth Rodisch, College Inn ond
—= The Honor System
**Bach Temper of~ the cancion is urged to realize her social.
responsibilities by attempting to redirect any attitudes and actions which
are contrary to the beliefs and practices of self-government.’
Too often, what the Self-Gov handbook here terms “social responsibil-
our honor system. We are insulted by anyone who is bold enough to
‘assume that it couldn’t work, and we are usually shocked when we hear
of any infringement. From thevery beginning we at Bryn Mawr are urged
to consider deeply the matter of personal integrity on which our honor
system, one might even say our theory of education, is based.
In the realm of personal integrity almost all of us undertake our
responsibility, What we neglect are the more general, less easily defined
responsibilities which the existence of any community demands. These
: entail recognition of the fact that any action which any one of us under-
takes is a matter which always concerns the entire community. Aithodugh
the degree of this concern may vary, the fact in itself cannot be escaped.
We guard our individuality jealously here, and we have every right to.
But individuality per se can become destructive. It becomes destructive
when the individual thinks in terms of his own personal aims to the
exclusion. of what affects others, It is manifested in such areas as a
student keeping a reserve book out and paying a fine for it because she
needs it rather than returning it for the others who have reserved it and
are waiting for it. It is evident in another way when professors, granted
_.that they are-busy, make. themselves more and more inaccessible to
students.
The pressures ofan ns acadarale eommunity-a are such that the individual’s
sovereignty naturally assumes almost excessive importance, But when we
cease to take into consideration the needs and rights of others, we have
lost respect for our own rights.
We must be more than shocked when we hear of infringements against
the honor system, because, every offense against it is an offense that
GWE have committed, if only in neglecting to stop the offender. For the
- idealist, personal integrity is.an easy virtue compared to social integrity.
Social integrity is the highest ideal that any of us can support.
%
The President _
The event of the ‘President’s assassination has already assumed its .
place in the past, It is right to concern ourselves from now on with the
new administration and with present problems, We remain in a thirty-day
period of mourning, as the College has taken recognition of in having the
temporary flag on Taylor tower at half.mast, but essentially, the crisis
has passed, °
This act will always have a unique , iditanomae for our generation,
; because whether we agreed with his actual aims or not, John Kennedy
created an image of youth, ambition and idealism which alinost all of us
believed in,
If it has had no other effect, the President’s death has shown.us-what.
one man can mean to a nation. Inthe hours between Kennedy’s death and
Johnson’s arrival in Washington, the United States seemed as vulnerable
as a single individual. No democratic nation is as vulnerable as one man,
and perhaps this is what we should think about. The man was destroyed, .
but let us hope the image was Nts,
‘went 's:7o SNenRyl”
ving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks)
ities”? are lost sight of at Bryn Mawr. We are almost arrogantly: proud of ~
Post. Scriptum:
Campus Events
And Occasions
to discuss a variety of problems.
in connection’ with the library has
been proposed for January or Feb-
__Tuary, Alternate plans for-enlarg- __
ing the library may be discussed -
at that time,
James MacTodd, ‘who -has been
a porter in the library since 1948
will--retiré..as__ ofthe. first of
January. Previous to his.job in
the library, he was in defense work
for six years. Before that he
served..as. ‘porter. in Rockefeller
for fifteen years.
On Tuesday, Miss McBride at-
tended a meeting of the Committee
‘for the Equality of Educational
Opportunities, which is under the
auspices -of the AmaricutGounell
of Education,
Rosalie Beck, Scholar in tiglish,
will study at Cambridge University
next year under the Imperial Order
of the Daughters of the Empire
fellowship.Rosalie, who is from
Nova Scotia, Canada, is working
towards a graduate degree in
English here.
Miss -McBride will spend three
days of the week of January 6 in
Honolulu at the University of
Hawaii, where she will be attending
a meeting of the Advisory Council
for the East-West Center,
‘and grave gifts of pottery.
cemetary is Early Bronze age with
BMC Archaeologists Find_
Giant Bronze Age ‘Pithoi’
Bryn Mawr has completed its
first digging season at Antalya-
Elmali in southwestern Turkey.
Now the excavation is closed down,
A fence has been built around the
site and a guard is on duty.
--Miss~-MeHink;—P- rofessor of» -—
‘Classical and Near Bastern Ar- ;
chaelogy, who directed the excava-
tion of the Early Bronze Age siteis
pleased with the gta The
first season’s excavation
a foothold.in. the general excava-
tion of the entire.site, consisting
of a settlement and cemetary and
explored the cemetary more care-
fully and. scientifically. The sys-
_tematic excavation of the entire
site may take five years, but al-
ready new facts have been learned.
The cemetary brought new infor-
mation to light concerNing the bur-
{al customs ofthe Early Bronze
Age. Giant pithoi,(burial jars)
were found containing skeletons of
no ruins of other periods interfer-
ing. The graves, found near the
surface, were intact’except where
the Turkish farmers had disturbed .
them with ploughs,
The catalogued finds have been
taken to the museum at Antalya,
_a harbor town three hours from the
site where they will go on display.
. The Bryn Mawr ‘digging crew,
C onference At Lehigh Explores
Promises of Africans’ Future
America is the continent of to-
day. Africa is the continent of to-
morrow.
On that note, the Crossroads
Africa Committee of -Arcadia, the
Student Council of Lehigh Univer-
sity, and’ Operation Crossroads
Africa, Incorporated, began their °
two-day conference on ‘America
and the Future of Africa.’’ ‘The
conference. was held on November
15 and 16,
The keynote speaker at the open-
ing banquet was His Excellency,
G.B.O,Collier, Ambassador to the
United States from Sierra Leone,
Representing Operation Cross-
roads - Africa, Incorporated, was
Dr. James He Robinson, founder
and director of the organization.
Dr. Elliot 'P. Skinner, : Profes-
sor of Auth
University, spoke on ‘‘Pan-Afri-
-canism.’*- He traced the move-
ment begun by Africans in the
Didspora toward full dignity and
participation in world affairs of
all people of African descent,
The efforts of students parti-
cipating each summer. in the
Crossroads project emphasized
the ability of students to aid in
the revolution. Crossroaders from
the 1963 project conducted a panel
discussion, \
Problems in specific areas of
Duo Piano Concert }
Coming January 6
Agi Jambor and Horace Alwyne
will present a concert of ‘«Music
for Two Pianos’’ on Tuesday eve-
- ning, January 6, 1964 at 8:30.p.m.
The concert, which will be pre-
Sented in ‘Goodhart Hall, will fea-.
ture works .by. Busoni, Brahms,
‘York Bowen, Britten, Hollaender,
Scriabin, Bax, and Palmgren and
promises to be pleasurable,
A point of interest in the pro-
gram of the concert is two move+
ments from’ Brahms’ Sonata Opus
34. This. is one. of the earlier.
versions of ‘his great Pianoforte ©
Quintet, The work first appeared
as a String Quintet with two ‘cellos,
but was found to be ‘insufficiently
sonorous for its’ great matertal”®
and Brahms rewrote it as asonata —
for two pianos, This sub: ently
became: the Quintet for Pianoforte «
sie —— ~ and Str nes." a
iropology at Columbia:
Africa were dealt with in discus-
sion groups cenducted by Mr. E.
Jefferson of the African-American
Institute, Dr. Ibrahim Mansoury of
Mills College of Education, Mr.
Harry Langworthy of Boston Uni-
versity, Dr. Martin kKilson of Har-
vard University, and Dr. Elliot P.
Skinner of Columbia: University.
These’ speakers later participa- —
ted ina panel discussion on ‘Africa
in.the Coming Decade.”
' At the closing banquet, Dr. Rob-
inson spoke on ‘*The Promises and
Anxieties of Africa’s Future.’’ He
stressed the need for strong
backers of the Crossroads project.
This project sends college students
to Africa each summer to partici-
in -study-work:camp projects,
‘African student counterparts.
wi
applebee
hitch-your wagon*to a-star-
and maybe you’ll get near enough
to reach’ your hand. out not so far
and ‘snag it - without being rough.
if stars for’ you are high ideals’
don’t let a low one throw you back
but grit your teeth a kick —_
heels sont
and keep your Laced on the tracks
if ambition ties youup in knots
a bundleful of future plans- |
leave somé leeway just in case
you need to change them for aman.
never static, always changing,
keep your life well greased and gay.
then when trouble tries toget you -
you can fight it back and say -
pick on sgmeone else, you coward! _
keep your trouble! go away! |.
i have better things to think of
and then you kno
it’s really so!
a:
7 va
smade-
The
. end: in itself,
that maintaining our ‘‘respec-_
besides Miss Mellink, were; Mrs.
_T.H. Caghee.-“*=* Ds-Haviland, and _
Arlene Krimgold. “fhe actual dig-
gers were 20 Turks recruited from
the ‘nearby town of Elmali and
trained on the site.
fall, Preliminary reports will be
published before then, but a com-
prehensive report will not be made
until the site has been completely
excavated. And with one success-
ful dig accomplished, Bryn Mawr
archaeologists are confident of .
further successful seasons.
LETTERS |
Chester Pickets
To the Editor: ear
We are appalled that the recent
arrests in Chester, Pa., could even
bé considered to bring discredit
upon the college. Of course, this
. action. will be looked upon. with
disfavor by some, as all.-civil
rights action is. After all, people
felt that a Negro family moving .
into: nearby: Folcroft brought such
discredit upon, their-neighborhood
that. they threw bombs at. their
house,
Just as we must realize that
adhering ‘to the law is not an
so must we see
table,’’ ivory tower image in the
eyes of an uncomprehending public
should not be the goal of our
actions.
There. is much more we could
say in support of the action in
Chester, but we feel that Kathy
Boudin and Nora Clearman in
their letters to The College News
of Nov. 22 have presented the vital
issues. We feel that the only dis-
credit to Bryn Mawr -is-that-so
few people there have taken so
’ little action in the past. *
Pauline Dubkin, °63
Rachel Brown, °63
Library
ro the Editor:
Oh. ho, ho, It’s. almost Christmas,
and in the midst of tinsel and toast-
mistressing may be glimpsed the
feeble light of the Main Reading
Room, a beacon for ear beleagured
students seeking a desk for study
from 10p,m. until 12 p:m.; and even
before: yet amidst the din of carols,
a plaintive voice asks, ‘“‘What about
_the-Reserve Room?”
What about the Reserve Room,
what about the entire student atti-
tude toward the Library? The-
‘ewhat’’ is integrity, the Honor Sys-
‘tem, Bryn Mawr. Because of use- _.
tess neglect in. the behavior of
students they are being denied fur-
_ther benefits of the Library and
elsewhere.
Rules are written for the pro-
tection of the group and for the
obeyance of the individual, If a book
is returned late, or in torn or de- .
faeed condition a fine does not ex-
piate all sin, Someone has been
denied any present or future use of
the book: No smoking is a simple
- rule of mortal. protection; a five-
minute “margin of safety would
never see you out of the basement
“The site will be reopened next |
mermaid.
-
untoasted, Yet the rules and the _
“code of Bryn Mawr to live as a
community, to respect the individ-.,
ual andthe whole of the student body
grow weak under the burden of
>> ~neglect.and opposition. -
If conscientious observation of
the Honor System is practised, the
entire college gains and grows, Is
‘a turnstile system the only alter-
native for the Library? Ithink and .
‘better visa ta spend a day! ne not, but proofiis, Atmoniy per=
suader,
‘Diana Hamilton, Chaitman
The Library Committee
ty --—
BF Syn b-
Totem seemed aml veeeomerosey Aha, 2 y, ile a My
Friday, ‘December 13, 1963
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Protest To South Africans
Gets Reply. From Murray
“On behalf of NUSAS I wish
to thank you for the letter which
you sent to the so-called Minister
of Justice—protesting against his—
vicious attacks:on us. It is.of great
importance to us_ to’ know that
Students who believe in democracy
throughout the world stand behind
us in our struggle to bring about.
a decent South Africa.’’
Alan Murray, National Union of
South African students, addressed
__the above to Marj Heller and three
other Bryn Mawr students who
made an active protest last month
against suppression of the only
sizable, fhulti-racial orgsiizatién
in South Africa.
“As Mr. Murray’s letter says,
they had written to the South
African Minister of Justice pro-
testing his attacks on the Union.
NUSAS_ has. consistently opposed
the dictatorial policy and.apartheid
philosophy “of the Afrikaner
government. It now appears that
.the. government plans to ban or
crush NUSAS,
Faced with increasing African
unrest during the last decade as a
‘result of. government apartheid
policies, ‘the Afrikaner National-
ists have passed a series of laws,.
which in the words of the Inter-
national Commissioner of Jurists
‘... surpass the bounds of
civilized jurisprudence.’’
For example, the Sabotage Act
makes it a crime punishable by
not less than five years imprison-
ment to disrupt any public service,
trespass, or strike for higher
wages, if the accused cannot prove
his act was not intended to; a)
promote general disorder, b)
‘encourage any change in the
R. Kirk-Analyzes
Foreign Policies.
by Caroline Roosevels, °65
Dr. Russell — Kirk,
American intellectual and Con-
‘servative philosopher, author. of
several books on Conservatism and ©
‘other topics, and editor of THE.
UNIVERSITY BOOKMAN, spoke
‘Tuesday evening on the subject of
- **Disintegrated
Liberalism in
Foreign Policy.’’
Dr. Kirk defined ‘ ‘dis integrated!
liberalism’? as that which had lost —
its aims and become mainly a list
of slogans. —
The theme of his talk was con-
cerned with four illusions .. of
Liberal foreign policy, which are
fundamentally derived from 18th
century assumptions about human
nature.
The first of these illusions is
that men are essentially of good
will. The Liberal rejects the fact
of. corruptness in human nature.
This Dr.:Kirk described as a lack’
of realism,
The secend illusion of the
Liberal is that which he has re-
garding the nature of power. He
tends to explain men’s actions in
terms of economic, or similar,
motivations, rather than those of
power. The Liberal misunder-
stands also the power of ideology.
The third illusion of Liberal
foreign policy is that there will
eventually be a uniform worldand,
implicit in this, the assumption
that this world will conform more-
or-less to the American pattern
of government and life. Yet
attempts to impose our ways in
other countries have often met
with fierce resistance and re-
jection. :
And lastly, the Liberals are
~ under the illusion that there are
permanent solutions to world prob-
lems, which is contrary :to the
fact of balance-of-power relation-,
ships among nations.
These .points were illustrated -
»-..with references to the. Wilsonian
. \ contribution. to -the fall of the’
Hapsburg empire, the. Hungarian
crisis, the current situation in .
Vietnam, and. -the 1958 Iraqi coup.
ee
a leading .
economie. or social structure of
the Republic, and c) embarass the
administration. Other ‘‘inci-
dental’’ mailers ferred to.in the
act make it, in effect, illegal to
protest the policies of the govern-
ment in any public manner,
The Afrikaner response /to
‘charges “that “South “Africa has ~
become a Fascist police state
that ‘the government is in the
process of assuring self govern-
ment and economic progress for
‘the African through the creation
of. autonomous ‘‘Bantustans’’
throughout the country. In fact,
these Bantustans are and probably
will remain under the direct con-
trol .of the’ national police.
Togethtr, the Bantustans, located
in some of the worst geographical
areas of the nation; constitute only.
13% of the land area of South:
Africa, About 75% of the population
is expected to. live on them,
It now seems difficult for South
*Africa to follow a road of peace-
ful and non-violent protest against
the government policy of apartheid,
The only road left open to the”
African majority, appears to be one
of violence-and civil w
The independent nations of
Africa have begun to send as~
sistence to rebel elements in South
Africa, and a civil war, a war
that will © probably surpass
Algeria’s in bloodshed, is expected
to break out within a year or.
two. Since a civil war is already
underway in neighboring Angola,
one is in- preparation in
Mozambique, and there are
rumblings of violence in Southern
Rhodesia,
portion of Africa is likely to erupt
into ‘‘violence.”?
‘The United States has refused
to vote for strong action. against
South Africa in the United Nations.
~ It is reasonable to assume: that
the U, S. will be required to take
a position on the South African
question within the next year.
the entire southern.
Haverford Helps
WBMC Members
With Radio Work |
Since the “Start of WBMC, the —
Bryn Mawr radio station, -last
year, the ultimate goal has been
the complete reactivation of WBMC
as..a.broadcasting station, Though
it is unlikely that -WBMC will -
transmit its own-programs in the :
near future, the college may soon
be able eb receive’ WHRC, the
Haverford radio station, > -
A number of Bryn Mawr girls
now have their own regular shows
“on WHRC, while others are learn-
ing about the IBM record filing
system, and Sechnical aspects of -
“radio work.
45 WHRC said it would put a line
into Bryn Mawr that would enable
the college to receive--WHRC'S
broadcasts,
Since it is hoped that each dorm
will be able to receive WHRC,
five or six new custom made trans-
mitters known as MIT models with
built-in transformérs have been ~—
ordered, The parts are beginning to,
arrive, but it is unlikely that the
transmitters will be completed
before the end of winter. Lance
Jackson and Frank Ghigo, of
WHRC’s technical department will,
work with WBMC’s technical de-
partment (Connie Maravell, June
Boey, and Terri Preston) in buiia-
ing the transmitters so the girls
will acquire technical experience.
According to. Mako Yamanouchi,
the head of WBMC, Bryn Mawr’s
radio station can only become
fully reactivated when someone
outstanding in the technical field
joins the. staff, Until that time,
WBMC will continue to work in
cgoperation with WHRC. Even if
WBMC does become a fully func-
tioning radio station, the girls who
have ‘programs. on WHRC_ will
probable continue with them.
Kennedy Stressed Dilemmas —
In His ’57 Speech At BMC
Senator Kennedy (sight) talking with History Professor Dudden.
«eThe basic dilemma of the poli-
tician is that he is asked to sacri-
fice himself to the public good ina
country where private interest is
encouraged to the maximum,’’
This was the keynote of an ad-
dress given by the late President
John F, Kennedy, when he spoke at
Bryn Mawr College in January
1957. Those words were as revel-
atory of the dilemma of a senator,
as he was then, as they were to be
of the president’s, rou S
According to Kennedy, the pres-
sures exerted upon the politician
include: (1) strong exhortion inthe
House and Senate to “‘go along’’
with the party despite disagree-
ments; (2) re-election; (3) con-
flicting needs. of.district- and coun-
try; and (4) party pressure,
Kennedy dwelt on the third of
these conflicting intergsts, for it
-was a subject that was of especial
interest to him, as was shown in
his book aBportier of Courage.’ "
He iaaeead toa particular prob-
lem that had confronted. him when
he was a. senator representing
Massachusetts, Iceland had ‘de-
livered the ultirnatum that unless
BMC Students Sobered and Saddened
- By Their View of Kennedy” s Catafalque
By Margie Aronson, ’ 65
(Margie was one of a group of
students who went to the capitol to
pay their respects to the late
Presidént Kennedy, ) :
. Washington, November 24, 1963
The American people, shocked
into speechlessness by the sudden
maniacal assassination of their
President, became articulate once
again in anunusual and moving way.
Even before the public was per-
mitted to view the casket of John
Fitzgerald Kennedy, an assembly
of inconceivable size had convened
in the nation’s capital.
Arriving in Washington at mid-
night, we became aware of the
charged atmosphere. Walking
through the , streets, we sensed
. something indescribably present.
It was the feeling of the immehsity
of the time and the events which
created confusion in even the most
astute and hardened observers,
The murmurings of the.crowd as
it passed awakened us and set in
‘motion certain automatic appara-
tus for observation, without which
the impact of what we were doing
would have been lost.
We had decided to pay our re-
spects to the President, as had
Informal Carol Sing Highlights
C ollege’ s Christmas Festivities
The appearance of Christmas
trees in thé halls and sentimental
ornaments on doors mark the be-
ginning of Christmas at Bryn
Mawr. .
The holiday season will offici-
ally begin on Thursday evening
at 8 when the German Club holds
its annual Christmas party. —
On Saturday. night, the Bryn
Mawr and Haverford Choruses will
combine to present a Christmas
. pageant’ in Roberts Halls. Tra-
ditionally the concert has included
some special selections, as well
was’ familiar..carols in which the
audience is encouraged to join. °
A new feature of the Christmas
tradition will be an informal, all-|
college carol sing which will fol-
low ‘the Sunday night (8 p.m.)
Christmas service. It w, Pn vata be held
in the Common Room
ments, will be served. Class song-
mistresses will conduct, ,
The graduate students’ cus-
- tomary mummer’s play, directed
by Jane: Hutchins, will begin its
campus rounds at 9:30 p.m. Mon-
day. After its first performance at
the graduate center, the play will
tour the residence halls, In addi-
tion, maids SDE OFSERS cater in the
halls..that. evenings.
Halls will hold their own Christ-
mas parties on Tuesday, evenings. »
Faculty members are invited and
presented with humorous - gifts.
Miss McBride will dine in Pem-
broke, After dinner, students,. fa-
culty, and guests -gather aroundithe
hall Christmas tree and exchange
gifts via Santa Claus.
(Upperclassmen remember
wistfully last year’s unique Christ-
mas sherry, now outlawed by. the
‘modified Pennsylvania drinking
law. One_ more tradition spirited
away.) .
- Following the parties, ‘Seniorsi~.
will go caroling around the campus,
starting at Miss McBride’s at
9:45 pem. :
iD at Ba BTS
most of the others who stood with
us, Yet, had we been asked-why we
stood, many of us for seven hours
or more in near freezing weather,
we could not have said,
_ Instead of speaking, we chose to
act. The Americans we saw and met
gave us a feeling, strangely patri-
otic, for we had never before seen
the American people demonstrate
their admiration and respect. with
such mute eloquence,
Who were those who came? Stu-
dents? Yes -- from universities
and colleges in the east, the south,
~the north and the midwest. Par-
ents? Yes -- with children of all
ages, from those wrapped in blan-
kets for protection against the cold
and wind, to toddlers and teen-
agers, Elderly persons? Yes --
Roosevelt and before him,.Harding
and McKinley.’? They were all
there,
The sense of cuseiniapliiasial we
had anticipated upon reaching the
bier was subdued by the awe we
instinctively felt. The quietly mov-
ing throng stopped momentarily;
some prayed, others reflected, and
still others cried, When we left the
Capitol Rotunda, we could not de-
scribe its physical properties, its.
murals or even the hundreds of
bouquets of flowers which lay .
around the bronze flag-draped cas-
ket. These factors were unimpor- ~
tant in face of the time and events. -
In us there was a final and defin-
ite realization that our President
was dead, which could not have °
been ‘produced in us in any more
memorable. way.
age dhe Ne
Washington Monument and the
Mall, we felt exhilaration and great
ena
ee
Sivess,
Yet, when we:
‘sat of the: Rotunda and,saw .
“the early morning dawn upon the
she could import ‘fish into the U.S,
ie Neneeneans
we could not retain our air base
there, Either the fish industry of
Massachusetts, essential. to the
livelihood of many citizens there,
or a national defense must, in this
case, suffer,
He also. discussed ‘the conflict
_ between private interests and pub-
lic goods faced by such senators
as John Quincey Adams and Stephah
Ross,
The conclusion of the. speech
revealed atypically Kennedian
point of view.
This was a reference to John C,
Calhoun, who said that he néver
knew what South Carolina thought
of a measure he took; that the most
he could do was act. in the best of
conscience :and either receive her:
approval or, in the case of disap-
proval, vacate his place willingly.
Interfaith Plans
Lecture Series
For Rest of Year
Interfaith has been.a very.active—
and dynamic organization this year
as its trips and lectures have
indicated, Past events have been
well attended and, according tothe
president “of Interfaith, Mary Lee
many interesting and
worth features are planned
for thé future. Of special note are
the recent expedition to a: Greek
Orthodox -Church--and the music
. and meditation sessions. :
Sunday. morning, Nov. 17, stu-
dents attended a service in a
Greek Orthodox Church in Phila-
delphia. They were given copies
of the liturgy written in Greek,
with an English translation on the
side. After the service the priest,
Father Logothetis, answered ques-
tions about the ceremony. Inter-
faith hopes to repeat the trip in
the spring. Also planned are trips
to a Russian church and places
of either architectural or historical
interest, '
Two of the:**music and medita-
tion’? sessions have already been
held this semester; the. chorus
sang at one of them. During the
- second semester Interfaith will ©
have a regular schedule of music
and meditation from 5:30: to 6:00
Sunday afternoon in'the Common |
Room.
As usual, Interfaith will sponsor
various speakers during the year.
Of particular interest, however,
will. be a series of lectures on
comparative . eligion.
v
*
»
Condolences
sg njunme smart en BAAS gh eC A aa a
eg
Page Four
> A .
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Se coal
¥
Friday, Decainbar 13, 1963
In And Around Philadelphia
“MUSIC
The Ballet Folklorico of Mexico, a troupe of 75 dancers, singers,
and native instrumentalists, will appear at the Academy of Music
‘Thursday evening, December 12, and Friday evening, December 13,
Eugene Ormandy
will conduct the Philadelphia Orchestra in a con-
cert. featuring, Gold. and Fizdale, pianists, The program includes
music from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite and Méendelssohn’s Concerto
for Two Pianos and Orchestra. Performances are Friday, December
13, at 2 and Saturday, December 14, at 8;30, at the Academy.
The Smothers Brothers will spoof folk music in a _aees at
the Academy of Music, Monday, December 16,
The Philadelphia Lyric Production of Bizet’s opera, “Carmen, ”
will. be presented at the Academy; Tuesday, December 17, with Gloria
Lane, Jon Vickers, and Cesare Bardelli.
THEATER
“he British topical revue, “Beyond the Fringe,” starring Patrick
Patrick Horgan, and Leigh Wharton, is
Carter, William Christopher,
in its last week at the Forrest.
~**Love and Kisses,”*-a comedy about the problems of young marrieds,
featuring Larry Parks and Mary Fickett, will cqmplete its. engagement
at the Walnut this week,
The Arts Council of the YM/YWHA presents the original off-Broadway
production of ‘‘The Brig,’’-a controversial:drama which investigates
the nature of cruelty, Saturday evening, December 14, at the YM/YWHA
~ A-Tevival of the Bizet-Hammerstein II. musical.,¢‘Carmen Jones,”’
starring Harry Belafonte, Dorothy Dandridge, and Pear] wid is now
. Playing at the Yorktown,
‘Lord of the Flies;’’ film adaptation of William Golding’ ee
at the Lane.
. versial novel concerning the nature of man, oenewee its engagement
| Acu te Nee No + > ee
: Caesl Lynley Becomes a Star
(After being admonished by the
subject herself about twisting
information to make a good story --
and perils of ansuing suing -- we
rather hesitate to’ print this
article.) .
What is Carol Lynley REALLY
like? Had she told us, we'd tell
you,
In press conference Friday to
ballyhoo her. new flick THE
CARDINAL, cinemannequin Lynley
‘emerged as an exciting, vibrant
personality - with myriad outside
interests, including movie maga-
zines, three or four books, and
lying (sie) in thé sun.
But seriously, Miss *L--whom
most remember as a silk and
porcelain ingenue on every other
page of SEVENTEEN -- is trying
to become afine actress, Honestly.
Her roles’ (yes, two) in THE
CARDINAL were the hardest, most -
interesting, challenging, and re-
wafding of her career. To explore
the potentialities of herself and
her roles was ‘‘fascinating,’’ and
her best performance has resulted.
- The ‘*extremely strong direction’’
of Otto Preminger may have
helped.
The Cardinal sin
In our handy-dandy instant Car-
* dinal publikit -- which included
thirty stills and assorted biogra-
phies, -but helas! no mitres -- we
found theme music records, both
a 45 version by Roger Williams,
‘some trumpets, and a male vibrato
factory, and the whole fersh-
‘elugginer mess-on a 12’? LP.
We suggest you wait until seeing
the film. Perhaps in context the
Monks:-at. Casamari» won’t sound
so flat. Anyway, they’re pretty
hilarious juxtaposed to the Dixie-
land-Tango Carol cuts with a
..refugee from a coffee-bean com-
mercial. NEWS music critic W.°
Cleverly wasn’t in onthe listening,
but we think she'd agree,
:
_Cashmeres for the Holidays —
by Hadley,and Braemar,
PECK and PECK
Suburban Square
Ardmore, Pa.
beiaitiuisnsiae'seistes dee ate
_ Bryn Mawr
Flower Shop, Inc.
_A 5-0326.- .
@ FLOWERS BY WIRE.
@ CUT FLOWERS
ane GIFT ARRANGEMENTS
Book By FicSuavdeboen Dean Weighs
By Mary H. Warfield
THE REVOLT. OF — THE
COLLEGE INTELLECTUAL by
Everett Lee Hunt, published by
' Human Relations Aids, New York,
172pp.,$5.00. ;
-The intellectual revolution in our
* colleges is an. accepted fact. The
noncomformists, the delinquents,
the hordes of unwashed in the
‘cult of the grubby’? have been
repeatedly pulled to shreds, with
‘Time magazine recently adding
their two cents worth, It has been
the Thing To Do to criticize the
college intellectual,
At last, however, a fair a
has been written. Everett Lee
Hunt, Dean Emeritus’ and Pro-
fessor Emeritus of Swarthmore
has a more. constructive and
realistic, ean if you like,
contribution, Mr. Hunt
attempted to explain and analyse
this intellectual revolution and find
the constructive aspects instead of
dwelling on the destructive ones.
In his analysis of the revolt
of the college’ intellectual, Mr.
Hunt “discusses the change ia the
attitude of today’s students. They
look down on the rah-rah antics
of their fathers’ generation, be- —
coming involved instead with
national-and political affairs -sit-
ins, strikes and other similar
events,
What Dean Hunt wants to find
, out is -- what is the meaning of
this intellectual revolution? Are
the students ‘less adolescent and
more. mature, or -do their.im- -
Miss Lynley poses in brown wig.
Jocular Rock Supplants “Swifties”
Grapefruit Gags Do in a Squeeze
THE BROTHERS GRAPEFRUIT;
GRAPEFRUIT REX; WUTHERING
“A Comedy of.‘ Grapefruits’’
Another Bryn Mawr first! A new
type of joke, originated at BMC,
has come along to replace Tom
Swifties and Elephant jokes as
the national sally.
The game goes like this: the
word ‘grapefruit’? is substituted
for one word in the title of a
book - ise.; GONE WITH THE
GRAPEFRUIT, TO - KILL. A
GRAPEFRUIT, THE..RISE AND
FALL OF THE THIRD GRAPE-
FRUIT, ~
The prospects for g
as you see, are really quite
uits,
Ngeaching: There’s LOOK HOME-
WARD, GRAPEFRUIT: BRAVE
NEW GRAPEFRUIT; THE WAY‘
OF ALL GRAPEFRUIT; THE
SOUND AND THE GRAPEFRUIT,
etc.
Or, on,the international scene;
GRAPEFRUIT KARENINA, and
Success comes early to college
women who supplement their .
education with Gibbs training
. =who obtain marketable skills
that gain them quick entry. into
the fields of their choice.
- SPECIAL COURSE FOR
COLLEGE WOMEN
Write College Dean.
for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK
KATHARINE
GIBBS.
. SECRETARIAL”
BOSTON 16, MASS., 21 Marlborough Street
NEW YORK 17, N. Y., 200 Park Avenue
MONTCLAIR, N. J., 33 Plymouth Street”
-CHATTERLY’S
a Bryn Mawr
4 9-6 .Mon.'- Sat.
Scholars... .
we offer
bookends
s*
in wood
~8% MONTHS: |
_ |THE-PEASANT SHOP}
°
- PROVIDENCE 6, R.1., 155 Angell Street | °
De Seen eee B45 honeaster Ava f Rew. vein
GRAPEFRUIT; THE AUTO-
BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM
BUTLER GRAPEFRUIT. 7
Of course, no series would be
complete without “sex = ~~ LADY
GRAPEFRUIT,
GRAPEFRUIT PLACE, SATUR-
DAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY:
GRAPEFRUIT,
The ‘game was originally in-
vented by Andrea Kovalchick, ’66,
in Rockefeller one night at dinner,
when ‘there was grapefruit for
déssert. It has already begun. to
spread rapidly, off campus and
on; with no stop in sight. (RUN,
GRAPEFRUIT, RUN!)
Someone getting off the Paoli
Local last week was heard to
remark; “STOP THE WORLD, I
WANT TO GET GRAPEFRUIT!’
Walter’s Swiss Pastries
Cakes - Pastries: - Cookies
870 Lancaster Ave.
wood and tile,
fused anes
wood & slate
"1602 Spruce St. Philadelphia |
has
Ss
: Young Intellectual Campus Revolution
maturities merely manifest them-
Selves in* different’ ways.’’
‘Perhaps, he says, the maturity
is ‘shown in their political and
national interests, while the
adolescence is betrayed indiv-
idually .in ‘‘a superior con-
descension or in depressive .
inferiority complexes.” As one
Harvard senior said, ‘Well,
Harvard really is.a terrible place
to be, but whefe else would you
go?!’
_Discussing the-phenomenon-. of. ewes
late adolescence, Dean Hunt says,
“tthe adolescent rebellion of in- *
dividuals is an anciently observed '
and permanent. phenomena, but it
is only in recent times that whole
group. cultures have become
dominated by adolescent intel-
lectuals.?
Using his close observation of |
Swarthmore drawn from over 30
years of experience as dean and
professor, Mr. Hunt questions the
role of the liberal arts college
in the revolt. ‘Should it try to
teach students to adjust to the
world as it is -- or should they
be encouraged to revolt???
And- he gives the opinions of
students on many college prob-
lems -- suchas customs, attitudes,
actions, and expressions of values.
Swarthmore, known well for its
*feagerness,’’ is an ideal place to
examine the current intellettual
‘revolution, _ At .Swarthmore. and
other colleges requiring a high
* admission standard, failure re-
sults from emotional problems.
The task at hand is to direct the
emotional buildup from thestress -
of the intellectual revolution into
a constructive, not destructive path
(and this is being done), Then the
revolt of the Intellectuals will _
prove its value in the accomplish-
_ments of. the graduates!
League’s 8 Activities”
Require More Aid —
Saturday mornings at BMC
usually means ‘extra hours of sleep
or study, or a trip to the laundro-
mat. For six members of League,
however, Saturday begins early,
with a train trip, to Philadelphia.
For the past two years, League _
- has sent six girls every other
week to the Children’s Reception °
Center of Philadelphia, the city’s
orphanage for children under five,
The girls stay with the children
until after lunch, playing withthem,
feeding them, and giving them other
personal attention.
‘‘what we notice most about
these children is their lackofper- -
sonal possessions; toys and
books,’’ say members..who have
worked on the project. League is
now considering a drive for toys
and books, but ‘‘what we need most
of all is ‘student support -- not
necessarily permanent members,
but students who would be willing
to devote some spare time occa-
sionally to this and other League
projects.’’
Dotrowiie News
bf
“A dvertisers
| RICHARD STOCKTON |
. Gifts-Soctat Stotionery-Conls
Christmas Cards
< and -
Gifts:
851 Lancaster Avenue.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
peau we
maa
= ;
ea ’ =
* ——
Friday, December 13, 1963
sateine
THE COLLEGE NEWS
‘Pose Five
By Allice Ely, "66
The Bryn Mawr-Haverford
Orchestra gave its first concert
‘ of the year December 6 under
the direction of William Reese.
On the program were pieces by
Mozart, . Bruch, Fauré
‘Schubert,
The concert began with an over-
ture from ‘*La Clemenza di Tito,’
by Mozart. The playing of the
woodwind section: gave sonority
‘and unity to the delicate, lyrical
e
~ Mozart,
BRUCH CONCERTO
Concert mistress Barbara
Dancis, °64, . displayed’ fine
technique in her performance of
the Bruch Concerto for Violin.
to bring out the lyrical expressive-
ness of the Adagio. -
The. performance showed com-
Campus. Events
Friday, December 13 8 p.m.
“The Seventh Seal,’’ directed by
Ingmar Bergman, at Robert’s Hall,
Haverford. Admission 25¢, Tickets
available from Clara Perkins,
Rhoads. South, .
Heinrich Schutz Singers present
four Motets by Poulenc, and the
Christmas Story, by Schutz.
Roberts Hall, Haverford. Ad-
_mission Free,
Sunday, December 15 8 p.m,
Christmas Service, including
Chorus concert, with informal
carol sing afterwards. Service in
Goodhart; sing in Common Room.
Wednesday, December 18
CHRISTMAS VACATION BEGINS,
If you care-to stay here however...
8:30 pem. Dr. Leon Edel, Pro-
lecture on ‘“‘Henry:James.”?? Com+
mon Room, Founders Hall, Haver-
ford.
Monday, January 6 8;30° p.m.
Phyllis Jay, Assistant of Anthro-
oplogy, Columbia University will
speak on **The Evolution of Social
among Primates,’’ under - the
auspices of the Bryn Mawr Chapter
of Sigma Xi.
Tuesday, January 7, 8: 30 pem.
Recital for Two, Pianos, to be
Professor of Music. Goodhart.: -
Wednesday, January 8 7:30 p.m,
Interfaith Association, A student-
led discussion, f
BERMUDA
COLLEGE WEEK
1964
MARCH 22-APRIL I
(Everyday packed with action)
..new friends... fun!
SUN. — Get acquainted dance,
(Wear Bermudas!) MON.—
College Day-at the beach. Tal.
bot Brothers Calypso, College
- Queen Contest; barbecue lunch.
TUES. -—Jazz session, Limbo
contest, buffet lunch. WED.
—Cruise to St. George, Steel
Band entertainment, Gombey
dancers, refreshments.
THURS.—On your ‘own:
swim, shop, sightsee, sports.
FRI. — College Week Revue—
entertainment. Tennis finals.
-All these... and lots more —
complimentary activities!
Cyr +
L Campus Organizer now!
j
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on
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bese act
and —
passages so often -misplayed | in
She and the orchestra combined -
plete mastery of the technically.
Saturday, December 14 8:30 p.m. '
fessor of English at NYU,- will
given by Horace Alwyne, Proféssor.
Emeritus of Music, and Agi Jambor.
The Bermuda Trade ‘Development. Board —
difficult finale. The technical dif-
ficulties, however, were
in theorchestra’s expressive play-
ing, so necessary in any romantic
music. .
BEST PIECE
The Faure Suite, ’‘‘Pelleas et
Melisande,’’ was by far the best
piece on ‘the program. The or-
chestra played as a whole, and
the woodwind. section, enhanced
by the harp, showed itself capable
of colorful.sound. The entire piece
was executed with the lyrical _
sonority of Faure, which comes
only through cleancut playing and
not °
evident, since they were forgotterf .
“Stronger” Orchestra Performs Bruch
Mozart, Faure Works at First Concert
feeling for the music,
The final number ‘on the pro-
gram~ was the* overture to
**Rosamunde’’? by Schubert. Here
again the orchestra. played with
delicacy andstrength when needed.
_ NEW STRENGTH
The concert ended with a repeat
of the Sicilienne from the Faure
_Suite, this ‘time stressing the
delicate flute and harp parts, The -
1963-64 orchestra has an oc-
~ ¢asional problem with pitch, but its
sound is fuller than it was last
strength, especially in the wood-
“wind and string sections,
year and shows a definite new
Fu ine, ‘Gruff? Renditions
On New Van Ronk Disk.
Dave Van Ronk, Folksinger:
Prestige of Folklore 14012,
Twenty-six year, old*RQay-- Van. om
Ronk has already established him-
self in the folk field with his gruff
rendition, of American ballads and
blues.” Now, in this record, he
moves into more subtle shadings
of meaning, -
Although an “urban folksinger,”’
he very definitely has his own style.
-admirers, including Odetta, -he
successfully entered the folk-field.
Then he began to listen to old
Gradually, encouraged by many —
transpose the contrapuntal ideas
of rag-time pianoto his big Gibson,
The.result was a style far more.
mature, just as powerful, but full
of new shadings and warmth, There
_is also a pleasant humor and a
refusal to over-dramatize,
“He was a friend of mine,” .
shows a deep understanding and
compassion for the simplest folk
material, ‘Stagger Lee’’ and .
‘‘Long John’’ tell convincingly of
+ Strife-and-vielence, especially-with
the intricate guitar wort\in“Stag-
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Subjects Of DuMaurier’ s Latest Novel
THE GLASS-BLOWERS is the
latest work of the famous Daphné
du Maurier. This book, however,
is more a history of the French
Revolution than a novel, ,
The story is: told through the
eyes. of Sophie, one of the five
children. of Mathurin Busson, a
famous. glass-blower who. made
a~-perfect -crystal-goblet in honor
of Louis XV of France,
This very’ crystal -came_ to
symbolize the artistic talent of
the Busson family and the fate
of the family unity. As different
as_these children. were,..each re-
flected the impact of the Revolution ..
on their family.
It is in the. Prologue and the .
first -section of the book that we
see Miss du Maurier’s talents as
asnovelist. The Prologue contains
a. vital and primitive description
of the life of the glass-blowers,
and in the first section, the family
is the.center of interest, rather
than the external events and the
‘growing uneasiness in France.
However, in the second section
the historical events, the fear of
vandals and the surging public
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the ‘historical aspect-of the novel.
One Sees the detached eye of
the historian at work: ‘‘,.. the
crowds today, Friday the 24th,
were even worse than on Wednes-
day ... and despite the presence
everywhere of the armed militia
there seemed more disorder too.”
The narrator is. present at the
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this section hinges upon the book’s
historical value and its relation
to. previously . mentioned. char-—
most: childlike humor of ‘Mr,
Noah,”’ and, of course, the intimacy
of ‘Come Back, Baby,’’ done with
beautifully wistful shadings, and
**Cocaine Blues,’”’ a near master-
piece of talking and singing, witha
pasthos hard to find on most of
today’s folk records, :
In short, the record is .most
certainly worth owning, and may
even be one of the most powerful,
unusual, and perhaps BEST: folk
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Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Friday, December 13, 1963
Tom Jones: a Perfect Movie
With a Lucky, Lovable Hero
Tom Jones is a perfect movie,
There’s really nothing miore to
add, . :
However, for those who have not
yet had the unforgettably delightful
, experience of seeing the movie
(everyone will have to see it even-
tually) it might be worthwhile to
mention a few of the qualities that
contribute to its perfection.
First of all, the story itself is
the sort: you uncontrollably laugh
out loud at when readirig. The movie
version not only preserves but even
intensifies this humor, maintaining
-the- exaggerated dramatic empha=
Sis, as well as the lengthy delicate
dissection of the character’s mo-
tives,
Even the style is retained: many
of the words are Fielding’s own.
OVERWEIGHT?
REDUCE WITH UNA-TRIM
$1.00 for 72 tablets
PARVIN’S: PHARMACY
MAIL ORDERS FILLED
Dramatic devices, suchas literary
moralizing, are converted into
sudden trdwiexpected soliliquies.
The pictorial effect -- the color-
ful juxtaposition of earthy serv-
ants, elaborately costumed
squires, formal drawing. room
ceremony, undignified horse- -play,
riotous drinking, -- is more ef-
fective than the book couly ever
achieve, ‘ .
Albert Fitiney, the warm-
blooded, _sensuously attractive
star, muSt have been the prototype
as the ideal Tom Jones,
By the-end of the movie, having
held your breath while he skirted
death, slid in and out of scrapes
and dangers, and unraveled all the
complexities of a Victorian novel,
you, like every woman in the play,
will be madly in love with him.
If necessary, cut your classes,
postpone your dates, and beg, bor-
row or steal the money, but don’t
under any circumstances, miss it,
Our gloomy existential existence
; needs such delightful injections,
C.R.
LA 5-0443 LA 5-6664
PARVIN’S PHARMACY
James P. Kerchner Pharmacist
30 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mowr. Pa.
| Joyce Lewis
Gifts — Gifts — Gifts
839 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
The Schilling is local currency in hustria. |
$0 is this.
CRS EDERS CRE OCR |
Austria, Australia, or Afghanistan: whether you're on. *
—or off—the beaten track, BANK OF AMERICA
Posie gen CHEQUES are as good as cash.
Bette
in fact. Loss-proof and theft-proof, they’re
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makes ‘them valid. Buy them before you go—
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Ne SE it So i i
‘Room At The Top.
Of Neighboring Inn
Has Unique View
Dear Mom,
So you and Dad want to hear about
my dorm! ‘‘Gollege Inn Tea
Room,” the quaint sign in front
reads, reminiscent of a bygone
(I hope) era, but ten feet away from
the porch, and from my window too,
arises Erdman Hall, an avant-
garde residence to be ready for.
_ occupancy next fall, And speaking
of arising, I’m up every morning
at 7:30 to drown out the resound-.
ing cacaphony of hammers and
nails with the soothing strains or ~
WFLN. : .
SPRING oh WIRES POR EINETOB _...All this new construction leads to...
-&@ marveloys variety of ,outdoor
sports: vaulting over the piles of .
dirt, inspecting the solidity of the
foundations, and for the more in-
trepid, absconding with some ofthe
many bricks strewn about, for
those brick and board bookcases
that are so popular on campus this
year, So you can finesse bringing
the orange crates when you come
to get me at Christmas, Dad,
All in all, it’s really an educa-
tion in itself living here, although
my English Comp teacher has been
really cooperative and has assign-
ed us a book which really seemsto
tie in with our milieu - I haven’t
had a chance to start it yet, but the
title’s great ~ A ROOM WITH A
VIEW!
Classified Ads
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© PHONE .
. Pictures At An Exhibition
Artists At College Exhibit
Work In New Art Show _
“By Betsy Greene
Cyrano de Bergerac and:a red
wooden Centdur are two of the
stars of the Bryn Mawr-Haver-
ford-Faculty Art Show, organized
by juniors Connie Rosenblum,
Peggy Wilber and Ricky Stewart,
which. is. now. on display. in. the
Roost.
“‘Cyrano de Bergerac,’’ athree-
dimensional portrait by Artist in .
Residence Fritz Janschka, is made
of three candlesticks, copper pot
metal, and touches of brass, Mr.
Janschka has captured in his Cyr-
ano the bravado, the whimsy, the
gallantry, (and, yes, the nose) of
Rostand’s hero.
Mr. Janschka’s other piece,
‘“‘Centaur,’’ is delightful, slightly
reminiscent of the Sawhorse inthe
WIZARD OF OZ. The roundness of
the head andtrunk contrast with the
straight planes ofthe legs andback,
sharply differentiating between
man and horse:
The other faculty contributions
come trom Gertrude Leighton, as-
sociation’ professor of political .
science. She has done three peace-
ful landscapes of turquoise’ blue
bays and green trees,
COUNTRY BOOKSHOH
428 Bryn Mawr Ave., Bryn Mawn
\Fiction -- Nonfiction
Lending Library
EL GRECO RESTAURANT
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FINE STUDENT WORKS
There are also many fine student
pictures in the show. Almost all the
pictures are interesting, rangingin
style from simple realistic draw-
ings to complex abstracts,
Several pictures by Faith Lewis
fall into this first class, Some are
in pen and ink; some in watercolor,
All have the feeling of haiku -- a
few essential lines create the type
of a girl wading through winter or
an angel poised before Christmas.
Another interesting artist is
Susan Capling. She has drawn two
studies of female figures in char-
coal and has achieved in them a
Renoir-like softness in the model-
ing of the flesh,
A more. finished picture is
‘tHellenes,’’ which shows three
Greek travellers with their don-
key journeying over a dusty road,
IN THE ABSTRACT
Bates Buckner, ’64 has. déne a
series of tightly patterned ab-
,Stracts, two black and white, two
in vibrant color, Her ‘‘Flumena’’,
is a picture of contrasts; The core
of the picture. is ‘based on: cir-
cular structures with curved and
straight black lines within them
and through them, (The- spaces
between ‘the lines are filled with
color), i
These lines lead the eye deep
into the core of the picture ang
then out again, past the central
circles, almost beyond the edge
of the painting.
The basic colors of ‘*Flumena’”’ ,,
-- blues, greens and oranges --
varry through the picture’s prin-
ciple of harmonized contrast.
The above are a few of the many
pictures. well--worth- seeing-in -the--
newly-hung art show, It is a fine
at.
**COCA-COLA’* AND ‘COKE’? ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANH =“
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Bottled cada the authority of The Coce-Cola Company by: THE PHILADEL PHIA Ke ‘sored cabal
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ait
exhibit and deserves to be looked >
Friday, December 13, 1963
THE COLLEGE NEWS
‘Page Seven
Dance Club Performance —
Includes. Trio
'Members of the Bryn Mawr
Dance Club, under the direction
of Senta: Driver, will perform two
pieces on Arts Night, December
13, at Skinner Workshop. Both
pieces, a trio and a quartet, are
new to Bryn Mawr audiences and
. will be added to the.club’s concert.
repertoire
Rivvy Feldman "63
Wins Recognition
~~ Tn Story Contest ~
Rivvy Feldman, a 1963 Bryn
Mawr graduate, has won an honor-
able mention in the Fourteenth
Annual College Short Story Con-
.test sponsored by the —
wor STORY-Magazines ~~~
Her story, ‘‘Withdrawal,’’ will
_ be printed with the other winning
entries in a volume entitled THE
STONE SOLDIER AND OTHER
PRIZE COLLEGE STORIES, 1964.
---T his annual__competition, fi-
nanced by the Reader’s Digest
“Foundation, divides $2,000 among
the winners. The first prize of
$500 was -won ‘by- William Cobb
of Vanderbilt University for his
story, THE STONE SOLDIER.
More than 250 manuscripts were
received during the nine month
entrance period. The stories,
which were submitted from 116
colleges in 36 states, were judged
by a panel of publishers, editors,
. and-short story writers.
MADS
DISCOUNT RECORDS
9 W. Lancaster Ave.
Ardmore
MI 2-0764
Largest Selection Folk Music
“ments designed’ expressly
Pop - Classics - Jazz
and Quartet
The quartet, called ‘‘Vibrato,’’
was
Monk, president of the Sarah
Lawrence dance club, to music
by William Schuman, It has been
. performed at Sarah Lawrence.and
at the Connecticut College Summer
the piece comes from the physical
and emotional tension which is .
sustained within a rigidly timed
musical framework. The Bryn
Mawr premiere of ‘*Vibrato’’ will
mark. the first time the Dance
~“Cliib fas” performed the work of
a guest choreographer, P
The second-piece, ‘‘Persistence
of Vision, Part I,’ to music
by Gunther Schuller, was choreo-
graphed by Senta’ Driver.
Originally an assignment in dance
... composition,. the .piece..aims.. to
be intrinsically a trio, with move-
for
three dancers such that they would
be less compelling or success-
ful with more or fewer people.
A quartet and a quintet, still to
be completed, will be chedfeo-
graphed with the same purpose
and -will- appear~--in--the--Dance-
Gluh’s spring concert on April _
10.
- Performing ‘on Arts Night will
be Alice Leib, Elena Mestre,
Liz Roper, Andrea Stark, and Toby
‘Williams.
choreographed by Merry
FIESTA
Stocking presents
1011 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PENNA.
production of the complete HAM-.
-School-of the--Dance.—-The.title-of. .-
“High Polish” And Conversational Tone
Characterize BMC-H” ford Uncut Hamlet
By Betsy Greene
College Theater’s long-awaited
LET under the direction of Robert
Butman played at Haverford No-
vember 21, 23 and 25,
It was a casual HAMLET, free
from the rhetorical declamation
that often eripples.-spoken-Shake~. “
speare,.
As a result of this underplaying,
the comic scenes achieved high
polish and humor. The elegance
of the language and much of the
dramatic impact, unfortunately,
“were lost in the off-hand manner
of delivery. Hamlet’s ‘Oh, what a
rogue and peasant slave am I!?’
although admittedly very difficult,
had almost the same amount of con-
viction as a toothpaste ad of com-
parable length, .
_Munson Hicks was‘ magnificent.
in the scenes of repartee, especi-
ally with Polonius and with Rosen-
krantz and Guildenstern, a clever,
rather than tormented or coldly
convincing, loyal- Horatio; - Peter
intellectual Hamlet. He was less ,Moskovitz was good as the hot-
good in the serious scenes and headed Laertes.
occasionally ‘spoke too ‘fast.
Special praise goes to Howard
Bush, who was an unfailing comic
and delightful Polonius.
Wendy Westbrook was excellent
as Ophelia. Her mad scéne was the
most moving space in the play,
deeply felt, controlled, at once
dignified and pathetic,
Jane Robbins, playing Gertrude,
was a regal queen ‘and mottier.
Her. very presence on stage-added==
.dimension to thé play. ..
Terry Van. Brunt was good as
Claudius; Charles Strong was a
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The set by Chris Glass, a sim-
ple, split-level series of stairs
and platforms, was exceptionally
appropriate and artistic. The same
should. be Said for the music by
John. Davison,
Visually, the play was
perfect, ‘each of the actors moving
and gesturing in character, al-
“though they sometimes tended to
deliver their lines_air-mail.
“WHAT'S —
NEW
IN THE DECEMBER
C?
‘*Berlin: The Broken Gity”!: A Special _
*4@5-page Supplement: A border guard
lieutenant, an East German textbook
editor, distinguished Berlin. novelist
Gunter Grass and 7 other informed
observers report on:. The Political
Cabarets, The Young Germans, Why
the -Guards .Defect, Writers in Berlin,
Berlin's. Ecoriomic Future, and. otter,
. Subjects,
on the rebuilding 6f Berlin,
ALSO &
_**The Supreme Court and Its Critics’’:
-Judge Irving R. Kaufman discusses
the extent to which the Supreme Court
appears to havé taken on an eduéative
function and how such change can
be justified.
Stories and Poems by: Dudley Fitts;
N. J. Berrill, Ted Hughes,
Peter Davison, Muriel
Rukeyser, Sallie
Bingham, Jesse Hill
Ford, Jeannette
Nichols.and others.
The pursuit of excel-
lence is the everyday
job of The Atlantic's
editors be it in fic-
tion or fact,° poetry
or prose. In ever-
increasing numbers,
those in pursuit of
academic excellence
find in The Atlantic
a challenging, enter-
taining and enlight-
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Page Eight — 3 THE COLLEGE NEWS : Friday, December-13, 1963
WORLDS FAIR FOR ©
\ CHRISTMAS —
Special Christmas Gift Ticket Package Saves $4 90
$15 worth of World’s Fair fun for only *]}!9
You will never be able to buy World’s Fair
tickets at a lower price than right now —
* just in time for Christmas giving.
The Christmas Gift Ticket Package -
— includes seven (7) adult* tickets to the Fair
that will sell for $2 each at the gate...
. . plus the Official World’s Fair Guide
Book —a handsome 300-page book.of facts,
maps, pictures and every detail'of information
you’ll want to know about the Fair. This will be
the only Official Guide Book. It will be published
by Time Incorporated and will be sold for $1. In
your Gift Package you will receive a Certificate to
exchange at the-Fair grounds for this Official |
Guide. ©
The Christmas Gift Ticket Package comes to
~ you in a festive Christmas Gift envelope... all
ready to give or to hang’on the tree.
Here is $15 worth of fun: : . but you pay only
510.10, for everything! You_save $4.90.
_ You have until Christmas.Eve to send in.
your order for this money-saving bargain, but
why not do it now to assure early delivery! :
Two additional Christmas ticket gifts!
e Family ticket book—contains twenty *
(20), adult tickets. $40.00 value— ‘
Special price now—$27.00 —
e 50 ticket special—fifty (50) adult* tickets
worth $2 each. $100.00 value —
* Special price now—$67:50
77485
onl ate a sees
*Aw adult ticket is exchangeable
fortwo child tickets at the Fair.
&
SEND ME THE WORLD'S FAIR ~
FOR CHRISTMAS a -
MAIL TO: Mr. Erwin Witt, Dept. 330
New York World’s Fair, Flushing 52, New York
Please rush the following in time for Christmas giving:
CHRISTMAS GIFT TICKET PACKAGE: 7 Adult Tickets plus -
Guide tant Certificate. Price —$10.10 each. Quantity ordered
seer | FAMILY TICKET BOOK: 20 Adult Tickets. Price— $27. 00 each.
Jey neenmteneenr se sventity erdered. wicinisisi ss ‘, ei eh We
50 TICKET SPECIAL: Price—$67.50 for 50 Adult Tickets: -
Quantity ordered
~-Name. a sce catia iil titag tach
Address
City | __.Zone____ State
; : Make check or money order payable to New York World’s Fair Corp.
Cor ccccccccsccccccccesecccccccccceeeeecceeeeseeeceeeneneeelee
~ Unisphere « sieseares » = GS) United States Steel ©-1901 New York World's Fair 1964-1965 Corporotion
= . * + : BO andrei vcnwas EOS eek eae MEE Kes
GIVE THEM THE ~
©eeee0e000080
@©@@@eeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeede@
4
Fs, OT aa wl < oq
College news, December 13, 1963
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1963-12-13
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 50, 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-vol50-no10