the college news, 1960-04-20, vol. 46, no. 20

7
Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College News Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Collections, Digitized Books 1960 e College News, 1960-04-20, Vol. 46, No. 20 Students of Bryn Mawr College Let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: hp://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews is paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. hp://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/1127 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, e College News, 1960-04-20, Vol. 46, No. 20 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1960).

Upload: others

Post on 24-Nov-2021

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Bryn Mawr CollegeScholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn MawrCollege

Bryn Mawr College News Bryn Mawr College Publications, SpecialCollections, Digitized Books

1960

The College News, 1960-04-20, Vol. 46, No. 20Students of Bryn Mawr College

Let us know how access to this document benefits you.

Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews

This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/1127

For more information, please contact [email protected].

Custom CitationStudents of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1960-04-20, Vol. 46, No. 20 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1960).

,

,

VOL. XLV-NO. 20 ARDMORE �RYN MAWR, PA., WEDNfSOAY, A�IL 20,1960

1 , ,

@ TruulIll!1l of Bryn )lIIwr CIlUe •• , 11110 PRICE 20 CENTS

Mis'McBride . Wins Award At Alumnae Dinner Tonight

>

Sixty-two Students Picketers Stand So That All� May Sit Alumnae 'Enjoy Chorus �t Carev Thomas Prize .

At City Gathering Honors President Bachrach Praises Student Picketers

IJ.U •• !McBride neeived the 1M. Carey Thoma. Award at a dinner celebrating the leveDty�th anni­versary �f Bryn MaWl' College to­night at the Philwlphla !Museum of Az;t. Sir Leslie Munro. repre­sentative to the UnIted NatJons 'rem Nf/W Zeeland. w .. the guest apeaker at this function.

Awarding IMl,s ,McBride this 'Prize, IDr. Hemy Joel Oadbury, Chainnan of the Board of Direct­ors of Bryn :Mawr, stated, "In thua honoring Preeldent McBride . . . the committ.ee touche. a re­IPOnaive chord in the hearts of those who bow her beat. W. hon­or her not 'beeauae others have honored her outside the Bryn 'MaWI' famUy, ibut because we our­aelvea recognize the combination of her 'passion for exeelleonee,' her balsnced understanding of compli­cated queatlons, her capacity for executive mastery of mwtirple tasks. and her lresh and friendly approach to the wideat variety of people."

Mial (McBride requested that the check !be made ipl.yable to the Direeton of Bryn 1lMwr Colleae ao that it rnay be uaed for the school.

Sir Lealie !Munro, speaker of the evening, discuased "AI We Ap­.proach the Summit", reviewing political eventa lince the lut .um­mit conference in Geneva in 1966. He i. ,particularly concemed with the Hungarian aituation and told of bls awn etrorla to vlait thiJ country and to improve the lot of ita peQIPlea.

He closed his talk with a quote fl'(lm 'Lord tPlalmenton first spoken in the House of Commonh in 1848 foJlowlng the intervention of troops by the Czar Nicholas I in Hungary: HJ: say then that It- I. our duty not to remain 'Passive spectaton of event. that in their immediate. COil sequences affect 0Itb­er countrie. but which in .their re­mote and certain con!equencel are .ure to come back upon ua."

Interfaith lnterlaitb is very 1)Jeased to an­

nounce tlt&t 1MI' • .Don Co1enbeck, leader last year of the Stude.nt ChriaUan \Movement, will '!Seak at the Chapel Service at 7:30 Sundey eveniR'l'. iHn subject 'Will be: The lIlood of the Church in a Ma­turing World.

,Misl ktharlne \McBride, Presi­dent of the Collere, will tibia eve­ning become the sixth winner of the M. Carey Thomas Prize, given by the Alumnae Alloeiatlon to an Ameriean /Wom.n in recognition of eminent achievement.

The prize, amountlnc to $5000, was establithed by Alumnae in 1'922 as a tribute to ,MiN Thornas upon her retirement as President of Bryn iMM¥T. Previous recipi­ents of the award were 1M. Carey Thomas, Jane .Addams, Florence Rena Sabin, Marion Edward! Park. Eleanor .xooaevelt, Anna Lord Strauls, and lMarianne Moore.

The studenta who ,picketed W 001-worth's I&lt ISaturday "did . thy deed" according to Mr. raeh, Professor of Political Sci.r ... at Bryn Mawr. iMr. Bachrach spoke on '1.Politlcal Action, Re: Picketing," Monday evening.

There are four major ob.iect;a,n' to plckebing. To thOle who that it da not an etrectlve meo.nl of ameliorating the preaent . gratlon IProblem, and who have it to the opicketers to prove ita ef­fectivenes., IMr. Bachrach anawer­ed that nepUve action il action. The burden of proof, the"re-:'

I [ ... __ �� �!:i!;=��':�Cl��S:...:j fore, doesn't any more rest on t

initiator of action than on ",w.I ' Students tum out for Bryn Mewr Pkltet. who feel that picketing i, not by Suu. N.'--n

. t' Th . fectlve. ...... regatlOn quea Ion. e 'Ploketin&

i, f1art of a movement of !protest. The same logic applies to the LaBt Saturday 8.!ternoon a croup to the .managing office to tighten oi:Jjection that one must be com- of sixty·two student! from Hav- up ita policy and demtnd that its pletely educated. on fbe problem erlord and IBryn Mawr demon- southern stores lervl N681'08a .t before lie takes aotion. 1! this' .trate<t with pickets in lunch oountera. true it follows that one can't and. the viUe to .how their A third group of demonstraton cide not. to ad unless he is com- al suppo.rt of the sit-in wi.bed to Indic.La protest of dis-pletely educated on the issue. in the South .nd to protest crimination but w •• unwilling to point that must be .treased is r.cial diacrimination. picket the Woolworth'. for two problem of urgency. Of course in hour-and-a-half .hifts, the main reasons It felt w.s unfelr must ·be Infomtad .if he is to deftM.-.split into three groups. to strike out at the loeal store for intelUpntlY-POeiUvely or I��:r�: I 'nwo of thele, one In each the pollciel of other .tores con-. tively-but the problem 01 demonstrated in Ifrcmt of Wooll-; nee ted with it; picketing might cal action must be put in the worth'.. 'Iihe southern Injure its reputation and context. of thb concern do not se�e and as a relult the sales The third objection, thet thOle roel at their lunch counten, commillionl of It employ .... who acted were neurotic or had the central managing office in The lecond conllderation was ,prin, fevu, can easily 'be elimin- York: haa a policy of let·I .. -......... that the 'Woolworth'l here doel ated. IMr. IBachracb . local .branches determine their own the ironic reaction of those who ipositions on the eatin&.oplace serve and e�IOY Negroe. while used to complain that .tudents Coau_ad 0. Pale 6. Col. 2 were apolitical and apathetic end NonCE

This year'a .award. which will be now complain that they are !beIng To date ·more than$960 hal Civil Rights Issue Evokes R$lution

conferred tonight .t a Philadel- too active. been collected for the NAACP phia dinner in honor of the 75tb Although the atudenb !Who pic- Legal Defenae and Education Annivenary, IWaa made by a eom� keted do not represent the majority Fund from Bryn Mawr faculty mittee includin, Mn. Learned of the students at Bryn M8IWl'. and students. AdditMmal contri­Hand, iMill Marion Edwardl Park. they a� exerci.ing their freedom At an oopen .meeting to dlac.ual Mrs. E. Baldw1n Smith, alumnae of lpeech. Bryn IMa}';'r must cer- butaons can be m.de throuah whetber or not the college, a. a of B� lMawrj Mrs. J. Nathaniel tainlq stand for freedom of indl- Perry Cottier in Merion. Checks whole, wanta to take a ltand on Manhall, lDean; Min Sarah G. vidual action. Furthermore, the Mould be made out to the ,Rlcht.a, .. committee of five Blandinc. President of Vasur, action <4 !picketing should, in i� NAACP I.e&al Defen.se .nd waa fonned to draw up a reaolu-Mrs. Ada Louiae Comstoek Note- I=�Coo.:.:�tln::::..ed:::...:,0:: • ..:P..:'::'::'_5::,_Co::::.I:: . .:,5 =..!!;= Ed =UC&==tio =n =Fun==d.=====

= tion to be preaerrted to the Itu-

ltein, lonner president of Bad- dent body for a vote. The meet-. e1Ure, .ad iMl .. 8trau .. , • prov!- TralonlOng of Poet I I d ;ng. run by U.derrrad, ..... held oua recipient of the grant. It will DC U es in Goodhart o n Tuesday afternoon. be Il/Warded by d)r. Henry Joel Cad- :Anna Khnbrough, Elle Zebel, �:::;,,<;'�;':,.:l :':..

.Board of Mastering Race, Moment :

e �:"::;:�'r.;��'::.'�: ��: .Mi.. .M'cBride, who bas been '- et of !a,t Saturd.y'. "Icketinc)

Prealdent &ince 194.2, I. currently . Mr. 'William Meredith, n(JW.t Milieu, or how a langua&e re- and Melinda .AIkens (NSA rep) a trustee 01 t:be University of Connecticut College, gave the see- apondl to its eurroundi1ll'l, nl.tel in .dvbory ipOalUon" .re to for­Pemtlylvania and of the Carnegie ond 6! the leventy.Jiftb annlver- to ... tbe fact that .. rword depend. mulate the resolution 101 the vote Foundation for the Advatl(:ement aa.ry lectures sp01J!SOred by the on the .tand of the Bryti MMrr

Enrli.h department on the .\i)je<:t for �ta meaning on It I context. student body o f the academic year of Teechinc. f th . of literature .nd knowledge. The One 0 ' e chief deVices of poetl1Y 1969-60.

Hunt Examines Hugo Novel . As Vehicle of Social Ideas

title of hll taUt was "What the II to create a contl'(lUed milieu foe One of the major points of dis-Poet iNeech To -Know". IlnlUS£'8. Ithyme, for CUliion lW.1 whether or not the

The !POIt, 1MI'. !Meredith 'Snerted, .trengthenl individual words, resolution IMuid be def\nite .nd i. Intereatlnc.to.us because of the do chances in rword order. factual In content or on an ab-int.e:Dslty of his verbal ex-perience, -Moment refers to the ex�::�I :.�tract..PrineiPte ob.lll. It waa felt nI. ute of Janguace. To dncribe to IWhich the poet bow," tl'Ie .ame that a deftnlte statement

bplaining that his interest lie. The �t note in hia work. the education of a poet i. lome- lUau_of hil time. We don't &yo lMawr'. beln& in fnor ot. In the connection between literary is pity--.pity for the racial out- what like <the transl.tion of • the option a! IWrltinr In any .nythiN' more th.n an oJllPOlition and ,ocia! thought rathb than in cast. dimwitted, defonned, and poem into iprOle. a rational de- lanl'Uace than our own. to the violation of civil ri,htl pure li.terary thought Mr. He.rbert condemned, and even pity for the ecription of a mystical eJ;perience. poem IWrltten today In would allenate those who are op-J. Hunt, professor of !French I.n- wicked "Who, aeeonUne to Buro, Mr. !Meredith went .to to UN tang1lage ia notbinr .more to the preHnt metbocb of cuage and literature at the Unl- are the r.J., mlaenble members T.ine'. concepti of race, milieu, an _rcbeological cOMtruction. (pickett., .l�m., veniby of Lcmdon, bep.n tbe <l.902 of eoc:iety. Mr. ,Hunt concentrat- and moment, distorting them poet will lutrer if he'l economIc bo,colt. etc.)j It wa. leeture, "Victor !}lap and the So- ed Oil BOlO'. main "fI'Ork. LM IIi-.. IOmewhat. to fit the 'Y&l'ioul parta in sensibility, if he baan'.t - howeY'er, the tJelief of UI l..(rnea cial Non!." er ..... for, be obeaned, it BUCO at the 1)081'. education. of the response. of the people .nd other. wbo ha.,. been .cilie

The loclal .novel ftrst -.ppeared bad written only ttlil "mammoth" Race, or the orlains of kncuace. hi. time. This don Dot in their oppolitlon, that a dalbll.e at the beginning of the nineteenth novel there owould be nothing mlu- baa a1waYI been an intere.t of that the poet'. lanauare .boWd ltatement /WOuld meaD much more century. The tFftMh ,il.ew)wUon iD hit humaniltic. creed. .poets. Their mOlt obvioul eooeem Ilong -with the irnor.nc:e and than a pn«al . .... OWl' and the need for IOCial As fiot1on, the .tory of Jean V.l- il in aec.uf'lcy of meenil1l', .nd -thy oHl11 •

'1L.!8q.a.. � dOH _decide to reforny end recon.truction ,... Jean'. redemption Is one 01. the beat that il larc.1y • m.tter of orieinl. meetl them be.d on. • ltand, notl� 01 thil will be rliine. Stimulated by 80CiaJist Uf'l'- known in the -world . ....... lIiMn- '('be poet I. Interested in the In- 'Mr. Meredith ended the talk by Mnt to lOut.hem and aorthem in,a, Victor iHugo ca.me to see blm- ..... il • bIe1dosc:ope with a brll- tel'rity of lan&'UAge. He is usu- readin. a !pOem of his own, tDtitJed IChooll, Nerro, white, .nd lnte-Mil as a teef or "man of utopi.... c.d-'" _ .... , c.L 1 .tty conaen.tm. "A Major -Work".

--------

--�--

TH E C O L L EG E NEWS

fOUNOED IN 1914 Publhhtd w .... ly during the CoI'-g. V .. r ('II�p1 during

Th.n .... "I'Iln". Chrlltn'1'a1 .nd EIIn.r holld.Y', .tId during .x.mln. lion w ..... ) In In. Inllr.11 of Bryn M.wr Coll.g •• 1 In. Ardmor. Printing CornDlny. Atdmorl. PI_, .nd Bryn Mewr Colleg ••

Th. C.u... ..... II fully proll:JR by c:opytighl. Nothing 11'111 'PPM" NIl If -IIUIy 1M ,.prlnted -wholly Of In D.rt wlmO\ll o.rmlulon of the Edilor4n-Chltf ••

IDITOIIAt IOAJD .-��"iIf .......... ... . . _ ..... _ ... _ ............ , Mlrion eo.n, '62 Cepy 1IItt., ••• . . . • • . •••••• • • . . • . •••• • • • • • . • • . • _ . • • • Su .. n N.I.on. '62 ..... d ... leG"r • • ••••••• _ _ • • • • • • • • • . • . • • j,j"C • . • . . •• . _ • . I .. Br.nnon, '62 � .. Iter ........... . . . . , _ ...................... Svun Sz ... lrr, '61 ..... • .. ..., ........................... "t............. Judy' Stua", '62 .... __ .. LIt .... ...................................... AII.on "klr. '62

And Now - A Resolution

THI NEW 5 w.d ...... y. April 20. 1960

Fr:!U�:�: - Discrimination in .Jobs and H�us!ng Denies BiHemess Proves to be Senous on MaIO line

by Judy St.art have _ decent home and equal job Ballbara BroJrton I. • . opportunities. one.yea.r..old southern Necro .tu- AI a relult of the new and dra- •

dent jailed for her !part in a pro_ matle concern over the problema In lBryn IMawr Necroea may 00-telt demonstration. Her l.tt,.r.loI. southern oN e � r o e I rebellin&, tain houainc on a lew street. only. reprinted below, was in re� aga.in.t the depriYatlon of their all with house. old and in 'Poor to a note of encourag4.llMnt and rightl a 'Whole new lCoptI of -in- condition. In A.rdmore Negroes support from Uz Lynes. terest' .hal been opened at tBlI)'ll are reltrleted to a limited number

Leon County Jail 'Mawr. But mON! and more the of streeta in an area of old, POOf Tallahauee, comment i, beard .tha.t. the North ouael built very CIOH toeetber.

Yesterday afternoon an open meeting of the student Dear Liz, ha.a no ria'ht to talk, that . :he eommUDiby, 1lrot.,ct.ed �y t.be body was held to discuss the form�lation of a resolution indi- ,'-t',on ,', no' -strl",d ,b. e&re!u1 real e.tate a,ents, IWlIl not ...

II ta d So th . I t· f ' '1 . hts I received your letJter rwith �at- .... .'" h eating a co ege s n on u ern VIO a Ions 0 CIVI rig . . , d It k 1 I ood Sout.b bu' I. a d'·..... ,', In- let :I. Negro buy a ou.e any. Th f h I t· Id be . '1 to I u e. ma e. me et , to , .w., e. purpose 0 suc a reao u Ion wou prlmarl y en- .idious in t.he .-NQJ"th:al.o._ .where ebe in ...... e area, n�at e

. courage those engaged in tbe passive -resistance movement rece�ve letters of eneouracemem. ---, who he t. or how mueh he I' pre-against these violations. A resolution of this sort, considered It make. the jail seem less hard Two questloRl natuda1ly ari'e in pared to ip�y Several mini.ters by many to be a highly effective means of communicating a�d cold and the 1'ood more bear- con.ldering diltCriminatio� in th: now attemptln'c to find ibooses are the sympathy vital to the success of the movement, would aQle. North: what fonn doe. lt u'ke. wiUlng to 'Pay up to $30,000, but seem to be simply.a formal articulation of an attitude con- /My brother and I await ano�her and, what con.tructive action ean either t.bey find :no leller or the cordant with and necessarily following from the alleged trial -that is to come up as the re- be ta.ken a'bout the.e problem • • eller il I!orced to conform to .the 'spirit' of Bryn Mawr. suIt of .. mall dmeonltratlon th&L �re eioser t.o u. 't ,With re- de.ire. of the n�rhood. A

Nonethelese, though yesterday's open ,meeting was at- amoJl1t the ltudents of Ttl.111 U. gard to �ese queltJo�1 (.

have few yean ago an apartmeDt hou.e tended primarily by the core of students actively interested Mareh a.2. !WIth the encourage· been Inve1ltlg&tin� the Iituatio n of was ope� .on Ardmore Avenue in resolving integration problems, it was evident that diffi� ment of you '8.nd the many mend. the N�ro �inonty group here on and the pr.oprietor lPut out a lign culty in passing a resolution must expected ndubitably that -w:rlte to 'U' eveJW d8¥ and the Mam JAne. ltatlna that it was .open to col.oreclj this already-recognized resistance indicates a &ommendable with the help of God we IWtU be J;I ere the�1. not u open a vio· a. white committee wal f.ormed and hesitancy to jump on a band wagon without consideration of able Ito feee whatever obstacle IMlon ot Tlj'hta as In.

the S.outh. bous-ht the building, and no 'Neg. principlesj unfortunately it seems at the same time a curious confronts u.. Negroe. can Ule ip�hc tran.por- roea could rent apartments. and regrettable indifference to the principle most funda- I don',t leel ibitter towards the tatl.on, eat in tpublH: places and The !Negroes ftrat moved into mental to our national tradition and ethic. Southern whitel, only pity. Re- attend the movie theatres. Yet

thl. area about 76 yeul aro to The resistance is based on a variety of defensible atti- member /What JesUI said on hi. the Negro who livel in B ryn lM8IWr serve a. domettici fGr the larae tud ......... n unwillingness to endorse the tactics of the sit-in dying cros., "Follgive them, Oh or Ardmore il Gfttm' denied rirht! e.tate.. The women are ltiU prl­demonstratore, hesitancy to contribute to so-called "Yankee Lord, fGr they know nGt what even more ba.lc in terms of our marlly dome.tics and are in de-interference", or simply disapproval on principle of the at- 1t.b_'_Y _ d_O_.'_' ___ B _a_rbe_r_a _B_ O'O_xto_ n _ _ d_._m_ 0_cr_ a_ "_· c_id_ ,_a_', __ '_

h_'_l'Og_ ·.:._n_,_to mand. Frequently their emplGyers tempt to formulate a college stand on a controversial issue.

Denn Puts Out Damphlet laU .. .. "" ou' lbeir lOCiai .....,.. Though this resistance may be too firmly ingrained in expon· r � .r � it.y, which .hould be done for a ents to be subject to editorializing, its existence has several aala.ried enwloyee if b e eams over practical implications which should ,be considered.

, J\Teut"alz·st Gene"'atz.on' fOO.OO in a thr.e-mon'h period A "weak" resolution, that is one expressing sympathy l' j , I • ' As a t"e.u1t rxf thl., when theM with the principle of equal rights but voicing no particular peo.ple become 00, they are com· support of current action to attain them, would be agreeble by 8uy Spa.lJl v •. So�a!kea," reviewed the proir ipleteJy dependent. to a larger portion of the student body than one which ex- In an effort to ahake college lern of two ae.rious young TV writ- Much pl"Oerell hal been made pressed direct sympathy with the sit-in movement. Both .tudent. out of ... the grolleat a.pa- ers who are JOlt in an efl� ot half· by the continued effGrt of local

would, however, be used for the same end-the encourage- thy on vital domestic, world and hour, western and sleuth seriel OtyanizatlOlll such as the NAACP ment of southern Negro demonstrators. Obviously this is human issues" .a new, different with Ideas for oeood h.our-.lonr to obtain 6DlPloyment o.poprtuni­an end not sanctioned by the opponents of the strong resolu- and OOI:DJ)ellinc - in - ltl-unlquenell probleml, and Gerald W6alea, lit- ties In sales position. in stores in tion who, though they may favor eventual integration, dis-!",obUcation hal e.ppeared. Point. erary critic tor The Reporter had the vicinity but the men are still approve of current action to achieve it. Sixty, lJ)li)liahed under the au.- a chance to be righteously indrg- reltricted: to jobs al laborera-

It will be fine indeed if a sufficient proportion of the pleea of The J)aJly PenMylvaman nant, conseendlng .1Id erltical In in the capacity of ;porten, ... nita-student body to make a resolution representative can find it the undercraduate. and facul- • rewew of a Dew art f.orm, the tiGn 'WGrkers, road wGrkers. etc. in themselves to take a strong stand in support of integra- .of the eleYen colleges ot the Piccolo Tieatr.o. They are nGt hired by the local tion action. If, however, a "weak" resolution is all that is e.rea (,Perm, Temple, In an eft'ort Ito create contro- Indulttrie. or banks, or pUblic util-acceptable, those feeling that even vague support is better Drexel, Beaver, Harcum, J)ryn ver.y, or pe�1 rivalry, Polttt. ities, "I)eeifieaUy .gal, water, and than none should consider carefully the implications of wat- MaWl', Ba.verford, La SaUe, Villa- Sbt, bas lined' up artlIclea by the public transportation. ering down a resolution simply to 'get it through'. A weak nova, .9warbbmore and St. Jo.· Democratic leader of Upper Dar- The bigge.t !problem of the stand may be more encouraging than none, but it wiU be eph'a), baa ibeen distributed (tree I) by and !Penn political scientist. G. Nea-ro population here il that it counterfeit coinage. It will be used to encourage continuation .to �refute the cha.reu" levelled EctwaTd Janosik ("Olalllell Po- haa no chanee to !progre •• .or de­of a means of action not endorsed by a sufficient majority to against '"The Si.lent Generation" Irti<:al Parties, Key to Creative velop. Out.tlanding atudents, II.n· pass a resolution directly supporting that action. or "The NeutraU.t Generation." Government"), rPeter Bachrach, anced by the <:hurebn and local

It may be well·argued. that any advance toward achieve- A pUe 01 these �ra lay on whom 'bhey caU Bryn Mawr'. organiz.ation., go to school and ment of equal rights fully justifies the use ot doubtful coin· the ooUC'bnut ebair In T.ayl.or for ";practicing !politician" ("a.u come Ibaok. wtib skill. and profe.-age to attain it, that the possibility of hastening of integra.- a week. PerhaPi the he&d "'Point Politics anmtable a. Urban siGns that are vit&l .to the livell-tion is a more important consideration than the aecuracy Slst), A New .Medium 01. CoUege Crowllh !Mushroomllt), Holland hood of a community. But they of the formulation and articulation of the Bryn Mawr atti- Oplnlw' attracted a.ttention, but Hunter, H. v e r f G r d eeonomUt do not stay here beeauae, again, tude. No,netheless ,if it appears through the student refer- the four umed ROrC men pietur- .c"American Response to Afro- tty bave no decent place to Uve. endum which will consider the resolution that "weaklt sup- ed below immediately cauled re- A.lan Uproar"), and Swarthmore'. Moreover, when .. .r..millf becomes port is the strongest commitment that the student body as conside1"ll.ti.on. political telenb1. Roland Pennoclr:� financially .ecum..Jt Jmmediately a whole can make, then the implications of sacrificing the The BaI'C, howeT8Ir, was nGt treabh\lr .pathy itle� ("From Aop- movea out ot the poor area and means to the end should be carefully considered. all, for PGlD.t Slxt, offered .. rwlde athy to Involvement."). into Philadelphia or .other !places

Nll8'e of reading matter. Arthur Polnt 8hty is an admira:ble where it can live ftspeetably and Where Are You, OppOSition? Knioh� movl. ,rt�, 01 the 8&1.r. a_. but Volume On. a,peon 'omfo ..... ,' .. 80 lb. ,ommunlty day ReTiew wrote "Movies for the ''too-too,'' IBIS- name. M.\'e been 10SH Ita better educated and more - Opposition to the action that'll being taken on cam· C08'flOMentl ........ n article on, more attIw:ted, but their e<mbributiona financially secure segment and pus over the Civil Rights issue, that is. We know you're or leM, what the public wanta to are DOt UDique; the .ame subjec:ta again ia open to a fre&h KTOUp. there; you're why it took so long to get the picketing launch- see, what it d08l see and how it are bei:ne treated .U Ofar. But Another jnlluence whlc:.h will ed when Vassar picketed within a week of Yale's inspiring 1& acUIli' to cet what it wama, &11 again, the editor. of Poib.t Sixty have the effect of depletinc the Oballen.&e colloquium in February; you're why the collection well aa <8 diacuslion of .. the late (Wanen Link and Melvin GoJd... community rather than developine of funds was 80 unevenly distributed: you're why Executive of art iUm.... IlJremar Berman .tein) have enlilted well� it b the Urban Renewal P1an fGr Board balanced 7-7 hours over whether or not to call an open 18, two .�ects that cannot people to help them in their fIf- .clearing the blight from the '8C-meeting to decide if a resolution should be drawn up for necleeted by any thins-, human fom, and tibey have produced • tion east from lla:verf.ord College presentation to the student body j mainly, you're why a great GthellWiM, that alpirel for a.p- atraicht-torw.ard and .i�t to Wnt lW)'llJ1ewood Road and many important considerations-moral, legal, and philosoph- were tre!W.ed from the f.ol. paper that may Indeed, after at- south to County Line ANenue. The ie queetions--have claimed attention when they might ,have lowinc aspet.tt: ":Bercman: The tracting reader. with J8, Bare- authority decide. IWhat areas are been buried in the dust of a perhaps impetuous and over- Vilionary" and uJB Revisited." man, Saturd., aerie,.. and &.port.. 'blichted', theDI buy the land at eager TUsh to action. Two other entert&imnent art- et-lRAoken and enllchten the eol- awral .. ) prices. rI'D' theory no We know you're there, and we're glad you're there. The Iclel, dne with the kicker "Quality lere Itudent. Ccmtbu." 0& Pale iii, Col. 1 pause you put between the impul.oe and the action was room 1--,--,------------------------ --''---'--­for a lot ot Id.... to develop and understanding to change To tho Editor:

and grow. for more thinking and learninjf {han can easily

�...:'�:.m�tU�ha��� !�"J:;rat your points are Miss Leighton Clarifies Stat_ants On Psyc�iatry

Perhapa;f you wlKl!objeet to the action be1nlr taken on Civil Righta would make your positions, your views and To the Editor: in contrast to the lawyer's lOme- tric determination that the alleged reaaona, clear, the curiosity and concern that haa been arous- Your .,.DeroUl, aoeount of the times more ",public" orientation criminal aet i. fla produc.t of men· ed would eacape miring down in inertia. The only opinions dilCQUicm on 'U.aw and Peyehia� and CGncern for the etandaw of tal iIlnes.... There are local var­that have been publicly voieed are tb� of approval, and Jt trJ" on mlan:h 7 was appreciated aoc.leby. Obrio\l&ly tor peychia- iatlon. on these two rulee--& .... • will be Impooalblo to come to lripa Wlth the situation when . . ,buae'" add. "Irre.I,Wbl. im· only ODe aide .tatee ita cue. 'Where, letters I am .ure bJ all who ,.artieipated.1 tnat .nd lar:er alike, the individ· pulM" to MeNachtea. New Uamp· to the editor tlldn, the New. to taak the In the UvelJ' "'ve .DeI 'take a eer- ual human belne function. (.or wf- ahire baa ita tn!D "mental illneu" luue' Where when the meetIDa on taiD .....-t of ooafUOD ...... len difdUDCtion) ift 1Ociet!Y not te.t. B ut inceneral the MeNaptea TalldAY were' thoee .ho "WI ariMa wideJl *oaId pe'I'� apart from It. .. standard .ia adhered to throUChout

tataI II. of .PINt.. I woald DOt like pbJebIa· im90rtaDt not for deter.mlneUon. ConwnonwealOh, the Dun.. rule of to .111 ••••• MIl ......... aboat .. ...utaUo.. derree- ot appliee .onll to the OIltrict of

__ .�� - ill"'!' .. WIllI __ tpII� 0\0. .. __ • IE ... Col........ �.--..... ... ..... t.dhIctaaI ...... In. t.t. for • ... .. hrd � J.p.1 SineereJy 10url, nt' ta· , ..... __ ). I ..... at._Mr". .. ... nale __ d- Gertrude Lei.ht.on,

..... III" ....... ,.11.1& ..... ,. .... ... ,uSle. JIe!II.P- A_Deiate ProfeHOr ot 1ft II L $ .. _ .. W ...... ... ..... S WI ...... till&. • ..,uta- PoUtieal SeltlDCe

··T H E C O L L E G E N i W'S P • • • 0' h r • •

Brogan Lectures on Problems Youngest Seeger Mi'ji Lehr TraceS En-matic . Follows Folks' Way . .� Of Gaullist Republit: in Futu�e Wi!h b��!.P::I� ��_e� Punle About Magic Sqiares

Professor O. W. BrolIn of Ox- live.. . "I have .promised that I would ! I'd U-' ._, d . WILh . clever enougb startr-o mversity dllCu.�. in the Asi t, from the Aleerisn eri.la, urn mj title," said Mill Lehr to Common Room of Goodhart on the Fifth .French Republic: faces that of slipping four music CasH an audience pun led by the connec­�rU 11. two often-negleeted fac.- a serious problem with the peal· .packed 'With In.trumenh under the tlon bebween "Parade., Geometry to... iinportant to the future of antry. Peasant farmer. Jive on rather shrunken and trodden- Skin- and Allen Corn'l and mathematici. the Fifth Republic of France. The amall famu divided up Into 10 or ner .tage curtaln-folk-.ingerMike MI .. Lehr treced a mathematl-tam o'l the.. WIS the develop- 12 sbips. �I. arnn-gement re- I '-'1 f ' t' "" .... Seeger beean two hours of chat- Ca p ........ em 0 magiC squares rom ment in Franc:e of a highly in- suits in uneconomic farm in, with lh 18th to t.h 20th t h duatrlalised economy whleb 1e np- bad distribution in !pOOr soill and Ler, '�pluok.ing aTld beating," ling-' in; h� each

e .. ttem�t :Y.'o�v�;

kl)y mode.rnmnl' and Americanlz- production of sunplus cro.ps. Inr and foot-t.awp.ping, on 'Friday added to and clarified It. 1n 1779. in£' tbe Ji'reneh nation. lWbereas The .outhern .French pellant.l night, Alpril Ui. Leonard .Eiller reported a .paper. "'tet' World JWer II France W&nted are &,etting poonr and mO,re dls- One-third of the "New Lost City ".Relearehes On A New K:ind Of to riturn £0 the situation which content@d, thus COIWPN:ing a dan- R,uri)lera" group, Mike Seeger Ma'Kic Squares," to the PeterabW'1 bad exiated to UU ... tb. total de- ge.roli. threst to the vernment. �adem1. Thi. paP" presented a ._._, __ "__ W Id Th 0 I Ib\e I I' to .. I.. ' comel from a musical family; hi. ew-ucwon &eOOU ....... .JUl6 or e n Y POll so Ion 'WII' que.tlon concerning "thlrty-.lx of-War 11 left tbe .French eeger to situation I. ,that, In a land tp'OW- brother Pete &ru! . Iister Peggy ftcen of slz different �det drawn build OD .. new fo\md:a:tto;n .. to con� ing younger every yur the c>eu- have preceded him in the folk�.onr from .ix dlffertmt �giments who atruet a more modem way ot. life. ants, 'Whoae average age now ia limelight. Mike excused his late are to parade" [here lU •• Lehr The aecond factor conc.enll the 66, will die off and leave .outhern start &nd .ald it was due to a child- cheeked off the flrat of her re­

rejuvenating nature of the French France open to the mechanization hood of enforced study of the qulrement.a] "In a .Ix . by - .iz population. In 1820, the birtb nt.e and modernization now being car- cla.tical eu.i�r. square In .uch a way that each �,.n .to fall. In il.QW. the popu- ried on by the young people in He concMl't.rated on a do-it-your- row will have a representatlw of la"on wa • • maller than It wa' In northern Frtanee. •

•• -I.. d .... .... elf variety of mountain muaie ea ..... regiment an grade, and each 1870. !FIun 19016 on, hO'W8Y8l'. the I.paUeat -pfeDChmea. and introduced each of hi. nu.m- eoJwnn .imilarly." Alter lnten.-

Euler concluded that .uch an ar· ranremmt with six unitt was ab.­.olutely irnpolJibte. He alto atat· ed that, by all indication., all ar· rancenlent. -of other number. which div,ided once !by bwo ha.ve an odd quotient, ere &lao ImpoN1bJe. He reported that he could not, however, prove this ltatement.

"Qulltion toJ'lte cuneuH" No more procreu wa. made on

this problem untit 1900. when ,M'. G. Tarry presented It In a fPAPer to the Congress of Mathem.tle· 1&Il' in Paris. Tarry quoted EUler a. "yin&' th.t this "quHtioa. forte curleuae" was impoaaible. and pro­ceeded to prove this impossibility. In 1003 .and 1905 the same .prob­lem was ,presented Itt I"uea of the Mathematical MOClthly by mathe­maticians who evidently Jl'ad net come in contact with Tam's PI· per. birth rate began to rise to Its prta- The &verage F.renchman i. Im- ben with a homily, an aneedote Ive Invut:ptlon of t:.hele squares.

ent level. the highest itt Europe. ipltient with the old way of IUe. or an neuse for Its not being a Once again the problem eune I ,_ ., '-tl �II •• � -----------..., I up In 19.49. The ftrat pert ot H. B. n .......-, 'Wle ])OpUC on "" uooa,n He expects France to be richer, tonr of "protest." Mr. Seeger I� Mann's paper "Analy.l. of Deslen to let 70Ullg'U, that i •• the a.ver· mOlie .modern, more Allnerican. and ( Mike, really, is more awroprl. of EXlperiments" wa • • trletly tteb­age age will be a younger one. he will turn against the govern- ate) w«. at his best when he &C- nieal, but the seeond part dealt

Notice No one aUve ·bal ever eeen a young ment wbich imped81 thl. progres •. companied silence: hi, voice W8I "Russian and the non,aulI- with « lpI"Oblem encoontered In France, a France where every lIOn If development comes laat enough too nnul even for foJ.k-singinr .iall' Lan"'uages" wil .be dl.� • India. 'I'his problem concerned the could not ha.ve hta ,lather'. j�, to take in the larger po.])ulation, if and he had tome difficulty remain- cussed by iloJrs. Ifearee at the plantinc of wheat, which In IndJa where there were mOl'e younl pee>- the AI,eTian .ltuaUon it saUs/ae- ing on pitch. Runian club meeting, Thurs- is eorn (Min Lebr cheeked ott a pIe tDen lpOaitlona for them to 1m. torily solved, delGawlewUJ go down Banjo, mandoH.n, guitar, the f\d� day, April 21, at 4 : 16. The talk .econd requirement]. He wanted

Yoatll Adl... In Ftrench history II a great lead- dIe and an autoharp (or idiot will be mostly in Engli.h; tea to .plant the wheat in a .Imilar er. But wbatever the case may lither, In a unique combination The younc rpeaple in Franee are will be served and Meryone is magic square to te.t and � be. "the Nth French Republic with the mouth orran) accompan- h a'-'- h."'� • d ... ·ded ---t welcome The meeti"'" will be "-. t e mean ..neld .uitability _ • ... � '._- cu.... will not lone aurvive hi. death or led the silt¥6l' and hi. ta.pping . '0,1; '- d·�fr

,. '" upon the oount.-v. 'Dbe Gaulliat held in !Merion. room 43. I erent tloils, effectiveness of '1 retirement." toot. revolution was Immediately caus- :.:::::=�� _________ :.:::::.... ___________ ..!=============� I varioua t.ype. of fertllisen, and ad by the ..A.lgerilll crisl •• but an- quslitiu of a number 01 .varletle. other 1Ye.ry important reaeon 'Wu " "'all Slory's" Ave�ag ", I V II 8' L t of wheat. Mann could not solve youth'. reaction of frultratlon .nd .1. I , , e .l. a e L' a .s ,,,or thl' p...otem. but FI'h .... an En.-irrttetlon to the politieal ltaJ'R'l- !ish mathematician, cont4derinc tion. Kandu .. France i., ... t .prel-

by .K..rietiM Glhnartln trailer of .ome married friend. its near-fareleal quality. I kept Menn'. "roblem. 'developed the ent, the only man who hal tapped ill !you enjoy watehlnc Tony .which they ju.t happen to IWInt .to ezpecting .omeone, eIIpe�lal1y Mr. neeesMry design ot lorty-three the cn.eontent of the young ,people. lell. However, our Junie asks Perkins, to reveal that everyone nrieties . • He believed �i. design Perkins being endearingly .. wk- practically, where's the money to realized what an as. he wa •• and to be ' 'bl h ' eo Id not Con.tltutlonally. the Frencb Re- ImPOII� e, u� u

hd ward, do go to see Tall Story come from ! that they were all just havin .... a 't >public il not 'Very aGund. Ttl • prove I . now ,playIng at the Stanley Thea- Enter Invisible villain via money good time. Unfortunately acene M' h h EW ' Confltitution provides for a pnai- lSI Le r�. reaeare on e.r s . h'l d Iph' " t to bribe Our Jlero to throw .the after' straightforward lCelle flash-dent with ereatly inereased pow- tre In P I a e la. .Ill you wan problem led lIer to a'lt I.ne of the Big, Game. Hero mel to flunk td cn, each one filled rwlbh line. hI ed ere and a.n a!.molt impotent prime to .ee ·a clever, amu.lng comedy Mat emati�1 Month y, publl.h his way out of the .problem into � fracturing cutene". rnlnl,tor. De Gawle hILS. more- ·th . t to k . th·, . in 1906. Here Oaea.r Veblen, then W1 a poin rna e, give I ineligibility. Under ,pressure f.ro.m '(n. brief. Tall Story i. just too over. demonstl'ated. hi. dislike 01 a young \profenor at Prineeton, min. ,I .&IW it for free which should all .ides, the stubborn professor tall for it. own good'-end it's not h d .poUtielana and bll determination a submitted three !problem., tJbe make any nomna.1 person I�ve a ezcellently ipOrtrayed by Ray Wal- even amusingly fantastic. Tony t . 1 h'-h •• led to iDterpret the Constitution - as mos 111!POrt.a.n.t 0 w "" , eDUIt

be tbi'Db be.t. good word to the IPlcture, but with ston, gives way at last, andJ'unie's Perkins doe. hi. bes� which is "Miscellaneou .... a.ked if the read� the eueption of M'r . . Perkl1l'l, there darling leads Custer to a Jut min- sometimes quite futmy. and Jane ers could arrange forty�three ob-Weak CahlDet ute triumph. Fonda is a lovely-looking girl, but ,·eet. in sets of seven ... • .. b .. "·t is nothing hr this picture worth The t I..A lh · tho -"-- t •• tho be k hall -, - -

Althouab the French IPe09le mo. IN en.. Ing -..u ..... unte. II • et -eenteroeu every pair of objecta 'Would lie in have been ovenwhelmfngly Geullist, !plunking down aeventy-Jl.ve centa _th_I_,_w_h_o_I._I_n_c_re_d_i_bl_._m_QVl_·_,_w_,_._d_r_lv_._I�j�u_._t_h_._._n_o_"...:._O_L _____ one -and only one set of .even, and th6y do not shaN de .GIulle'. lack a.t a ticket 'Window. 110 that any two .eta t1l. leven of ",nfIdenc. in polltlci .... nor hi. 'lib. acen. 01 Tall Stor, I. a

Ml·tchell Dl·SCUSseS German would have one and only on . .. 1 of ho.tillty towanit the AMem:bly. It small co-ed college where basket- objects in eommon. Veblen'. in. ia unfortunate for the future of ball I. kine .and, logically enoul'h, tereat jn this problem atemmed the French Republic that th ... Our Hero I, ,ha .tar player.

H, Artl· sts of Re�ormatl·on TI·mes I,om the book which h. and Younr aft -ftO Important 4aures In de is brilliantly aelentiftc: on �ourt .11 were writlnc. 'l'\he object of thl. Geulle'. cabinet, and that the COV- and m 18b-until be meets our coo- � book was projective ..-ee. in ernment it 10 .atrOl'lC'ly centralized. inr heroine (Jane !Fonda) who a. Charfea ltfiteht.ll';-"miting-p.tO- �Inting In a hllmanl.tIc Ityle for ,eometry lIMis. Lebr eheeked off' in the uocutlve. , sbe carefully uplains to two 'pro- fenot of the hlttony of arl, �e hi. IJ)etrans. -.. - . -.theJ¢ of her requirements] . He

A. reprcl. Algeria. Hr. Brog.an fea.ora, is a home-ec. rnajot' who', about three arbilt., Di1rer. Cran- In Brandenburg. M&thl. Grune- and Young Iiia sUCceeded In sob .. feels t.ba.t there it no good .olu- tranaferred to Custer to meet a ach, and Grtmewald, in hi. lecture wald emotionally and Intensely ing the problem for units up to tion, only a lea. bid one. The basketball player to marry-a:pec- "German Renaissance Art Al'd the worked on the .Ide of btle Refor- six .but they a. all others could AJeerians �_ compJete indepen- ifteally Our 'Hero - .Ince .he II Reformation," on TuudaiY evening, matiOD. lBe seem. to have been no; !prove It for .Iz ItMlf. 'In an­dance; de e favor. some .ort rather taU. and <cue .. what ba.- Aprll 12. .Each artist represented <involnd In "the Peasantl' Rwolt. &wer to thl. article, Mr. Sa.vatb of aMOdaUon. l'u the meentime, ketlbal1 plaiyers are' a Germen eultu1'll1 center of the and dol-ured Luther tractl were from otbe 'Univenity of Pennsyl­t.be war I. coating Franee ,1 bil- Sbe punuea him to chemi.try Reformation period. foond among his belonging •. " He vani& presented .tllI another proof lion a yea.r, ai well .. an enormous lab,4.nd finally en.nares him in a Albrecht I>iirv, of Nuremlberc, I. be.t known for an aJtar�feee that .uch a �c square 01. .Ix n�r of French and Al,l!!'ian narrow ,ehower (water off) In the was involved In both the Humani.t c..tlaaed o. Pare 4, Col. 2 Coati •• eeI 0.. Pa,_ 4. CoL 4

and Refor:moatlon movements 01.

I Wiles Tells of Nationalization his time. "lIn blm the a.nxietiea ot •

:,.' ��nI';:��::'::� I:�� Mr. Poeschl Savors Epicure tpeetive J)01"tr8il," aa.ld !Mr. Mit- .

...... Nationalization Really Out connected with �1ic OWDerabtp." chell. He saw in the Reformation Developinc the tbought that individual Ronee ..... . -cnat-of Date!" Thl. w •• tbe title and With t'egard to tbe frequent a hope for .. lvatdon lrom wdlsor_ Borace' . .. rty dea�ir .temmed or of pareoaal ealtare. ... topic of the lecture elven on A-pril strikes. he said: "True. there are der in tlbe trtate and wickedne .. in from hi. rwitneasing a .,.t catll- I1iloreoTer, he preferred. ... 13 at 8:00 in tM Common Room mort! atrike:a in IBriti.ab. miMs than the ehun:h. tropbe. the collapse 01. the .Roman plieity to splendor, pover� to by Mr. Pet.e-r J. D. !Wiles of the anyrwbert! else in the worl�ut "Hcrweyer." !Mr. Mitchell conlin- Republic, IProfessor Vlktor IPoHchl riches. The contrut bet .... .. Ru •• ian Reaeafth Center and'"New lell than there wen Wort! (na- ued, "DUrer """ .also mati, con- of the Unlvenity of Heidelberc oetentatious .rnaDDU'iaml of � OoJlece, Oxford. 8peakinc from tioDaliza,tion)." Thus, for Britain eernect with dilCOVtring the prin- explained that the ,g-reet ,poet'. and the .implicity 01 'po'Nrtr I. a wutem. d.noeratie, socialist nationalis.tioD Ii 'DOt out ot date. ciplet of ba.mnony in art. Thu., 'land of bln.inc' wal a world eat. thown not only in t.be cont.nt of countl'y'. �nt of view, Mr. Wilei' NationaUsa:tion I. considered DUrer's Itrork n6ect.a both move- from the contamination of politics. hi. ip08l.ry, but a� in ita form e. asterted that nationalization il out ot date by moat 9«I'P1e be� menta of his time; he was tom Dr. Poetebl, who I. aeni� .. inner mo+....t. In tIN tNt .... not really out of date. cause they aaaoelata It with ec.n .. bet..- the trouble - tormented Vi.iting iPro/ealOr of La.tin at the man ode, Horace dee __ .........

r1n Britain, he aid, naijonallza- munl.m or aoelallam. In diaeu .... world at the lNorth from wbence he Univerlit, aI. ,WaahinJ1on for W. 'rng pleaaea me so much _ the tlon baa Im.proved tNnaportatioD ing- nationaHHd Industry under eame and t6e claMic lIannooies of year. pve tne Lily Roll Taylor grotto." �ee and: the .mclency of eoaJ. cc:mrnuniNII. I£r. WiI.. polnt.ed the South." Lecture, wPoetry .wi Wbdom In Horaee himMlf was DOt 01. DOble mi.nhllr. UDder public ownership. out the weM: I)OSition oeeupied by Locaa Cra'D8.eh reprueDta the Horaoe." In ·the Ely Room, wecf.. .tock. He could not bout rJl .., Brltlah rat .... ,. are not mue.b lnde unioD8. -..bicb a.re a bind- seeoncl .rti.tic center dJacuseed .by nellday evenln«, Alprll 18. relative who had "'.,. neobad efta worM tbu DUn, or the re.t of ranee to economic �.t.h but not lIr. KitcbeU_Wl�nberc. In 1606 In the SU ..... JIIpoft, one of the lowest raak In & .,oft .... the ecoDOIIl7, wbern. In America. neeeuarilr to natlon.Ua.ation." be beeeme court painter tbere. aMj hi. eerlier poeme, RoNCe ptedlda menL PurtbeftDore, JtU father'. 9""*" n1hrIriIJ'I are "strikingly Communi .. I. not., he .... � hi • .t7le eha.npcl from the tur� I the eoequ_t at :Rome br b&rtIu- land bad .... cqnf_ted ..... Jnt.HN' to "e """N1t 01 the eeon. "the -most etfeeU.e nationali.... • ....... riatie .......... i\ Mdt'- .. .. _� � ..... be t.d: siil4JOlUd Bnatu ad .. om,." The eoel mines. he edmlt- sYltem. A miauDdentandintr at pre'rioual, beta to a. .raeio ..... 1 boDeI 01. RomWu., aD ..... .. bIda Republic. Bow..-er, ... � .... tad, are "uDeatlafaetorUy publ� Braitin'. �_tion under 10- 10ft, Wand-one. He met LuI&her ill be took from. &be fi1ieal pnpbet, tIM doee frieDd of iK ..... ,... 0WDtd, .... t dI. t-.IOIU wby t.bq clali .. baa also 1ed muy to crit- 1&18 aDd Mc.me hi. ttrop-acandI.t. 1 J • ...ma.h. H"","" ba oIMn '" ... of the DObOk7 . .... badlJ' run are: not part1�ularlJ Olaf ..... _ PaP 4. CoL I At Ute __ time, be COD..... kama --cr � ......, eo ... c.th ... _ Pap .. C'AL I

f

i

..

. ,

-

, . . . P o u ,

Kid8 Hunt And Roll Egg8;

�?'M�:ri�!. E�!'�. ��.��s;tI��X-

l T·H f C O L t E G E N I W 5

Nationalization ConUaued fro .. Pare S, Col. 2

ieize nationalization. �plaininK' the notion of social ...

iam ot •. �up ot "intelleetual. who believe In the proletaria.t and

Wed ....... y, April 20, ·.1980

not be 'Partments I() that he)' ean ue aU the era rollinc eonteat on Merlon citem�DtI. In the �h!l11e of a Green Saturday. a youae linrul.t nou-to-oo.e e&, rolllnr cont.eat said, III didn't mean t4 win both; tbe 2, 8, and 4-year-old., that the proletariat aufl'era," .Mr. as cood .1 �ou.ly expeeted, aides of bhe bualnetl. Thl. II more

than moat eompanies do, but all provide valuable exJperienee.

J just. couldn't help It." '" -.wanntly a scientific type Under the direc.tion of co�h.lr- up the rHor suddenly

Wllel Inaitted that thia la, untrue; the .prolela.rlat bal rejected Wa

noted " Mila IFarjeon of t1he Bureau ot Recommendation.. Last fall

men Sandi Goldberl and Joan up, I'rtied her err, ran, SI1nP'OD M'erionite. reverted to it abead of aU the othen, el"s-conK'io\1l image of ltaell. pro.peets aeemed very rood. Thlnga Another InteresUng job is be.

ina ofl'ered to an older s� 'Mho spea.ka excellent Frepefi ·to &'0 to Eul'O'})e and ea.re for ehlldren from mld-July to early September.

nursery tchool day. and JJpent this and e&knly /Wf'ht ahead with the put weekend dyeing and tpalntlng race. She thetl- hlUt. little trouble Easter eavl and mak1nc and 1U1- goine on to rvictory. Inr FAlter' .,b.,keti. Not without tPu.e;."�y will notke that reuon, however: they bad invited three eggI which were apparently the faculty and their children to not discovered by the ehUdren in­partJeipate In the egg roll and manifold In .ize and n()w hunt--the latter partlelpatlng, the adorn tHerion Green _ eolorfully former eheerlnl' their olhprmc to dec:orated with red "H'," . Could vidory. they han been lelt by H_verlord

Tri-College A�rll 00-30:

Trl-oCoUege Weekend April 00:

'Db. iLoI Ray •• Steel lBand Muale Undft' the Stan Swarthmore Ampitheatre

A<prU 80: .A.tternoon:

Sopbo.ore Cen,,:nl :Merion Green Hood Tr.oph, c.. ..... Tennl.......s_verlord Batebal�rtbmore

.Eveni,., g.,1: no-Ua.,..rtOM tFieldhouJe: Frankie Leiter and .the Bill,. 1M., iBand ..ntb Ttte Nail IDrivin' Six

You don't have to miss Stock­holm ond Copenhogen .Imply bec.uae you would .110 like to lpend • wNk In Rome. The N.B.B.S. LHpfrog Tour linb a northem and I south­ern "",te by mMM of 0 150<MnUo IIlghf, so thot you «n"now joIrI • lel.UNly· 56-doy 1o<Jr ond sHU _ Scand� nlvia ..... the Mecllterrl.....,. Espedilly follorod for"Ihe col· loge girl who won" .. much freedom II poulbl. in I guldod four, the Leapfrog fro""l. with only II.. glrh ond 0 Dutd> studonf guide­dt-I_ In ooc:h VoIksw_bus. Tr.naetl.ntk tranlportetion on. N.B.B.S. studonf .. llIngo.

Write UI for further information.

Nell ...... 0fII0e ... "-Ie I ...... nt I.h.. (III . ' 5.)

It ..... ., _ V .. .. _ V ... •

el'gheads?

• AppIicotIan .... dli .. May 1 , 1960. W.... now to: ACADEMIC PROGRAMS ABROAD

UNIVERSITY COlLEGE DEPT. D 610 E. F.yMto StNet, Syr.c .... 3, N. Y.

plul the GAnwAY IINGIU

ONLY PfIUDIUIIUA AlIUMt.CI ,,-•• ., ........ .... 21, •• ,oM.

IIVINI AUDITOIlUM .uN1VIISITY 01' PlNNSY\.VANIA

no.. r- suo, SUCII _ ,. H.s ... ... CI4IIt .. ""11)

I ... nll' ••• c.l 1V MI . ........ HI

The best way to look for _ poII­tion II to leaf through the dir«­tory in the lBureau. In WI the eountry ....... l. dIvided into diltricta, liating the jdba available in eaM one. The plan of attack II limple; eboose your loc.a.tion, chooee Jour eompatry, and ltart writin&, let.t.en.

Parades, et al

SPECIAL-EUROPE 1960

If you're a girl who loves to be independent but is going to Europe for the first time, N.B.B.S.' Volkswogen "Spedol" Is the tour for you. First � student salling to Rotterdam, then a leisurely 41-day tour of the Continent In a .comfort­able Volkswagen bus with only four other oollego girl, and a Dutch student guide-driver­interpreter-friend. After the tour you wtll have an optional free stay in london with free flights across the Channel. So much fun and so inexpensive tool $965 includes everything from New York to New York. Just drop IJS a line and ask for further information.

Netherl.nds OHice

for foreign Student

Rel.tions (N.B.B.S.)

29 Broadwoy Now V ..... 6, N_ V ...

Anachronism ? Not lHIIy. 'Co_ H Coke ... d bee. orouad In C_o day, C ..... woule! ..... trMted himleU to the oporkliDc aood _, the welcome lilt 01 Cokel ea.ar'. motto-HI tame, I lIw, I ecmquend.. .. Pretty rood motto for Cob too-the prime lavorite in over lOO _ todayl

-

'--� -

-

-

WId.oodor, April 20, 1960 T H'E C O L L E G E N. E W S .

P i g . F I ., .

c!!�!r:�i��t:,o:,. 5 �::

N

�:��:���'����::;�t�! �;:; I Philosophers And Physicists Debate Indeterminacy PTc}RertX will be rtnld until the not to reloeawte whole groups tamiHe. are reloc:ated but th.r. fa ��r ••• but '" all,w N...,.... Its helev"nce ror Modern SC·lent·lfl·c Studl'es no place for the Negroes livinC move into int.ecraLed flelrhbor. K u � here Ito move. They mUlt leaV41 hood,. their jobs, work, schools, and tMuch ean be done to alleviate Mr. ,Micheli Introduced the facti and pro.bablHty art! "intimately · physics can never he whoUy ade-churches. It will not be as hard thea� !problema. In an interview the eore Gf the question of de- involved." Could a .�rIOt' ob- quate to rea.liliy. The scientist on the landlord. as they can sell Reverend Jone., minister of t.he I ��:�":'�.' it .. tands today in the server uMatn])ered -by the uncar- works a. if with a c108ed .y.tem and are not interested In rebuylng. Baptlltt Chureh In Ardmore, uld I i Ohib lpalIel on "Detenntn- tainty iprinciple tell the eleotron'l in order to reduce nature to limple The renten wiU bear the brunt "Why don't lWe lee more 01 Bryn in PhYlicl and PhilMoPfy" l f"tu, .. in term. oUler then proba- mathematical absLracLions. thoUCh

Probably the tlwo most etrective Mawr. girls! U they have a cen- Thursday. ,bility� One school ()l physicists, he IknOWS in. !lad .tha.t there II no organizatiom in thi, area for en- uine interelt in our problems why led by Born, uy. we ",ha.ve no .ueh perfectly closed 'Yltem . • bring individual ril'hta, belides don't they come down _ and help right to ask detailed questions tha.t This 'Point became &n Issue In the the school and church organlu- us, observe the mind, lemperat.- at .. cerUn time it will bit a can never be answered." Another dlaculS!on. iMr, Micheli anlwered tions, ere the local NAACP whOle ment, and .expression ot our 'peo.ple target rln the c!aasical picture 'school, I'Which counted Einstein In that the phylicllt knows the in flu­efforts brought about employment and our problems ! " the bullet II in a definite .paee Its ranka, Ilal expressed reluc- enees from elements external to

SIUDEII • YOUIG IEACHER E U R O PEAI TOU R

'675 80 DAYS 11 COUNTRIES

TOUR 'RICI IHCLUDU J flI4II11 d.n., cnrywha,.; .11 t'Ulporl.UOll 1ft lure,. � 4. ,.. _. eOlldIUOII'. motor eNtII; lpeel.1 NctptJOl1i tllrowlhovt t,v, • • •

E?)- _ ... tt_"'_ ...., tt...,., ..... .,.u.6I . ... .... �I_ -.

TRAVEL • CULTURAL UCHIISE, .10. AI '""' A' ... � low yoot .. .. y, - --

any IrutaDt with a de6nlte vel- tance to 'Ic:ceopt. that nature itself the systan and tries to eorreot �­oeity. But bbe Iilbt that cives the ia indetermlnaU. This ecbool ba. equately for othem. Mrs. �e La­infonnaUon can 1'8.vee.1 an revived rwU.h ;the approach . that guna was .sked M'hat her int.6r'pre­tron'. �Itlon only within an un. there may be ,hidden or unknown tatlon of a closed Iyatem would be, I ","'lin,,, o.f the order of It I wave lorce. that actually -guide n rpar- but ,the relatlol\ ot the question of length. waves ere our mum Uele !While It appu.r. to be Jult the closed system to that of inde-of measUftlment there rwiU random1y ou-eeni1lK'. While tbe terminacy rWII not .rellolved. AI tor be .lome uncertainty in continues tbe J)robah- ·whether philo.ophy lound �n biol-tnc the 'POIition.

- interpretation work:.. ogy eueption to the Second Law Yet, that it could be .Mr. Ferrater.(Mora, uter re- of Themnodyna.micl, the physicl ••

to .any degree of aecu.raey �ont the wave..particle _ ''!wav- ha4 not beard of such, and Mrs. perfection Implies a definite lele," a-ave a four-point definition de .Laguna commented: "What a Ity to whIch the _ determinate IYltem, /Which lin- philosopber hAA to say about blol-a.pproximllte. tBut lle'ht can the charaeteristic of "dose- ol'Y oUl'ht to be dlareP,{ded-a

dncribed a • • Itream of as en ellmtlal element. but !philo.opber told me that"). With as .JW:elL as a tWave,- and 'When as a neceulty ita cra� Hke attitude, the 1)hilolopbers ex-beawn Itrikes an electron, the by our eocniza.nce in an pressed uncerta.inby as to their tron'l velocity is changiKl. .to render detenninacq the comm�nd of physics, und the quently, by the Helaenbery ba,il for complete !predictabliity. ,physicistl a fear of the terml of tainty �rinciple exact prediction The .problem leema to be, not philosophy. AI yet, neither phys-impossible. 11 the ,position of whether the uncertainty .,rinciple iCI nor phlloaophy bas given a final

is aceura.tely ,known desuibes the natUN of .reality or anlJWer to this question which one moment, nothinl' at .U ean be lim;ply ineac.pable ,limltationl of leems to toucb upon the nerve

about where it rwill be lat.- phYlical meaauremelrt, but that if center ol lboth.

!Mias Hoyt eXlJ)licated Jtbe evi· that physical reality itaell

is uneertaln. A stream of trons txhibita a wave nature II I�nt does, oby •

waWr w .. ves. lIn the ot an electron that takes of both ita ipartlcle and lWa.ve erties the 'lJ'rliCertainby

there is lueh a limit of measure· ----ment then there I. an Impo"ibllity Re: Picketing of our ltnawJng the nature of real-ity as anything other than uncer- Continued (rom Pare 1, Col. S taln.

Mrs. de Laeua emphasized that neither determinacy nor in­determinacy ,have been ruled out. !by the uncertainty principle, as general ontological doctrines, and

lIelf, be an answer to those who eaU the iplcketen hyopocritical on the grounds that tbe picketers them&elves consent to live in a relativeLy aejfreg'ated area.

SugresUons lor other lorma of action were made by the .udJence. 1'he Negroes in (his '&rea should be informed of the value of an economic Ooycott of chain ltores. It should be noted that the NAAOP LegaJ lDefense and Education Fund Is not a 'Part of the NAACP. Money to !be used for immediate defense ot southern NegTO students in jail ahould be 110 mark_ed..

Ravel"lford and <Bryn Mawr stu­dents hope next year to extend their activities to the segregatIon problem I in this area. The litue­tion in IMain Line ,towns is getting worse, not !better. However, al MT. Baehmeh 'POinted out, otber considerations and different torma of action do not preclude ,pickets.

BEAU ond BEllE Breakfast - lunch

Dinner - lale Snacks ••• MUDA UNGTH IHOm Excellent Bonquet FacJllli •• tallo-" L_ ' . I Open Seven Days

)

..- on our -y • - • Next Door To Bryn Mowr P.O. In llood-lookInll -...... �I.,�coIoI�rI�np��_�:I_If���:::;; ;:;;;;;;::;;;;;::� __ _

1"lyuur MIl Con..) N. B. B. S.

New York to Europt al law ai $176 • • • 46 dap Pan Am oren you • fabuloUi II8:riM of apeeiGl It,",,", touno '" ..... throua:bout the world.

To make your tour even more rewardinr, you will fly aboard Pan Am', h .... new Jet CUppera·-the lupot, I .. teet airlinen in the world. On Pan Am Jeta yOU .... fly to Europe, South America, the Caribbean, N ... u, Ber-­muda, Hawaii, the Orient and 'round the world-f&ater than 1!,veJ' before. That meant you'll have mora time to spend oooin, the ploceo that intereot yOU.

Conolder Europe. There are Ut.eroIIy -.. 01 _ to eh ... lrom-l_ttIrinI , lueinatiJlc ODd ad __ type 01 travel ouIted to your in_ Many 011. .... d ... l • ....ut. And thaN', at ... ,. ploDty 01 _time to room about on your own. Call 10ur Tra ... Apnt or POD AmarI..... or _d In the COUpoll hoI.w lor lull informatioD eTn, M • ... a. .. __ 011.

------------------------------------, ,..------------

&04 10, 0-.. _, Edu .. tlooaI � Pu A __ Boa 1108, N.Y. IT, ll.Y. P ..... ...a me a "" ODPT of "Ad...tur. In EducatlOft," • au_t'. (ldde to tn.'" fun ud Rudy abroad. Nam-c-C-____________________ _

.���------------------Q..,. .... J � __________ WOIlllLD'. MOIIT a)CP."'.NcaD ..... LIN .... _ .... _____ ..

;" N6V1, iWwI, LighJ BIII4, TRA VEUNG SEMINARS Oxford Gr., or Olive, $12.50 W.shdk KhUi Chiwi, $8.50

Oxford Gr., Fz-l, $1 S J l.a;. Modnu PlMds, $,13

W ... hilDu SIripod Con.. S .... nd4r ;" '. Gr,,-d-Whilo or BIII4-M4-Whilo, $9.50

-Itmnllcla Shorb in Ii_ 24 to 30.

346 MADISOH An" COL 4+TH IT .. H&W YOIJt 17, H. y,

1 )I...,._� .. :.:H�.�W;:::.u�.�y�',�c�o�a.� .. ;;;AJC;;.;I�I)(:;__:n�-"o BOSTON 16, MAIL� • SAlr nAHCISCO

In addition to the traditional Volkswagenbus tours, N.B.S. S. offers this summer:

Twentieth C.ntury Tour

A fascinating seminar on pol· itical science, visiting "hot spots" of political controversy in Europe such as Berlin, Paris and Rome. Price all·inclusive $ 1 1 95.00.

Renaissance Tour

An enlightening and thoroug­Iy enjoyable semInar on Re­naissance trends and influ­ences throughout Europe.

Price all·incluslve $ 1 1 55.00 •

80th tours coed-maximum of 1 5 students plus American professor and Dutch student guide.

Netherlands Office .... foreign Stud.nt 1.1Miono (N ••••• S.,

2t ....... , _ Yoot. 6, _ Yoot.

.-•

• Hunt on Hugo T H . C 'O L 1 • '0 . N·. W 5

Main Liner's Reactions To Picketing Vary w.d ...... y. April 20. 1 960

tudes on tbe iJlue could eaneraUy .... be deacribed 81 indifferent to .ym·

CAntinaed trOl8 Par. I, Col. J Coa.t1autd IrOID Pare 1, Col. 5 i by p ... ers-by, not to interfere with dom To Stand Torether-To Eat pathUe, though a few rpeople we.re liant variety Jd scenes and charae- many atorea on tn9 "'ain'Lin. do trame, or "in any wAif attract UD. Toeether. !Bullnesa did nOt appear I openly 8.ntagonlatlc. A tew teen­ten-.ordid and 8Plendid leenea, not. U an, local concern. 'WeTe fa

Thvorab

dle attention." k . to be dllturf>ed by the plcketlng' l agers in pasaing cars ,:hurled out . h t be I k ted th t de b felt e emonatraters wal ed In a and lordid and ,plen� c nae- 0 p e e , tie . u n circle bolding the 'Picket. IWhite The manlier of the Bryn Mawr hostile commen ... and a few �od-tetl," conta1n1nc certa)n �.rvel- they .hould be the one. who them- one of them puaed out ledet. braneh bad no comment to make, esmalUl were heard to refer to the ous element. of opsycholoeieal an- Min share dLa.crirninatory poll. I inl • h

' h " Th and the .ale�ople h.d been in- picketers as "beatniks", "inteUee-• , Tb of th' , , ex]) a DC W Y lWe are ere, e ,lyl1., elerd

s .. I

.S·h

Ibs O'Pln

llon ae· papers stated the students' eonvle- .trueted to offer no comment, In tuaIl", or "rabble-roust;rs", There

LH MiHf'abiH II one of the most co In, y C OM • ulY ntenee- II th " d" " I Ardmore the mt\.naler lent out a were .tmllar incidenta, and quite " th � th B /U on at . , ' IscrnnlDatlon • won, e eorner ow. e ryn IRMn' h I. ubll lalurlrl with a little car of flow- a If!W people refused the leaflets dierel.lve novel. ever writteD­only about one-fourth of the total !.ext Is directly caocemed M'ith Jean V.Uean's redemption. This much /WOuld have been enough in itself but Hugo felt . need to char­acteriz&' the timet and to giw hi • .personal opinion. of tbe trends of thele times, The work was • an hi.tol'ica1 novel and an expo,i­tlon of !Hugo', kleolOfaV,

Th4t.e eXlpOlitoll7 chapters .hould not Ibe c01llid6red .upe�cial, bOl'N'­ever; tlbey ,re lobe mean. by which the Jlnal eOn1Uet between Jean Val­jean and Ja.vert acquire . ceneral and .oeial .ignificance. Huao trace. the ebb and "'ow of .the revolution­ary principle '�Uberty, ntuallty, Fraternity" from the t.n qf Na- I !pOlean to the .treeWtrhtinr inci­dents in 1.832; both Jean 'Valjean and J.vef\t were involved in thil street.4ightlng, tonrninr • major climactic. !poInt In the .tory.

HulO'S Ideolo&'Y b built around lewe II bhe law of ·the universe and the belief that without thourbt JIle i, meanlnrle .. . TJd .utrerina' intoleNhle. ,He .thu. based every­thing on God', divine pattern tor the aoc.ial I)fOI't'e1i of man.

Hugo wu lfichting human mil­ery, both phy.lcal and moral. 'lbe three !principal .. peet. of this mis­ery with .which he wal moe eon­cemed were the auppft!Hion of the working clllaee, !Which forced them to live em the brink or beyond ,the brink ot. alarv.tion ; ,the ruin of women; and the....tuntlnl' chUd_ 'iii

Jluao dld.not !propose many eon ..

crete eeonooni.c refOMlS, alt1hO\ijfb he did believe 'ibenian ":::�.:� I II:lon of indultry" to be � for the prosperity and ha'PPineas of a country. Hi, main pU%!pOae !WI' to .arouse (pity and horror, to exci.t.e It.M weU.cJlaposed to reiorm. tHe held that "Ideal c&n no more recede t.ban riven can dlow back­wards," and, !Mr, Hunt .tated, .. the fallity of that Idea, if it is indeed a falle one, hal yet to be proved."

MARCO BIANCO JEWELERS

GIFTS Of DISTINCTION 8 1 4 lancast.r Avenue

Bryn Mawr. P., RELIGIOUS ITEMS, TOO

JEANNETT'S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop

823 Lancaster Avenue

I Delivery Ass'n

Don't be Trite .bout Spring Be fresh and new with

Clothes from JOya; LEWIS

lancaster Avenue Bryn Mewr

Trust �ny in Bryn ,Mawr, for W7r:c ' ' . � ope �1 oe�,1 5> c

ers and a II�BuT Your Eaater Some people ltopped to talk with their demon.tration. oPTh

n on I�� te • I

P'fO em.

f Wi I Flower • • t Woolworth'a-and the the demonatrate� a'bout the isaue e p " ... e rs n rant a 00 - • iln meetiTl'gl durinr the week the worth'l bore .igna sayine Support girl !Wheeled her cart around in a Some felt i t W,aI unnecessary;

pioketen had been riven Instruc- So h S' I ' W d II circle alonr with the !picketers for "This Is the North," .But many tlons on how to act. They were ut ern It- NI, e Stan So A much of ,the &flernoon. voiced the opinion that the plcket­cautioned ..,ainst bemg provoked MaT Sit ; Untn We Can AU Sit To- The reaction of ,the palsers-by inK' WBI a good Idea and might to retaliate If cursed or Itruck at ,ether ,Let', Stand Together; Ff'ft- was one of Interest. Their atti- bring the !problem cloler to home,

Tareyton

DUAL fILlER

THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT :

, NEW

FILTER

MAKE YOUI ,AITY A SUCCISSI

Now Available For All SocI.1 Oo:: .. lon.

1 . lt combines a unique Inner IiIter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL • • •

definitely proved to make the smoke of a Cigarette mild and smooth, • •

2. with a pure white l2llW: IiIter. Together they bring you the best of the best tobaccos-the mildness and taste that pay off In pleasure I

Fully Equipped Thr .. Room Aptl

Near Columbia U. All public Transportation

AVAILABLE

.�, ...

: ---r-«... --- : ·················�l··································

i :.5;rf:- 'ACCENT EST ' � FRANCAIS . . . �

THE GREAT MARCO June 1 5 to Sept. 1 5 Rent $100 A Month

Contact­NANCY OYER

W� fjI'M tt, tk. .� __ MAGlqAN-HYPNOTIST

240 .lYI ....... _ Apt. 97.::' 601 W. 1 1 5th St. New York 25, N. Y.

Now '''' UN 5-8023

BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN Open To The Public

Br •• kf .. t • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 9,00-1 ! '00 A.M. Luncheon • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2,00- 2,00 P.M. Afternoon T.a . • • . • • • • • • . • . . • . • • • 3,30- 5,00 P.M. Dlnn.r . • . • . . • • . . • • • . . . . . • • . . . • • 5,30- 7,30 P.M. Sunday Dinner • . . . • . • . • • . . . . • . . . • 1 2,00- 7,30 P.M. ----- -'-

OPEN SevEN DAYS A WEEK SPECIAl PAIlfIES AND BANQUETS l'RRANGED

hlaphoM

-

\Offtbeert St • .,..; Metria AIM. � MIwr, �_¥_ .

�AIR FRAN-CE � I i .l!\--=' •

live outdOOB I. !he sun, toss corul.ID the se., : Go .. tiw 6 I. Roman or Greekl You can skin dive, sail, or water skJ.-• All for only 40 bucks I weeld

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ... .... : ... .......

IW ,...... .... . AII I'IWICf. IN AlII ,� ... yilt 2t. ... y .. .... ... . · ....... ...... ...... tmII .... .... . . . . . . . .. , ... ... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. ' ADOfI£SS • • , ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ • • , • • • • • • • •

: ., ••• , • • • • • • •• • • , •••• ,.1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

. ..