College news, January 14, 1959

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    Description

    Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.

    Linked Agent
    Creator (cre): Bryn Mawr College
    Publisher
    Place Published
    Bryn Mawr, Pa.
    Physical Form
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    Date Created
    1959-01-14
    Date Issued
    1959-01-14
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    serial
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    Extent
    4 pages
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    Internet Media Type
    image/tiff
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    Vol. 45, No. 11
    Local Identifier
    BMC-News-vol45-no11
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    bmc:91461
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    Note

    funding: Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.

    









    ~ Department.







    VOL. XLIV—NO. 11

    ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1959

    © Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1958

    PRICE 20 CENTS



    Sloane To Leave;
    Accepts Position

    At North Carolina

    Dr. Joseph Curtis Sloane, pro-
    fessor and chairman of the History
    of Art Department, will leave Bryn
    Mawr-at-the-end of this semester.
    Dr. Sloane will go to the Univer-
    sity of North Carolina at Chapei
    Hill qs.,chairman of the art de-
    partment: Among his new duties
    will be that of director of the
    university’s small, new museum,
    the William Achland Hayes Mem-
    orial Art Center. At present the
    museum his no collection but has
    a large endowment. Dr. Sloane,
    with’ an advisory committee, will
    select the pieces that are to be
    placed; on exhibit in the museum.

    Dr. Sloane received his B.A.,
    M.F.A., and Ph.D. degrees at
    Princeton University. He was a
    field assistant for the University
    Museum excavations in Minturnae,
    Italy from 1931 to 1932, an ‘assist-
    ant curator at Cooper Union Mu-
    seum in New York from 1934 to
    1935, an instructor at Princeton
    University in the department of
    art and archaeology from 1935 to
    1937, an assistant. professor at
    Rutgers University, 1987 to 1938.
    He has been teaching at Bryn
    Mamr as associate and full pro-
    fessor in history of art since
    1938. He was a lieutenant in the
    U.S.N.R. from 1934 to 1945 and, at
    present is a lieutenant commander.

    Dr, Sloane has written articles
    and book reports on the subject of
    art. He has also published a book
    entitled French Painting between
    the Past and the Present (Prince-
    ton University Press, 1951).

    Patrick Malin
    To Speak Here

    “The Next Twenty-five Years In
    Free Speech, Due Process, And
    Equal Protection,’’ will be the topic
    of a lecture to be given by Patrick
    Murphy Malin in the Common
    Room at 4 p.m. Thursday, February
    5, it was announced by Dr. Roger.
    Wells, head of the Political Science

    Mr. Malin was formerly a mem-
    ber of the department of economics
    at Swarthmore, and since 1950 has
    been the executive director of the
    American Civil Liberties Union in
    New York City. This meeting is to
    be sponsored by the Political Sci-



    Mme. Jambor and Mr. Alwyne





    The task of the critic;-said Dr.
    Milton Nahm in a lecture on “The
    Fine Art of Criticism” delivered
    under the joint auspices of the
    Arts Forum and the Philosophy
    Club, is scarcely less formidable
    than that of the artist, for, like
    the other fine arts, criticism to be
    good must be creative and origin-
    al.

    In support of this view, he quot-
    ed Mrs. Katherine Gilbert who
    said that to achieve sucessful crit-
    icism which adds to the apprecia-
    tion of a work and sharpens the
    image created by an artist the
    critic must create something new
    rather than merely seek what is
    hidden in the original work.

    This tenet is not, however, uni-
    versally accepted. To illustrate
    another view, one with which he
    is not im complete accord, Dr.
    Nahm quoted E. M. Forster who
    feels that criticism is “grotesque-
    ly .removed from _ creativity.”
    “Think before you speak, is the
    critic’s motto, speak ‘before you
    think is creation”, said Forster,
    echoing Plato’s theory of the in-
    spired but ignorant poet.



    ence Department.

    To accurately determine wheth-



    Workmen Shovel Around The Clock
    To Replace Destroyed Conveyor Belts

    Christmas vacation came to the
    brink of an indefinite extension in
    its last moments, as the reveille of
    fire engine gongs awoke the few
    sleepers on a near-deserted campus
    the last Sunday of vacation. A sud-
    den fire in the power house was the
    cause of unwonted alarm among
    members of the administration ex-
    pecting a relatively peaceful return
    to normal. Faculty in near-by Low
    Buildings were more immediately
    alarmed-and-as the flames shot up
    to fifteen feet, they began to gather
    children and catalogue their mov-
    able possessions. __

    Two fire engines roared onto the
    campus at six fifteen, and firemen

    began to quench the blaze which
    had started in the elevator shaft,
    and, in spite of all efforts, lasted

    stately elevator shaft is the chim-
    ney .which is used to draw up coal

    power house. In the fire the con-
    veyor belts which raise the coal
    were destroyed.

    The miracle of the still-hissing
    radiators was totally owing to
    workmen who worked twenty-four
    hours a day in four-man shifts

    {shoveling coal into the furnace. On

    the first day they had to fling the
    coal into a door high over their
    heads. On the second day they built
    a chute and continued shoveling
    down from the top. These men
    shovelled forty tons of coal a day
    —a small feat for an elevator no
    doubt, but-a-major accomplishment
    for the workmen. Sustained with
    coffee from the halls, and perhaps
    some traces of the Christmas spirit,
    the good-natured workmen with-
    stood the labor which was abso-

    Nahm Sees Creativity, Originality
    Of Great Importance in Criticism

    er or not criticism can be creative,
    one must go to the origin of the
    problem; one must discover. if.even
    art itself is actually creative and
    original. Plato, who expounded the
    first theory of aesthetics, thought
    not, Allsart is imitation he says,
    and the artist’s task is merely that
    of holding a mirror up to nature.

    Using slides to. illustrate — var-
    ious points, Dr. Nahm proceeded
    to outline further Plato’s views
    on art. There is an Absolute Beau-
    ty, says Plato, created by God
    and visible only to the rational
    thinker who employs the particular
    beauties of the earth as a ladder

    to reach it. Only pure mathemat-
    ical forms, like the line, the cube
    and the circle, often represented
    on contemporary cubistic art, can
    themselves take part in this beau-
    ty. Plato speaks of poetry as a
    gift of the muses, but goes on to
    state that beauty can be attained
    only through
    problem of whether art is actually
    the product of reason or that of
    inspiration figures prominently in
    the illustrative slides employed
    in the lecture.

    History teaches us, said Dr.Nahm,
    intelligibility and perfection. The
    artist strives for what ought to be—
    intelligibility. His principal value is
    recognition. Said Coleridge, “the
    artist embodies all ancient myths
    and legends; the intelligibility of
    his art depends on symbols.” Im-
    portant examples of this universal
    symbolism such as the trees of life
    and death, the bearded personifica-

    Continued on Page 2, Col. 5



    , e
    Notice
    The News is happy to announce
    the election of its new Editorial
    Board for 1959:
    Editor-in-Chief............
    ae Betsy Levering ’61
    Denbigh
    Cépy Editor......:.. Lois Potter ’61
    Pembroke East
    Make-up Editor............
    uw. Freddy Koller ’61
    Managing Editor............

    rationality. This

    Two Pianists Conquer Music From Bach
    Totindemith;PreserveMagnificentBlend

    by Allison Baker
    (with thanks also to Anne Farlow)

    The absolute.musical contact be-
    tween Mme. Jambor-and--Mr. Al-
    wyne last Friday night, as they
    sat far separated by the length of
    two grand pianos, was to me ex-
    traordinary, and a tribute to both
    the musicians. Mme. Jambor’s
    piano was closed, but she counter-
    acted this by more forceful play-
    ing, so that in the resulting bal-
    ance the two pianos were often
    indistinguishable.

    Schumann’s Andante

    Schumann’s Andante and Varia-
    tions, Op. 46, seems to me to suf-
    fer from his tendency to repeat
    rather than develop themes. This,
    of course, is also a characteristic
    intrinsic in the Variation Form,
    and even further intensified in ‘the
    two piano medium, where every
    bit of the theme or variations is
    played first on one piano and then
    on the other. It was interesting,
    however, in such a piece, to com-
    pare the two players. They had
    worked out their interpretation
    of the music to such an accord,
    that the liquid romantic melodies
    seemed almost continuous as they
    shifted from one piano to the oth-
    er.

    Contrasts of Pianists

    Mme. Jambor and Mr. Alwyne
    are complete opposites as one
    views. their stance at the piano.
    He uses no other medium than his
    fingers. in ‘bringing out musical
    expression, whereas she ‘reflects in
    her whole person every aspect of
    the music. This difference, how-
    ever, was purely visual; the ex-
    pression of the resulting music

    Continued on Page 2, Col. 3

    Notice

    The annual Maids and Porters
    Concert will be held on Friday,
    January 23 at 8:30 p.m. in Good-
    hart. The program will be varied
    and a very interesting one includ-
    ing many popular and _ spiritual
    selections. This concert promises a
    mid-exam break with an opportun-
    ity to hear some very lovely music.
    Please come. Students may charge
    to Pay Day. S.H.

    DuPont Grants

    $4000 To B.M.C.
    For Science Dept.

    Bryn Mawr has received a grant
    of $4000 from the Du Pont Company
    which, continuing its annual. pro-
    gram of aid to education, awarded
    grants totaling $696,000 to various
    colleges and universities.

    This program is directed toward
    fundamental research and_ the
    strengthening of the teaching of
    science and related liberal arts.

    This year DuPont has nearly
    doubled its grants for unrestricted
    research in the physical sciences
    because of the growing need for
    work in this area and the flexibil-
    ity of this form of support.

    The grant to Bryn Mawr will go
    to support the teaching of science
    and mathematics as well as other
    subjects. The grant consists of
    $2500 for the department of chem-
    istry and $1500 for other courses.

    The colleges receiving these
    grants were chosen on their records
    of strength in chemical education,
    and the grants were awarded with
    a view to helping them maintain
    their success in the field.

    Taylor Initiates

    Fire Drill Plans

    A fire drill plan for evacuation
    of Taylor will go into effect Mon-
    day, January 12. New signs will
    be in each room giving directions
    on how to leave.

    This action is prompted by the
    fire drill in Taylor Tuesday, De-
    cember 9. The drill took place
    at 10:50, first surprising and then
    confusing everyone. No one seem-
    ed to have any idea how to walk
    to the nearest (and proper) exit.

    Mrs. Paul and Weecha Busé,
    head ‘fire captain of the college,
    decided, following this occurrence,

    +to put signs in every room beside

    the door with exact directions on
    how to get out. “These directions
    must be obeyed to the letter’, says
    Weecha,

    Students in rooms A and B are
    to leave by the senior steps. Rooms
    F and S only will use the fire es-
    capes. Other directions are, as we
    say, posted.

    Weecha adds that she hopes the
    profesors will not be so amazed



    next time.



    Dr. Brian H. Mason Will Speak

    At Vaux Collection Acceptance

    At 4:00 p.m. Saturday, February |

    7, the Bryn Mawr Geology, Depart-
    ment will formally accept the Vaux
    Mineral Collection acquired last
    spring. A speech by Dr. Brian H.
    Mason, Curator of Minerology at
    the American Museum of Natural
    History in New York and Professor
    of Mineralogy at Columbia Univer-
    sity,on “Extraterritorial Mineralogy
    and its Geo-Chemical Implications,”
    will mark the occasion. Tea and a
    visit of the collection will follow.

    On display will be about 100 of
    the 308 trays containing the 800 or
    more types of minerals (10,000
    specimens) represented, and visi-
    tors will be able to examine ingots
    of gold, enormous pieces of mala-
    chite and mica, chunks of meteor-



    ssid ais Barbara Broome ’60



    to open during the coldest days of
    winter.



    and dump it into the furnace of the



    Continued on Page 3, Col. 3





    “Members-at-Large............
    Joie E. Anne Eberle ’61
    ' Allison Baker ’62







    ite, calcite crystals, silver, uranium,
    and such curiosities as the largest



    flake of biotite in the world.



    At present only the larger pieces

    of the Vaux Collection may be
    viewed in Park Hall, because of
    lack of space. When the Math-
    Physics wing of the Science Build-
    ing is completed, built-in display
    cases nearly 100 feet long will
    house the specimens. “Minerals are
    like paintings,” says Dr. Edward H.
    Watson, head of the Geology De-
    partment. “You don’t have to un-
    derstand them to enjoy looking at

    Continued on Page 2, Col. 5°



    Notice

    The assembly at the opening
    of the second semester will be
    held at 8:45 a.m. on Monday,
    February second, in Goodhart

    || -Hall.-Dean-Dorothy N. Marshall, | ~

    Acting President of the College
    for the semester, will give the
    address.







    a

    Page Two

    #

    THE

    COLLEGE

    NEWS

    Wednesday, January 14, 1959





    wligilieg the Deputy Premier around, was asked by Mikoyan.
    ’ whether he made a profit. “Why, well yes,” was his genial

    THE COLLEGE NEWS t

    FOUNDED IN 1914
    Published weekly durin§ the College Year (except during
    Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examina-
    tion weeks) in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore
    : Printing Company, Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
    The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears
    in It may be reprinted wholly or in part without permission of. the Bditor-in-Chiet.

    EDITORIAL BOARD

    IE ccice cdc es cbeccvecdsees Dapensonvesecas Eleanor Winsor, ‘59
    Copy Eder oo ccc csc ccc cesccccesewcccceetececveseens Betsy Levering, ‘61
    Managing Editor ,...........s.cceecececeeeereneteeees Frederica Koller, ‘61
    CTE OE chic vv ses pic cevarvivessveascehaeees Miriam Beamés, ‘59
    © PatmMerehbtarge: nw ccc ccc cree cree cceccssccceer Barbara Broome, ‘60

    EDITORIAL STAFF
    Gail Lasdon; ‘61; Lynne Levick, ‘60; Lois Potter, ‘61; Gloria Cummings, ‘61;
    €. Anne Eberle, ‘61; Sue Shapiro, ‘60; Alison Baker, ‘62; YvonneChan, °62;
    Marion Goen, ‘62; Linda Davis, ‘62; Sandi Goldberg, ‘62; Judy Stuart, ‘62.

    BUSINESS BOARD
    Sybil Cohen, ‘61; Jane Levy, ‘59; Nency Porter, ‘60; Irene. Kwitter, “61; Sue
    Freiman, ‘61;. Melinda Aikins, ‘61.

    Business Manager... 01+. + 00s sereceeecceeceeeeereeeerens Ruth Levin, ‘59

    Ametiite Bostases ‘Manager tes ceenseseweh ia seeee Elizabeth Cooper, ‘60
    Ce PRUE os ccis ci Sicdcduccpedeccccspacessweiwe Holly Miller, ‘59
    MONTE SESS socks cccesenomcecresenssoesiores Margaret Williams, ‘61
    Subscrig Manager ...........++. bi icin iiaakennen Elise. Cummings, ‘59
    Subseri Board: Loretta Stern, ‘60; Karen Black, ‘61; Gail Lasdon, ‘61; Lois

    Potter, \‘61; Danna Pearson, ‘60; Lisa Dobbin, ‘61; Sue Szelkey, ‘61; Elise
    Cummings, ‘59; Sasha Siemel, ‘62; Doris Dickler, ‘60; Kate Jordan, “60;
    Jackie Goad, ‘61.

    Subscription, $3.50. Mailing price, $4.00. Subscription may begin at any time.
    Entered as second class ma/ter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office, under the Act
    of March 3, 1879.



    When the President of Bryn Mawr enters upon her sab-
    batical leave next semester—if the first leave in fifteen years
    can be called a sabbatical—and visits colleges and universi-
    ties throughout the country, she will be welcomed as a lead-
    ing figure in higher education. Since Miss McBride was ap-
    pointed president in 1942 she has devoted her full time to
    the increasing duties of a college president, yet her activ-
    ities and interests have extended far beyond the range of the
    college. The many positions she has held show how widely
    her qualities of imagination and leadership have been recog-
    nized.

    Among her many. duties, Miss McBride is a trustee of
    Radcliffe College and the University of Pennsylvania. She is
    a member of committee of the National Science Foundation
    nd of_a committee of the Institute for International Educa-
    tion. Recently Miss McBride was elected to an unlimited
    term as honorary member-at-large of the College Board, of
    which she was at one time chairman. In the spring of 1956

    President Eisenhower made her a member of the President’s
    Committee on Education Beyond the High School.

    Some of us as undergraduates may not be generally
    familiar with these or the many other positions of responsi-
    bility our president holds, but all of us appreciate Miss Mc-
    Bride for her “commitment to education”, and for her con-
    fidence in us as responsible individuals, as students who
    must determine the goals of our own education and as mem-
    bers of a self-governing community. We extend our best
    wishes for her long overdue “sabbatical”.

    _ Hospitality With. Vengeance

    When Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan stepped
    off a plane in New York on January 4 he was met by Soviet
    officials on mission in this country, better than a hundred
    and fifty policemen, State Department bodyguards, and a
    handful of Hungarians who offered graphic insults. The
    amassed pickets and demonstrators of the American Feder-
    ation of Hungarians had been diverted by a ruse. Safely in
    Washington, Mikoyan was threatened by a streetlight»which
    toppled in his path; however, when he. started out on an
    “amity tour” of the United States, trouble recurred. In
    Cleveland, his first whistle-stop, the visitor was greeted with
    rocks, shouts, spitting-and an occasional rotten egg. It was
    snowballs in Detroit; signs carried by students in Chicago;
    a bomb scare and more eggs and rocks in San Francisco. All
    this brought forth a call to courtesy from President Eisen-
    hower, and from the president of the Federation of Hungar-
    ian Former Political Prisoners this statement: “We are very
    polite to Mr. Mikoyan—nobody has thrown a bomb.”

    The responsibility for this shameful rudeness appar-
    ently rests almost entirely on Hungarian groups, which
    makes it perhaps more excusable though certainly injudici-
    ous. But if we incline to be shocked and shunt. off. the re-
    sponsibility, we might remember that it is only five years
    since the heyday of McCarthy, Capehart, and Jenner, when
    so many were guilty of crimes against goodwill far more
    serious than these.. Hospitality is not merely a matter of
    fetes and tours of automobile plants, nor of abstaining from
    =. os far as graciousnes goes, we like the easy cor-
    “Md: motel proprietor, who, after |

    er vville,





    by Lois Potter

    Now is the winter of our dis-
    content beginning to have its little
    repercussions, and they are per-
    cussioning all over the place. True,
    one usually compares a cold’s more
    audible effects to the music made
    by the brass section of the orches-
    tra—hence a cold victim may be
    said to blow his own trumpet—but
    do consider, next time you hear the
    low, hoarse tomtom of the cough or
    the cymbal clash of the sneeze, and
    you will agree that one has every
    right, especially if one is hard up
    for a pun, to take note of the un-
    usual number of percussionists on
    campus at this time of year.

    They form a kind of secret soci-
    éty, flying banners of white, pink,
    yellow, and blue Kleenex. Whether
    or not they sing during their nor-
    mal lives, they are now most ac-
    complished musicians, and cough in
    rounds without need of a director,
    sometimes producing involved bits
    of harmony which make the Sextet
    from Lucia sound like Three Blind
    Mice,

    Like secret societies, too, they fill
    their conversations with phrases
    intelligible only to the initiated:
    “I’m back on chlortrimeton,” “I
    take the black and gold ones,”
    “Chlortetracycline Hydrocloride for
    me.” The awkwardness of these
    code words is clearly one reason
    why the Croup Group canhot be, as
    some maintain, a front for danger-
    ous political activities. Besides the
    fact that its membership is con-
    stantly changing, if the workers of
    the world do not unite until their
    leader pronounces the words “Di-
    hydrocodeinone Bitartrate” it is
    evident that the Welfare State is a
    long way. off.

    The cold is called common, but
    that is a misnomer: listen to any
    group of sufferers describing their
    ailments and it becomes plain that
    no two. are alike, although each
    victim has of course the worst case
    in medical history. Opinions are
    divided on how to cure it. An apple
    a day does not keep the doctor
    away, but other suggestions are
    organic gardening, garlic pills, and
    vinegar.

    The period from January 6 to
    February 12 is a bare and blank
    one, as far as holidays are con-
    cerned, so here is a suggestion
    which, if enough people petition
    Congress, may make a break in the
    unrelieved monotony of the time.
    Let a day. be consecrated to cold
    sufferers, a day on which you may
    sneeze’ unashamedly in_ lectures
    and concerts, when they-may~re-
    ceive the sympathy that is other-
    wise denied them. Let every com-
    munity festoon its streets with
    garlands of Kleenex, let the foun-
    tains run Alka Seltzer, and neon
    signs saying “Gesundheit” appear
    on house-fronts. Let Santa Claus
    be brought. back from the Pole to
    distribute free aspirin, and preside
    at a banquet where the guests
    would be allowed to sample every
    imaginable kind of pill and carry
    on long, fascinating conversations
    about which has done the most for
    them in the past.

    Rudolph the Red-Nosed Chair-



    “Tale Told By...”

    man arises, glass in hand.
    “T bropose a dost—to all victibs
    ob de cobbon cold.”
    “Ahchoo,” the guests intone
    solemnly, drinking their Listerine.

    News’ Editor Has
    Ranaeof lnterests

    by Lois Potter

    The new editor in chief of the
    News, Betsy Levering ’61, hails
    from a mountain at Ararat, in the
    south of Virginia, “a region whose
    chief agricultural products are
    apples and children’—and, Betsy
    adds, “my family has made gener-
    ous contributions to the supply of”

    both.” She attended a coeducational
    Friends’ boarding school in West-
    town, Pennsylvania, where she was
    managing editor of the paper.

    Betsy declined to announce how
    she plans to change the News, say-
    ing, “I think I’d rather do it insidi.
    ously. It seems pretty silly to start
    your term of office by announcing
    how much better everything is
    going to be under you, and then
    have it turn out ten times worse,
    with’ the News not coming out ’till
    Friday, and with nothing in it ex-
    cept Bureau of Recommendations’
    announcements.”

    Journalism Later

    Extremely interested in political
    science, Betsy plans to be a history
    major because she feels that “polit-
    ical science without a solid back-
    ground in history is barren.’”’ She
    does not plant to make a career of
    journalism, “at least, not immedi-
    ately. After college, I’ll probably
    go to law school or do graduate
    work in international law. And
    then, maybe, journalism.”

    Betsy’s writing for the News has
    ranged from humorous features to
    reviews to straight news to editor-
    ials, but she does not eonsider her-
    self interested in creative writing
    (“I wrote some poetry in high
    school, but I took a look at it the
    other day .. .”). “I’m afraid I
    think of writing as a means to an
    end, and use it for rabble-rousing,
    great declamations, sometimes even
    to fumble through an idea.”

    Weapons and Henry Ford

    An example of this kind of writ-
    ing is what Betsy was doing last

    summer, A General Motors’ execu-|

    tive with theories on the problem
    of the arms’ race hired Betsy to
    write them up and travel around
    che East and Midwest trying to sell
    them to eminent journalists, poli-
    ticians, and military technicians.
    “The result of it all,” Betsy says,
    ‘was a radically new and totally
    impractical weapons system to
    solve the problem of retaliation
    after the effects of a first attack.”
    She spent part of her time trying
    to convince Henry Ford, through
    his assistants, that he should go
    to Russia to confer with Khrush-
    chev. He finally did go, though “not
    because of my efforts.”



    Alwyne — Jambor Concert

    Continued from Page 1, Col. 4
    showing it to be musically imma-
    terial.

    The next piece on the program
    was two movements from a Hin.
    demith Sonate, written in 1942.
    The two movements were a Reci-
    ‘tative on an Old English Poem,
    and a Fugue. Hindemith’s rhythms
    are very complex, but never did
    the players seem to be consciously

    keeping together at the expense/s

    of freedom of expression and in-
    terpretation. The fugue subject
    is a forceful, jagged one, and its
    development very long, ~— in no
    sense “monotonous.

    strings. The project in itself is
    audacious, and its difficulties were
    intensified by the fact that, due to
    lack of space on Goodhart stage,
    the first and second violins had
    their backs to the pianos. The
    concerto is in three movements:
    Allegro, Adagio, and Allegro. It
    is to my. mind.an exciting piece of

    music, and any difficulties in bal-|-

    ance or placing of the instruments
    e to have been inconsequential
    in this performance.

    Chopin’s Rondo in C, Op. 78,
    was the most immediately delight-
    ful piece on the program. It has



    Mme. Jambor, in the Bach ei
    certo for Two Pianos in C minor,
    took on the added task of conduct-



    » “that's what we're in L-parinese for.”





    ing a quintette of accompanying |

    introductory passage preparing
    the way for the pianistic rippling}
    theme. Mme. Jambor and Mr. Al-

    Grads Undertake
    cations




    per cent were either employed or
    engaged in further study, accord-
    ing to a report released yesterday
    by the College’s placement office.

    e. group chosen for analysis

    |were the members of the class of

    1957 and 1958. Of the 292° sur-
    veyed, 116 were working full time
    on their first jobs, and 120 were
    taking further training. Of the
    total group, 94 were married at the
    time of the survey and of these,
    two-thirds were working or study-
    ing, while the remainder of the
    married group was at home.

    Teaching ranked highest in the
    list of occupations, with 53 of the
    graduates, all of whom hold A.B.
    degrees, teaching or preparing to
    teach. The teaching assignment
    varied from an apprentice in the
    lower grades in an _ elementary
    school to a graduate assistant in a
    large university.

    Public school teaching, according
    to the report, was one of the high-
    est paid occupations for beginning
    positions, second only to scientific
    and technical opportunities.

    Among those taking jobs in the
    scientific field was a physics major
    working in a radiation laboratory
    in the Far West. Nine of the 61
    students who majored in science
    at Bryn Mawr were in industrial
    research. Seven were engaged in
    research in hospitals and public
    health, and eight were beginning as
    social workers.

    Further study, largely in gradu-
    ate schools, occupied: the full time
    of 103 of the graduates, with eleven
    enrolled in medical schools in this
    country. Seventeen were combining
    study and a part-time job. Gradu-
    ate schools both here and abroad
    were widely represented, including
    such foreign institutions as the
    School of Oriental Languages in
    Paris, Cambridge . University in
    England and the Universities of
    Madrid, Lausanne, Vienna and
    London. In the group were four
    Fulbright scholars, a Marshall Fel-
    low and seven Woodrow Wilson
    Fellows.

    Next, after teaching and research
    in industry and government, the
    A.B.’s are most numerous in sec-
    retarial and miscellaneous office
    positions, in publishing and public
    relations, insurance and banking,
    retailing, and museum work.

    Vaux Collection
    Continued from Page 1, Col. 5

    them.”

    Dr. Watson has insured the Vaux
    Collection for $100,000, “though it’s
    worth more than that.” The speci-
    mens have a great scientific as well
    as aesthetic value, since they in-
    clude many minerals whose atomic
    structure has not yet been de.
    scribed.

    Mr. George Vaux Jr. (1863-1927),
    a wealthy Quaker lawyer, philan-
    thropist, and collector, sent expedi-
    tions all over the world to gather
    rare minerals which he kept in his
    home (now the Social and Econ-
    nomics Building). Eastern North
    America, and this region in par-
    ticular, is especially well repre-

    sented in his collection; many sam-*

    ples come from quarries long since
    covered up. Mr. Vaux’s collection
    was bequeathed to the Geology De-
    partment by his son.

    Nahm Lecture
    Continued from Page 1, Col. 3

    tion of time, and the compass of
    Rationality reoccurred throughout
    the slides. .

    In concluding, Dr. Nahm return-
    ed to the task of the critic. It is
    a task, he says, which requires

    Great art moves men profoundly
    and it is the critic’s job to know



    Continued on Page 3, Col. 1

    and understand just what its effect
    Mss,

    a

    extensive——-knowledge——of —anate =<





    ~Wednesday, January 14, 1959 THE COLLEGE. NEWS \Page Thrée
    e " @ e
    Duo-Plano Concert Review . {Experimental College Is Proposed:
    Continued from Page 2, Col. 4 ity derived from its folk basis, wyne explained. This ethereal :



    wyne both brought Chopin’s charm
    and sparkle out to the full.

    The next piece on the program
    was a Russian Round Dance by
    Medtner. Medtner is a Russian
    composer,’ born in the late nine-
    teenth century, and usually assoc-
    ia’ with the Russian national-
    ist schdpl of music. This dance,
    Op. 58/No. 1, had a Russian vital-





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    but seemed to me otherwise: rath-
    er uninteresting. The two pianists
    underlined its dyamic contrast,
    and co-operated in producing
    dramatic chordal chromatic cas-
    cades and climbs, storming over the
    length of two keyboards,

    Rachmaninoff’s Two Symphonic
    Dances — Non Allegro and Lento
    assai and ‘Allegro Vivace, are full
    of—complicated—cross-rhythms,—in
    the execution of which Mr. Alwyne
    and Mme. Jambor again showed
    wonderously close musical under-
    standing.

    As an encore. to their magnifi-
    cent performance, Mme. ,Jambor
    and—Mr. Alwyne played a piece
    from Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite.
    The Jittle fairy people whom the
    piece represents, play on minia-
    ture instruments such as violas
    made of almond shells, Mr. Al-





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    music was rendered by tinkling
    themes’ in the upper keyboards,
    over shimmering open harmonies.

    It seems, to conclude from Fri-
    day night’s performance, that the
    discipline of two pianos, rather
    than restricting either of the play-
    ers, brought out their best in vi-
    tality and expression.

    The program, aside from being
    well-executed, was also varied,
    catering, no doubt, to Mme. Jam-
    ihor’s specialties, Bach and Chopin,

    mantic composers,

    ‘Powerhouse Fire

    Continued from Page 1, Col. 2

    The power house was provided
    with new motors for the rebullt
    elevator shaft and a new roof to
    replace the one which was burned.

    Returning students were warned
    to keep their windows shut and
    conserve heat for a day or two until
    the repairs were completed. In re-
    sponse to anxious questions from
    those who learned about the fire
    came always the reassuring re-
    sponse, “The smoke stack still
    stands.”



    as well as Mr. Alwyne’s, the ro-

    “New College Plan”.



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    Radical Education Project Ventured

    In May of 1956, Sidney R. Pack-
    ard, Coordinator of Smith, Am-
    herst, Mt. Holyoke, and the Uni-

    versity. of Massachusetts, commis-
    sioned the Four Colleges to “devel-
    op the plans for a new experiment-
    al college aimed at producing edu-
    cation of the highest quality at a
    minimum cost per student and
    with as small a faculty relative to
    the size of the student body as
    new methods of instruction and
    new administrative procedures can
    make possible.”

    On the basis of that letter and

    '|with a grant from the Fund for

    the Advancement of Education,
    Professors Donald Sheehan of
    Smith, Stuart M. Stoke of Mt.
    Holyoke, C. L. Barber of Amherst,
    and Shannon MeCune, the chair-
    man, of the University of Massa-
    chusetts, have produced, and re-
    cently announced to the press, a
    Hence, as
    reported in the December 12 issue
    of the Mt. Holyoke News, 1962
    may see the opening of a college
    without» majors, departments, re-
    quirements, or extracurricular ac-
    tivities. .

    The small size of the faculty
    (50 professors to 1000 students)
    will be made possible by a com-





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    bination of large lecture classes
    and small seminar groups. Stu-
    dents will take three courses dur-
    ing two of the three terms, fresh-
    men in the fields of social science,
    humanities, and science, wupper-
    classmen in advanced fields which
    they will program themselves. All
    four classes will unite-for the mid-
    winter term, which will offer two

    Examinations will be taken in a
    particular field of interest rather
    than a general area.

    The committee stresses that one
    vital feature of New College is to
    be its dependence‘ on the Four
    Colleges. New College students
    will be required to take at least
    one course at one of the other col-
    leges during their four years of
    study, and will make use of their
    libraries for the independent work
    which is to form the major part of
    the program.

    The development of responsibil-
    ity is stressed: thus there are no
    requirements in such subjects as
    physical education or. languages,
    which the committee feels will be
    learned more eagerly if they are
    learned voluntarily. Religious and
    extra-curricular life will also de-
    pend on student initiative: there
    will be no organized athletics, no
    fraternities or sororities, no re-
    quired chapel attendance.

    The College is to be coeducation-
    al and residential, with large din-
    ing halls and dormitories of under
    75 students each. The faculty rath-
    er than the board of directors will
    choose the president.

    The committee feels that New
    College students should have no
    difficulty gaining admission to
    graduate schools, that on the con-
    trary their training in independent
    study will be better preparation
    for them than a more traditional
    curriculum. They also point out
    advantages for the faculty in the
    more concentrated program which
    will make it possible for faculty
    members to teach the subjects
    they know best rather than try to
    cover a broad area. The mid-win-
    ter term will also offer many of
    them an opportunity. for research
    of their own.





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    Wednesday, January 14, 1959












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