Students Elect 1970 SGA leaders The Elecfion Committee of the SG A has completed conducting the election of new Student Government, class and club officers. During the past four weeks, the committee, under the chairmanship of Laura Hentschel organized and scheduled elections, p r oviding for self-nominations and voting, and making signs, ballots and boxes to accomodate the student body. Voting in several instances it was nec,essary to hold a re-vote because neither candidate could clearly be declared the winner. Elected
to the SGA for the 1970 term were: President: Nancy Gorevin Vice -Preside nt: Mary McLaughlin Recording Secretary: Michele Waldron Correspondi ng Secretary: Antoinette Guerra
Class of !71
Class of '72
Laura Hentschel Teresa Costello Anne Obduski
Renee Spellman Mary Lou Tranchitella
Vol. XIV, No. 3
Class of '73
Kathleen McGill Jane Menendez Jo Malloy Patricia Bedard Installation of the new officers of SGA will take place January 14, the first Wednesday after semester break, at three o'clock in the auditorium. The term of office of these members will extend from January 1970 to January 1971, according to the amendment to the Constitution passc,d last semester. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
C&S Presents "Arsenic," Elects New Officers The Cast and Script Society presented J os·eph Kessel ring's Arsenic and Old Lace, the second annual student-faculty play, on December 5 and 7. Rayette Marcotte directed the play which c,enters about the insane Brcwsters of Brooklyn. Regina dePaolis and Linda Crumlish portrayed the elderly, plotting and poisoning Brewster sisters. Michael Aspras was Mortimer, their nephew and a drama critic. Anne Redden played Elaine Harper, and Father
"Teddy" (Gerald Satlow) charges up "San Juan" staircase.
Santa
Visits Cabrini
Sixty children from St. Basil's Orphanage, Philadelphia and St. Mary of Providence Institute for exceptional children, Chester County, were feted by Cabrini College students at a Christmas party on December 9 at the College.
Rudy Rooymans, her minister father. Gerald Satlow charged the play with his portrayal of "Teddy Roosevelt" Brewster, Mortimer's brother. Karen Liniewski played the role of Jonathan Brewster, Mortimer's criminally insane brother. Rita DiRenzo was Dr. Einstein, the inebriated plastic surgeon responsible for Jonathon's freakish features. William Kuhns, Andrew Litavec, Catherine Murphy and Andrea Nobel were officers on the POE~ force. Lawrenc~ Sedler, as Mr. Gibbs, narrowly escaped the fate of ~ynda Fernandez and Mary Cavanaugh, the corpses of Mr. Spenalzo and Mr. Haskins. Williard Bowers was Mr. Witherspoon, the head of Happydale Institution. An outstanding job of set design and technical work can be attributed to the production crew: Maureen Murphy, lights; Colette Casey, props; Antoinette Guerra, costumes; Adele Stalcup, stage manager; Rosemary Corbo and Elizabeth Pierce, makeup; Patricia Hom, C~rl]lechi, Nancy art; Janet McHale and Kathleen Costigan, sets. Teresa Costello, Susan Sullivan, Marianne Linneman and Laura Hentschel gave cues. Taking over the activities for Cast and Script next semester will be the officers elected December 8: Janet Czarnechi, president; Rita DiRenzo, vicepresident; Linda Crumlish, secretary; Colette Casey, presssecr-etary; and Linda Denesh, treasurer. Mr. Willard Bowers will continue as moderator.
The party is an annu,?-1 community project of the Cabrini College students which is highlighted by the arrival of Santa Claus. The senior class staged a performance of "Charlie Brown." Following the entertainment, Santa distributed gifts to all the children. The jolly gentleman behind the whiskers was the college chaplain, Father Rudy Rooymans.
The Br ewster sisters Crumlish and Regina lis) spy on intruders.
(Li nda de Pao-
CABRINI COLLEGE,RADNOR,PA .
December 17, 1969
College Names Eight to Who's Who ·. Eight seniors at Cabrini College have been named to W ho 's Who Among Students in Amer ican Colleg es and Univ ers iti es: Judith Andrewlevich, Margaret Clark, Mary Ann Drummond, Kathleen Haag, Jean Mannion, Anne M. Redden, J ane Sefranek, and Marie Vaccarelli. Miss Andrewlevich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Andrewlevich of 42 W. Second St., Mt. Car m el, is majoring in ele mentary education and , has a minor in psychology. A Dean's List student, she has held a Pennsylvania state scholarship for four years. Miss Andrewlevich is a member of the Cabrini College chapter of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the Spanish Club, and her residence hall council. She has participated in the annual inter-class play competitions and in intra-mural sports. She has also taught interpretive dance at the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Pa. In conjunction with her psychology studies, she participated in a field work program at the St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Orphanage, .Philadelphia. Miss Andrewlevich is a graduate of the Mt. Carmel Area High Sfhool, where she was named to the National Honor Society. Miss' Clark , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Clark of 442 West Avenue, Northvale, N.J., a chemistry major, has been a Dean's List student. She is a staff member of both the college yearbook, "Woodcrest" and the student newspaper, 'Loquitur." Miss Clark is also a member of the philosophy club and the chess club, and belonged to the Cabrini College chapter of the Pennsylvania State Education Association. She is a graduate of Mother Cabrini High School, New York City. Miss Drummond, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Drummond of 17 W. Golf View Road, Havertown is majoring in elementary education and has a minor in mathematics. A graduate of Archbishop Prendergast High School, she has held Dean's List honors. Miss Drummond is · a member of the Cabrini College ' chapter of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the mathematics club, and is a staff member of the college yearbook, "Woodcrest." For the past two years, she was assistant production manager for the all -black musical "Wake up Man and Live." In her community, Miss Drummond has tutored youngsters in mathematics and has been a substitute teacher of the Blessed John Neuman School, Bryn Mawr. Miss Haag of Parlin, N.J. is the daughter of Mrs. Emily Haag of 11 Washington Road, Parlin, and Mr. Walter Haag of Lake Charles, Louisiana. Miss Haag is majoring in his-
tory and has a minor in philosdphy. She is vice president of the philosophy club and was active in the German club and the international club. She also served as recording secretary of the Student Government Association and was a member of the production staff of the all-black musical "Wake up Man and Liv e." She is an honor graduate of St. Mary's High School, South Amboy, where she was named to the National Honor Society. Sh'.) has held a New Jersey state scholarship for four years. At Cabrini she has been nominated for a Danforth foundation fellowship . Miss Haag is employed by the Ardmore , Pa. realty firm, \Vendell West Co. Miss Mannion, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Mannion of 401 Lincoln Avenue, Havertown, a chemistry major, has held Dean's List honors. She is a member of the German club, the philosophy club, and the Cabrini College chapter of the of the Pennsylvania State Education Association . She also belongs to the chess club and is a staff ,nembe-r of th coltege yearbook, "Woodcrest." A graduate of Archbishop Prendergast High School, she is the second in her family to attend Cabrini College. Her sister, Marie, graduated in May, 1969. Miss Redden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Redden of 550 Fort Washington Avenue, Washington Heights, New York City, a psychology major is currently president of the Student Government Association and served as class president during sophomore and junior years. She is a member of the Council of College Affairs and has been on the Dean's List since her freshman year. Among her activities are piembership in the Cast and Script Dramatic Society and participation in the interclass play competition and the faculty-student play. She also serves as a volunteer teacher aid at the Timothy School for emotionally disturbed children in Bryn Mawr , Pa. Miss Redden is the third member of her family to attend both Mother Cabrini High School (Washington Heights), from which she graduated with honors, and Cabrini College. Her sister Patricia, is a 1962 graduate of Cabrini College and holds the PhD. degree from Fordham University. Another sister, "ll"oreen, graduated in I 1966. Miss Sefranek, daughter of Mrs. Frances Sefranek of R.D. No. 3, Bethlehem, is majoring in history and has a minor in secondary education. She was elected this year as secretary of the Student Academic Council. She has been president of the Cabrini College Athletic Association for the past two years. In addition, she is co-captaih of both the varsity basketball and field hockey teams on which
she has played for four yea~s. She recently qualified as a locally-rated woman's basketball official, rated with the Lehigh Valley Board of Women Officials, an affiliate of the American Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. This enables her to officiate at typical interscholastic or recreational league game$. She was editor in 1968-1969 of the student newspaper, "Loquitur," when it won a First Class honor rating in the 80th All American Critical Service, conducted by the Associated Collegiate Press. The Pennsylvania Federation of Democratic Women awarded Miss Sefranek the Florence Dornblasser Memorial Scholarship for 1969-70. Among her other campus activities are membership in the Cabrini College chapter of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, and participation in the annual inter-class play competition. She also works as a student library assi ~tant. A graduate of Bethlehem Catholic High School, Miss Sefranek has a sister, Helen, who ,is a-sophomore - at E:abrini CuiJege. Miss Vaccarelli, daughter: of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Vaccarelli, of 10 William Street, Red Bank, N.J ., is an English major with minors in history and philo sophy and has had Dean's List honors. Miss Vaccarelli has been editor for two years of the college literary journal, "Cryptic." She is also copy editor of the college yearbook, "Woodcrest." In addition she serves as secretary of the Council of College Affairs. She is a graduate of Red Bank Catholic High School.
Oriental ArtOffered A unique course in Oriental Art will be offered by the Cabrini College Evening Division in January. Special emphasis will be given to the arts of China, India, and Islam. The course will not be a mere historical survey, but will view the arts against the cultural backg'rounds from which they emerged. Consequently, there will be far greater attention given to the aesthetic merits of the various art forms such as jade, ivory, porcelain, lacquer, carpets, calligraphy, metalwork and glasswork in addition to the arts of sculpture, painting and architecture. The aesthetic approach of Oriental Art will be compared with that of the Western world. Comparisons will be made between Classical and Oriental sculp ture, Renaissance and Oriental painting, and Baroque and Oriental gardens and architecture. Artistic influences between the Orient and the West will also be considered. An outstanding private collection of color slides will be used throughout the course.
/
December 17, 1969
LOQUITUR
Page 2
Where have you gone, Joe DeMaggio ...? by Dr. Joseph J. Romano We are supposed to be living in an age in which heroes no longer exist: Boyhood idols have turned into plastic statuary. Some might attribute this widespread dissillusionment to a n egative cynicism that seems to prevail aqiong the younger generation today . Others might point to a more knowledgeable breed of young adults as a cause for the current demythologizing.
Jingle Bells Deck The Halls by KATHLEEN GODDARD BECK
To coin the phra se of an old song: "We need a little Christmas Right this very minute Need a little Christma s now." Our Christmas sea son is in one sense made up of bright lights, rich food and drink, new skie s, mistletoe and lots of silver bells. Commeric al American has its busiest and most productiv e time of the year. Where once all living rooms smelled of fr esh pine or spruc e, t oday, instead of the traditional needles, dust from t he yea r' s storage of the aluminum invention covers the hands as well as the floor. The local post offic e is stacked ; th e colleges and universities are empt y ; and Santa Claus is again Chase Manhattan's "Man of the Month ." The radio and television . stations present sounds and/o r scenes of the season which tend to make everyon e groove in the so-called "Christmas Spirit." However, at the same time, this very same group begins their "Highway Death Toll" and does not let up until the record is met and/or exceeded. But Christmas ha s a greater, deeper significance than tinsel and cranberry sauce. As Linus points out to our beloved Charlie Brown in "A Charlie Brown Christmas""And t.heFe wa s born in a stable in the City of David Savior called Christ the King ... And that, Charlie Brown, is what Christmas is all about." Christma s is a tim e of joy, but not joy over the number of gifts you r eceive . The religious implications of this holiday season are overwhelming and profound, and the resulting feelings propounded by clergies of all faiths 路 is Peace- "Peace on earth and good will to all men." Year after year, Christmas comes with a majority of the people enlightened to the ideals of peace and goes with this facet of the Yule Season paoked away along with the electric trains and twinkle lights. Peace-a very short word but the only one the entire world cannot seem to fit into its societies. Definitions of peace are few and far between, and the ones that do exist are mainly an irrelevant jumble of far-fetched phrases. Peace is being abl e to live with and to honestly face every man. I am not saying that Webster should include this in its next survey, but why all the philosophical stress on a simple theory of honesty and integrity? The philosopher may answer that "peace" like "love," "beauty," and "truth" is an inaminate thing and, therefore, full of hidden meaning and deep physchological impact. If the general public would look mor e simply to peace, maybe peace could be more simply achieved. Christmas is supposedly the time of peace, but I ask for whom? Sure, the young lovers nestled before a glowing fire on Christmaas Eve may have peace. However, a majority of girls between the ages of 18 and 25 will be stood up this year because over half of those young men who would enjoy a warm fire and a loved one near them are standing guard over a lonely, snowy hill in Korea, or wading through stagnant, sweltering swamps in Viet Nam. A cease fire will be called for a day or two to observe the holiday, but the guns will be reloaded and strategy maps unfolded once again. What happens to the Christmas spirit?
Whatever the reasons, it does come as a surprise to learn that President Nixon has named Michael Collins to be assistant secretary of state with the primary purpose of informing dissenters of the real "facts" about the Vietnam War. Everyone remembers Mike Collins as that courageous astronaut who piloted the command ship in lunar orbit while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the surface of the moon. Collins deserves nothing but our praise and admiration for his spectacular space performance. Only a fool would question his expertise in aeronautics in which he trained so hard and worked so well. We do wonder, however, how he could have become an overnight expert on Vie tnam-what with the demanding training program of NASA . What is more alarm ing is the administrations apparent belief in the hero myth . If Mike Collins, the space hero, tells us that the war is A-okay then we are
Jonathan (Karen Liniewski) and Einstein (Rita DiRenzo) sneak into the Brewster home in Arsenic and Old Lace.
supposed to be convinced. It is slightly reminiscent of a TV commercial several years ago when Bart Starr , the expert football hero, claimed also to be an expert on hair care . Y.A. Tittle was also an expert at throwing footballs, but for very obvious reasons he never did that commerical. Collins claims that dissenters are simply misinformed and he is going to provide the necessary information to persuade them of the true reasons for the war. I think Collins is m isinformed . Those who are dissenting seem better informed of the history and motives of the war-more so then those who simply accept it as part of life . If Collins envisions himself as a one-man truth team, he might like to devulge some facts in 路 other areas of interest. For example : the mysterious green beret incident; the scandalous kick -backs in the service clubs; the stock piling of bacteria; the massacre at My Lai (and oth ers? ) . There are plenty of facts that .he might like to produce instead of simply using his heroics in one field as a symbol of respect and authority in another . It is unfortunate that President Nixon does not read the times correctly when it comes to heroes. Coo Coo Cachoo , Mrs . Robinson . . .
Thanks From Biafra
LOQUITUR INTRODUCESITS NEW EDITORS OF 1970
Catherine Murphy and
Stephan 路ie Perez All those who are interested in working on the paper are cordially invited to join the staff. The first meeting will be held the first week after we return from Christmas vacation.
Dear Students, Thank you very much for your contribution. The money will be used to buy medicine, food, or to pay for the charter of a plane to fly these supplies in to the country . As you know, the situation is very bad , with an expected six million dead before Christmas of nineteen sixty-nine. Although the crisis may seem hopeless, it is far from it. There is much that can be done in this country to save these starving Ibos from complete annihilation. Your contribution is a splendid example of humanity in action. But let us remember that is is a continued support of such organiz~tions that give people hope in the cause of peace and brotherhood. Again, thank your for your concern. If there is anything more that we can do in the way of information for you, contact us and we will be more than willing to help out in any way possible . Sincerly yours, Cyprian P.N. Anyanwu III
LETTERS Letters to the Editor may be placed in the Loquitur mailbox in "Faculty Row". Please have copy typed in columns of 30 characters . Only signed letters will be accepted (name will be withheld on request). The letters will not be corrected, so make sure the spelling and grammar is as you . would have it printed.
LOQUITUR STAFF BOX LOQUITUR Editor-in-chief
............................................................Janet
Barbieri
Copy Editor ........................................................Michele 路skibneski
End of Year Clearance For Sale ... Cheap: Lazy hours in the dorm, watching television or "socializing." Nominal fee: be a student in name only--do not support class and club activities. Talk about dissatisfaction with "the way things are" at Cabrini. Talk is cheap, but you must not address it to the proper authorities or your suggestions might be put into effect. Sorry, shoppers, there is No Sale on full participation in college life-it will always demand the time and energy only a few seem able to produce. But remember, you get only what you pay for!
Features
Editor ..........................................................Kathleen
Art Editor ................................................................Elizabeth
Beck Pierce
Typing Editor ..............................................................June Tarasuk Business Manager ..............................................Catherine Business Assistant Photography Reporters Mortimer (Michael Aspras) is tied-up in the Cast and Script production, Arsenic and Old Lace.
....... ........ Stephanie .....................!...........
Murphy Perez
....................................................Mr. Willard Bowers
..................................Frances Addazio, Jane Sefranek, Helen Sefranek
Typists ........................................Jane Cimoch, Kathleen Costigan, Catherine Sulock Faculty Advisor ................................................Mrs. Cecelia Ready
December
17, 1969
LOQUITIJR
Movie List
Make HAIR A Must InYour Life
Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid-Robert Redford, Paul Newman and Katherine Ross. A great script and tremendously exciting performances by the above three. One show that no one should miss. The Madwoman of ChaillotKatherine Hepburn. With a great supporting cast, Miss Hepburn brings to life a colorful character and a great insight into a very meaningful period. The Sterile Cucko0-Liza Minelli. A funny, provocative look at such a touching and tender relationship. The Arrangement--Kirk Douglas, Deborah Kerr and Faye Dunauay. From a tremendously popular book, this film brings to light some of the problems of marriages, through the husband's point of view. Others of Interest Goodbye Mr. Chips Peter O'Toole Alice's Restaurant - Arlo Guthrie The Battle of Britain - 12 stars A Walk with Love and DeathAngelica Hustan and Assaf Dayan Easy RiderPeter Fonda Strongly Recommen d ed Books The Seven Min utesIrving Wallace The House on th e Stran d Dauphne Du Maurier The Death Committee - Noah Gordon The Inheritors-Harold Robbins Potak"
~
! i
Pa ge 3
by Linda Crumlish The theater was alive with people. I marv eled at this sudden influx of mi ddl e- age d Theater Guild m embers in what would seem alien territory. But there they were, lini ng the aisles as I trudged through seas of endless faces to my seat in the "uppest" balcony. The stage was completely exposed to our sight with people running here and there. "Stage hands," I asked the clean-cut Divinity student who was already in the process of informing me that this was his fifth attendance. "The actors," he replied with obvious superiority. Suddenly the lights dimmed. The strains of fami_liar music filled the air. People rushed together under the stage lights, some leaping off balconies and others streaming down the aisles -Hair had begun. I can't begin to adequately describe what the next three hours were like. I can only suggest strongly that you make Hair part of your life. You can play the cast album until the grooves wear out and listen to endless second hand observations, but you'll never believe how good something can make you feel unless you're there.
Special Note: I Can't Wait Till Tomorr ow ... For all those football fansJoe Namath and Cick SchnappInstant Replay - Jerry Kramar are colorful, vivid and good --and- Diclr chna pp , -and- ~~~~reading.c--~~~~~~~~~-
of modernity that peddles the youth cult with no regard for theatric art. Hair, I contend, had a very obvious plot represented by the art of professional, unorthodox performers. The central character is a man named Claude who lives and loves in a commune-type atmosphere in Big City, U.S.A. He and his friends present thirty musical and countless vocal expressions of our present generation's outlook -on life. Claude receives h1s draft notice midway through Act 1, anq this is the origin of the conflict. The rest of the play is spent in attempting to find the answer to Claude's dilema. His friends try to persuade him to stay with them in this way of life that he advocates and braves so well In flashbacks we see his parents telling him to honor them and his country. In the end Claude is left to make a solitary decision which remarkably affects hiS"'life and those of his friends. The show ended as the cast pleads to let the sun shine again and the audience streamed onto the stage.
The impact of the play evoked mixed reactions, and many of the faces grooving along the stage in the end were far from young. It doesn't matter whether the nudity offended or the scattering of four letter words, shocked, because behind every song, every action, every little Life is an excellent subject word there was hope. As I for satire. How refreshing it is walked out I wondered, were to see something take a needed people a little more thoughtful, swat at our suburban beliefs, a little nicer, were their lives prejudices and our "ideal" way affected in the least? If so, then of life. Critics have called Hair Hair was a completely uni que lotles -a....modcom _ex.ruQ_ita,.,,t ~io~n !.-_ e;;;.; xperie _n_c_e .'--'"-'"""--""
T¡HANKS for all yourhelp
Page 4
1970 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. ,Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar.
December 17, 1969
LOQUITUR
13 Our Lady of Angels Penn State Ogontz) Villanova 27 Cheney State 29 Chestnut Hill 3 Phila. Col. Bible 5 Muhlenberg 10 Immaculata 12 Rosemont 16 Holy Family 18 Swarthmore 24 Gwynedd-Mercy 26 Eastern Baptist 3 Manor Jr. College 5 Bryn Mawr
20 22
Home Home Home Home Home Away Home Home Away Home Away Away Away Home Away
7:00 7:00 7:00 7:30
4:15 7:00 7:00 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30
7:15
Scrimmage Scrimmage Varsity V JV V JV V JV Varsity V JV V JV Varsity ·V JV V JV V JV Varsity V JV
+ + + + + + + + +
Girls Play by Boys' Rules All you gym class students, basketball fans, and casual collectors of curious informationtake notes-you may see girls' basketball being played very differently next semester. For one thing, five girls from each team will be going onto the court at a time instead of the traditional six. In this respect, girls basketball will look quite similar to that played by boys' teams. This change from six to five players, plus 17 other moretechnical changes, are part of the new experimental rules to be tried for the next two years by girls' and women's teams across the United States. While in the experimental stage, the changeover is not mandatory. However, the majority of the women's college teams in the Philadelphia area have decided to adopt the experimental rules for this season. The only rule they decided
to delete was a 30-second rule und2r which a team would have a limit of thirty seconds in which to shoot after it gained possession of the ball. Area coaches felt it would be difficult to purchase and operate the timing devices similar to those used in the NBA pro games. Mrs. Helen Goodwin, Cabrinni's coach, acknowledges that the 'Cabrini varsity and JV teams will play their 15-game schedule according to the experimental rules unless individual teams request that the official six-player rules be used. At the present time more than half of Cabrini's opponents have agre·ed to the experimental rules. Perhaps the greatest single factor bringing about the writing of new rules is that the United States is the only country where five-player basketball has not been offical for girls' teams. Jane J. Sefranek
.Bryn Mawr Offers Grad Students Aid The Bryn Mawr Graduate School in Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania is now receiving applications from men and women for graduate work for the 1970-71 academic year. Departmental fellowships and scholarships in all major fields of study are being offered with work leading to the M.A., M.S.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Awards r.:\nge from $2500 to $3000, it was announced by Mrs. Richard W. Foster, Dean of the Graduat~ School. National Defense Graduate Fellowships under Title IV of the National Defense Education Act are available to students entering Bryn Mawr Graduate School in ' many fields of study including B~ology, Chemistry. Classical and Near Eastern Archeology, English, French. German, Greek and Latin, History of Art, Mathematics, Philosophy. Psychology and Spanish. Other fellowships in the award of Bryn Mawr are the Margaret Gilman Memorial Fellowship in French, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation Fellowships in History of Art, th~ Emmy Noether Fellowship in Mathematics, the Ida H. Oglivie Fellowships in Geology, the Max Richter Fellowships in Political Science. National Science Foundation graduate traineeships are also available to first and second year graduate students in mathematics, the natural sciences and in certain fields in the social sciences.
Pfe·Professional Traineeships Offered AtDevereux Undergraduates, who will be juniors, seniors or beginning graduate students by the Summer of 1970 are invited to apply before Jan. 15, 1970, for PreProfessional Traineeships at the Devereux Schools, a group of residential multidisciplinary treatment. remedial education and rehabilitation centers. Some consideration may also be given to freshmen and sophomores, as space permits. Summer traineeships for appointment as a Research Aide, Professional Aide, Resident Camp Counselor and Day Camp Counselor/Tutor are available at the Pa. branch in suburban Phila. A few traineeships may also be available at other Devereux branches and camps located in: North Anson, Maine, Santa Ba~bara, Califor-
nia, Hot Springs, Arkansas, Victoria, Texas, and in Rutland, Massachusetts. Acceptances will be announced on or before Feb. 15, 1970. Tax exempt training stipends of up to $200 per month for a 2-3 month period are offered to qualifie<;l applicants who are U.S. citizens and unmarried. Room and board is available without charge and the trainees can count on the entire amount of the tax exempt stipend (from $375-$600) with no deductions. The traineeships are supported, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Rehabilitation Services Administration and are designed to provide an orientation to career opportunities for work with the mentally retarded and the emotionally disturb-
ed in special education and vocational rehabilitation, in psychological services, in the mental health disciplines and in related research. The Traineeships cover a fulltime period of training combined with applied service-oriented work experience and observation of on-the-spot "milieu therapy." Depending upon their functional roles, some trainees will have an opportunity for work experience with mentally retarded and /or emotionally disturbed children, adolescents and young adults presenting problems of learning and/or of personal adjustment. Trainees who do not have direct contact with children will assist the staff as Professional Aides and as Research Aides in many behind-the-scenes activities and in related research and "writing." Further information on the Summer Pre-Profession a1 Traineeships and application blanks are available from Dr. Henry Platt, Director, The Devereux Foundation Institute for Research and Training, Devon, Pa. 19333. Tel: 215 MU 8-2600.
~ a.\.\\t.1'
·&~tr i
Carryout
A program in the History and Philosphy of Science, supported by the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation, and leading to the Ph.D. degree is offered at Bryn Mawr in coo!)eration with the American Pl).ilosophical Society and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The program emphasizes the biological, chemical and physical sciences since the Renaissance. The core curriculum is being taught by four full-time professors at Bryn Ma:wr and the University of Pennsylvania. Fellowships in this program are awarded by Bryn Mawr College and the University of Pennsylvania. There are numerous opportunities for study in the Graduate Department of Social Work and Social Research at Bryn Mawr. A variety of financial resources are available includ-
ing funds for traineeships from the United States Department · of Health, Educaton and Welfare, g~ants from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and fellowships and scholarships from the College. The Graduate School at Bryn Mawr is large enough to offer work in all major departments. but small enough for each student to purse his , work in a flexible program designed for his own needs. Students and faculty share research projects in small seminars. Applications for fellowships, scholarships and other financial aid should be received by February 15, 1970. Applications for admission are open until September 1, 1970. Further in~ormation may be obtained from the Dean of the Graduate School, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania, 19010.
BMC Sponsors Summer Studies Abroad Bryn Mawr College is again sponsoring two summer pr6grams abroad for men and women college students-one in Spain and the other in southern France. Both programs, offering intensiye work in significant aspects of the culture of each country, will begin on June 22, 1970 and continue for six weeks. Bryn Mawr's program in southern France-the lnstitut D'Etude:s Francaises D' Avignon -is now in its ninth year. The Spanish program-the Centro de Estudios Hispanicos en Madrid-has been operating for five years. Both the Centro and the Institute are directed by Bryn Mawr professors, with facilities drawn from universities and colleges in this country and Europe. Students live and take their meals with families living in Avignon or Madrid. The residential plan was developed in order to provide the best basis for fluency in the language and for acquiring a deepet knowledge of the life and customs of the country. Classroom work is supplemented with lectures given by scholars in art, literature, history and the social sciences. At the end of the six weeks there is a period of free travel when students may arrange practical projects in their own fields, particularly in art and archaeology. Classes and lectures for the Centro are held in the Inter-
national Institute in Madrid with access to libraries in the city. All academic activities of the lnstitut are held in the Palais du Roure in Avignon with the research facilities of the Bibliotheque Cal vet available for student use. During the Avignon drama festival, students at the Institut, have the opportunity to attend the plays produced at the Palaid des Papes by varidus French drama groups and later play:s at the Festival du Theatre at Arles or the Choregie in Orange. Following the final examinations at the Centro in Madrid, the group accompanied by professors from the faculty will make a study-excursion to Valladolid, Leon, Santiago de Compostela, Zamora and Salamanca. A limited number of scholarships are available for both programs. For information regarding admission, write to the Director of the Centro or the Director of the Institute, at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, 19010. Advertising rates are here by set at $1.25 per column inch with discounts for larger ade and for clubs and organizations directly related with Cabrini College. Classified ads shall be taken at the rate of $1.00 per 5 or fewer lines with discounts on such ads frqm Cabrini students.
MUS
IC The
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10% Off On All Dinners above $1.25 to All Cabrini Students who Show I.D.
Plea.se Phone Orders Ahead-MU Open Weekdays and Sundays -
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TOWN & COUNTRY RESTAU RANT . Suburban Square Montgomery Avenue, Ardmore
No Cover No Minimum
Plenty of Free Parking