“~ ollege ews Ny, 20 aoe At WAYNE AND. BRYN MAWR, PA,, TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1925 ane neeneeenesentonenienemeen nent Prite 10 Cents . NEXT EUROPEAN FELLOW WILL BE E. WATTS; ’25 Helene and Cecile Rubel Graduate Fellowship Goes to D. Burr, 1921's European Fellow UPPER TEN ANNOUNCED Emily Pepper Watts is the thirty-sixth ~ European Fellows She graduates-magna-- cum laude with 265 honor points (274 on 111 hours if her advanced standing is counted). She is the first European Fellow with the group of English and French. Miss Watts was prepared at Miss Ma- deira’s School, Washington, D. C., and at the Shipley School, Bryn Mawr. She has been the holder of the Sheelah Kil- roy Scholarship, the English Prize and the Brook Hall Scholarship. ‘Last Friday in chapel Miss Park an- nounced the fellowship. awards. Doro- thy. Burr, of Philadelphia, Bryn Mawr, 1923, summa cum laude, received the Helene and Cecil Rubel Fellowship; ‘Mary Albertson, of ‘Magnolia, N. J., Bryn Mawr, 1915, cum laude, received the Garrett Europea’ Fellowship. Rosa- mond. Tuve, of Minieapolis, graduate scholar in English, Bryn. Mawr, 1924-25, received the President M. Carey Vikonias Fellowship, while the Bryn Mawr Eu- ropean Fellowship went to Emily Watts, 25, who will graduate magna cum laude. The. Rubel Fellowship, awarded to Bryn Mawr graduate students, may be used in any centre of learning or in trav- eling and for any purpose approved by the faculty. Although Miss Burr has nev- er done any graduate work in Bryn Mawr, she is regarded by the faculty and by the donor of the scholarship as eligible, since her graduate work in Ath- ens has been done as holder of a Bryn Mawr fellowship. So competent was Miss Burr’s first year of work that she won the fellow- ship of the American School at Athens against other candidates, men and wom- en. Several of these had much longer experience in graduate and field work than she. “Her second year is being spent with a record equally brilliant,” said Miss Park. Exceptionally brilliant was Miss Burr’s record throughout. She was Sheelah Kil- roy ‘Memorial Scholar in English, and _ Special Scholar in 1921-1922. In 1921 she " CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 ~NEW YORK ENTERTAINMENT FOR BENEFIT OF ENDOWMENT FUND cl Nase, Basset Plays, Sketches and Music An entertainment will be given for the benefit of the Bryn Mawr Endowment Fund in the ballroom of the Colony Club n March 86, at 8.30 P. M. Undergraduates will present “The Re- . luctant Lion,” by Anne Shiras, "25; the Alumnae will present Barrie’s “Rosalind,” played by Haroldine Humphreys, ’23, and ena Hand, ’22; Cornelia Skinner, ’22, will give monologues, and Marietta Bit-. ter, ex-'26, will give a harp solo.. Tickets may be obtained from Frances Childs, 114 East Eighty- fourth street, New DR. STEWART DISCUSSES STORM CENTERS AND THEIR PERILS Germany is Bitter; Russia Crippled. ‘Hungary Very venoms "AS you look at the map of rope, there are four storm centers,” said Dr. George Stewart, of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, speaking under the} * auspices of the Christiah Association, in Pembroke West _ Sitting Room, last Thursday night: erate si pr engmaaiy “There is the triangle between. Eng- land and France and Germany, then Hun- gary, Russia and the Near East. Their quarrels rest on geographic and economic difficulties. England is an_ industrial country with a million- unemployed. As one-third of her frade is with Germany, she naturally wants to see her on her feet again. France, on the other hand, is self- supporting, and wants to: see Germany kept down for the sake of security and reparations. “Germany is one of the great nations of Europe today, when you consider her high birth-rate, her disciplined population, and her distinguished artistic and mili- tary history. She is always to be recog- nized. ° “The grodp mind is a myth. The Ger- man people are not repentant.” They are very bitter because of the violation of the fourteen points, because of the blockade, and_beca of the quartering of black troops on the Rhine. . “It. is almost a religion among young Hungarians to restore the truncated re- mains of old Hungary. It was shaved away two-thirds, after the plebiscite ar- ranged by the peace treaty. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 FRENCH AND RUSSIAN MUSIC PLAYED AT FOURTH CONCERT Members of Phila. Orchestra With Mr. Alwyne and Singer Perform At the fourth concert of the series under the auspices of the Music Department, in Taylor Hall on Monday. evening, March 16, a delightful and finely balanced pro- gram was presentéd, by Horace’ Alwyne, Piano; Mardel Tabuteau, Oboe; Walter Guetter, Bassoon; William Kincaid, Flute; Daniel Bonade, Clarinet; Anton Horner, Horn, and Baron Hesse von Schencheney, Baritone, accompanied by Agnes Clune Quinlan. Beginning with Beethoven and ending with Honegger and Roussel, , the. program was thoroughly interesting; it included works by two famous musical associates, Cesar Cui and Rimsky-Korsakow, and songs by another Russian composer, Taskin. The large audience were particularly enthusiastic over the Rhapsodie by Hon- egger (for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, and Piano), with its very modern and _ in- tensely complex rhythm, and the Diver- tissement of Roussel (for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn, and~ Piano), which had a very beautiful part for Flute. Baron von Schencheney in response to the demands of his audience, sang an en- core after his first group of songs, ‘and: repeated the second part of a “Spanish Serenade” at the end of his second group, The program was as follows: Quintet ; (For F PA Evaica das is eke . Beethoven Oboe, estat, Bassoon, and ey a Horn) ‘CONTINUED ON PACK 5 bad when it becomes CONSTITUTION OF SELF GOVERN. MENT CHANGED MARCH 18 Dress and Chaperone Rules Relaxed; Studies Still Closed to Men At a meeting of the Joint Undergradu- ate and Self-Government Legislatures held in the Chapel, Wednesday, March 18th, several rules*regarding undergradu- e conduct were amended. ‘ The ‘Little Chop Houses were sided | to the tist-of-places-where-one-may—dine-+ with men unchaperoned. H., Hough, ’25, president of the Self-Government Asso- ciation, announced that as long as there was any doubt about the abvisability of} adding the Russian Inn to this list the board had decided not to suggest it. She also announced that the Board of Directors had approved the theatre rule passed at the last meeting. Three or more students may now go to the theatre at night unchaperoned, except to the Chestnut Street Opera House and the Walnut Stréet Theatre. They approved the amendment to the Constitution, passdiat the last meeting, to increase the size of the Executive Board. By the new election rule any candidate receiv- ing nominations to the number of 15 more than the sum of all the other nomi- nations is considered elected. The rule against taking a hitch or lift will apply in the future only to students in -parties of less than three. Hockey skirts-may be worn in Cartref and. the Infirmary. The motion, to allow men in students’ rooms for three hours on Sunday rihinain st was not car- ried. Collége breakfast and sub-freshman ac- CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 __ YALE PROFESSOR DISTINGUISHES BETWEEN GOOD AND BAD JAZZ Emphasis on Shrieking Sensations is Dangerous, Says Dr. Tweedy “Tam no foe of jazz in general; jazz of the right sort and in the right place,” said the Rev. H. H. Tweedy, professor of Practical Theology in Yale Univer- sity, speaking in Sunday evening chapel of March 22. “Good jazz is just an ex- pression of rollicking youth, not intoxi- ; cated, but indulging in a perfectly legiti- mate spree.” The difficulty is that the modern world is not confining itself to wholesome forms, but is jazzing life itself. We may apply this test: “Is this good or bad jazz,-and ought it to be jazzed at all?” Are syncopated hymns, jumbled cubist paintings, meaningless free verse, part of the advancing tide of human progress or only its encumbering froth and foam? Even more dangerous is this sledge- hammer emphasis on shrieking sensa- tions. There are multitudes of mad, de- structive apostles of jazz who cry that |. no virtuous man can be an artist, that right and wrong are meaningless words, that truth is only the lie easiest to be- lieve. 5 “T am warning you agairiet jazz, a spirit in part vigorous and wholésome, in part leprous, moribund; good, when it stands for progress and a constructive future, ‘mocking, mad, cynical and destructive, dancing on the ruins of humanity’s Cathedral of | Rheims.” brought up by petition, | SWARTHMORE GAME ie DEFEAT FOR VARSITY Red Team’s Superior Passing Turns Their Time to Advantage. Play Begins with Jenkinson te VARSITY GUARDING LIVELY Varsity, outdistanced t Girysicaity and technically, was beaten here 31-40, by the Swarthmore team last Saturday. = The first two baskets were made auto- matically by Swarthmore. Their very tall and accurate centre, Jenkinson, had the ball aimed toward the red forward before it came within jumping: distance of S. Mc- Adoo, ’26.