F ; a wget ews he College ==" VOL. XX, No. 22° BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1934 Sopyright BRYN MAWR COLLEGE NEWS, 1934 PRICE 10 CENTS Seen Dr. Compton Speaks _ On World of Chance Physical Laws Are All Correct For the Average, Not For The Individual CHANCE EVENTS OCCUR Dr. Arthur H. Compton, lecturing in Goodhart Wednesday -eyening on “Do We Live in a World of Chance?,” stated that we do live in a world of chance, but that.at the same time there. is a strong element of choice or of free will. “Science has opened up a world where human thoughts ‘are important, and where we can see once again Plato’s vision of man as master of his destiny; and beyond, because while adhering to the vision, we still hold to statistical scientific laws.” Man can, if he wants and tries, do something on his own initiative, and his responsibility “s the action proves. that he has freedom of per- sonal choice. On the other hand, the most fundameastal. principle of science “is that “Nature obeys its'own laws.” Science and modern civilization, which arises from it, are based on the idea that a truth, once proved and tested, is reliable. If nature is not reliable, then why study the laws of nature? But into modern physics has come the principle of uncertainty, the idea that nature does not obey exact laws, that there is no perfect effect from cause, and that the laws of natire are flexible and allow human qualities un- known before. If this were not true, that is if the laws of nature were ful- ly reliable, then human actions, such as raising one’s arm, would_ result from molecules striking one another and man would be a machine. The fixed physical laws would determine the movement of the arm without the interference of personal will, and the person would not be responsible for his action ut the human side of the = that the arm moves by the person’s will, The physical laws are obeyed, but the desires of the individual enter into the question, too. If this means that the laws of nature Continued on Page Three Archeology Department Gets News of Expedition The Archaeology Department re- ceived a cable from Miss Hetty Gold- man, ’03, announcing that a success- ful start had been made on the exca- vating expedition sponsored by Bryn Mawr and by the Archaeological In- stitute of America. The cable read: “Excellent arrangements. Govern- ment permission. Preliminary sound- ings. Sites promising.” Miss Goldman went out to Ankara in February to ask permission to ex- -eavate in South-Eastern Turkey. The officials granted her a permit to work in the sites not far from Adana, fifty miles from Tarsus. There are mounds of many cities in that neighborhood, some of which have been worked on , and have produced fragments of My- cenean pottery. The expedition is very anxious to find Mycenean re- mains. like those found in tombs near Haifa by Professor Garstang, and in tombs near Hamath in Syria by Dr. Ingholt, of the University of Beirut. _No actual digging will be done this season by the expedition. Miss Gold- man has been at Adana, investigating the mounds and studying the shyeds of pottery. which she found near the surface. By this time, she has prob- ably been joined by Dr. Emil Forrer and by Ann Hoskin, Mary Elizabeth Garret Graduate European Fellow for 1933-34, who has been working with. the School of Classical Studies at Ath- _ens. Dr. Forrer will give advice on the choice of the site, which will be in a region concerning which he has expert knowledge. He and Miss Hos- kin will join Miss Goldman to work on the preliminary soundings, but the real work of excavating is not ex- pected to begin until next fall, when a considerably larger number of Bryn Mawr grad owill be working on ‘it than are now on the expedition. » COLLEGE CALENDAR Tuesday, May 3: Charlotte Van C. Carter on “The Interna- tional School of Art.” Common Room, 5.00 P, M.. Saturday, May 5: German Language. Examination. Tay- lor, 9.00 A. M. Varsity Tennis _ Game vs. Beaver College. Tuesday, May 8: Mrs. Joseph Dohan on “Opportunities for Work in Museums.” Common Room, 4.45 P. M. Wednesday, May 9: trial Group Picnic. Room, 6.00 P. M. Indus- Common New ‘Courses Announc _in Several Depa , “There will be a number of re rangements and new courses,” said Mrs. Manning in chapel on Thursday, “which students should consider be- -}fore making’ out their schedules for next year.” Changes in English, French, Latin, History of Art, and Biblical Literature, as well as in His- tory, Education and Economics will; be made. : | Advanced French students should! | consult Dean Schenck for information! about their work, but readjustments | in the first year course will apply par-' ticularly to next year’s Freshmen. | The course will be given in one section rather than in two, and the work will not beso specialized as it has been. It will follow and tie up the threads of study begun in school. Students who have had special opportunities and can do advanced work may be admitted to the second year course at once. This will be given in sections and will econ- sist of a more detailed study of nine- teenth century French literature. The English courses are to be ad- justed so that major students will Have more choice in their work and the Junior year will not be so strictly prescribed. English Literature of the Romantic Period will not be given un- til year after next, but Dr. Chew will gives in its place Tudor and Stuart Drania. There may be other changes about which major students can find out from the department. Dr. Rogers will give the course in Educational Psychology in the tirst semester. Although her work will keep hér in the Psychology department in the second semester, students may go on from.this course to others in the Education department. First year Psychology is a. prerequisite for the course, and any one who intends to teach should try to take it as early as possible in her college career. The History department announces a course in Modern English History to be given by Miss Robbins. Her course in England Since 1485 is not a prerequisite, but students will find it valuable. — ve The absence of’ Miss Marti makes it impossible for Medieval French and Latin to be given next year, but Miss Lake will give a new and interesting course in Rapid Reading of Latin. Latin majors may choose either this or Advanced Composition. Astronomy will be given if tere is a demand for it, but Dr. Michels pre- fers to ‘give the course in alternate years, so that plans for it re not definite and must work. in with his schedule. The History of. Art department is answering a long heard student de- mand for a course in Modern Art. This will be given by Dr. Diez instead of his Art of the Far East. No pre- requisite is demanded, but students who-take—it-myst--demonstrate some}. foundation in History of Art. The most important general change is that in the department of Biblical Literature. Because of the departure of Dr. Cadbury, the work will be-divid-|} ed next year. Dr. Chew will give the Literary History of the English Bible, ‘a coursé ‘which he has given before as The English Bible. The work will be along lines plan- ned by him and by Dr. Cadbury and will consist of a study of the Bible from the point of view of its: influ- ence on literature and art. It will come on Tuesday and Friday at 11.00. It is possible that this course will be- i. Continued on Page Three This will come at 19.00. | oe Habit ttacks All Editors Old Questionnaires Reveal That Introverts Domesticated Smoking Room USE OF LEISURE SHOWN | A favorite occupation at Bryn Mawr, ‘and one which is of long standing, is ‘that of filling out questionnaires. Printed sheets of paper appear at reg- ‘ular. intervals, are read avidly by ithose who fill them out, and‘ viewed ents proudly by those who produced them. | Almost every subject of interest has “been queried from all aspects: courses, smoking, marriage, examinations, and | ,even personalities are taken up ‘turn, The merry little custom began ‘in the days of Tipyn O’Bob, and has |been conscientiously carried on by all in isueceeding editors of college publica- tions A long time ago, the editors of Tip had a great curiosity to find out. how the students passed their time. The means of ledrning, then as now, was through a questionnaire, which de- manded an account of every moment. One of the questions was: “How much time do you spend in (a) talking, (b) resting, sewing, cleaning, clean- ‘ing up room, sorting wash, wasting ‘time, (c) any occupation not listed above (if important, specify).” The inext query was for the number of ‘hours spent in “Private Reflection.” ‘The questions on reading asked for .the author and title of books. The ‘results of this little excursion into the students’ private lives have unfortu- nately been lost, so we cannot com- ‘pare the amounts of time we and our ;mothers spent at piano practice. We ‘are sure, however, that the ques- tionnaire, which is appended below, ‘was received with the same frenzied i ‘joy that it would be now. | How many minutes do you spend in: 1., Meals: Dinner, Breakfast, Lunch. (Put “ex” for exchange with other hall, ‘‘T-H” for Tea- house, “p” for picnic, “Out” for elsewhere.) Dressing and changing. (a) Singing on steps, (b) listen- ing to singing, (c) fire-drill, (d) * hall-meeting, Rehearsals (If directing or coaching, write “Directing” in Remarks column) (a). Glee Club, Mandolin Club, Choir, (b) show, entertainment or exhibition (specify), (c) May-Day. Board and Committee Meetings: (a) Self-Gov., (b) Christian Assoc., (c) Undergrad., (d) Ath- letic Assoc., (e) Class Committee (specify), (f) Typ, Lantern, (specify whether Business or Edi- torial Boards.) General Business Meetings: Class (if song practice, write “song”’); (b) Self-Gov.; (c) Christian Assoc.; (d) . Under- grad.; (e) Athletic Assoc.; (f) College Settlement; (g) Can- sumers’ League;; (h) Debating Soc.; (i) Soeialist Soc.; (j) De- partmental Club (specify). College Functions: (Specify or- ganization, giving function) (a) Plays, Concerts, or Receptions; (b) Meetings with speeches or papers by students; (c) Meetings with speeches or papers by out- siders. : Maids’ or —-Lab-boys’- or--Settle- ‘ment or Sunday-school—Classes. (If off campus state where. Give Continued on Page Six (a) Vocational Conference Mrs. Joseph M. Dohan, of The University Museum in Phil- adelphia will speak on “Oppor- tunities for Work in’: Museums” in the Common Room of Good- hart Hall Tuesday afternoon, May the eighth, at quarter of five. Tea will be served at half-past four. Everyone who is interest- ed is cordially invited. Pa + Undergrad The following officers have been elected for 1934-35: President: Peggy Little, ’35. Vice - President: Maynard ’ Riggs, 35. Secretary: Frances Porcher, 36. : Treasurers burg, ’37. - First Junior Member: nor Fabyan, ’36. Second Junior Member: . Ag- nes Halsey, 36. au Sophomore Member: Esther Harden- Elea- Edith Rose, ’37. we Little May Day Practices Come From Old Traditions Little May Day, unlike big May Day, does not have a definite origin, but has gradually been. formed by an accumulation of different toms. Its numerous festivities repre- sent some of the most delightful of Bryn Mawr traditions. To know something about these various cus- toms adds to the general charm of this day of celebration. The Maypole dances and songs grew out of Big May Day, which first took place in 1902. The general theory seems to have been that having the dances every year would keep the un- dergraduates limber between the larger quadrennial celebrations. Of course, it would be wrong to consider this aspect of little May Day as en- tirely utilitarian, The enjoyment that the students get from these dances has always been such that it would have been unkind to deprive them of it for three out of every four years. The hoop-rolling is the oldest of the traditions, and can be traced back at least to the late Nineties. Besides be- ing ripened by age, this custom has a piercing (no other Word will describe it) significance. In the olden days, rolling hoops meant that all the sen- iors had passed their orals. More- over, it was a law that if any senior failed her oral no hoops could be roll- ed. To dwell upon this last possibility is all too mournful, so let us imagine that every spring deliriously joyful maidens rolled their hoops with bac- chanalian frenzy. Continued on Page Three cus- 1934-35 Scholarships Awarded at May Day. Vung Yuin Ting Wins Eastman and Divides Hinchman with Elizabeth Monroe NEW FACULTY COMING “May Day,” said President Park in her address to the college.on Tues- day morning, “is. one of the great days ~ of the college year, because it ties the past year to the coming one.” The. announcement of changes in the fac- ulty and the awarding of fellowships and scholarships in recognition of the past and for help in the future, aid in forming this tie; so Pygsident Park at once announced the following changes in the faculty for next year, as an addition to those announ¢ed in March. Professor Helson has been granted leave of absence to take a part-time position at the University of Southern California, exchanging work with Dr. Milton Metfessel, who has been ap- pointed Lecturer in Psychology- here. Dr. Metfessel will probably continue the work in which he is especially in- terested, the investigation of sound. . In the French Department, Profes- sor Canu has been granted leave of absence, and Mrs. Daudon will work in the first and second year French | courses in addition to teaching super- vised French Reading as usual. Mlle. Maud Rey, who has had extensive training in the theatrical schools of France, will lecture in French Diction. Mr. Howard Brinton, who is to be Acting Director of Pendle Hill next year, will also give a course here in the History of Religions, Among the wardens, two are not re- turning next year. Miss Cross, War- den of Denbigh, will be replaced by Caroline P. Walker, whom many Bryn Mawr students already know.as teach- er of history in the Ethel Walker School. The Assistant’ Warden of Rockefeller, who is to replace Miss . Grant is Eloise Gallup ReQua, Direc- © tor of the Library of International Re- lations and of the Children’s Interna- tion Library at the Century of Prog- ress exposition held in Chicago this Continued on Page Four ‘College Ides of Yesteryear Discovered Seniors Locked in Taylor for Oral Orals Orals are no longer orals, and with the present era of dumbness which has descended upon Bryn Mawr, we raise a discordant voice to recall the glori- ous past. All the blue books in Bryn Mawr cannot make up for the imple- ments of torture that were the mode in our grandmother’s day. They, as Seniors, took their orals orally, and the whole college was prostrated dur- ing the four times per year set as dates upon which the oral examina- tions were given. On these college Ides the Seniors were led from one torture chamber to the next, first be- fore the examiners, and from thehce to the confines of Taylor loft, where hysteria ran high and the death-rate was appalling. It is no wonder that our fore-mothers were inspired ‘to start the custom of oral singing, and to inspire succeeding classes to con- tinue it because of the extraordinar- ily clever songs they wrote. The oral-writers of that time had much the same spirit in regard to their language examinations as we have now, but--the circumstances. surround- ing their labors were different enough from ours to bring forth such an in- teresting comment as the following, senior year—with a sung with Bryn Mawr vigor in 1915. to the tune of Sing A Song of* Six- pence: Hordes of sorry Seniors cramming hard at Dutch, ° Some crammed éheir brains away; they didn’t lose much. Countless sorry Seniors learned some French in France, They didn’t like a steerage trip, and so they missed a chance, Many sorry Seniors tutored with a will, . Me. But they took in washing when they got the bill. Some sorry Seniors. crammed till 4 A; M., Overslept the oral, quite a blow to them. Couple of sad Seniors wrote an oral ditty, Died of the attempt to be original and witty. A few sorry Seniors really knew a lot, But their friends’ put poison in their coffee pot. One sorry Senior actually passed, The shock was terrific and she breath- ed her last. Oh, sorry Seniors: arefi’t there any more? Never mind, they’ll meet again at oral Number 4. If we were footnoting the above we should surely be able to make up a vivid account of the singer’s life from the. facts therein, with an espe- cially scholarly comment on the “tak- ing of oral number 4” (a custom that -is-still retained in our practice of tak- ing the oral fall and spring in our junior year, and then fall and spring phenomenally large and congenial crowd at the last stand). Also, we could trace the in- fluence of this early bard on later works of the same type: witness the same spirit of camaraderie in the memorable lines of a 1921 song to the tune J Wish I Was A Little Bird: “*For. when it cometh to French and es wi You’ve got to-do it all by yourthelf.’ To thpite that proctor (speaking _ above), I reply, Continued on Page fix PERE Page Two ‘THE COLLEGE NEWS OLLEGE N THE COLLEGE NEWS Published weekly during the College Year (excepting during Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter. Holidays, and, during examination weeks)_in_theinterest—of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr. College. =f 4 | | | | 1 | Orn eal The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in Bred hog fs ib Raa either wholly or in part witheut written permission of the tor-in-Chief. Editor-in-Chief ’ GERALDINE RHOADS, ’35 Copy Editor DIANA TATE-SMITH, 735 Editors ELIZABETH LYLE, ’37 ANNE MARBURY, 737 HELEN .FISHER, ’37 FRANCES: PORCHER, 736 PHYLLIS GOODHART, ’35 EDITH ROSsB, ’37 FRANCES VANKEUREN, ’35 Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor PRISCILLA HOWE, ’35 BARBARA CARY, ’36 Business Manager Subscription. Manager BARBARA LEWIS, ’35. MARGOT BEROLZHEIMER, 735 Assistants AGNES ALLINSON, ’37 LETITIA BROWN, '’37 | DOREEN CANADAY, ’36 LOUISE STEINHART, ’37 SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office The Right to Cut It is not very often that modern women are given a chance to mount a soap box and scream with joyous ire that someone is depriving them of their rights. We arrive at college to find that most of our possible rights have been thought of and granted usglong before we) ever sat down to consider just exactly what our rights were. We arrived from schools where attending classes was done entirely as a! matter of course and were faced with what seemed like dazzling vistas) of cuts. It was not long, however, before we discovered our drastic! need for these very cuts, nor before they seemed to dwindle away into - a paltry few, making us compare the relative need of a free hour before! a scheduled quiz here and there with the need for several free hours) all at once the day before our Freshman long papers were due. We! came to accept as a matter of course the fact that required atteridance!| of our college classes has as a correlative the privilege of cutting them! with impunity as long as our‘quota of cuts holds out. | It is with a kindling sense of injustice and a feeling that the time] has come to demand our rights,that we now consider the proposition | that in some of our courses, our marks will be lowered a certain amount| for every cut we take. We feel that in a collegé which has an‘estab-' lished cut system, it is against the spirit of the administration to follow’ such a policy. We further feel that this policy is inconsiderate to the students and is detrimental’to their work done for other courses which have not adopted the same policy.. The students on the whole give a fair deal to every one of their courses: when a cut is taken in one course in order to devote time to work for another, there invariably comes a moment when a cut is taken in the second course in order to do work for the first. Our cuts are generally equally distributed, and allow us to do much better work than if we were permitted no cuts at all, because they give us free time to concentrate on the most important; part of our work in any week;so that we may do it as well as possible. | Furthermore, we find it difficult to believe that every single class in: any subject is so vitally important that our work will suffer irreparably | if we miss it; and since this belief is the only possible reason for any | professor’s adopting the policy of deducting from our marks for every | cut, we hope that our professors will henceforth take into consideration the fact that when their classes are slighted for other work, the time will eventually be made up to them when work for their course takes its turn in demanding extra time spent on it. i | \ i Requiescamus in Somno : Most of the students in this country are inflicted with reports and examinations, just as we are. We realize that fact, but we also note that most higher institutions of learning of the high intellectual status of Bryn Mawr provide an oasis of sorts for the weary students. At the eleventh hour our kindred sufferers reach a time that is called ‘a “reading period.” We are not asking so much as that: farthest from our thoughts is any desire for a period in which to read. But we do demand some consideration. We shall be straightforward in - our requests, sincere as we fear other students at other institutions of learning have not been. a Straight from the shoulder, shoulder to shoulder, we rise to demand a “sleeping period.” Let us define our terms. The week before examinations we should like to have for sleep. We promise that we shall sleep. Given a bed anywhere, even on the gym roof, we could out-snore even an alarm clock. On our awakening, then, we bind ourselves to drink black college coffee and eat hot cereal and write long examinations that will send each member of the faculty to a separate desert island to read our works. It is net only this great advantage to our professors that prompts us to make*this suggestion, however, We admit our motives are not. purely unselfish. They are justified and-can be proved so by statistical inquiry. Firstly, we lost all sleep May Day eve because with our a priori ~knowledgeof the Sophomores’. lung power, we-were-terrified at the thought of their morning approach; secondly, we lost one hour of Standard Time last week-end—plus the loss of sleep we sustained staying up until two A. M. to keep the tradition of changing all our clocks at the time specified by proclamation; thirdly, we have lost sleep hanging out of windows, watching for the approach of Spring, lest she catch us unaware; fourthly, we have found that we must deprive ourselves of a portion of our nightly rest in order to finish digging out the breakfast oranges and grapefruit before our nine o’docks. It is with growing horror that we realize how these lost hours Sawn ¢ ‘ Mans + | A-ha! ‘Tt paints the campus rose. om | was said and our best tear was wrung i iwhen, in the days of yesteryear, we WIT 4% Fed ‘sat and cheered for the wronged Eliza or ' tearing across ice floes with thirsty : "| bloodhounds in hot pursuit, approved thoroughly of Topsy, and wept copi- -|ous tears at the untimely demise of |little Eva. If anyone will give us an- ‘other play with the sheer theatrical- lity of Uncle: Tom’s Cabin, we prom- ‘ise to hold down a front row seat for ‘nights on end, but the usual play with SENIOR PRAYER ia mission’ blithely neglects anything Now I lay me down to sleep, |like amusing. the theatre-goer, telling I pray the Lord that He may keep '@ story, or presenting interesting The sophomores abed ‘all day | characters. If plays about Sacco and Upon tomorrow, first of May. Vanzetti, senators, and _ intolerant —College. Lifer. | dwellers in Tennessee would conceal itheir mission behind a really swell | story, leaving us to draw the moral lin a frenzy of righteous indignation, {no one would be so enthusiastic about [them as we would, but invariably ‘they make: their protest in the first ‘five minutes of the play and then go |on making it for the next three acts. | That, we believe, is the real trouble with plays like Stevedore and Yellow Jack; and it also proves our point that Tobacco Road, one of the finest plays Broadway has,ever seen in the opin- ion of all the critics, presents its dra- /matic story without it, as it were, edi- torial comment from the aythor, and leaves the audience to walk out in a state of violent-rage that such things ishould be. That, in our opinion, is | the way a play should. be, too. 11TH HOUR-SCHOLAR—— What do the busy little bees ‘A-buzzing from their hives? The springtime finds them A-digging in archives. ° —Oil Burner. THE SUMMONS Arise!, Awake! Why there’s the dawn! Come see the Seniors greet the sun; Put on your peasant clothes. We'll wander out with reverent pace And sniff the good grass smell And revel in the opal light So well described by Shell- Ey. Girl! The -world awaits! Sweet nature smiles: the lambs, the sheep, The catbirds and the cooing dove— THE ANSWER Aw hell! Go ’way and lemme sleep. —Lazy Loon, OSMOSIS ONLY? It occurs to me to wonder As I yawn through hist-o-ry: Though I’m absorbing eddication, Is it absorbing me? —Lone Goose. METAPHOR This Maypole dancing That’s all the rage: A lot of long-legged Squirrels in a cage. —Dying Duck. IN PHILADELPHIA os Theatres | Broad: S. N. Behrman’s comedy, ‘The Second Man, in which Alfred | Lunt and Lynn Fontanne played sev- era] years ago. Bert Lytell is star- ired, and the play is all about the love lives of a sophisticated novelist, a wealthy widow, an attractive girl and ; _ 'a@ young scientist who loves her but Hoops, hévalders of Dawn, all hail! ‘has great difficulty in persuading her Spring is upon us, and with sleepless | to’ love him. The reviews in New eyes we stare at the racing clocks, Ah! | York were very favorable . ’tis sweet to dream of Dreaming, while Erlanger: The tryout of J, Myself, the May whitens the snow-withered a new play by Adelyn Bushnell, star- bow. But no! We must arise like ring Charles Trowbridge, and staged Shakespeare’s Lady~and fling about by Charles Hopkins. It is about New the Maypole if we are so graced, or England family life, and there is some stand and sing a happy song, while fear around town that. the principal our thoughts hark back to the Dream | character is a‘ghost. If Charles Hop- we were having about hatching chick- kins brings it, however, it must be ens. But that is philosophy, mes all right. enfants, and my ears have grown! Garrick: Opening Friday, a re- limp with so much philosophizing and! vival of Victor Herbert’s operetta, so little repose upon the sheeted straw. | sweethearts, for only three perform- If you find me stretched upon the agyees, grass in lifeless attitude, send me home to my parents ina blue box tied : ’ : , Aldine: The House of Rothschild with a sprig of blooming rosemary; . unwoinn -aninla orealh 7s th and forget-me-not. | ie boi aad Oh cad | shoulders of George Arliss and Nun- THE MAD HATTER. nally Johnson, who adapted it for the ‘movies, It is hailed on every side as |striking an all-time high in movies, so ‘don’t miss it. Arcadia: The Scandals will run until Friday, when Spencer Tracy in The Show-Of will burst upon us. A Movies News of the New York Theatres The coming of Spring-like frivolity | to the theatre is now a fait accom-'| pli, to our infinite joy: another riot. | tice, in the form of more old-fashioned | ‘melodrama is due in our midst on April 29. In the People’s Theatre, in the Bowery, a most appropriate spot, our pet of all melodrama, The \Black Crook, of Hoboken fame, is jagain coming to light. Free beer will flow in the most approved: tradition, audiences will be encouraged to howl and hiss and stamp and boo, and up- | | roarious cries of “Ta-ra-ra, Boom-de- ay” from an. audience joyfully in- idulging in what could scarcely be itermed “community singing” will re- |sound lustily all the: way to Times ‘Square. Now that the “Sprig” is with us once again, nothing could be more delightful than an open air trek to thé Bowery, enlivened by stamped- ing herds of cattle and buffalo charg- ing across the plains of 14th Street, while the cries and hisses of our rol- licking associates-to-be, urge’us to speed along on our bicycles for two. and join them at the picnic, or rather beer binge. We commend to your at- tention the possibilities of an evening in the Bowery or equally in the at-: mosphere. of good—unclean fun. pre-| 'vailing in the midst of P. T.. Barnum’s The Drunkard. : We wish to go on record as one who does not care for plays with a mis- sion. If you like to see the oppres- sion of the negro race, badly deplor- ed through three long and terribly wearisome acts, read no further. Personally, we don’t. It is not that we believe the negro race should be qppresged;. far from ‘% . Put e doy rather bad movie of an extremely funny play. Boyd: Viva Villa, romanticizing Pancho Villa and Chihuahua in a big way. Wallace Beery is the romantic’ hero, and is supposed to be very good. There also seems to be a large native cast, probably not so good. Earle: Success At Any Price, or ‘The Rise of- An Advertising Clerk, with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., doing the rising, lasts until Friday, when Upper World, a heavy melodrama, with Ginger Rogers, Warren Williams and Mary Astor begins. Neither of them very good. Fox: Such Women Are Danger- ous, displaying lots of ‘baby. stars” running after a novelist, lasts until Friday, when a new musical, Stand Up and Cheer, which is supposed to be very good, will appear. It has John Boles, Jimmy Dunn, and War- ner Baxter in the cast. Karlton: The Countess of Monte Cristo, with Fay Wray and Paul Lu- kas, in a story about a movie extra masquerading as a countess. Not bad at-all.—-Friday;-FPhePoor Rich, a-com- | edy,; with Edward Everett “Horton” and Edna May Oliver, opens. Stanley: Twenty Million Sweet- hearts, a rather gooey movie about a radio crooner enslaving millions of adoring women, is held over for an- other week, proving something or other about our fondness for seeing ourselves, even in our more unattract- ive moments, on the screen. > =~ Spante » Fw Fume veBl-ws, -pith feel that the best word on the subjett Continued on Page Six sent them in tabulated figures, we confidence than pessimism that we we need a sleeping period, and in view of our plea we believe with more. shall lose even more sleep. Ergo, Not Out of the Stacks _ Julian Green’s The. Dreamer is a book about the sordid relations among a sister, a cousin (male) and an aunt, | and. we should say that-you.will-like 4 it—if you like that sort of thing! Per- sonally, we find it wearing to pick up a book like The Dreamer after losing sleep over reports and Little May Day and Daylight Saving Time: the book is much too powerfully written for us to escape one solitary sordid detail that Mr. Green thinks may lurk in the mind of a character, who is, if not actually depraved, at least inclined to be a kind of autistic, erotic intellect- ual. The vividness of the portrayal of Manuel’s character. does not re- lieve our feelings of depression at all: on the contrary, when we have fin- ished we wonder if the only way out doesn’t lie-in our running around cru- sading for Child Health (this being Child Health Week). We had better stop to explain our sympathy for lit- tle children, however, before we are accused of succumbing to spring and sentimentalism. All we need do is select a passage from the beginning’ of Manuel’s story. It concerns the thoughts of Manuel, the dreamer, about his cousin, Marie Therese, aged fourteen: “I remember shé was wear- ing a white dress that left her arms and legs bare. There were many girls prettier than she, but there were none whose beauty had the indecent qual- ity which no one but me seemed to no- Her mother dressed her in the most provocative manner by making her, probably for economy, wear last year’s dresses, which had grown. too short and too tight for her.” By the end of the book we also begin to get some sinister lights on death, and Mr. Green tries to persuade us of the greatness of Death. Says he, in ef- fect, “Does not the Dreamer cast a — keener eye on this world than we do; are not the illusions of desire and of death, in a world which is surround- ed by the invisible, just as real as our delusive reality?” Yes, yes, say we hurriedly, and — rush out to look for four-leaf clovers. If you are feeling particularly gay, we should advise you to run for The Dreamer. It will introduce a new note into your life, have no doubt of that, for it is written with lucid and unmis- takable plotting like that employed by the French realistic novelists at the turn of the century. Perhaps Julian Green, in following his custom of writing first in French and then trans- lating into English, has here absorbed both madness and method from those pathologists of human relations. Then, having given up Mr. Green’s escape from reality, we tried another. The second is much more fun: we found by chance a book called Hide- Away Island by one novelist, Barry Fox. We don’t believe you’ll ever come across it, much less read it if you do, despite the fact that it is a definite type of modern fiction. style is remarkable: take, for exam-. ple, the sentence, “But the evening was too glorious: it held her there.” That is the sort of thing, that, coming in the first paragraph, enthralls us! The story is a gripping one, and very instructive. It has several chapters in which minor operations take place —in one’s own home. And we learn all about obstetrics — “the ABC of medicine”—and about the extraction of a splinter. With one great cli- mactic stroke the novelist runs through one of his main characters with a slice of wood: in fact, the hero is brought in bleeding both front and back, having been spitted on a splinter. Then all the characters get together and operate, the home medical author- ity throwing intestines around and screaming, “Look! There goes one two-foot loop.” The whole description is very real, but it has a certain glam- or, withal: it is fantastic the way the people run around the house bringing on hot sterile towels. Some day, when we are up for a Ph.D., we The Number and--Quality- of~ Hot-- Sterile - Towels in Hide-Away Island.” Of course, you really needn’t read Hide-Away Island. We just thought it necessary to tide you over to the _ shocking news that the next’ instal- ment of Jules Romains’ twelve-volume novel is going to come out in the fall. We should hate to think of trying to keep up with Jules, without starting # Drivate reqding “purse right now t9, _ get well into Men of Good Will. So. we suggest retiring to a desert island for the summer among your book (Men of Good Will) in anticipation of the publishing of the third vol- shall be given our. deserts. _ : ume, The Proud and the Meek, f \ -are~going to basea~ thesis on “The ~~ => > Pee~G live: Beyer Ma mot THE COLLEGE NEWS “ “ Page. Three hee Good Tennis Season Is Foreseen as Teanis Form Despite a discouragingly rainy be- ginning, the tennis season is now well under way. Varsity and Advanced squads have been chosen and practise on alternate weekday mornings under the watchful guidance of Mr. White and Miss Grant. Varsity’s first match will be on Wednesday afternoon, when (Dr. Compton Speaks 4 on World of Chance | Continued from Page One | | ,are not adequate to cover man’s ac- 'tions, then the laws of these actions. must be determined. If physical laws ‘do not reach to human organs, then) ‘these laws must either be extended to lcover men or it must be concluded ‘that we live in a world of chance. It _ ee A. A. Eleétions - « Tne Athletic Association an-_ nounces the following elections: L. Bright, ’37, Secretary. G. Wilde, ’37, Sophomore Member. M. Bridgman, ’36, Treasurer. A. Van Vechten, ’36, Vice- President. ‘Th Come From Old Traditions | Little May Day Practices Continued from. Page One Though the lazy Rip Van Winkles ‘who wear down the Bryn Mawr mat- tresses often raise cries in protest, one of the loveliest of the May Day tradi- {tions is-the singing by the seniors in Rockefeller tower. This originated in tainty of the final result. This does'1904, the year in which Rockefeller they will meet the Merion Cricket| was such reasoning on freedom in a not prove that there is free will, but) was completed. The ceremony is best : iworld of law that brought Professor it does show that humans do not hec-|déscribed by a simple account in the There are to be four singles and | Heisenberg to formulate the theory of essarily act according to law. Club. . two doubles matches. So keen is the competition for places on the team, ‘uncertainty. | | Pythagoras; one of the first neat But the world is not wholly one of chance, for the very fact that Dr. | May issue of Tipyn O’Bob: | “The class of1904 originated at ‘Bryn Mawr a very charming custom however, that only two people are cer- ..ientific leaders and discoverers, be-/Compton: arrived to lecture at the ap-|of celebrating the first of May after tain of positions. ~ These are Mar-'j:.ved that the world obeyed definite pointed time shows that more than’ the fashion of Magdalen College, Ox- garet Haskell, captain of the _team, laws and that the way to live in the \chance governs human actions. The'ford. The same hymn used at Magda- who was away last year studying in .¥41q was to learn these laws and|chance that a number of stones in In-|len College was sung by the seniors F rance, and Betty Faeth, who played | discipline oneself to live a complete | dia should be combined into the Taj|from Rockefeller tower to greet the Number I in the singles last year. ij:e. in accordance with them. Demo- Mahal was infinity ‘to one, but they;dawn. After, the singing, the. senior They will each play a- singles match | +15 believed in a world of absclute were because an emperor loved his|class. went a-maying, and ended by and, in addition, will combine to form |law, where all movements, even human wife and willed it to happen in order! joining the other classes on the lawn jactions and emotions, were explained to please her. In the actual construc-|in maypole dances.” the first doubles team. The remaining three singles posi- tions are the center of great rivalry- between six people, all of whom are likely to be on the team at some time in the season. Of the six, four were on Varsity squad last year, and the other two are members of the Fresh- man class and have had considerable experience at school. Carter is a Senior and was a member of the! squad last year. match, as did.also Fabyan, of the sophomore class. Carter plays a steady game of tennis, while Fabyan, although possessed of strong excellent strokes, is inclined to be somewhat ‘erratic. Canaday, who plays first in the singles team for the Sophomore class, is another outstanding competi- tor, as is Betty Perry, a Junior, with previous experience on the Varsity squad. _The two outstanding Fresh- men on the squad are Peggy Jackson, who had valuable experience at Win- ssor School in Boston, and Molly Meyer, who won the school tournament at St. Timothy’s in Catonsville for both of the past two years. This year, interclass matches are to be substituted for the College Tour- nament of previous years, and these have already gotten under way. The Freshmen were victorious over the Sophomores last Thursday on. the basis of total matches won, although the Sophomores defeated their first team two to one. The Senior-Junior tournament is not yet finished, because the rain prevented a couple of matches. During the next week there will be more interclass tennis, for the Freshmen will meet the Juniors on Tuesday, and the Seniors and Soph- omores will play later in the week. The Varsity Schedule, published last week, has been augmented by the addition of the annual Faculty match, which is tentatively planned for the last day of classes, May 19. New Courses Announced in Several Departments | Continued from Page One come a_ requirement for English, French and History of Art majors, buf’ no definite plans have been made for this. A new course and one which should prove of exceptional interest will be given by Dr. Brinton, who is head of the Friends’ Graduate School at Pendell Hill. His wide training and experience in education, science and philosophy make him well quali- fied to give History of Religions. This will meet twice a week, but the plans are not definite at present. An addition to the Economics de- partment will be Dr. Anderson, who comes next year from Harvard. He will share the first year Economics course with Dr. Wells and the divisions will probably change at mid-year. He will also give an unrequired course in Second Year Economics called Problems in Money and Banking, which will supplement Mrs. Smith’s -eourse; There will be more choice in} the advanced work in both Politics and Economics. A course in Contem- porary Politics will be given by Dr. Wells and one in Problems in Econom- te Recovery by Mrs. Smith: These allow an extension of work which should give a wider range and a more flexible point of view for. advanced work. Fifteen hundred law students at went on strike recently, demanding the reduction of student taxes and a modification of the examination sys- tem. The rector threatened to close the faculty unless the. disturbances ceased. Vigorous’ demonstrations were prevented by police action. She played in one! Du. Piay i ts Mat hie~sca_p evt.as;~such as human actions, are determined by |. | by the movements of atoms. This | imade a cold, hard world with atoms: |in control and with no human or moral determined not by chance but by the| complete | choice, love, and desire of a man. Will|through which Bryn Mawr ushers’ ir With Socrates and Plato the ad-'@"d purpose choose among all the the first of May. responsibility. vancement of science was stopped for a thousand years. ‘cause it had destroyed free will and. ithe basis of morality, for it had taken | and logic of Plato, with his vision of | failed because it deprived man of pur- pose and desire. | In the Middle Ages, under Thomas | Aquinas, a world of law was again, preached, but this time it was rigid: theological law, through which one| learned ‘the laws of nature and. there-| by learned to know the Creator. Co-| pernicus, Leonardo, Galileo, and New-; ton brought forth a new science of | determined laws of cause and effect, | which made prediction possible. Their | system left science in the same place. in which Democritus had left it. They were followed by the seven- | teenth century materialists, such as! Hobbes and Voltaire, and by the later ' reactionaries against them, led by | Burke. Science and philosophy were | then at complete odds, but science could:not be done away with, for it! had brought man too many real val-| ues, and philosophy, although it was. logical, could not convince man. The idea of Heisenberg that we do' not live in a world of definite laws came after experiments with atoms | showed that they do not follow the laws of motion as had been expected. | They follow the laws of motion in an| average way, but not in an individual | way, so that scientists can predict | with exact probability the average | speed and direction of an infinite sam: | ber of atoms, but not the exact speed | and direction of any individual atom. | They are controlled by the same sort’ of law as makes it possible for us to predict exactly the average lifetime of human beings, but not the exact life- {time of any individual human being. ‘In finding the speed of a bullet pass- ing through beams of light at meas- ured distances, very accurate predic- tions of the bullet’s speed can be ob- tained, but they are not perfect be- cause of the light beam’s pressure on the bullet. Although this pressure is small in the case of a bullet, it is large in experiments with atoms and elec- trons. Even if the intensity of the beam were reduced to one photon of light, the bullet would still be retard- ed by the pressure of the photon, and no accurate prediction of the bullet’s speed could be made. Even if a radio wave, whose mass is in inverse pro- portion to. its length, were substituted for the particle of light, the great length of the wave would still prevent any accurate predictions. ratus where a photon of light dif- fracts through a slit and has an equal chance of striking either one of two photoelectric cells, if the experiment is repeated an infinite number of times, the photon will strike one cell half the time and the other cell half the time. But no prediction is possi- ble as to which cell it will strike in an individual case. Therefore it is prov- ed that nature obeys the laws of chance. . The individual human meaning of small scale atomic phenomena which occur according to chance. The delib- erate act of a lecturer’s ceasing to speak would probably make his audi- ence walk out, but the nerve currents reason was the only thing to be count- ; ed on, and that science was useless be- Made according to the laws of proba- In an appa-|. tion of the Taj Mahal physical laws were obeyed, but the final result was ‘possible acts, but none of them may ‘They said that Violate physical laws. Thus no wholly ‘accurate statistical average can be bility. The result of this inacc y. be considered the factors deciding phy- sical possibilities. H N CADY tHe wine — = "HEADY tHe ciat WHO USES IT FIRST @ Now that Lucien Lelong’s smooth lipsticks have the added zest of wine-flavoring — all ordinary lipsticks are decidedly Volstead (and you know how dull that is!) There's a Lipstick Bar ata good shop nearby where one can spend a dollar to the best advantage. Order Port or Burgundy or any of your favorites in LIPSTICK form. Wear it while it is still exciting news! Claret Madeira Sate ae KD on an atomic scale cause the uncer- a is | away the desire to try. The idealism that it is no longer difficult to under-| stand freedom in a world of law. | man as master of his own destiny, won Physics has -now -entered--the stage | men away from the new science, which ' where human desires and choices must | | BEST’S » ARDMORE IGEN LELONGS | This brief account in the progenitor lof: the College News gives a fairly picture of one custom | | The only student to receive an A ;ayerage in the Louisiana State Uni- iversity Law School during the first | semester was a woman. —(N. S, F. A.) Dr. Tennent attended the Meetings of the National Academy of Sciences and of the National Research Council in Washington last week. Selections in Early Greek Philoso- phy, Dr. Nahm’s book on the Greek Philosophers.from Thales through the time.of the Atomists, will be published about May 15 by F. S. Crofts & ‘Co. It includes the fragments of the writ- ings of all the Pre-Socratics and “a . considerable portion of the most im- portant commentary and: supplement- ary material of later philosophers and critics of antiquity.” oe ee Dr. William Roy Smith has an. arti- cle on Isaac Norris, Sr., and another on-Isaac Norris, Jr., in the recently published volume of the Dictionary of National Biography. There was an error in Campus Notes about Dr, Cadbury’s appoint- ment at Harvard. Dr. Cadbury is to be Hollis Professor of Divinity. This chair was founded in 1721; it is the oldest professorship at Harvard 4nd probably in the United States, | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | CBest’s exclusive LISLE MESH FROCKS FOR — TOWN AND COUNTRY, [OO I] Melon Corn Hydrangea Blue _White a Best fashion. ~ pastels, their trim necklines and well fitted skirts. They are very moderately priced, but you'll find that they have the nice details of workmanship and_ styling which you are accustomed to expect in 10.95 Sizes 14 to 20 UCH grand little frocks—you’ll get a world of wear from them. Perfect for golf, because they’re made of cool,-:~" absorbent knit lisle mesh. Practical for cruise or knockabout country wear, ~~because they’re washable. Correct for town, -with- their interesting “cottony 3 <<>> —D ee ><> ep Montgomery and Anderson Avenues ARDMORE, PA. Ardmore 4840° Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS 1934-35 Scholarships ong Awarded at had = Continued ‘trom. ‘Paso psi year. She is, moreover, a graduate of Bryn Mawr, and president of the Chi- | cago Bryn Mawr Club. Two more resident Fellows have, been added to the number appointed in March. FELLOW IN HISTORY Hazel Dorothy Burwash, A.B Somerville College, Oxf ord, | 1931; M.A., Mount Holyoke:/ College, 1933; Scholar in His-' tory, Bryn Mawr College, 1933- 34, SECOND FELLOW IN ROMANCE LAN- GUAGES Lydia Whitford Mason, A.B., Pem- broke College in Brown Univer- sity, 1931; M.A., Brown Uni- versity, 1933; Graduate Stu- dent, Brown. University, 1931- 33; Fellow in Romance Lan-; guages, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. The Graduate Scholars for next year are the following: DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY Sylvia Butler Rouse, A.B.,. Mount Holyoke College, 1931; Brown University, 1932-34; Candidate for M.A., 1934. Non-Resident: Eleanor H. Yeakel, A.B., Bryn Mawr, 1933; Candidate for! _"M.A., 1934. | DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Dorothy Dana Dalton, A.B., -Carle-| ton College, 1927; Graduate | Student, Carleton College, 1931-34; Candidate for M.A. DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL ARCHAEOL- OGY Dorothy ; Annette Schierer, Mount Holyoke College, rere Candidate for M.A., Bryn | Mawr, 1934; Scholar in Classi-, cal Archaeology, Bryn Mawr}+ 1933-34. Miss ship from Mount Holyoke Col- lege this year and has been | awarded the Frances Mary Mason Fellowship by * Mount! Holyoke College for 1934-35. DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND POLITICS Mary Cathern Albin, A.B., to be conferred, University of Ne-| braska, 1934. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH Constance Marianne Brock, B.A., McGill University, 1928; B.A., Oxford University, 1930; Scholar in English, Bryn Mawr, College, 1933-34. Anna Janney De Armond, A.B., Swarthmore College, 1932; | Scholar of the Society of Penn-| sylvania Women in New York, | Bryn Mawr College, 1932-33; Graduate Student, Coluisitite | University, 1933-34. DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH Mary Lane Charles, A.B., Earlham: 1927; Graduate Stu-' dent, Bryn Mawr College, 1927- | College, 28; M.A., 1928; Scholar . in French, Bryn Mawr College, | 1928-29. ® DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Ruth Helen Johnson, B.S., Hampshire, 1934. DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN Grace Patricia Comans, A.B., Mount. Holyoke College, 1933; Scholar in English, Bryn Mawr Col-, lege, 1933-34; Candidate for M.A., 1934. - DEPARTMENT OF GREEK Adelaide Davidson, A.B., Pembroke College in Brown University, 1933; Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. Miss Davidson held the Arnold Arch- aelological Fellowship from Brown University this year and Schierer held | the Joseph E. Skinner Fellow- | to be conferred, University of New | Sweet Briar College, 1932; Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr College, 1932- 345, , Candidate for | .. MLA,, 1934. DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS Scholar of the Society of Pennsyl- , vania Women in New York: ' Ruth Caroline Stauffer, A.B., Swarthmore College, 1931; M.A.,\ Bryn Mawr ~ College, 1933; Scholar in Mathematics, rey Bryn Mawr College, 1931-32; »| | Graduate Student in Mathe | matics, Bryn Mawr College, / 1982-34. # Resident Scholarship plus Emmy | Noether Scholarship: i Marie Johanna Weiss, A.B., Stan- | ford University, 1925; M.A., | Radcliffe College, 1926; Ph.D., Stanford University, 1928; Na- | \ tional Research Fellow Univer- ‘sity of Chicago, 1928-30. DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY { Margaret Frances Cole, A.B., to be | conferred, University of Colo- rado, 1934. DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL ECONOMY Carola Woerishoffer Scholarships: &: | Julia Dougherty, A.B., to be con- | ferred, Sweet Briar College, | 1934. | Josephine Leah Newmayg, A.B.; to | be conferred, Mills 1934. | DEPARTMENT OF SPANISH | Mary Sweeney, A.B., Radcliffe Col- | lege, 1917; M.A., 1922; Fellow in Spanish, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, 1927-28; Student abroad, | 1928-29, and at Radcliffe, 1929- | College, 80; Part-time Instructor in Spanish and Graduate Student, | Bryn Mawr College, 1930-31. | FRIENDS’ COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP (Non- | Resident) : | Etta Albrecht, Oberrealschule, B.., | Hamburg, Germany, 1924-33; | Hamburg University, one sem- ester, 1933; Earlham College, 1933-34; A.B., to be conferred, 1934. | There have also been honors and ‘scholarships awarded to Bryn Mawr 'women by other colleges. Dr. Ilsa Forest is the Sterling Fellow in Edu- cation at Yale. Three present mem- ‘bers of the Graduate School have re- |ceived scholarships: Helen Bagen- | stose, Fellow in Education at. Bryn | Mawr, 1983-34, has received a:Univer- sity Scholarship in the School of Edu- jeation at Harvard University for +1934-35. Dorothy Annette Schierer, 'Scholar in Classical Archaeology, | Bryn Mawr, 1933-34, has been award- ied the Frances Mary Hazen Fellow- ship by Mount Holyoke College for ' 1934-35 and will hold it at Bryn Mawr. 'Adelaide Davidson has again been awarded an Archaeology Fellowship from Brown University and will hold it at\Bryn Mawr. Janet Elizabeth Hannan, of the present senior class, has received a ‘Scholarship in History at Radcliffe, ‘and Betti Goldwasser, also of the sen- ior class, has been given the Scholar- ship in Economics at Radcliffe. Emma Dietz, Ph.D., ,Bryn Mawr, 1929, has been awarded a Research Fellowship by the American Associa- | tion of University Women and will / spend the fellowship, year at the Uni- versity of Munich working in the Lab- oratory of Professor H. Wieland. |Edith Fishtine, Ph.D., Bryn Mawr, 1933, has received a grant from the American Council of Learned Socie- ties. ’ Before announcing the undergradu- ate scholarships, Miss Park explained for her education only ‘in part. Gifts of money which the college receives and the interest from ‘investments of former gifts amount to a sum which just matches that paid by the students. This is perfect, as the cost of stu- dents’ instruction, library privileges, and laboratory materials is double the that every Bryn Mawr student pays. A few students use awards which could have been used elsewhere and which are. given for purely impersonal | reasons, Bryn Mawr is very grateful for these scholarships, which are the following: STATE SCHOLARSHIPS - Mary Pauline Jones, of Scranton, Pennsylvania (junior). Prepared by the Central High School, Scranton. Scranton College Club Scholar, 1931-32; Alumnae Reg- ional Scholar and Pennsylvania State Scholar, 1931-34; Maria Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1932-33; Evelyn Hunt Scholary 1933-34. Ethel Arnold Glancy, of Brookline, Pennsylvania (junior). Prepared: by Haverford Township High School, Brookline. Pennsylva- nia State Scholar, .1931-34; Professor James H. Leuba Scholar, 1933-34. Caroline Cadbury Brown, of West- town, Pennsylvania (sophomore). Prepared by Westtown School. Ma- triculation Scholar for Pennsylvania and the South States, 19382; Founda- tion Scholar, 1932-34; Pennsylvania State Scholar, 1933-34. CiTy SCHOLARSHIP Kathryn Swain Docker, of German- town, Philadelphia (sopho- more). Prepared by the Germantown High School. Philadelphia City Scholar, 1932-34. CHARLES E. ELLIS SCHOLARSHIPS Edith Duncan Van Auken, of Phila- delphia (junior). Prepared by Germantown High School, Philadelphia. Charles E. El-| lis Scholar, 1931-34. Ruth Robinson Atkiss, of Philadel- phia (sophomore). Prepared by the Philadelphia High School for Girls. Charles E. Ellis Scholar, 1932-34. JAPANESE SCHOLARSHLP Shizu. Nakamura, of Tokyo, Japan (junior). Prepared by Tsuda College, Tokyo, and the Misses Kirk’s School, Bryn Mawr. The Misses Kirk’s School Scholar, 1931-1932; Japanese Scholar, 1931-34. CHINESE SCHOLARSHIP Vung-Yuin Ting, China. Prepared by the McTyeire School, Shanghai, and the Shipley School, of. Shanghai, Bryn Mawr. Chinese Scholar, 1931- 34. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY SCHOL- ARSHIP Geraldine Emeline Rhoads, of Belle- ville, New Jersey (junior). Prepared by the _ Belleville High School. American Chemical Society Scholar, 1931-34. Another group of scholarships is given by the college itself to students from schools in the surrounding dis- tricts. They are: TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIPS Alma, Augusta Waldenmeyer, Philadelphia (junior). Prepared by the Philadelphia High School for Girls. Trustees’ Scholar, 1931-34; Athletic Association Scholar, of 1933-34. - Mildred Marlin Smith, of Altoona, Pennsylvania (junior). Prepared by Germantown High School, Philadelphia. Trustees’ Schol- ar, 1931-34; Maria Hopper Scholar, 1932-92 Lillie Edna Rice, (sophomore). Prepared by Frankford High School, Philadelphia. Praaiaer’ Schol- ar, 1982-34. Mary Elizabeth Hemsath, of Mt. Airy (sophomore). Prepared by Germantown High School, Philadelphia. Trustees’ Scholar, 1932-34. Marian Elizabeth Gamble, of Phila- delphia (freshman). Prepared by West Philadelphia of Philadelphia Anne Goodrich Hawks, of Summit, Joane E. Baker, of Narberth, Penn- | New Jersey (junior). sylvania (junior). Prepared by. Lower.“ Merion High - er Merion High School Scholar, 1931-! 34, WARE | Louise Atherton Dickey; of Oxford; Elizabeth Smedley, of Narberth,” Pennsylvania (freshman). Pennsylvania (sophomore). » Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. Prepared by Lower Merion High » Mary Pauline Jones, of Scranton, School, Ardmore. Lower Merion High Pennsylvania (junior). School Scholar, 1932-34. | Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34. Alice Frances Martin, of Bala-Cyn-' District III : d, Pennsylvania (freshman). Anne Elizabeth Reese, of Baltimore, Prepared by Lower Merion High | Maryland (sophomore). School; Ardmore, Pennsylvania. (Low-'*' Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34. er Merion High School Scholar, 933- Frances Cuthbert Van Keuren, of 84, “ x. | NORRISTOWN, Havenioan: TOWNSHIP | Chevy Chase, Maryland (jun- AND RADNOR TOWNSHIP HIGH. ior). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34. ScHOoL SCHOLARSHIP | District IV Josephine Bond Ham, of St. Davids, ' Helen Brandenbury Harvey, of Pennsylvania (freshman). | Huntington, West Virginia Prepared by Radnor Township High | (freshman). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. Catherine Adams Bill, of Cleveland, School, Wayne, Pennsylvania, Rad-| nor Township Scholar, 1933-34. FRANCES MARION SIMPSON SCHOLAR-| Ohio (junior). SHIPS ; Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34. Rose Goddard Davis, of Cheshire, DISTRICT V : ; Connecticut (sophomore), | Margaret Robinson Lacy, of Du- Prepared by New Haven High, buque, Iowa (freshman) | School. Frances Marion Simpson | Esther Bassoe,.of Evanston, Illinois Scholar, 1932-34. (sophomore). Virginia Dorsey, of Germantown, , Philadelphia (freshman). | The scholarships given on the rec- Prepared by Germantown High _ommendation ‘of the faculty are as School. Frances Marion Simpson follows: Scholar, 1933-34. | Scholarships to be Held in the Lillian Jane Fulton, of Pittsburgh, | Sophomore’ Year Pennsylvania (freshman). ‘(arranged in order of rank in class) Prepared by Peabody -High School,! Marta Hopper SCHOLARSHIP ‘Pittsburgh. Frances Marion Simpson Scholar, 1933-34. FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIP Caroline Cadbury Brown, of West- | Continued cn Page Bight MAISON ADOLPHE French Hairdressers any, sac dean ho- 853 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr 2060 LEILA HOUGHTELING’ . MEMORIAL ss ; . g | Individual Coiffures Designed CHOLARSHIP | Diss iW Sancta Evelyn Hastings Thompson, of | rmanent Waves a opecialty Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared by the Winsor School, | Boston. Alumnae Regional Scholar, | 1931-32; Sheelah Kilroy Memorial | Scholar in English, 1932-33; Leila| Houghteling Memorial Scholar. 1932- | 34, | The most important group of ee; arships is that given by the Alumnae. | Each region is supposed to send four| students to college each year, but actu- | ally the numbers are much more ir-| regular: This year the Alumnae schol-} ars, arranged geographically by dis-, tricts and in order of rank in class under each district, are: NEW ENGLAND Elizabeth Duncan Lyle, of Lenox, Massachusetts (freshman). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. Barbara Merchant, of Gloucester, Massachusetts (sophomore). Alumnae Regional] Scholar, 1933-34. Sophie Lee Hunt, of Kendal Green, Massachusetts (sophmore). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34. Margaret Carolyn Wylie, of Dor- chester, Massachisetts (sopho- more). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34: Elizabeth Margery Edwards, of West Roxbury, ‘Massachusetts to Europe Via Red Star TROLL on the i decks, enjoy the finest cabins, the best public rooms on the ship... (junior). 4 pee Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34. Gnc. pay — more than Tourist New York Class fare! When you sail on Betty Bock, of Buffalo, New York these large Red Star liners, you (sophomore). : get the benefit of this modern travel idea; Tourist Class is top class. Regular sailings to and from Southampton, Havre and Antwerp. Minimum fares —Tourist Class $117.50 One Way, $212 Round Trip; Third Class $82 One Way, $144.50 Round Trip. Ss. S. MINNEWASKA S. S$. MINNETONKA 22,000 gross tons Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34. Elizabeth Margaret Morrow, of Caldwell, New Jersey (junior). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34. NEW JERSEY Margaret- Cecelia Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey (sopho- more). Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34. Alice Russell Raynor, of Yonkers, New York (sophomore). ~ Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34.. Alummnae-Regional -Scholar,-1931=34,— > School, Ardmore, Pennsylvania, Low- | ; EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA AND DELA- -—has—bheenawarded the féenow- ship again for 1934-35. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY. ~—Beatrice Nina~ Siedschiag, Lawrence College, 1930; M.A., - University of Minnesota, 1932; - Fellow in History, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. : Margaret Hastings, A.B.,, Mount Holyoke College, 1931; M.A., 1932; Fellow in History, Bryn Mawr College, 1932-33; Mary Elizabeth Garrett Felow; 2933-2. DEPARTMENT OF HisToRY OF ART ~~Elizabeth H. Chambers, A.B., AB, _ European |tors, friends,.. _® < Deion eins ; Le. $500° éach one pays. This money, which permits the existence of the col- lege, has been paid not only to Bryn Mawr, but also to Yalé, Harvard; and Princeton by people who realized the various advantages of education. In many cases, too, the college pays on the student’s side of the account, and when it has net the money itself, obtains it from other people through the efforts of the Scholarship Com- mittee. Neighbors, the faculty, direc- ales readily and generously to these demands. Fortunately, this year more students can resume their Swarthmore College, 1931; Co.| usual payment for expenses, and so lumbia University, 1933-34. DEPARTMENT OF LATIN . Marcia Lewis _ Patterson, AB. | the demands are less spectacular. Yet there still remains $2,000 to seek for other students not named here. ae School. Trustees’ Scholar, S.s. PENNLAND — Phone -570 Dorothy Blake Hood, of Philadelphia JEANNETT’S S. S. WESTERNLAND __ (freshman). a 5 eer easel teint 28.500. gr085 £008. Prepared by a RT High BRYN pl Rh LOWER See your local agent. His services are free. School, Overbrook, Pennsylvania. \ ao RED STAR LINE (ay Trustees’ Scholar, 1933-34. . _— . oe International Mercantile Marine Co. Lower MERION HIGH SCHOOL SCHOE- ~¥23--banecaster—Avermue——-"- ~|* 1620 Walnut St. Sheen eT ARSHIPS LIVE in FRENCH Residential Summer School (co-educational) in the heart of French Canada, Old Coun- try French staff. Only French spoken. Elementary, Inter- Dp
: dance will be held in the Gymn after the production of the Glee Club. ‘Tickets will be $2.50 per couple and $1.00 for stags. There will be a reduc- tion of fifty cents on couple tick- ets for all those who purchase two tickets’ to. the Saturday night presentation of The Gon- doliers. a | Three oy a Honeymoon, with Sally Eilers and Johnny.Mack Brown; Mon: and Tues., Six of a Kind, with Charles Ruggles, Mary Boland, Burns and Al- len; Wed. and Thurs., John Boles and Rosemary Ames in / Believe in You. Wayne: Wed. and Thurs., Bert Wheeler, Ropert Woolsey, Thelma Todd and Ruth Etting in Hips, dips, Hooray; Fri. and Sat., Anna Sten-in Nana; Mon. and Tues., You. Can't | IN PHILADELPHIA | } Continued from Page Two George Raft fighting Mexico’s tough- ‘est bulls and Frances Drake doing some pretty fancy dancing. Not so | good, even so. Local Movies Ardmore: Wed., Harold . Teen, with “Hal LeRoy and Rochelle Hud- son; Thurs.,.Fri., and Sat., Wonder Y cx (And I’m learning hare in college What all other Seniors said, “When you come up for. your Orals Then you'll wish that you were dead! es Yes, you’ll’ wish that, you were dead, Buried in a mossy bed, , With a little Bryn Mawr daisy | Nodding gently overhead!” : ie And it is equally obvious to the In- Buy Everything, with May Robson and ‘Lewis Stone; Wed. and Thurs., Good Dame, with Sylvia Sidney and Fredric March. i Bar, with Kay Francis,.Al Jolson, iDick Powell, and Dolores Del Rio; |Mon. and Tues., Robert Montgomery \in the Mystery of Mr. X; Wed. and ,Thurs., Herbert Marshall and Clau- dette Colbert in Four Frightened People. : | Seville: Wed. d Thurs., Ruth | Chatterton and Adolphe Menjou in | Journal ‘of Crime; Fri-and Sat., | Afternoon Tea 25c Cinnamon Toast Toasted Date Muffins al oT Biscuits Buttered Toast and Marmalade telligent Observer that the pei GREEN HILL FARMS fast ings meg a point igo no written oral to “Is That the Human | one can claim to a@ genuine stu ent Thing To Do?” is a folk-corruption of | of the college unless she has helped He ame idea: to compose and fill out at least three ° City Line and Lancaster Ave. Overbrook-Philadelphia Coffee, Tea, Hot Chocolate Cake or Ice Cream (Chocotate or Butterscotch Sauce over Ice Cream) of them. The leisure-time examina- tions come more and more frequently, anxious-looking student she is told, any minute now!” Seniors Shut in Taylor for Ides of Yesteryear Continued from Page One ‘Pleath take away thoth Quith- Bookth ‘ I don’t even know if I want to path, I might be all by mythelf, Even in this modern era, the same spirit exists in a 1935 oral: “Here’s a toast to the jolly Orals— long may they endure, We love and adore them; of that I’m quite sure. : They cause us no trouble, they cause us no pain; We_all like to flunk them so’s to take them again.” The “‘torture-tradition” also started early in Bryn Mawr, when all schol- ars were Christians and martyrs in the name. of higher education.__The horror of the ‘situation is evident in the verse from an early oral: The country has a list of sins; The Railroad Trust began it. Then inhumane Child Labor laws And Mormons in the Senate. The Sweat Shops:—that’s another thing That can be put most graphic. Unequal Suffrage, that’s a curse— So’s the Liquor Traffic. But what can you expect? The cause is most direct. Of all this pain and blight and curse— Conditions daily growing worse— Expressed in language plain and terse, It’s simply Senior Orals!” It is obvious to the scholar that this depression is a carry-over from the 1899 oral: i Oh, the mediaeval tortures They were nothing in their way, To the inquisition methods In Bryn Mawr, the present day! so that now when anyone sees an, “Sh!—She’s expecting a questionnaire | ’Cauthe I might be all by myfhelf!” | '“Orals are as bad as spikes and stones and stakes, * How we suffer tortures when we make mistakes; Must we be Bryn Mawrtyrs for the Orals’ sakes? Is that the human thing to do?” | This is the culmination of the de- ipression; this and “Why Do We All| 'Work So Hard When We're So | Young.” | There comes a cheering note, how-| ‘ever, that makes us assent in bi-lin- | gual frenzy to the continuance of the ‘oral tradition. We look forward to the time when we have passed, when I don’t even know if I want to tdi we can hear the Baccalaureate with| Cauth I might be all by mythelf! an untwinging conscience as he sends us out to be wives and mothers in the ‘wide, wild world. Then we can chant ‘with the faithful: “The clergyman tied up the Gordian | And asked me if I would obey. | So taking my little accordion | Isang him these words that I say: eves, yes, yes, I promise to love you, |. To honor you with all my might, , Although I’m a good bit above you, | For I read French and German at | sight. “I swore at the butler in German (Mein Gottt!), : | In French I scolded the maid, | But they never studied at Bryn Mawr, So they misunderstood and they stayed. | | “For a time—and with tears I relate ; it— My husband shot ¢raps every night, er But now he stays home itt the evening, For we read French and German _at sight.” Such is the power and the advan- tage of a Bryn Mawr A.B. Bryn Mawr will always have the last word, and that word will be in French and German. PHILIP HARRISON STORE BRYN MAWR, PA. Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Hosiery, $1.00 Best Quality Shoes in Bryn Mawr 4 NEXT DOOR TO THE MOVIES 1896 —_ ed a drastic change in rules; the stu- dents were soon allowed to smoke in the hall libraries, at private houses, anid on the lower campus. Later, stu- dents were permitted to smoke in the Meet your friends at the Bryn Mawr Confectionery (Next to Seville Theater Bldg.) The Rendezvous of the College Girls Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundae: Superior Soda Service _ : Music—Dancing for girls only = -— —_ | CECEEIA’S YARN | SHOP ___ Seville Arcade BRYN MAWR .- PA. . ile tthe tina .fe_.aite...tte.6e alten. an at — know what they are getting into. the Camp must like you, - coming to a decision. Advantages of the Camp No radio ‘No dancing - No dressing No stunts No direct access by auto Much paddling and rowing Much wilderness hiking rm opportunity to be alone good an Suclott fed See CAROLINE P. BACK LOG CAMP A camp for adults ana families ~Sabael P.O. New York & On Indian Lake, in the Adirondack Mountains It is essential for the happiness of everybody that prospective Back Loggers Not only must you like the Camp, but Perhaps ee uae. schedule--will help you in . F aagih 1934} mms hy al ae Disadvantages of the Camp No. radio No dancing No dressing No stunts = No direct.access by auto _Much paddling and rowing a wilderness hiki opportunity to alone Much good company * Weights taken weekly BROWN, petiean | A reminder that we would like to take care of your parents and friends, whenever they come to visit you. Waffles and Coffee —25c a L. E. METCALF, anager. . THE CHATTERBOX TEAROOM ATTLLLEELLLELE TL ELELELULLUEEEE LU U : ‘ BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN TEA ROOM Luncheon 40c - 50c - 75c Dinner 85c - $1.25 Meals a la carte and table d’hote Daily and Sunday 8.30 A. M. to 7.30 P. M. Afternoon Teas BRIDGE; DINNER PARTIES AND TEAS MAY BE ARRANGED MEALS SERVED ON THE TERRACE WHEN WEATHER PERMITS THE PUBLIC IS INVITED Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386 Miss Sarah Davis, Manager THIRTY-FIVE CENTS Isn°t Much? Most college allowances go only so far. But | | even at that you can probably spare 35 cents | once a week. | It isn’t much —35 cents—hardly the price of a movie or shampoo. Yet for 35 cents, if you know the ropes, you can telephone as far as 100 miles. That probably means you can telephone home! Can 35 cents buy more pleasure than that? You can pick up a budget of family news... talk over your problems . . . share | your interests. There’s nothing like a “voice | visit” with the folks back home to brighten "gear whole week—and theirs. mn TO TAKE ADVANTAGE dé the LOW NIGHT RATES... Call after 8:30 P. M. Standard Time, and be sure to: make a Station to Station call... That means, ask the Operator for “your home telephone, but not for any. specific person. . If you've fixed a date in advance, the family | will be sure to be there. 35 cents at night will pay for a 3-minute Station to Station call to anywhere within 100 miles. THE BELL SEE Or PENNSYLVANIA . Se . if cy THE: COLLEGE NEWS Page Seven Voice of Bryn Mawr This column’ is intended to afford ' to the undergraduates, the alumnae, and the faculty an opportunity of ex- pressing their opinions about matters of interest to the college. Letters are earnestly solicited, and do not need to be signed, We reserve the right of not printing unsigned letters, if they present too personal a point of view. Words of Wisdom You were speaking for this reader of the News and spectator at many college plays, when you published the editorial on Varsity Dramatics. I agree with your statement that the big production of the year should make use of the talent of the college. As for the counter-claim that an “artis- tic production” cannot do this, let me say that undergraduates, if they wish to produce a work of art, should first make a study of their own limi- tations. Such a study would disclose the all too evident fact that inexperi- enced attors cannot play with success, the parts of worldly ladies, sophisti- cated matrons, suave and complex heroines. No matter how great the individual talent, such roles challenge comparisons that are unfair to the young and untrained. As for using the big dramatic production. of the year to supply a certain degree of this training, to a selected few, this is obviously taking unfair advantage not only of the student body, but of the audience. In such a production as The Knight | of the Burning Pestle, there was a} spontaneity, a quality of burlesque | that young and spirited people can) put on with a maximum of. original- ity and color. There were no’ out- standing “stars,” it is true, but many first-rate bits that the public knew could never have been achieved by a “professional” group. It is in the per- sistent ignoring of the most excellent possession student actors ‘have — high spirits, mimicry, gaiety—that Varsity Dramatics, in the opinion of this writ- er, has made its greatest mistake. And it is likewise in thé striving. toward an impossible and rather jaded pro- fessionalism, thax the work done this year and last has most dismally failed. : > ELDER. Questionnaire A member of one of the departments which suddenly (and unexpectedly) sees itself blessed with the ability to balance in its demands the elements of memory and originality, wonders just what the undergraduate regards as “originality.” Did the instigators of the inquiry pause at all to consider how havoc-producing some of this vague and loose terminology might be? We suspect that original work, to the undergraduate mind, fheans the oppor- tunity of offering her personal reac- tion to something she has read. It is that happy state in which one is. in- spired by a great IDEA and pro- ceeds to elaborate upon it in. much the same way, and with approximate: ly the same results, as a pebble cast! upon waters produces concentric cir- cles spreading out to the vast un- known.....Measured, from such an. an- gle, it is small wonder that the. exact sciences .and elementary language courses, which by their very nature cannot give a free foot to the sub- jective ego, alias “smothered original- ity,” fall headlong in the scrimmage for student approval. Or are there those who think they are ready for original work before they have ac- quired the rudiments of a subject? PUZZLED PEDAGOGUE. Varsity Dramat Fo the Editors of The College News:' Varsity Dramatics presents ‘the fol- loWing statjstics, which were omitted from the account submitted to the Col- lege News on April 28,1934. ~As we feel that these statistics \are import- ant, we ask that they be printed as they are given here, in this week’s issue of the College News. I. Number of Bryn. Mawr _ under- graduates acting in major pro- ductions: 1930-1931: number of parts for girls... 2 productions; total 8 1931-1932: 1 production (May Day year) total number of parte for Mirtle. occ c. cei 8 III. Direction: 1930-1931: -1. professional ; 2. undergraduate 1931-1932: 1. undergraduate. Note to Section IV: °: It was considered wise for the spring play not to depart from the tra- dition of smal] casts because of the proximity of the French Club play, steals Self-Gov Elects Barbara Colbron, ’37, has been elected treasurer of Self-Gov- ernment for 1934-35. Miracle play, and Glee Club produc- tion, which employ a large amount of. the dramatic energy of the undergrad- uate body. There were five women’s parts in Pygmalion which offered op- portunities for clever and interesting acting. (Signed) VARSITY DRAMATIC BOARD. Twenty Years Ago Continued from Page Five on the lack of progress in this mor- tal sphere, when we read of the show igiven by the class of 1918 in Merion, entitled: “The Rejuvenation, of Mer- ion.” Santa Claus, so ran the play, brought the much-needed new bath- ‘tubs and white paint to Mr. and Mrs. ‘Merion and their family of four chil- dren. f | Hypocrisy, in our good old tradi- | tion, was relentlessly unveiled twenty years ago. “How can we, college stu- dents and presumably thoughtful peo- ple, care to sing at divine service hymns which we do not mean? How can we sing ‘Jerusalem, my happy home, would God I were in thee,’ when in our hearts we are blessing God that we are alive and young and able to test the good of this world? . ; To sing them you may say is thought- Hess, but it is really more than that; |it is mockery.” We do not concern ourselves much with hymns at this late date; but the general attitude is the same. _To.continue and to.end_on. the subject of singing: Aide, we find, was effectively rendered at the Senior Reception to the Graduates in “the stentorian tones of Helen Taft,” as- sisted by other operatic.stars of 1915. Officials of McGill University (Can- ada) recently forbade the circulation of a questionnaire among the student body.. It contained, among — other questions, one as to whether or not Canada should enter another war. The action was taken on the grounds that any published results might give “an entirely wrong picture of McGill stu- dent opinion.” The sponsors were the editors of The Alarm Clock, a campus publication —(N. S. F. A.) Journalism students at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin spent their spring holidayé managing rural papers. In groups of four, three teams set out to Ripon, Burlington, and. Wautoma, Wisconsin, and with only the very necessary supervision of the editor or publisher of the papers, the four stu- dents in each group put out a com- plete issue of the paper. West Virginia University faculty members conduct annual fire schools to aid in training village firemen throughout the State—(N. S. F. A.) One of the CWA projects at the University of Kentucky is the inau- guration of a course in Aeronautics. —(N.S. F. A.) | ERRORS ARE ERRNO Ea poeta _ Panesar ees ——————— sco ERR a Watch out for the -signs of jangled nerves You’ve noticed other people’s nervous habits—and wondered probably why such people didn’t learn to control themselves. But have you ever stopped to think that you, too, may have habits just as irritating to other people as those of the keyj uggler or coin jingler are to you? ~~ And more important than that, on yourself, never jangle the nerves. COSTLIER TOBACCOS Caniels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS than any other popular brand of cigarettes! those habits are a sign of jangled nerves. And jangled nerves are the signal to stop and check up Get enough sleep—fresh air —recreation—and watch your smoking. Remember, you can smoke as many Camels as you want. Their costlier tobaccos sneer a MATCHLES® BLEND J / / Yi ee Copyright, 1934, B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Shows 20 ways to test nerves—all illustrated. Instructive and amus- ing! Try them on your friends—see if you have healthy nerves your- self... Mail order-blank below with fronts from 2 packs of Camels. Free book comes postpaid. TEST YOUR NERVES FREE! WEKVES | | ver ~ / Sa ay saoal Seo Nae So ye” § & CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company | Dept. 76-B, Winston-Salem, N.C. | lenclose fronts from 2 packs of Camels. | Send me book of nerve tests postpaid. / | ES Se ee Sona ioe | (@riat Name) | | Pda i dh ceded ineihnniecicuiccaes cocebesnaniin | | | we —_ elias Badan State. - nn nnnannenccnne none a SMOKE AS MANY AS YOU WANT... am THEY NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES! CAMEL CARAVAN with Casa Loma Orchestra, Stoopnagle and Budd, Connie Boswell, Every Tuesday and Thursday at 9 P. M., E.S.T.—8 P. M., C.S.T.—7 P. M., M.S.T.—6 P. M., P.S.T., over WABC-Columbia Network Page Eight os THE COLLEGE NEWS 1934-35 Scholarships Awarded at May Day Continued from Page Four Louise Atherton Dickey, of Oxford, Pennsylvania, Prepared by private tuition and the | Misses Kirk’s School, Bryn Mawr. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. JAMES E. RHOADS MEMORIAL SOPHO- MORE SCHOLARSHIP Anne -Bowen Edwards, ogh, Maryland. Prepared by the Bryn Mawr School of Baltimore. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. Maria Hoprper SCHOLARSHIP Margaret Robinson Lacy, of Du- buque, Iowa. Prepared by St. Katherine’s School, Dubuque. Alumnae Regional _ ar, 1933-34. Maria Hoprer SCHOLARSHIP Kathryn Moss Jacoby, York. Prepared by Hunter College High School, New York. Mary ANNA LONGSTRETH MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Marcia: Lee Anderson, of Durham, North Carolina. Transferred from Duke University. Alumnae Régional Scholar, 1933-34. First Mary E. STEVENS SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by the President). Eleanore Flora Tobin, of Chicago. Prepared by the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr. Directors’ Scholar, 1933- 34: Seconp Mary E. STEVENS SCHOLAR- SHIP (awarded by the Presid- dent). Mary Hinckley Hutchings, of Bos- ton, Massachusetts. Prepared by the Winsor School, Boston. of McDon- of New Scholarships to be Held in the Junior Year James E. RHoaDS MEMORIAL JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIP ? Elizabeth Porter Wyckoff, of New York: Prepared by the Brearley School, James -E. Rhoads Scholar, 1933-34. AMELIA RICHARDS SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by the. President). Barbara Merchant, Massachusets. Prepared by. Gloucester High School. Alumnae Regional, Scholar, 1933-34. EVELYN HUNT: SCHOLARSHIP Frances Calloway Porcher, coa, Florida. Prepared by the Cocoa High School and by the Misses Kirk’s School, Bryn Mawr. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-33; Mary Anna Longstreth Me- morial Scholar, 1933-34. SPECIAL DIRECTORS’ SCHOLARSHIP Frederica Eva Bellamy, of Denver, Colorado. Prepared by the Kent School for Girls, Denver, Colorado. ANNA HALLOWELL MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Virginia Harper Sale, of Buffalo, New York. Prepared by the Buffalo Seminary. EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP AND SECOND ALICE FERREE Hayt MEM- ORIAL AWARD — Margaret Cecelig Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey. Prepared by the East Orange High School. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34; holder. of the second Alice Ferree Hayt Memorial Award, 1933- 34. SUSAN 333 of Co- SHOBER CAREY MEMORIAL AWARD . Sophie Lee Hunt, of Kendal Given, Massachusetts. Prepared by Concord Academy, Concord, Massachusetts. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1932-34; Constance | Lewis Memorial Scholar, 1933-34. ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP AND FIRST ALICE FER- REE Hayt AWARD Alice Russell Raynor, of Yonkers, New York. Prepared by Miss Beard’s School, Orange, New Jersey. Alumnae Reg- ional Scholar, 1932-34; Alice Ferree Hayt Memorial Scholar, 1933-34; of Gloucester, |, Miniter ema nerReS. BERET nes Virginia Woodward, of ‘Toms River, | New Jersey. | Prepared by Toms River High| School and the Misses Kirk’s School, | Bryn Mawr. Scholarships to be Held in the Senior Year (arranged in ordey of student’s rank in class) Marta L.:EastMAN BrooKE HALL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP | (awarded each year on the | ground of scholarship to the member of the junior class with the highest average). Vung-Yuin Ting, — of China. EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP Mary Pauline Jones, of Scranton, Pennsylvania. ELIZABETH WILSON WHITE MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by the Presi- dent). Catherine Adams Bill, of Cleveland, Ohio. ; Prepared by the Laurel School, South Euclid, Ohio. Matriculation Scholar for the Western States, 1931; Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-34; Amelia Richards Memorial Scholar, Shanghai, 1932-33; Mary E. Stevens Scholar, 1933-34. PrRoFEessor JAMES’ H. LEUBA SCHOLAR- SHIP Ethel Arnold Glancy, of Brookline, Massachusetts. | AMELIA RICHARDS SCHOLARSHIP ‘ (awarded by the President). Gertrude Van Vranken Franchot, of Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared by. the Park School of Buffalo, and Miss Lee’s School, Bos- ton. Evelyn Hunt Scholar, 1932-33; Anna Hallowell Memorial Scholar and Sheelah: Kilroy Memorial Scholar in English, 1933-34. CARY PAGE SCHOLARSHIP Elizabeth Kent, of Brookline, Mas- sachusets. Prepared by the Winsor School, Boston, Maria Hopper Sophomore | New York. Anne Dunn iesian: 1932- | 2 Holder of Alice ——— apt Wenorial | Saholar: 1932- 33; ie Pani Scholar, Sophomore | Award, 1933-34. SPECIAL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP 1933-34. , ANNA POWERS MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP ——— Diana Tate-Smith, of New York. Prepared by the Brearley School, New York; Alumnae Regional Schol+ ar, 1931-32; James E. Rhoads Scholar, 1932-34. ANNA M. Powers M&MORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP Alberta Anne Howard, of Bellevue, Pennsylvania. ‘Transferred from Wellesley College. UNDERGRADUATE AND GLEE CLUB SCHOLARSHIP Lucy Fitzhugh Fairbank, of Chi- cago. Prepared by Miss Wright’s School, Bryn Mawyr. ABBY SLADE BRAYTON DURFEE SCHOL- ARSHIP : Jeannette Morrison, of Quincy, Mas- sachusetts. Prepared by’ Thayer Academy, S. Braintree, Massachusets. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-32. Tuomas H. Powers MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP Elizabeth Waln Meirs, Egypt, New Jersey. Prepared by St. Mary’s Hall, Bur- lington, New Jersey. of New Then, these prizes for distinction in special subjects are awarded: SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL, SCHOLAR- SHIP (awarded for excellence of work in Required English Composition). Elizabeth Duncan Lyle, of Lenox, Massachusetts (freshman). Prepared by Gloucester, Massachu- setts, High School. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1933-34. SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP IN-43NGLISH (awarded for excellence of work in First Year English). Margaret Cecelia Honour, of East Orange, New Jersey (sopho- more). ELIZABETH DUANE GILLESPIE SCHOL- ARSHIP IN AMERICAN HISTORY (awarded for excellence of scholarship in American His- tory). Elizabeth “‘Waln. Meirs, of New “Egypt, New Jersey (junior). THEODORE DE LAGUNA PRIZE (award- ed for excellence of work in Philosophy). Betty Lucille Seymour, of Sala- manca, New York (junior). Prepared by the Salamanca High School. SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP IN ENGLISH (awarded for excellence. of work in Second Year.English). _ Gettrude Van Vranken Franchot, of Boston, Massachusetts (jun- ior). : ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOLARSHIP IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES (award- ed for excellence of work in for- eign languages). Catherine Adams Bill, of Cleveland, Qhio (junior). Foreseeing’ the difficulty in the awarding of The Hinchman Memorial Scholarship, Miss Park selected an ex- periencedA%mmittee; the same which determirfed the graduate fellowships. The list of candidates proposed by the various departments is being given for the first time, because five of the seven candidates would undoubtedly have won the scholarship if competing with an ordinary class. Proposed by Departments for HINCH- MAN SCHOLARSHIP (arranged alphabetically). Gertrude Van Vranken Franchot Ethel Arnold Glancy Nora MacCurdy Elizabeth Monroe Jeannette Morrison Betty Lucille Seymour Vung-Yuin_Ting. The scholarship, which is awarded to the student whose record shows the greatest ability in her major subject, was finally divided between: Elizabeth Monroe, of Rye, York (junior). Prepared by Concord Academy. and Vung-Yuin Ting, China (junior). New of Shanghai, | | men ng he way tobacco is cut a. y ~ lot to do with the way Chesterfield - burns and tastes A long time The tobacco how they taste. There are many different ways of cutting tobacco. ago, it used to be cut on what was known as a Pease Cutter, but this- darkened the to- bacco, and it was‘ not uniform. The cutters today are the most improved, modern, up-to-the-min- ute type. They cut uniformly, and cut in long shreds. in Chesterfield is cut right—you can judge for your- self how Chesterfields burn and Everything that science knows is used. to. make Chesterfield the cigarette that’s milder... the cigarette that tastes better. heste the cigarette that's MILDER ew . the cigarette that TASTES BETTER - Fo @ 1934, Liccxrr & Bivans Tosacco Cd, ¢