THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five Jane Alleyne Lewis Will be May Queen Continued from Page One Fisting thing with curls” and sat for a number of ‘portraits in Paris. She tells an amusing anecdote about a man who approached her at the Ballet Russe last fall and asked to be allowed to take motion pictures of her. Mistak- ing him for a professional photograph- er and hesitating to involve the nanie “Bryn Mawr” in any publicity ,en- terprise, she declined, only to find that he helped select models for Wana- maker’s; he promised to call her up about it—“but he never called.” Miss Lewis has pale blonde hair reaching far’ below her waist and usually wears it in a coronet. She employs no special rinses, not even lemon juice, to emphasize its natural color; and for a shampoo she uses her favorite complexion soap. She never wears heavy make-up, and uses no facial creams or eye cosmetics; as for nail polish, “Coral is my limit.” Five feet five and one-half inches tall and weighing 127 pounds, she is ex- cellently. proportioned. A member of the sophomore class, Miss Lewis held an Alumnae Regional Scholarship last year. She hadal- ways planned to come to Bryn Mawr,} and with the exception of a year spent at Mlle. Fontaine’s School in Cannes, she studied at Miss Fine’s School in Princeton, where she lives, in prepara- tion for entrance. She expects to ma- jor in archaeology. Miss Lewis’ favorite sport is swim- ming; she was.on che Varsity.Swim- ming Team last year “because I swam breaststroke.” She was also a member of her class hockey team. She is now a resident of Merion Hall. During her freshman year she lived in Wyndhan, where she held the position of fire chief. Archaeology Students Offered Scholarships The Department of Classical Archaeology will have in its award for the year 1936-37 the Mary Paul Col- lins Scholarship for Foreign Women of the value of $1000 and will, in ad- dition, offer three special resident scholarships to promising candidates in the field. These, together with the regular. departmental fellowship and scholarships, would furnish to the de- partment a specially picked group of students for a project which is an- nounced as follows on the posters sent to colleves and universities: “In the hope of evoking from a more intimate collaboration of teachers and students new and publishable material in an important and fruitful field of research, the department during 1936- 37 will converge its seminaries and graduate courses upon the single topic of Early Greek Civilization. Dr. Car- penter will deal with the tribal mi- grations and epichoric alphabets; Dz. Swindler will study the vases of the geometric and early orientalizing periods; Dr. Miiller will trace the in- fluence of the adjacent oriental civi- lizations upon Greek architecture and ferences. will focus. upon. specifie op- portunities for research in the’ proto- archaic period.” In reference to the foreign scholar, the announcement states that she “will be encouraged to pursue research. in any field of Mediterranean ‘archac- ology of the pre-Christian period, in which’ she may be espetially equipped or qualif-4..-™ g/pitior, she may par- ticipate ‘“xr-une or more of the Re- search Seminaries. . . . Within the option of the department, the success- ful candidate may be required to as- sist other graduate students in re- search in fields in which she is ex- ceptionally qualified.” . This scholarship, named again this year in memory of Mrs. Henry Hill Collins, and awarded again in a spe- cific field, is the only one that has sur- vived of the five $1000 scholarships for foreign women which the Bryn Mawr Graduate School awarded for so many years and valued so highly. The award for the cufrent year was made in the Department of Biology, the holder being’ Miss Hedda Norden- skiéld. Theorems Are Sought For Modes of Meaning Continued from Page One poaching of other ends on the function of exposition. The second kind of problem is more difficult and funda- mental. It can be formulated in various ways: What is the connec- tion between “events” in the mind and the other events which they are of? How. are. these .events. thought of? What is the relation between a name and what it names? _In the search for a theorem by means of which to ap- proach these problems, one begins by a consideration of the so-called simple responses, : Man is a thing responsive to other things in a particularly complex way. This is illustrated by a comparison of man’s simple response to’ changes in temperature with those of a mechan- ical device such as a thermometer. The response of a thermometer to a change in temperature is not in- fluenced by its previous experience of other changes, while in man such a response is inevitably influenced by other conditions present simultane- ously with the stimulus in the past. Thus one could never have a perfectly simple response by a man. The near- est approach, a response to a perfectly new stimulus, would be recognized or classified by man in the light of his experience of earlier stimuli, as a “new kind of pain” for example. The basis of its meaning for him would lie in the past. Psychologists recognize sensations, defined as perfectly simple things, or data, as non-existent. In their place one finds perceptions which take what one experiences through the senses as “a thing of a sort.” In perception man has also the process, which is ell Al