———_—__ Vol. XVII, No. 22 f / £ its ‘The College News — meee — . : WAYNE AND BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1931 ree —s ‘ Price: 10 Cents Haverford Profess . Reviews ‘Lantern’ Dr. Reitzel’ Finds Character Well Drawn But Sense of Incident Weak. CONTRASTED TO MEN Verse Is Lauded as Having Something Worth Saying. High Level Seen. By Mr. William Reitzel, of the English Department of Haverford College To_read..“‘The.Lantern”-for--the first time, especially: if one’s knowledge of undergraduate magazines is bounded by the work done in men’s colleges, is an eye-opening experience. It draws. one toward an essay rather than toward a review; for, larger than any question of quality is the interest of a contrast. To this interest the present reviewer bows. Most striking is this point: in all the stories in “The Lantern” (I have also read baek through several numbers. in “search of further light) a__ surprising ‘grasp of character is shown. In ‘Miss Darlington’s’ Hero two difficult concep- tions are laid - down, followed, and brought to a finish. with sureness. In Miss Grant’s The Waitress, whénever be- havior is being observed, the writer’s mind works neatly and accurately. But the sense of incident is poor and the movement. of -.people-through a series of scenes is fumbled. Miss Einsiedler’s Water for My Stain. is a case of this fumbling, most obyious perhaps because most ambitious. Very little of the writ- ing done by young men shows so much sense of the way human beings are made;} but the sense of these human beings en- gaged in an activity of being alive is weak. Character has been observed, thought about and recorded; but incident is taken on trust; which means that it has chiefly been taken from the books one has, read. Perhaps young women have a faculty for observing others; they certainly show a more developed com- mon sense about people than do young men. The contrast is significant. No piece - of fiétion written by a man (I mean exactly between. the ages of 18 to 22) shows any experience of other people, any awareness of the “impact of other minds and other behaviors. Young men scarcely know what it is to hate or to be hated, so indifferent are they to these important. bases‘ of social intercourse. They believe that yéu love or hate your fellows because of their political opinions. They do not know that the ground of dislike can be a pasty complexion, that the ground of affection is often the line of a profile. Everything I have read in “The Lantern” shows some appreciation of these simple foundations. When’ a young man tackles fiction, the fuddling of character «is ,the ‘consequence. His conceptions are borrowed from his read- ing. But an incident he handles with do; but she car*6ftén tell you they do it. Muscular Vs. Emotional Effort Another curious contrast is to be seen when one considers the verse in ‘The Lantern”. to say; the poems of young men most often are mere grab-bags of words. I suspect, that the quality of the poetry in “The Lantern” comes from one of two causes. The writer is able to see clearly something: other than herself. This These poems have something | To Study Dry Law “ dp, —Photo by Wm.’ Shewell Ellis. DR. SUSAN KINGSBURY who has been appointed to the Col? Amos Woodcock’s Advisory Research Council. Collegiate Styles Are Scored by Miss Park “You can get accustomed in a year or two” thus ended the spring song with which Miss Park began her discussion of spring dress at college. We believe that Miss Park believes that the conduct of the students is in their own hands. off for we can=get-accustomed in a year or two. Miss Park, in carefully reading her Vogue, has discovered that a period of elegance and charm is coming which hides behind formality. There are two areas of the campus in which Miss Park hopes this new world of formality will lift its head: on the upper campus and at the dinner table. Apparently the upper campus is regarded as a bathing beach while in reality it is more like Rittenhouse Squate in its free admittance to the public and its general look, Therefore our appearances should be drawn from Rittenhouse Square and not from a beach. Shorts and drying hair belong to one and not the other. Miss Park hopes that the new way will first reach the area of the campus. While Miss Park does not belong to the school where Englishmen in igloos or an African jungle dress for dinner, she does believe that if the dinner hour can be detached from the fever and heat of the rest of the day by a feeling of leisure, given by a sponge, a comb, powder and Continued on Page Two Dr. Fenwick Rewarded for Current Events After a stimulating half hour with Dr. Fenwick’s five hour plan, which-he pre- sented in condensed form at the year’s last current events lecture, Miss Helen Bell, erstwhile president of the Under- graduate Association, arose. “Dr. Fen- wick,” she began, “I have a question to _.some--ease-—-He-ean-tell-you-what-peoplet ask vot Do you thijkecit right th ata] prevent man who haStic-anuch-to.Ye-xs~you are said to have, should devote half an hour every Tuesday night, as well as the time given to preparation,-to presenting the facts of the world (in convenient and sugar-coated doses) to a group of girls who know nothing about it, with no better recompense than the sound of their applause? I have asked you‘a question, but I shall not ask you to answer it. In- stead I shall ask you another. Do you think that the time may come when the "Freshmen Write and But now ‘she is inclined to push a slight}. reform for which we will all feel better]. Miss Kingsbury On Prohibition Council Effects to Be Studied Along Scientific Lines. Graduate Students to Help. Dr, Susan M. Kingsbury, director of the Graduate School of Social Econ- omy and Social Research, at Bryn Mawr College, is to serve on the pro- hibition advisory research council or- ganized by Colonel Amos W. W. Woodcock. The purpose of the coun- cil, which is composed of ten “econo- colleges and universities, is to study thé effects of the dry law “along purely scientific lines.” The research will be carried out as graduate study under the direction of the members of the council. Such sub- jects as “How has the operation of the Eighteenth Amendment affected child delinquency?” and. “How has it affected juvenile drinking?” will be investigated. Beside obtaining information _on certain angles of the problem, it—is {hoped that the commission will stir up interest in prohibition among educators. enforcement Produce Three Plays On Tuesday night the Freshman, -elass presented three of the one-act plays written in their Required English Course... The. first play of the evening was a comedy.entitled “The Habit of Habit,” written and directed by C.}- Duany._ The plot concerns a middle- aged gentleman, unusually “set in his domestic habits (even for a middle- ‘aged gentleman), who is imposed upon for twenty-four hours by a visiting boy scout_who-camps-out-in-his breakfast room, much to the dismay of his well- ordered domestics. The point of the play seems to be the similarity in the rigidity of the habits with which time had imbued Mr. Stickney, and the Boy Scout code, this rosy-cheeked young hope of the nation. The performance | was distinguished by the pantomime of Miss Schwab as Mr. Stickney, Miss Parsons’ characterization of the Irish housekeeper, and some lovely touches by Miss Smith with bacon, setting-up exercises and tents. War, a tragic episode written by C: F. Grant, who not only wrote: and directed her-own play but supervised the whole produttion, followed. Joce- lyn Todd (Miss Carpenter), given the opportunity of marrying her fiance (Miss Boyd) before he sails ‘to France, probably to die, sends. him away because with the disheartening example of her widowed sister (Miss Carter) whose future is ‘a blank,’ she cannot “believe there is any real hap- pings.” While the idea. is an inter- esting one we felt the brevity, wordi- ‘tion. The actors gave the impres- sion of sincerity, but the playwriters had obviously bitten off more than they cpuld chew. The last play, Phacton, was un- doubtedly the most successful, more ambitious in its production—both set and costumes were charming. It dealt with a situation more within..the scope of college dramatists. It concerned a clever intrigue in the court of Louis XIV. Miss Coxe, author, director and mists and sociologists from leading Garden Party Dancer MISS RUTH PAGE who is to dance in the Cloister Garden on Tuesday evening, June 2. Varsity Tennis Downed by Merion Cricket Club st Vara tennis suffered-a-second-set+ back Saturday, this time at the hands of the Merion Cricket Club. - Unfortu- nately the German oral prevented a large attendance and anyone else who might. have come was having her pic- ture taken as -a~ member of. the “Mikado” cast. Allen was the first to’ fall, being beaten 6-0, 6-2, by Mrs. Lasky. Her game was qpite. good, but she was clearly outclassed. Mrs. Gardiner beat Collier 6-1, 6-4. During the second set there were.some good rallies and the playing was fairly even. Anne Page defeated A. Lee Harden- bergh, 6-4, 6-3. They both play a similar type of game, standing on the base line and driving at their oppon- ents’ feet. There were a good many long rallies which Miss Page was gen- erally able to end. The best--match was that in which Miss Townsend beat Margaret Hask- ell. During the whole first set the playing was, very even. Haskell often got Miss Townsend on the run and then finished off the point with a well- placed shot to the side lines. Her best point. winner was a stinging drive which bounced about an inch inside of the base line. Because of the. lack of sufficient good competition at col- lege Miss Haskell was not able to (‘couttwand on Page Two Moder chitecture Simple and Useful On Wednesday, April 29, Mr. C. H. Van der Leeuw gave a lecture, illus- trated with. slides, on “International Architecture.” . Mr. Van der: Leeuw is not only a prominent Dutch indus- trialist, president of the Internatienal Industrial Relations. Association, but also a recognized exponent of modern architecture. Architecture has a variety of aspects, historical, aesthetic, hygienic. Its beauty is psychological, differing in different people and from one age to another. Many people do not like the modern phase, but if they would look at it without prejudice they would sée how adequately it answers the needs of this age. It should be remembered that “modern” does not mean “medern- ‘The Mikado’ Fulfills 4 High Expectatio ‘ 4 Choruses Are Powerful ond Effective—Splendid Cast : of Good Voices. The Glee Club’s long-awaited produc-.. = tion of “The Mikado” on Friday and Saturday nights contributed more than one straw toward the collapse of an old adage, for it fulfilled every feature of our hopes, and our readers know they were fond. : With the: rising of the curtain’ upon the “gentlemen of Japan,” in the bright setting-of—“many—a~—vase~ and jar,” the tone was set. The arrangement of the gentlemen was effective as well as suited to their humorously stiff movements. They came to life nicely, however, both vocally and physically, in response to Nanki-Poo’s “song of the sea,” and in their greeting to the Lord High Exe- cutioner missed none of Sullivan’s ex- ploitation of color varieties. They even | overcame their femininity: to the extent of providing a-real-contrast-to the “trairr of little—ladies’»-whose—fluttering entrances and delicate singing contributed more than’ their costumes, especially the wigs, to the effect of the. shy and. wondering schoolgirl, as charming -as she is rare. As the populace, the two -choruses “with joyous shout and ringing cheer,” made quite a powerful ensemble, while in their dramatic silencing of Katisha, not overplaying Sullivan’s-grand-opera~ style, which is not too happy’a lapse from the, vein of light musical satire exemplified by Ko-Ko. ; It was in this compliance to the de- mands of comedy. that Miss Bell, whether speaking or singing, .excelled as the shameless upstart, for she brought out the ludicrous and the pathetic in his char- acter. Her entrance was_ incredibly superb, but her young sword-bearer comes in for a share of the credit quite incom- patible with his size. Miss Bell’s untraditional stature was a decided asset to her appeal, and, for a tall person, helpless from a softening of the heart, seems just.too pathetic for words. The list song, of course, appealed to a common emotion, but even Ko-Ko’s refusal to execute himself, or his both- ering the flowers that bloom in the spring made him something. to bé loved. As with the harassed “Major General’ of the “Pirates,” played by Miss Bell last year, one wanted to pick him up and soothe his ruffled spirits. It is no won- der. that Katisha succumbed to “Tit- Willow,” for, in contrast. to the usual clowning, it was sung with an’ air of simple sincerity which would have moved the heart of the most skeptical ~ Concerning the “three little maids from school,” it has been said that at their Continued on Page Three s Athletic Assn. Election President Gertrude H. Woodward, 32, Chestnut--Hill; was elected” presi- dent of the Athletic Association for 1931-32. Miss Woodward is a graduate of Springside School. She has been on the Athletic Associa- tion Board since 1929, when she was freshman representative, being sophomore member in 1930 and treasurer for the. past year.. Miss Woodward has. played léft half- back on the varsity hockey team for three years. Vice President ~#elen Leidy, '33, of Baltimore. _ |/ of vould. explain such a piece as Miss ; j : oe ome ' = 7 ; hohe ren ia « tae fai women | ees of the world shall run_gut,’ when | actress, as the machiavellian—Chevatier;+istic.”——Eighteen seventy” began aj] Graduate ot the Bryn Mawr: . 8 fatiohs shall have disarmed and there|gave the most convincing performance of| period of extremely ugly architecture school. Member of the varsity / are consistently ‘romantic, hence are aware of what it means to be romantic, hence can state a romantic moment with Continued ou Page: Three Recent elections to the Under- graduate Board have created the following officers: Anne Knapp, 33, secretary; Lulu Bowen, ’34, treasurer; Nancy Hoyt, 33, first junior member; Beulah Parker, ’33, second junior member; Helen Bowie, ’34, sophomore member. shall be no more tariff, and when Mary- land shall have sunk into a dismal bog? When that time comes, you will have more leisure and you may be able to occupy your time and perhaps find the answer to my question in these.” She theh presented him with an_ edition of Warren’s “The United States in the Supreme Court,” and Beveridge’s “Life {of Marshall,” ‘a gift from the Under- graduate Association~in™~appreciation of Dr. F enwick’s enlightening Tuesday night Cogtinued on Page Two the evening. The last line was an excel- lent finishing touch. In following the precedent of last year’s Freshman Class, 1934 has carried on a tradition’ Which we hope will become firmly established by succeeding classes. : €:-€--and J. M. The casts were as follows: = 0-— fea So ee . THE HABIT OF, HABIT C. Duany Pret ree a J. Parsons Continued on Page Three SS without any relation to its surround- ings. In reaction to this the ~-artist came_to the front and for a time every- thing was. ornate and lacked utility. Windows were not for light or_air,-but for ornament. The~proposed Radio Cityy-to~ be built in New York, is criticized by conservatives for having too much of this artistic decoration. Buildings should be simple; their pur- pose is to form sheltering walls. The ultra-modern . criticize. the plans of hockey squad for two years and captain of the 1933 class basket- ball team. r ; Treasurer © ' Sylvia C. Bowditch, '33, of Bos ton. Winsor School of Self-Gov, ernment Board for. two years second varsity basketball team and with Mr. and Mrs. Martin‘ Johnsen. - Stanton: Continuing Trader Horn. Ad- venture in Africa with the aid of all the animals that could be found. Boyd: Gloria Swanson. in Indiscreet. Amusing complications in the love life of an indiscreet young thing: Karlton: Constance Bennett in Born to Love. Exactly what it sounds like. Stanley: Continuing John Barrymore hypnotist. and madman of Du Maurier’s| noyel Trilby. — ) te - the skill of his first with the skillet, will be as nothing.. Let us warn you of one thing only, it takes a lot of sense of humor to handle him. If-ever he frets you, my dear, laugh it off! _ It. is natural for us to wonder. what manner of woman you are who has taken our place at the breakfast. table, and now pours out Lot's morning cof- fee, and reminds him to trim: his patri- archal beard. So we have a little plan | which tickles us:mightily, and need not s Were rocking to-and-froly in the pan. Said the omelet awful anxious to The ham all red and ranxious: “Do you think that I shall get a coat of tan” ‘ —Inquiring Reporter.” “Bryn Mawr Attitude” How hideous the College man - How dry and dull. How vain his thoughts and deeds pw wer Ne sul —Dismal Desmond the Dalmatian. ° ‘LOT’S THIRD WIFE... By . Wa. 6 _ tended May 13, 1931 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 3 ‘The Mikado’ F ulfills High Expectations Continued. from Page One entrance the music is wreathed in smiles. With someone like Miss Drake in the part of Yum-Yum, we do not see how it could be otherwise. Her grace in itself is a perpetual source of delight, and her Japanese manner of seeming actually to glide about the stage was a.source of wonder as well. -But what is more, she brought-to the part a vitality which ex- itself to the other characters. Whenever she was on the stage.the ac- tion, never slow, became brisker, and the entire atmosphere. brightened as if a ray Of sunshine had struck the stage. Not that: Miss Drake’s Yum-Yum ‘is entirely a” sunshine girl; while naive to a certain extent, as when she admits her beauty. in “a mood of the most egotistic innocence,” to: use.a more or less happy phrase of Mr.*Dunhill’s, she is also very worldly wise on such subjects as being buried aliye. Her--interruption of Ka- tisha’s disclosure with an “Ah-ha! I know,” is almost smug. At any/rate, she is irresistible, even when she romped around sharp and with a suggestion of __shrillness...But. perhgps--she -reached her highest. point after the-quartet, when she and Nanki-Poo prance off the stage to- gether, rather like the owl and the pussy cat. Nanki-Poo, however; was a worthy mate, for he possessed all the smoothness and grace that Miss Burrows, in a very fetching costume, could give him. His gestures, purposely / stylized, and _ blue- stockinged legs made him a very decora- tive, if not too skillful, second trombone. Even so, one wonders how-he could have resisted the entreaties of Katisha, at least when_played_by. Miss. Zeben..No- one. of the cast was so well suited as she to portray a role which depende’l so’ largely -.....0n.singing, For Katisha’s arias, with the| *’ Sun exception of Yum- -Yum’s “The Whose Rays,” constitute the only music of a serious nature in “The Mikado;” the rest is’ witty, sometimes melodic; sometimes rhythmic, and often graphic accompaniment to the .comedy of the libretto. Miss Zeben’s ‘voice has a maturity possessed by no other member of the cast. She has also more natural power, and knows something about how to use ‘ her. voice, which has great dramatic _pos- sibilities. Miss Zeben sustained the agi- tation of “Oh Fool, that flee-est My hal- lowed joys’ with good theatrical effect, and in “Hearts do not break” -she-came very close to tragedy. But she was given opportunity to display her talents for comedy as well, and capitalized on such lines as “I am an acquired taste.” Much as we liked Miss Zeben as Lady Jane in “Patience,” and as Ruth in “The Pirates,” her talents, both musical and histrionic, have never shown to better advantage than in the role of Katisha, and we feel that she always will be missed. Miss Wood, as her father-in-law elect, was also excellent. She portrayed the starchy, though ferocious,. monarch with no little humor, and was actively assisted by Miss Tyler -as a frolicsome parasol- bearer. Miss Evers’ Pooh-Bah -was the very essence of a sneer. Her deep and sure ra ) LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER Open Sundays CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE 918 Old Lancaster Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 Haverford Pharmacy HENRY W. PRESS, P. D. Prescriptions, Drugs, Gifts ‘Phone: Ardmore 122 PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE Haverford, Pa. School of Nursing of Yale University A Profession for the College Woman interested’in the modern, ‘scientific agencies of social service The thirty months’ course, pro- , viding an intensive and varied experience through the _ case study methods, leads to the voice was a pleasing complement to her acting, which, of necessity, did not have a great deal of variety. lord, if her voice did seem to~ get’ below her, but that is the penalty one pays for being a lady in gentleman's’ clothing. Yum-Yum’s little playmates, _ Pitti- Sing and Peep-Bo wer¢ as charming as they should be. Miss Polachek’s voice is fresh and sweet, but/it lacks power, and her diction, especially in her description of the executions made it even harder for her to bé heard. ‘ The set for’ the second att, with its pagoda and tfees, caught even more than the first, the spirit of “many a. screen and. fan,”/ and provided a lovely back- ground for the brilliance of the costumes. As a matter of fact, the entire perforrii- ance might have been said to glitter. Not only did the orchestra, conducted by Mr. Willoughby, in-spite of a-sprained ankle, bring out this quality in the music, but ‘the cast and chorus, through their brisk- ness and vitality, did the same for the action and the dialogue. Despite the naturalism and freshness which charac- terized the performance, it is obvious that great care must have been taken’ over every detail. Mr.-Witloughby and. Miss Shatighnessy, however, were well re- warded’ by the enthusiastic reception. of their efforts. There was nothing of politeness in the applause of the audience. Like ourselves, they clapped spontaneously and from sheer delight at the manner in which their hopes were realized. i Gs: The cast was as follows: ’ The Mikado of Japan, Rebecca Wood, ’33 Nanki-Poo, his son, Q * Angelyn Burrows, 31 Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of PN oasis visti scan Helen Bell, ’31 Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything RG iis ana Louise Evers, ’32 Pishe ‘Bet, a Noble Lord, dj Wards of ey Yung Yum. .......i4:. Mary Polk Drake,. ’31 PEBDEBD |. .56is.: Katharine Thurber, ’31 Katisha, an Elderly Lady, Sheema Zeben, 31 Conductor and musical director, F. H. Ernest Willoughby, A.R.C.M. Director, Margaret Shaughnessy, 31. Assistant director: Denise Gallaudet, ’32. Chorus accompanist, Vernon A. Hammond. The rection. a TTI Expert Hair Cutting BRYN MAWR 1721 | BRYN MAWR 494 : _ JOHN J. McDEVITT PRINTING Shop: 1145 Lancaster Avenue ROSEMONT P. O. Address: Bryn Mawr, Pa. ° Frances Tatnall made a very noble] “sama --Franees—Fatnall—31+ LOSES) ) eee Jane Polachek, ’34 Glee Club wishes to express its appre- ciation of Mr. Alwyne’s manatee. in-di=| Haverford Professor Reviéws ‘Lanterns’ ‘Continued from Page One This would explain the sur- success. prising’ goodness. of . Miss- Perkins’ There’s a Thin Mist. I use “romantic” in its most casual, obvious and perhaps unintelligible sense; but, since we so rarely recognize any mood as poetic ex- cept in the light of what we know from the Romantic Poets, I need not define the term. The conclusion is. that young women are romantic, while young men whip up a mood to’ poetry as one whips the white of an egg to froth. The effort is muscular, not emotional, and J am still unable to see such: effort as the way to poetry. The poetry in this num- bey of “The Lantern” seems to me to have been properly made. Indifference to English Let me now record a certain common ground I -find in all college publications. I note a cheerful indifference to the fact that English words when written are conventionally supposed to. mean some- thing, to convey an idea. That this in- difference is to be found chiefly in the prose only bears out the old belief that it is easier to write. verse. does so. quickly weary before the subtlety of an English sentence, so easily get bogged in its own vocabulary. These are some of the things I have found: “He. threw the paper on the window seat, and waited . . .” “It made-him feel secure in a tight house, before a warm fire...” ' “With eyes swimming like blue gulfs OF Oi ce Even quotations from other writers seem to have caught this air of indiffer- ence, for -I note that “Mrs. Donavan says, ‘She has little idea of honor nor of per- sonal obligation.’ ” —~One-comes—back—with pleasure to more | general matters, thankful that “The Lan- fern”. was able to stir one’s mind, even though the stirring seems to have stopped short of producing a review. In a hasty effort to repair this failure, let me add some formless notes. Individual Criticisms = The Weaitress—excellent record of things observed. Done with a satisfying | plainness. : Hero-—mgnagemenit of scene _and_inci-_ SCHOOL OF — oO FOR WOMEN Fioricutture, Lanpscare Desicn, Fruit Growinc, PouLTRY, ETC. Two-year Diploma Course begins Sept. 15th Excellent positions open to graduates Short Summer Course, August 3 to 29 Address, The Director, Box AA AMBLER, PA. Williamsburgh Savings Bank Building. Hanson awAsnianoPtacesar ftareust Avene. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Intensive Summer Courses. as Begin diny cums : The mind. | Joanna (Jo) Todd dent weak; what should be plain has been, I fear deliberately, concealed. But the somewhat difficult point of character J is done with firmness. | . Water. for My .Stain—unfair .to.take notes about it*in its unfinished form, Good practice writing, dangerous ghost of Henry James, or perhaps’ it’s Edith Wharton. One can only guess. Sense of character. seems good, but with all the shyness about anything’ happening one wonders if it will come off in the end. But exceflent practice writing, even if a shade too “silver,” “grey,” etc. . The technical sense and honesty of the two poems. is very pleasing. Now to end with the warning that I seem to have read “The Lantern” .and made these notes with a complete dis- regard -of- its. being an. undergraduate publication. This, I believe, has made my words too hard. If one moves to another position and asks, what of it as undergraduate work? the answer is much kinder. The level of ‘the work is high, and, most excellent thing, is maintained throughout. Freshmen Plays Continued from Page One PORE iatedaniisintaascncerannntieneis ‘A. Rorke Mr. Stickney ....... \seeetsseensesen oH Schwab Frank Badges: ....,,.snnmnnntiit: E: Smith It Was. Y G.. Fy Grant sR) RPPPPRRET REET SPT EO ITTTRT PTE K. Boyd] Jocelyn. Todd M. Carpenter ‘F.. Carter III PHAETON M.-Coxe Philippe, Duc d’Anjou _ (Louis’ brother) M. Gateson Chevalier de Lorraine ............ M. Coxe] LiendeChetillen i Copuish it PMT DN acces siecsussies O. Jarrett CICELY i sicauisciaauiniins N. Hart Maria Theresa i.....cssveserees B. Butler Comte de Guiche ...........0... M. Nichols INDUSTRIOUS SUMMER MEANS —A PROSPEROUS FALL Intensive Business and Secretarial Courses for the College Trained Day and Evening Classes ‘Graduates Placed NITED STATE / Secretarial School | Thirtieth Year 527 Fifth Ave. at 44th St., N. Y. C. NEW YORK WIGMAN SCHOOL OF THE DANCE Under MARY WIGMAN'S supervi- sion... Courses for dancers, ama- teurs, teachers, inauthentic Wigman method. Starts Oct. Ist... Reser- vation now. ite for curriculum: 113. WEST 57th. ST., NEW YORK. AN | hardly be seen forty stories up. | Modern Architecture Continued from Page One Radio City for not being modern enough. But modern architecture ‘is not a transition period to modernistic. Modernistic style is merely a phase of queer designs. Modern architecture is humane. ‘Builders of earlier genera- tions gave no thought to those who would have to live in their houses. Today the architect draws up plans with a technical man and according to what his client wants. Simplicity makes harmony difficult and today it is harmony that is important. It is the whole that strikes, not one window or door, as in the last century. Freud has influenced all modern thought and art and-sown in it a desire for contact with everything around it. Mr. Van der Leeuw showed slides of buildings, beginning with the artistic Deriod of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, work of Méndels- sohn, Loos, Gropius and Italian and Russian architects. Next he showed American moderns. In general New York skyscrapers go up simply to end in an inappropriate: spire which can ,Amer- ican engineers have come nearer than architects to the international modern ideal..This was followed by a film of the Van Nelle factory and more slides showing dyke construction and Dutch factories. The HAT CORNER 7012 West Garret Road’ 1 Block West of 69th St. Terminal Hats Draped to the Head “Gage” Hats—Large Head Sizes Allen “A” Hosiery FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL, OF LAW _ "NEW YORK Case System—Three-Year Course CO-EDUCATIONAL College Degree or Two Years of College Work with Good Grades Required _ Transcript. of Record -Necessary in All Cases MORNING, EARLY AFTERNOON AND EVENING CLASSES “WRITE-FOR-CATALOGUE...- CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar 233 Breadway, New York * ees FOR INTERESTING CAREER KKKKKK KK 341 W. £ ecbatan Avenue §&. O eXeXe ____ JHAVERFORD, PA. Telephone, Ardmore 2966 © ‘COLLEGE INN AND TEA ROOM SERVICE 8 A. M. TO.7:30 P. M. : Daily and Suntlay A LA CARTE BREAKFAST AFTERNOON TEA AND DINNER A LA CARTE AND TABLE D'HOTE , PERMANENT AND TRANSIENT ; Learn Languages This Summer T h e Berlitz Conversational Method, used by skilled native teachers, assures satisfactory re- sults. Private and Class Instruction Day and Evening. We prepare for all language examinations. Ask for catalog. CLASSES FORMING EVERY WEEK Elementary, Intermediate and Advanced French, PPGAne, Forwas, Italian, Cc. ‘ _.REDUCED SUMMER RATES é ur skirt, an example of iers as Lelong . 4 This suit shows the smart ‘combination of plain jack- et with plaid scarf and color contrasts highly im- _ portant with such coutur- $25.00 ” Sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 the RERLIiT SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES: Established 1878. ‘Branches: Throughout the World 226 South 15th Street Elrae Building PHILADELPHIA, PA... —* Pennypacker 4267 MAIN LINE STORE scxasumnens.* - & CLOTHIER Monigonfery Ave. and $1. James Place, Ardmore Page 4 4 THE+ COLLEGE NEWS ~ May 13, 1931 Phone Ardmore 328 HELEN S. BROWN 6 ARDMORE ARCADE ARDMORE, PA. LANG'S CANDIES Finest Assortment Bon-Bons Chocolates: « Salted Nuts Candy Novelties 6 Prompt Delivery For BOOKS GO TO SESSLER’S 1310 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA THE fl BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $500,000.00 Does a General Banking Business ' Allows Interest on Deposits oo ‘American Cleaners and Dyers Wearing Apparel Blankets Laces .:. Curtains Drapery Cleaned or Dyed STUDENTS’ ACCOUNTS We Call and Deliver TRONCELLITI, Prop. - 814 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR. 494 — | MRS, JOHN KENDRICK BANGS | DRESSES 566 MONTGOMERY AVENUE >» BRYN MAWR, PA. A Pleasant Walk fromthe in View College with an Object \1)- SS) >) DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE | THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL A Professional School for Women Summer. School Monday,. June 22 Saturday, August 1, 1931 Summer Travel Course in England, 1931 Date to be Announced The Academic Year for 1931-32 Opens Monday, September 28, 1931 HENRY ATHERTON FROST, Director’ 53 Cuurcn St., Camsripce, ‘ At Harvard Square Fr JEANNETT’S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop Phone, Bryn. Mawr. 570 823 Lancaster Avenue caeeaeal = MEHL & LATTA; Inc. LUMBER, COAL AND BUILDING MATERIALS | - ROSEMONT, PA. sete sonmamsai (EEA AA BABE EEE RE REEAE EEE EEE EEE EEE AEE 4 EEE EEE EEE EOS _“FRANCES ROBINSON-DUFF the great teacher.- In admiration.” —Dayvid Belasco. Collaborator with André Bacque, of the Comedie Francaise, Paris, in coaching roles and stage direction. ing and places speaking voice. dramatic expression, attaining acting. picture ‘actor. Applicable to the actor, singer, public speaker and moving Corrects stuttering. Announces Summer Session at 235 EAST 62nd STREET, NEW YORK CITY Telephone: Rhinelander 4,7900 estan Teaches diaphragmatic breath- Technical training: in all branches of the power of the modern school of 000 _ Paid to Winners of CAMEL CONTEST! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company takes pleasure in announcing that the decisions of Judges CHARLES DANA GIBSON, Roy W. Howarp and RAY Lonc in the $50,000 Camel Prize Contest have been reached and that prizes accordingly have been awarded as follows: bad ‘First Prize, $25,000 JAMES THOMAS SHARKEY, 101 Train Street, Dorchester, Mass. Second Prize, $10. 000 MRS. WALTER SWEET, Navy Yard, Brooklyn, N. Y. 5 Prizes of $1,000 each A. B. FRANKLIN, III, 52 Kirkland St., Cambridge, Mass. JOHN R. McCARTHY, 721 Main St., Willimantic, Conn. FREDERICK E. ROBINSON, Coronado Beach, Calif. WM. A. SCHRADER, Brent Apts., New Albany, Ind. DR. D. H. SOPER, 523 E. Brown, Iowa City, Iowa. 5 Prizes of $500 each ¥F. CARTWRIGHT. Transp’t’n Bldg., Washington, D. C, * EDITH COCHRANE, Glenvale Ave., Darien, Conn. is BARBARA LAWLESS, Ardmore, Pa. JANE PARSONS, 325 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y¥. RICHARD W. VOGT, Green Bay Road, Waukegan, IIL Bs congratplating the winners in the great Camel contest we want at the same time to thank most cordially the approxi- mately million men and women who dis- played their friendly interest by sending in an entry. sale of Camel cigarettes. 25 Prizes of $100 cach MARIE ALBERTS, 6252 So. Spaulding Ave., Chicago W. B. BARKER, JR., 420 N. Spruce, Winston-Salem, N.C. EUGENE BARTON, 3625 La Luz St, El Eases Texas MRS. EDW. F. DALY, 1133 Louisville St., WM. G. ERBACHER, 308 N. Front St., Conway, Ark. LEROY FAIRMAN, 69 Dartmouth St. Forest Hills, N. Y. KATHRYN R. FRANCIS, 448 E. 22d St., Baltimore, Md. MRS. ALEXIS GODILLOT, 191 Waverly Pl., New York C. W. GRANGE, 2316 Central St., Evanston, Ill. C. S. GRAYBILL, Paxtonville, Pa. JOHN I. GRIFFIN, 1208 Jackson, Pueblo, Colorado DAVID C. HILL, Peyton and Arlington Rds., York, Pa. Wewishalsoto thank the millions of smokers throughout the country for the appreciation they are showing for our new By means of this dust-proof, germ-proof, — t. Louis, Mo. Third Prize, $5,000 JULIUS M. NOLTE, Glen Avon, Duluth, Minn. ELIZABETH JARRARD, Porter Apts., Lansing, Mich. J. W. KEATING, 523 Prospect Ave., Cleveland, Ohio J. H. KENNEDY, 2627 W. State St., Milwaukee, Wisc. JOHN KILPELAINEN, West Paris, Maine DR. CLIFTON B. LEECH, 211 Angell St., Providence, R. I. EDWARD MARTIN, 121 Liddell St., Buffalo, N. Y. MRS. L. C. MILLARD, 609 Stockley Gardens, Norfolk, Va. EUGENE SARTINI, 745 Chapel St., Ottawa, Il. GREGORY LUCE STONE, 755 Texas St., Mobile, Ala. DR. C. L: THOMAS, Mount Airy, N. C. LEE R. WOMACK, 448 Tenney Ave., Amherst, Ohio J. ARTHUR WOOD, 21 Burke St., Mechanicville, N.Y. “ EMERY HERBERT YOUNG, Painted Post, N. Y. Humidor Pack moisture- proof Cellophane wrapping the rich aroma and full flavor of choice Turkish and mellow Domestic tobaccos have been—- air-sealed in Camels for your enjoyment. If you have not tried Camels in the Humidor Pack all we ask is that you switch over to this brand for one day. After you have learned how much milder, how much cooler, how much _more enjoy-_ able it is to smoke a perfectly conditioned fresh cigarette, go back to the harsh hotness of stale cigarettes if you can. Suche & ©1931, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C wate