SASS vil SE MY i ba ik THE COLLEGE NEWS | 4 sy a 5 ie — a” SRE ARR SS HNN RRS Vi RR Dg cee RS ee sl af ¢ : i - | ‘Page Three Awards for*Academic Superiority Go to Steinhardt in Philosophy, Lyle in English ‘S. Wright Wins English Prize, Meigs and Renninger, Excel = ae oy Se STs, sition . SCHOLARSHIPS ARE READ Goodhart, May 1.—The following list, of undergraduate scholarships was announced by Miss Park in chapel with this preliminary statement: “The names I shall read are chosen from a longer list because I wish to give them espécial honor before you all.” ; John Tyndale, Philadelphia Scholarships, held at Bryn Mawr, but not in the award of the college: Sophie Donaldson Hemphill, ’37; Catherine Dallett Hemphill, ’39; Scholarships awarded by the college at en- trance, to~be held for all four years: Frances Marion Simpson. Scholarships: . Vir- ginia Dorsey, ’37; Naomi Gladys Coplin, ’38; Constance Renhingér, 739, Norristown, Haverfotd Township and Rad- «nor Township High School Scholarships: Josephine Bond Ham, ”’37; Alice Chase, 738. Trusteee Scholarships: . Marian Elizabeth Gamble, ’37; Dorothy Blake Hood, ’37; Gretch- en Priscilla Collie, ’38; Bertha Goldstein, ’38; Eleanor Libby Bailenson, ’39; Helen Medlar Bridgman, ’39, Lower Merion High School Scholarships: Alice Frances Martin, 37; Doris Grey Turner, ”39. Foundation Scholarships: Suzanne Williams, *38; Agnes Williams Spencer, ’39; Doris Jes- sie Hastings, *39. Chinese Scholarship: May Chow of Peiping, *39, Leila Houghteling Memorial Scholarship (three-year): Mary Cunningham Sands, ’38. Alumnae Regional Scholarships (arranged in order of rank in class under each district): New England; Elizabeth Duncan Lyle, 737; Mary Elizabeth Reed, 37; Elizabeth King Simeon, ’38;° Doris Droste Frank, ’38; Sylvia Wright, ’°38; Martha Corrin Van Hoesen, 739; Julia Harned, 739. “New York: Ellen Brooks Newton, ’38; Dor- othea Radley Peck, ’39; Lorna Beatrix Pott- berg, *39. New Jersey: Elizabeth Jane Simpson, 737; Ann Keay, ’38; Amanda Elizabeth Gehman, 739, Eastern .Pennsylvania: Louise Atherton Dickey, °37; Gretchen Priscilla Collie, 738; Dorothea Reinwald Heyl, 739. Washington, D. C.: Ruth Stoddard, ’39. Pittsburgh: Lillian Jane Fulton, ’37. District IV: Jane Hearne Farrar, ’38; Caro- lyn Richards Shine, ’39, - District V: Margaret Robinson Lacy, 737; Esther Steele Hearne, ’38; Elizabeth Fabian Webster, 738. District VI: Virginia Ferrel Hessing, Anne Campbell Toll, ’39. Scholarships to be held in sophomore year: Maria Hopper Scholarships: Martha Corrin Van Hoesen, Carolyn Richards Shine, Cath- erine Jardine Richards. James 'E. Rhoads Memorial Sophomore Scholarship and George Bates Hopkins Me- morial Scholarship: Emily Watson Doak. Evelyn..Hunt Scholarships: Amanda Eliza- beth Gehman; Dorothea Reinwald Heyl. Bookshop Scholarship: Frances Bourne.” Scholarships to be held in junior year: James E, Rhoads Memorial Junior Scholar- ship: Dewilda Ellen Naramore. George Bates Hopkins Memorial Scholar- ships: Virginia Ferrel Hessing, Esther Steele Hearne. Amelia Richards Scholarship (awarded — by the President): Margaret Jeanne Quistgaard. Constance Lewis Memorial Scholarship and Alice Ferree Hayt Memorial Award: Mary Boone Staples. Anna Hallowell Memorial Scholarship: Ellen Brooks. Newton. Mary E. Stevens Scholarship (awarded by the President): Grace Allison Raymond. Elizabeth Wilson White Memorial Scholar- ship (awarded by the President): Fanny Rob- inson Hoxton. 2 Scholarships to be held in senior year: Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Memorial Scholarship: Elizabeth Duncan Lyle. Lila M. Wright Memorial Scholarship: Louise Atherton Dickey. Mary Anna Longstreth Memorial. Scholar- ship: Margaret Sprague Lippincott: Anna M. Powers Memorial Scholarships: Kathryn Moss Ja@e@hy; Lucy Huxley Kim- berly. . Evelyn ‘Hunt Scholarship: Margaret Robin- 38; Taplin son Lacy. Elizabeth Wilson White Memorial Scholar- ship (awarded by the President): Eleanore Flora Tobin. Thomas H. Powers Memorial Scholarship and Abby Slade Brayton Durfee Scholarship: Mary Hinckley Hutchings. - Susan Shober Carey Memorial Award: Lucy Huxley Kimberly. Book Shop Scholarship: Jussen. Scholarships :Awarded for Distinction in a Special Subject: Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Scholarships in English (awarded for excellence of work in Required English Composition): Mary Roberts Meigs, ’39; Constance Renninger, 739. Awarded for excellence of work in the first year English course: Sylvia Wright. Awarded for excellence-of work in Advanced English: Elizabeth Duncan Lyle. Elizabeth S. Shippen.Scholarships in Foreign Languages: Elizabeth Holzworth, ’37; Lucille Geraldine Ritter, 737. = Virginia Marie Elizabeth S. Shippén Scholarships in Sci- ence: Cornelia Ann Wyckoff, ’37; Esther Hardenbergh, °37. Elizabeth Duane Gillespie Scholarship. in American History: Mary Louise Eddy, ’37. : Nominated by their departments for the Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Scholarship: Mary Letitia Brown (history), Louise Ather- ton Dickey (archaeology), Elizabeth Holzworth (Latin), Ruth Levi (psychology), Elizabeth Duncan Lyle (English), Edith Rose (history of art), Leigh Davis Steinhardt (philosophy) and Cornelia Ann Wyckoff (chemistry). Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Scholarship, awarded to the student whose record shows tht greatest ability in her major subject: Leigh Davis Steinhardt, ’37. At the end of March Miss Park an- nounced a long list of appointments made in the Graduate School as fel- lows for next year, to which may now be jadded four more: emisiry: Mary Katherine “Owen, gia State College, 1933. onomics and “Politics: Mildred Sylvia an, A.B.’ Barnard College, 1935. ory: Mary Margaret Taylor, A.B. Mount Holyoke College, 1934. ; Psyghology: Marian B. Hubbell, A.B. ‘ ry : 7 r BS. ri # ‘Addendum In the issue of the News for April 29 it was stated that the accounts of the Undergraduate . Association are at present $744 to the good. It was not added that the greater part of this of this year in salaries to stu- f dent proctors, fire office similar. officers. Swarthmore College, 1934, The*-Graduate -Scholarships, an- nounced in chapel on Little May: Day, make up a long and interesting list: Biology: Carolyn Anne Hierholzer, B.Sc. New Jersey College for Women, 1935. Non- resident Scholarship:, Eleanor Husins Yeakel, A.B. Bryn Mawr, 1933. Classical Archaeology: Sara Anderson, A.B. Mount Holyoke College, 1935. Special Schol- ars: Barbara Merchant, A.B. to be conferred, Bryn Mawr, 1936; Eleanor Weston, A.B. to be conferred, Vassar College, 1936. Economics and Politics: Eunice Burdick, A.B. to be’ conferred, Wheaton College, 1936. English: Vivian* Irene Ryan, A.B. Oberlin College, 1934. ‘ French: Georgetta I. Stimmel, A.B. Elmira College, 1934; Janet W. Flanigan, A.B. to be conferred, Vassar College, 1936. Geology: Clementene B. Walker, A.B; to be conferred, Barnard College, 1936. German: Rosemond _M. Preuninger, University of Cincinnati, 1930, Greek: Delight Tolles, A.B, Vassar College, 1935; Katherine Lever, A.B. to be conferred, Swarthmore College, 1936. History: Margaret Ormsby, A.B. University of British Cobumbia, 1929. ‘ Italian: Janet E. McPhee, A.B. to be con- ferred, University of Michigan, 1936; Lena Ferrari, A.B. University of Rochester, 1935. Mathematics: Annita Tuller, A.B. Hunter College, 1929; Marion Greenebaum, A.B. Bar- nard College, 1935. Philosophy: Grace Lillian Chin Lee, Barnard College, 1935. Physics: Hodee Waldstein, A.B. to be con- ferred, Radcliffe College, 1936, Psychology: Mildred Ruth Henrich, A.B. to be conferred, Smith College, 1936. Spanish: Lucia Dolores Bonilla, Cardenal Cisneros, Madrid, 1928. Social Economy: Ruth E. Shallcross, A.B. University of Nebraska, 1929; Betty Bock, A.B. to be conferred, Bryn Mawr, 1936. Appointments for Foreign Women: Mary Paul Collins Scholarship in Classical Archaeology: Edith Eccles, B.A, Royal Hol- loway College, University of London, 1931. Exchange Fellows— through International Institute of Education: Teaching Fellowships in French: Paquerette Nasse, Licence es-Lettres, University of Bor- deaux, 1934; C. Fehrer to France. Teaching Fellowship in Italian: Giorgina Levi’ Della Vida, Laurea in Scienze Politiche, University of Rome, 1934, Teaching Fellowship in German: Erika~ Si- mon, student 1934 at the’ Universities of Frankfurt, Lausanne and Edinburgh; Caroline Brown, Bryn Mawr, 1936, exchange scholar- ship. to Germany. The Spanish Government has proposed to Bryn Mawr Miss Justa Arroyo, and has of- fered a scholarship at Madrid to Miss L, L. Mandell, A.B, Boston University, M.A. Bryn Mawr. Outside Appointments: Fellowship and Scholarship Awards: Barbara Cary, ’36, has been awarded the Mary Campbell Fellowship for study in Berlin through the American Friends’ Service Com- mittee. Adelaide Davidson, Fellow been awarded the Martin Fellowship from Yale University for next year. Alice Mary Dowse, part-time demonstrator in. Geology, has been awarded a Resideftt Fel- lowship for graduate study from Radcliffe College for next year. Janet Flanigan, A.B. to be conferred, Vas- sar College, 1936, holder of a graduate schol- arship in French for next year at Bryn Mawr, has also been awarded a scholarship from Vassar College which she will use to sup- plement the Bryn Mawr scholarship. Ruth Rogan, Scholar in Chemistry, has been awarded a teaching fellowship at Louisiana State University for next year. Susan Savage, A.B. Bryn Mawr, 1933, has been awarded a two-year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. Edith Ford Sollers, Fellow in Chemistry, has been awarded the Alice Freeman Palmer Fellowship from Wellesley College for study in any college. Miss Sollers will use it at Bryn Mawr next year. Jane Martin, Fellow in History of Art, has been awarded a scholarship by the Institute of International Education for study in Paris this summer. Frances Porcher, ’36, has been awarded a fellowship to the Radcliffe Graduate School of A.B, A.B. Bachiller in Greek, has acaamenmas pe ie @ Many young women already enrolling in our Special Course for College Women opening at the New York School, July 13, 1936, preparing for early place- ment, when openings are spe- cially favorable. It’s smart to be early. Complete secretarial training, identical with course regularly opening on September 22, 1936, in New York and Boston Schools. Write College Course Secy. for catalog, and. booklet “Results.” nok neice pm SERS —<—<—<< @ One and Two Year Courses also available for preparatory and high school graduates. NEW YORK........230 Park Avenue BOSTON.......90 Marlborough Street KATHARINE GIBBS SCHOOL sum will be spent before the/@nd 4 .| from the theatre. Lurid Crimes. Appear : In Modern Art Films Continued from Page One movies .were widely shown: in this country. In its use of the caniera, cutting and painted backdrops alternated with natural settings, Tatters is reminis- cent of The Great Train Robbery, sh here March 18. The most strik- ing aspect of the film is its acting, which is done in a stylized, unnatural tradition now almost entirely vanished It is the exact pro- totype of the performances of nine- teenth century melodramas which are still -given in poor neighborhoods in London. The part.of the little poor boy seems to have béen played by a girl, according to a custom which Mary Pickford later followed in her Little Lord Fauntleroy. . Underworld, the second film on the program, brings us to the _ not-so- distant date of 1927, when gunmen and crime rings were at their height. The fame of organized crime in Chi- cago gave a particular timeliness to the movie and helped it to set a long- lived fashion for gangster pictures. The film was directed by Josef von Sternberg and includes in its cast such familiar names as George Ban- croft, Evelyn Brent, Clive Brook and Fred Kohler. Von Sternberg’s feeling for atmosphere and for textures comes out well, particularly in the scene after the gangsters’ ball in which Bancroft, as the master-gunman, stag- ers through tattered paper-streamers eloquent of the sordid, uneasy life of his kind. The Cat and the Canary, produced in 1927, will be remembered for dis- turbing the sleep of many of us.’ It typifies the more subtly horrible mystery-film, which succeeded the blood and thunder movie. Clutching hands, concealed bodies and the final accusation of the person least under suspicion come into their own in this picture. The director of The Cat and the Canary was the late Paul Leni, noted for his ingenious lighting and macabre effects. Among the characters whose hair is set on end by a masked ter- ror are Laura La Plante, Creighton Hale, Tully Marshall and Lucien Lit- tlefield. The film is remarkable for odd camera shots and oblique angles, including a’scene looking down on the assembled characters and a_ shot through the back of a chair. . Al- though the acting is mediocre, the movie as a whole is pleasing to the eye and succeeds in being truly frighten- ing. Arts and Sciences for graduate study in Kellogg ResidentThistory. Academic Appointments: Frances Follin Jones, Scholar in Classical Archaeology, has been appointed Warden of Denbigh Hall at Bryn Mawr next year. Leslie Koempel, in the Department of Social Economy, has been appointed Instructor in Sociology at Skidmore College. Ruth Lawson, Fellow in Politics, has been appointed Politics and Government at Newcomb Memorial College versity. Jeanette LeSaulnier, Senior Resident of Radnor Hall and Graduate Student, has been appointed Warden of Wyndham Hall at Bryn Mawr next year. Economics and Instructor in the H.. Sophie of Tulane Uni- * Night Rates (on Station-to-Sta- tion Calls only) save up to 40% of the day rate. For example: Call 100 miles for 60c by day — for 35c after 7 P. M. BELL TELEPHONE ‘FOSSIL BONES RETAIN | to inflation, which would damn the EVIDENCE OF DISEASE > (Especially contributed by Dr. Dryden.) ¥ Dalton, May 4.—Dr. George Wag- 3 goner spake before the class.in ad- vanced: general geology on the general topic of “paleopathology,” giving par- ticular attention to skeletal evidences of disease in ancient man and in fos- sil animals. The diseases so dis- covered—by examination of | fossil bones, or of the skeletons of historical’ characters lately exhumed, or of, bones of mummies—are found to have been almost as numerous in the past as they are today. Skulls ‘and other skeletal parts of the ancient Egyptians show tha¥ these people suffered from pyorrheg, tubereulosis of the bones, smallpox, cancer, mastoiditis and a host of other modern ailments. Fossil reptiles and mammals, many of great antiquity, show fractures, arthritis, irregular adventitious growth and many other deformities. One of the most suggestive parts of Dr. Waggoner’s talk was his refer- ence to the importance of studies of the skeletons of historical characters. In one case, a Scotch general wa’ re- puted to have been kicked in the face by a horse, in the year 1314. His skull shows a fracture in the region of the face, and it is apparent that he continued to live, since the fracture healed naturally. In other cases, evidences of disease may help to ex- plain the motives behind the actions of many famous people of history. A number of interesting slides were shown and discussed. Administration Scored In Political Discussion Continued from Page One labor benefited by the new measures, though certain clever agitators have done so by confusing the men who blindly support them. Accordingly, there is an emphatic need for men in Congress and in the judicial system who are more than “rubber stamps,” men who will not carelessly allow a 435 million dollar tax bill to be made law while only 36-50 of their number are attending. Maurice Dreicer, of the University of Pennsylvania, struck the distinctly American note of personal liberty. Not only is this currently discouraged in expression of opinion, he believes, but as the Black investigation demon- strated, even personal correspondence is examined by officials. As the league maintains, confiscation is preferable country to chaotic insecurity and would be particularly severe on en- dowed institutions. To Mr. Charles Kenworthy, a mem- ber of the Lawyers’ Committee of the Liberty League, the movement is an “idealistic niche in the American sys- tem.” The motives of the founders of the league are irrelevant to the present condition of the movement, which is non-partisan where political groups are concerned. In fact, a na- tional administration bearing the label >OMPAN‘ ————_— Cite Universitaire . Room is Obtainable Applications for. Next Summer May Be Made to Miss Park Applications’ for: the Bryn Mawr room at the Cité Universitaire in. Paris for the French academic year, Noveniber, 1, 1936-July 1, 1937, shoukd be made to President Park before June 1. The cost of a room including ser- vice is from 250-300 francs per month, depending upon length of stay. Meals are served on the cafeteria plan at an average cost of fifteen francs daily. The following classes of applicants will be considered in nominating the occupants of the Bryn Mawr room: (1) Holders of Bryn Mawr degrees CA. B., Moa, Pri Ds). (2) Other present and former stu- dents of the Bryn Mawr Graduate School. : (3) Members of the Senior Class. A careful plan for the year’s work should be submitted, and if the -can- didate is not at the time of: applica- tion a student at Bryn Mawr College, at least three people competent to estimaté her work should be referred to. Application may.also be made be- fore June 1 to President Park for the use of the Bryn Mawr room for a period of not less than two months during the summer. This application should be accompanied by a plan of work and academic references. ~ PLANETARIUM SHOWS A SIBERIAN ECLIPSE The future is being revealed this month at the Franklin Institute. Vis- itors to the Planetarium are trans- ported to mid-June in central Siberia, where scientists and natives, if they are lucky, may view a -total eclipse. The demonstrations take place at three o’clock every afternoon and at eight-thirty every evening except Mondays and Tuesdays. In addition to these showings there is one on Sat- urdays at noon and at four The institute is cooperating with Federal, State and Municipal, author- ities in demonstrating How Science Fights Crime. For the next two weeks | the subject is Burglary. A feature of the exhibition, is the finger-printing which is available to the visitors for purposes of personal identification. of Jackson, who was noted for his economy, is spending in excess of any former peacetime budget. And strangely enough itis the Republi- cans who are clamoring for. states’ rights. Special-interest EUROPE TRAVEL _under_ eminent leadership! fds Travel with an authoritative leader, a specialist in your own professional or avoca- tional field. Make your Euro- pean trip a constructive cul- tural adventure. Here are only a féw of the important offerings. Write for booklets on any of these... or send for full program, — stating your particular interest. Joseph Fulling Fishman’s Crime & Punishment Tour 57 Days - 5 Countries - $581 Lester Cohen’s Course in Soviet Life & Literature 51 Days - 5 Countries - $399 Dr. Joseph Otmar Hefter’s Contemporary Art Tour 56 Days - 8 Countries - $489 Dr. Irving’ V. Sollins’ New Education Abroad 61 Days - 8 Countries - $450 ago Also Popular Edutours to suit persons of more: diver- sified interests but equally Critical tastes. Expert lead- ership guaranteed. EDUTRAUVEL An Institute for Educational Travel 535 Sth Ave., N. Y.—Land tours in Europe in conjunction with, Amerop Travel Service, Inc. (U.S.S.R., in cooperation with Intourist, Inc.).\/