a ih i. | — “om — VOL. XX, No. 18 , | BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1934 copyright BRYN MAWR COLLEGE NEWS, —= PRICE 10 CENTS 1934 | French Club Gives Superb Performance Barbier de Seville Unites Excellence of Acting With Good Staging: DIRECTION IS LAUDABLE Le The French Club’s presentation of Le Barbier de Seville in Goodhart Hall on Saturday night was a superb performance in point of action, stag- ing, direction and unity.. Le Barbier de Seville is a play of highly typed, “diverse characterization, and could therefore easily present the spectacle of a divided group of individuals, each pursuing his own part with determi- nation .and. indifference to the be- havior of everyone else on the stage. The French Club’s performance of the |: ptlay, however, was so well directed |" and acted that in tvery -sense~the group worked smoothly and unitedly together,,so that no one person at any time seemed better than any other, although all were excellent in their rules. As a result, the play had a degree of -professional~ finish - which has been seldom reached on the Bryn Mawr stage. The director, Mlle. Maud Rey, is to be congratulated not only on the unity and changes of tempo she man- aged to produce, but-on the period authenticity of the acting. The ac- tors’ gestures were both completely in character and done in the classic French style. The formal bowing; the combination of every gesture of the hands with an appropriate and styl- ized change of the position of the feet, and the studied, foxmal grouping of the actors in each scene displayed Mile. Rey’s accurate knowledge of cor- rect old French acting. If£ the mark of a professional play is its skillfull changes in tempo, this presentation of Le Barbier de Seville could have passed muster on almost any profes- sional stage, for the tempo was rapid and interesting whenever Bartholo was on the stage, was slow and deli- cate in the love scenes, and rose to heights of accelerated rapidity in the amusing drunken scene with the Count and in the scene when the Barber shaved Barthelo. (Continued on Page Three) Varsity Wins Game Against Swarthmor, In their final official games of the season, the Varsity basketball teams defeated Swarthmore by the scores of 29-25 and 34-18. A tied score at the end of the first quarter and a Bryn Mawr lead of only one point at the end of the half, not only indicate the excitement of the game, but perhaps show to some extent the disappointment we felt that a team which began the season with such excellent co-ordination, teamwork, and accuracy, should play its last game with such evident wild- ness and lack of unity. The fact that six personals and three technical fouls were chalked up against Bryn Mawr to. Swarthmore’s three personals and one technical does not indicate any intentional rough play, but merely shows Varsity’s lack of control and actual carelessness of play. Passing was even more ragged than usual, especially from the centers to the for- wards, whose inaccurate shooting did not help to improve the general mo- rale of the team. At the end of the third quarter, the line-up was shifted ~“a bitin the hope that the change| ~would: bring some’ order” into the chaos and it would seem that the shift ac- complished its purpose, for a fourth quarter rally from a score of 25-25 gave Varsity a lead which she man- aged to maintain until the whistle. On the other hand, we must give most of the credit to the guards, espe- cially to Bridgman, whose intercep- tions and excellent defense against Stubbs really saved the day. Of the whole team, the guards alone, we think, have maintained ‘the high standard which they set at the begin- (Continued on Page Four) “* Faculty Decision Dean Manning. wishes to ‘an- nounce that the faculty has re- considered the case mentioned in week before last’s editofial, and has agreed to abide by its original decision. The reason given is that the student in question was urged to. take the German Ora] last fall, and since she refused to do so, the fac- ulty does not feel that any ex- ception can be made in her case. final: Fencing Team Wins Phila. Championship College Team Will Represent Phila. in Amateur Women’s - Tournament E. SMITH RATES FIRST On. Thursday, March 15, the’ Bryn Mawr fencers won the Women’s Team Championship of the Philadelphia Division of the Amateur Fencers’ League of America, entitling them to represent the district. in the National Tournament. It is the first time in many years that the college team has been able to defeat that of the Phila- delphia Sword Club. In addition to the team championship, the Bryn Mawr fencers captured the first. two places in the meet for individual scor- ing, Miss Eleanor Smith ranking first and Miss Marianne Gateson, second. Three teams entered the meet, one from Bryn Mawr, one from the Sword Club, and a composite team, made up from Bryn Mawr and Shipley School. The college team consisted of Miss Gateson, Miss Smith, and Miss Man- ship. Gateson captained the team and took all her matches but one, despite the handicap of an injured left wrist that forced her to fence right-handed, as she has not done for two years. Smith won every one of her bouts, her fine form and dexterity showing up beautifully in open competition. Manship lost her first two bouts, but recovered her usual skill in time to win the last four with comparative ease. Miss Brill, Miss Lane, and: Miss MacDermott fenced on the Sword Club team. Brill, like Gateson, lost only one bout, but ranked third in the individual placing, because she had eleven touches against her as oppos- ed to ten against Gateson. Lane, of the Sword Club, ranked fourth in in- dividual placing, and MacDermott, sixth. On the composite team fenced Miss Coxe and Miss Berolzheimer, from the College, and Miss Garthwaite, from Shipley School. Coxe won the only bout which this team had to their credit. Mr. Agnew and Mr. Shakspere judged the meet. The following are the official results: Team Bryn Mawr College: and 40 touches against. Sword Club: 11 victories, and 58 touches against. Composite team: touches against. . Individual Miss Smith (B. M. C.): ies, and 10 touches against. -Miss- Gateson- (B.-M. C.): ‘tories, and ii touches | against, Miss Brill (S. C.): 5 victories, and 15 touches against. Miss Lane (S. C.): and 17 touches against. Miss Manship (B. M. C.): tories, and 19 touches against. Miss MacDermott (S. C.): tories, and 26 touches against. Miss Coxe (C, T.): 1 victory, and 28 touches against. Miss Berolzheimer (C. T.): 0 vic- tories, and 30 touches against. Miss Garthwaite (C. T.): 0 vic- tories, and 30 touches against. 15 victories, 1 victory, and 88 _6 victor- 4 victories, 4 vic- 2 vic- 5 vie~ \ _ | She took her Ph.D. degree at the Uni- versity of Vienna, 1930, was assistant. Miss Park Announces) Graduate Fellowships A Single European Scholar Nathed Instead of Five—Dr. Noether ‘Given. Tribute." Bw CUM LAUDE LIST READ Speaking in chapel on Friday, Marck 16, Miss Park stressed the fact that courses and degrees form only the framework of a college. Over- emphasis «upon them leads to dry- ness. To present such a framework as a representative picture of col- lege is incorrect. This skeleton or pat- tern must be rounded out and hu- manized by other kinds of discipline and learning. Clashes of mind, disci- | plines of the body, the senses and the will, also play their part in forming the woman who is ready to deal with abstract questions and practical de- vices alike. On such an occasion as the an- nouncement of European and gradu- ate fellowships, everything but the framework of Bryn Mawr College must necessarily be excluded and in- telligence must be dwelt upon to the exclusion of other qualities, which are taken for granted. The first graduate European Fel- lowships were presented in the first six years of the college. The Fanny Bullock Workman Fellowship was founded by the will of Mrs.. Work- man, at both Radcliffe and Bryn Mawr, for purposes of travel. Mrs. Workman was one of the most ro- mantic of Victorian women. She was a mountain-climber and a scientist, as well as being’ profoundly interested in education. This fellowship, which is of the value of $1,000, has been awarded seven times. The Mary Eliz- abeth Garrett. European Fellowship, of the value of $?,000, awarded annu- ally for excellence in scholarship, has been held 40 times in different depart- ments. The Fanny Bullock Workman Fel- low for 1934-35 is Maude M. Frame, of Philadelphia. Miss Frame _ took her A.B. at the University of Penn- sylvania in 1927. She was a reader in Philosophy and a Graduate Stu- dent at Bryn Mawr College, 1928-30, 1931-34, and a Scholar in Philosophy, 1930-31. She has chosen the subject for her thesis from the departments of both Philosophy and History of Art. Her subject is the conception of space and its relationship in Ital- lian Rennaissance Painters. The Mary E. Garrett European Fel- lowship is to be held next year by Emma Hope Broome, A.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1927; M.A., Bryn Mawr College, 1932; Scholar in Latin, Bryn Mawr College, 1931-32; Holder of Fellowship in Biblical Literature from Bryn Mawr College, 1932-33 (fellowship used at the University of Chicago), and Fellow in Biblical Lit- erature, Bryn Mawr College, 1933+34. Miss Broome, also, has studied in’ two departments—Latin and Biblical Lit- erature. She can contribute to her study a knowledge of the Roman Em- pire and an unusual background in the Syriac and in the Semitic lan- guages. She will work under Profes- sor Burkitt, at Cambridge, where she will investigate the sources of Peshit- ta, the accepted translation of all branches of the Syriac-speaking church. Only one European scholar, instead of the five usually admitted, will enter Bryn Mawr College next year. Olga | Taussky, of Czechoslovakia, has..been. selected. Miss Taussky studied at the Universities of Ziirich and Vienna. in the Department of Mathematics, University of Gottingen, 1931-32, and is now collaborating in the publica- tion of the edition of Hilbert’s works. Miss Taussky was chosen with the aid of Dr. Emmy Noether. Dr. Noe- ther, who is the greatest woman math- ematician in Europe or America,.is now resident at the college and will be here next year. To afford oppor- tunities for the very advanced study offered by Dr. Noether, an additional (Continued on Page Six) trip through the window! 7 News Elections The Editorial Board of the College News announces the fol- lowing elections for the coming year: . , Editor-in- ~Cheif — Geraldine ’ Rhoads. ; Copy Editor — Diana Tate- ' Smith. The following new members were added to the board: Allin- son, L. Brown, Fisher, Goodhart, Lyle, Marbury and Rose. Mr. Hopkinson Talks on Art Appreciation Thursday afternoon in the Com- mon Room an. attentive audience was given by Mr. Charles Hopkin- son, famous portrait painter, an ac- count of what passes through the mind of an artist when he looks at a picture. The layman, if able to perceive things taken from the visible world in a painting, enjoys the picture for the associations roused by it; the artist improves upon that habit of mind by enjoying a painting for the associa- tion, but also for a great deal more, for composition, form and color. It is these latter constituents of a pic- ture that he has in mind when creat- ing his own work and it is to them that he looks for the intrinsic value of _a work of art. The composition of a picture should be. enjoyed in the same manner as music, as something not connected with the visible world; or again, in the same manner as architecture, an art appreciated for the abstract ele- ments of direction of planes, thrust and prqportion. -The feeling of form in space, the three dimensional aspect of a picture should be produced in the simplest-way possible. The sense of depth which the artist strives for is not the depth of a mirrored image, out the space relation of a world cre- ated by the artist himself; and if the distortions are consistent, the picture ‘will exist in its own world, far more interesting than the visible world. The painter thus starts off with his own concept of reality and uses only material objects, such as trees, figures and_ terrain, as points for the eye to (Continued on. Page Four) Bryn Mawr Swimmers Conquer Swarthmore Backstroke .Record is Broken With 31.4 in First Meet Off-Campus DIVING IS EXCELLENT At three-thirty on Friday after- noon, the Varsity swimming team, accompanied by a sizable cheering sec- tion, wended its way grimly over the hills to Swarthmore for its first off- campus meet. At six o’clock the bus — loaded with its hilarious crew sped homeward after winning a most excit- ing meet, 49-35. Varsity, in carrying off six of the nine events and in breaking the col- lege record for the 400-yard back stroke event in a strange and com- paratively slow pool, confirmed the opinion that it is one of the. best teams we have had in many a season. In the first event, the 80-yard free style, Swarthmore led over the first three laps, ka the last turn, Dan- iels and VanVechten made a final spurt to take first- and second places, respectively, with Heathcote, of Swarthmore, coming in third. Woodward took an immediate lead in-the, 40-yard—back-stroke—event- to break Duncan’s record made in the interclass meet by clocking 31.4 sec- onds, with Huntington taking second and Porther third place. In the medley relay, Bryn Mawr was behind in the side and breast strokes, but Hemphill took the lead on the trudgeon, and Wylie kept it in the crawl to win the event in 54.2 seconds. Whiting was the favorite in the craw! for form, but met keen competi- tion from Keyes, of Swarthmore, who took second place, and was only .5 of a point behind with a total of 22 out of a possible thirty. In the breast stroke event, the field was pretty well bunched on the first lap, but Waldemeyer made a beauti- ful turn to take the lead down the lyst lap and first place in 32.2 sec- onds. (Continued on Page Three) Haverford Foils Bryn Mawr in Tag Game; Basketball Enlivened by Hurdles_and Songs On Monday afternoon, March 19, Bryn Mawr’s Varsity went down to its second defeat of the season in a hard-fought game with Haverford College’s basketball team* After a false start which netted Varsity an uncounted two points because of the Haverford desire for forwards to play against forwards, the game got un- der way. Bryn Mawr started off with Boyd scoring a nice shot amid roars from Haverford’s supporters. Flac- cus countered with a long shot, pre- ceded by a game of tag with his guard, ‘who viewed his success from a sitting position on the floor, Odd as it may seem, soon after these ini- tial efforts, Bryn Mawr committed the first foul, when Larned attempt- ed to hurdle her opponent as the best way to get around him. Haverford kept right on Varsity’s heels, both literally and actually, as the score mounted little by little until at quarter time it stood at 10-8 in favor of Bryn Mawr. A flock of substiutes came in for both sides and the battle continued. The Scarlet and Black tried some fancy shots and passes, some.of which.fell_into.Var-- sity’s hands, others in the basket; and one hada miraculous escape from a Wher half+ time came. Bryn Mawr was on the long end of a 15-14 score. The Haverford cohorts indulged in several cheers and songs, one or two of which we recognized as having been heard in these parts before. The rendition of ‘Come Cheer For Our College” was especially gallant, we thought. With the men’s rules in force, we expected to see a general roughhouse, for we had heard something about Haverford’s new underhand system of passing and it sounded quite sinister, yet all went well, although it cannot be denied that the Scarlet and Black shooters showed Varsity several tricks which may be useful against the Fac- ulty. During this quarter Varsity showed some hesitancy about using the privilege of bouncing the ball in- definitely. Meirs at center did avail herself of the chance to try‘for the basket, but unfortunately she met with no success. She made up for it with good play at center, in spite of a momentary protest at the small size of her opponent at the start of the second half. Bridgman did good work at guard during this period, but we wondered that she didn’t grow dizzy trying to keep her eye on her elusive opponent. Altogether we must admit that the third quarter was not a great success from the point of view of the Bryn Mawr score. A paltry two points was the sole product of eight minutes of frenzied activity dur- ing which Haverford rang up thir- teen points to bring the total to 27-17. In the final period the game re- verted to girls’ rules. This did not phase the Haverfordians very much, for;-although~ Varsity put in several ~ baskets, the Scarlet torWatas non- chalantly pushed in a couple of shots with what seemed almost infinite-ease;— while missing quite a few more in much the same style. The Haverford lead proved, nevertheless, to be insur- mountable and the game ended with the score, 31-26. The game was not a complete loss. Although Varsity did meet its second defeat, several valtiable pointers were\ picked which will undoubtedly be stored up for use . against’ the Faculty. So, as we say: farewell to Haverford’s victorious team, we close in the same breath with a warning to our next opponents. May the Faculty beware! Se ee eee THE COLLEGE NEWS _THE COLLEGE NEWS | (Founded in 1914) | WITS END : es Bree COE ur ; { abled weekly. during the College .Year (excepting ri Thanksgiving, Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest of Bryn Shree College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College. The College Néws is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part, without written permission of the Editor-in-Chief. Copy Editor . Nancy Hart, "34 | Sports Editor SALLY Howe, "35 “Editor-in-Chief SALLIE JONES, °34 News Editor J. EvizapetH Hannan, "34 : Editors - : . ELIZABETH MACKENZIE, °34 GERALDINE Rnoaps, °35 ee. _ Frances PorcHer, °36 , CoNSsTANCE ROBINSON, °34 a Frances’ VAN KEuREN, °35 Diana, TATE-SMITH, '35 . Subscription Manager ~ Business Manager g DoroTHy KALBACH, °34 BarBaRA Lewis, °345 : . Assistant MarGarReET BEROLZHEIMER, °*35 DorEEN Canapay, "36° SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME Entered as second-class matter at he Wayne, Pa., Post Office The Last Gasp As we bend over our faithful typewriter for the last time of a Monday morning we feel really quite sad about the passing of our ! glory and the coming of a new, and perhaps better, age. For two _ years the present seniors on the board of the News have planned the celebration which they would hold to commemorate the joyous moment now that that time is upon us, we feel unaccountably unhappy about it and the desire to sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of kings sweeps over us at frequent intervals. Whether or not the readers of our noble paper will mourn our demise is a matter of opin- “ion; if they do not we probably will not notice the omission as we will be fully occupied in bemoaning it ourselves. But,. while we are concerned with our memorial services, another board will have stepped into our shoes, and the News.will have gone by, another of the signposts on the road to journalistic immortality. The 9 fact which has always impressed us most strongly in connection with the News is that, in spite of periodically changing boards, it comical to maintain a certain continuity of character that survives the influence - to maintain a eertain continuity of character. That this should be true is an indication that the News belongs actually to the college as a whole and not to that group. which happens to be in control at any given moment. The assistance which the college can lend the editors by their support is much greater than would be imagined at first glance. No paper can long endure and prosper if its clientele is indifferent in its attitude, or destructive in its criticism. The News depends almost entirely upon the goodwill of its readers for its continued existence, and for this reason the present editors wish to avail themselves of their last editorial opportunity to thank the subscribers for their support in the _ past, and to commend the News to their future attention. The policies of the entering board may not be those of the deceased, and the methods of enforcing an editorial policy upon the attention of the public may not be the same, but the college may rest assured that their interests are being left in safe and competent hands. The new board will make every attempt to fulfill the specifications of the under- graduates as regards the type of paper they want, and all they ask in return is goodwill and a certain amount of co-operation during crises. We have no desire to burst into editorial tears at this point, or to indulge in a long harangue about the future that we hear lies before us, or the past that we know lies behind us. | about the character and the future of Bryn Mawr regularly every _ Monday morning for two years and there are certain ends which we j should like to see achieved within these ivied walls before we are plac- ed firmly beneath the sod. As they demand slight explanation we will witen they should no longer be the servants of public opinion. But, | But, we have thought | "RIDE THE FOUR HUNDRED Perambulating quite de luxe The puny little infant pukes With blasé air upon his ride Along the Hudson Riverside. —Snoop-on-the-Loose. Dear Mad-in-the-Hat, My name is big chief~ Ink-on-the- nose. I am American Indian. I am the only co-ed in Bryn Mawr. . They say I very fortunate. I do not know. I know I frightened and lonely. The other day I go to class. I get as far as door and hear hiss. I run 'and hide behind pale-face squaw on tree trunk. She very big with lumpy hair—I think she have name Venus. A big chief fuzz-in-the-face asks me what.is trouble. I tell him about-hiss, He grin and say it only thermostat. I ask him what kind of snake is that? He say it is not snake, but just lot of hot air. .He open mouth and laugh. I do not understand. : Please forgive me much in writing you. I have first idea of writing squaw with name Dorothy Dix. But a papoose, I mean say freshman, she say she only write when she do some- thing wrong. I have done nothing wrong. I just sad man. None like me. Big squaws tell me I have no merits. I do not understand. Humbly yours, —A Blue Redskin. MUSEUM FEET O! painful aftermath Of treading culture’s path! O! let me make my moan On museum floors of stone! It is so hard upon the earth To look at fragments on the march (Whereas I like to gawp in zoos Upon.-inhabitants in twos). With no apologetic “buts” I swear I haven’t got the guts To walk so very, very far To gaze upon minal objets d’art. —Aesthete. PHILOSOPHIC GEOMETRY Fragment I: It may be that I simply am Without intellectual clarity, ‘But really I don’t give a damn For the essence of triangularity. Fragment II: A square is a square and. always a square Be it non-existent here or there, And it is what saved Descartes from despair, .~..., ‘ Because through his doubting ra trusted the square. —Minor Philosopher. RUS IN URBE Come is the day of the double decker, Swarming the genus rubbernecker, | On the up and up in the upper half, ; Are a lot of people taking the gaff Of the insane wind coming out of the blue That stretches above Fifth Avenue. —Suburbite. ROCKEFELLER RETURNS TO THE DARK AGES confine ourselves to listing them. We should like to see: (1.) The bushes in front of the Library devoured by Japanese | beetles before the horrifjed eyes of whoever is responsible for them. a (2.) Two vegetables at luncheon and dinner in the halls, instead | Bs of some of the fantastic concoctions to which we are at present sub- jected in the name of “a change.” (3.) A system of marking whereby the disparity in marks so noticeable at the last mid-year period might be eliminated. (4.) A system whereby all marks should be known only to their proud owner unless they were so good that she felt constrained to noise them abroad, or unless they were so poor that she felt the need of consoling herself by asking everyone else what the Gods had brought them. [ (5.) eM tthe only course taken by their sreduita: We have sear S thought that -* if the professors did the work themselves at the same time that the “students were doing if there would be fewer overworked undergradu- ates: . : (6.) A recognition by the resident undergraduates of certain truths about “community living; (a.) The preferenee of a minority -eannot be made the choice of the majority, 1. e., when three people want to use the smoking room as a study and the rest of the hall wants to use it as a lounge—it should be a lounge. (b.) The Library is the logical place for those individuals to study who cannot bear the slight- est noise in their vicinity while attempting to concentrate. (c¢c.) Bryn is Mawr i is slightly advanced socially over the ordinary prep-school and ' seems a shame that disciplinary measures long endeared to the hearts | prep-school heads should have.to be instituted to keep the infants _A system WwW wher eby the professors might be prevailed upon to | Sh! Sh! We must not make a sound, | Though twenty odd people are gath- | ered around, We must not make a sound. Sh! Sh! Whisper if you must. Although yéu are aching to stream ’til you bust, Whisper if you must. Sh! Sh! coming down the stair. Take off your shoes for heels disturb the air, Coming down the stair. || The quiet ae is here, Sh! Sh! The quiet hour is here. It’s after ten-thirty, the warden’s wrath we fear. Ln | Sh! Sh! pai going out from dinner. Don’t stop to tell your best friend she’s looking much thinnér, When going out from dinner. Sh! Sh! It’s, boarding-school again. We thought we were twenty, but we’ve found we’re only ten. It’s ’s ‘boarding-school again. —Grown Up. Flotsam-jetsam has a very techni- cal meaning which, no one knows but such as are Marine Lawyers. When a ship sinks and only when a ship sinks and refuses to come to the top again, flotsam and jetsam are pro- duced, not both in the same way how- ever. One is made in, one way and one in a very different way. Flot- sam is: more or less passive and jet- sam as the name implies is active. When the passengers of a boat see the ship about to sink, naturally the first thing they think of is how to eep it above the water so they throw out everything they can lay their hands on in hope of saving them- selves. In case they are disappointed and sink, jetsam results and it comes under the head of wreccum maris in the-law--books.. But if the passengers decide that they do not want to throw things overboard, as someone might come along and save them from their fate, and then the ship. sinks with all hands on board and cargo floats to the top, that is flotsam. Cheero— THE MAD HATTER. Scavenger Hunt Promises ~ Hilarious Evening for All Scavenger hunts have been very common throughout the nation of late, but the Hunt promised for the Wed- nesday after vacation will be of a variety completely unknown to date. There will be sweepstakes on the va- rious teams of faculty and under- graduates, a talk on Germany by Miss Ely, unprecedented prizes for the vic- tors, and plenty of refreshments to top off an evening of sports. Teams are forming all the time for the big event: the Willing Wardens, led by Miss Ferguson; Dr. Flex- ner’s Bully Boys, and the Diez Dash- aways. Numerous’ undergraduate teams have also signed up with the backers of the Hunt, Terry Smith and Bunny Marsh. The schedule for the evening is sim- ple and should be very agreeable to follow. The teams are to meet under Pembroke Arch or in the vicinity if things get crowded, and from there proceed by car, bicycle, or foot to scavenge. Having scavenged until they are worn out, they may sink then into a well-earned rest at Miss Ely’s, where they will hear their host- ess talk in her usually amusing fash- ion as they are refreshed. Everyone not in the infirmary or otherwise incapacitated is urged to appear on the scene Wednesday night, April 4, and join in the fun. There are certain small preliminaries nec- essary, as the managers of the Hunt wish to be notified of what teams are entering so that they may make up their book forthe sweepstakes. The price for all this humor is only sev- enty-five cents and you may: be able to make it up if you bet wisely, so don’t fail to make the small initial investment. Any further information may be ob- tained from Smith or~Marsh, Pem- broke West, who are running the Hunt. : seetion. of the last. in t hand so the grey beards can live in peace. 7, 2 A realization on the part of the undergraduates ‘that they have come to Bryn Mawr to learn; and that there are many avenues to knowledge open. to them other than those of the lecture room, and quiz There are our dying wishes, and as we gaze at ies we are amazed to see how completely they contradict all the deep-seated eas which we held when we were freshmen. upon us in earnest, and that being the fact we shall retire to our rheum- atism, and ruminate on how the News was run in our day. Allow us to commend it to you as an institution.worthy of your support, and may we suggest that you hold none of the grudges against the. new board which provided us all with so much amusement during the regime The new board is composed of really charming people, and if the subscribers do not succeed in ruining their dispositions before they get started, all should go very well indeed. Sea a ° ns It all goes to show that age is ee 2 News of the New York Theatres After the furore created by Fred Astaire in Flying Down to Rio we feel.that we should keep-his-collegiate public informed of his life and hard -times to the best of our ability, and we offer as an opening’ wedge the item that after the film was complet- ed, and Fred saw it in a projection. room, he was so horrified that he rais- ed every cent he could find in the world and tried to buy it from Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer so he could tear it into very small pieces and throw it far away. He thought everything about it was awful, and the sight of himself going through the throes of the numerous dances made him shud- . der with apprehension for his. fu- ture. Fortunately for the “Bryn Mawr public, Metro liked it and re- fused to part with it for- love or money. Which all goes to show that Fred Astaire is a modest, retiring young man, and not in the least aware of the fact that down on the . Main Line there is a colony of young women who Carioca to bed and to breakfast. . Perhaps it’s just as well that he doesn’t know about all this liberal adapting of his medium to the specifications of academic joints and library muscles. The dear Bryn Mawr girl as a type was never meant to bloom.like an orchid in the. moon- light, and no amount of torturous winding..about. the campus _is going to change the fact. The present theatrical season is more or less over as far as new plays are concerned and the minds of most of the producers are teeming. with plans for the season to come. How- ever, before we launch into the prom- ises for next season, there are a few things in the here and now that would bear a little explanation. Charles Dillingham held both, thumbs and brought into town a revue in which there was not one seasoned performer nor one known librettist, scene de- signer, or stage hand. The thing was honestly called New Faces and every- one went to work, and hoped every night for five silent minutes before rehearsal, that they would get through the. opening chorus before all the first nighters went home for their sherry and biscuits taken after a par- ticularly stiff dose. They saw their prayers come true in a triumphant manner, for they were all so enthusi- astic about life and they played with so much spirit and gave every estab- lished: institution such a superior go- ing over that the jaded older gen- eration loved it. The audiencg all passed out of the theatre murmpring “Youth, youth, Ah, what a marvelous thing is youth” and the show was made. about it like one talks about an in- cubator baby—‘“marvelous what sei- ence can do,” and all the rest of it. As a matter of fact-the show is real- ly very funny indeed, and done in ‘the best blase manner which its children can affect. They submit the bird to the English Players by doing a scene in which the diction and enunciation are so perfect that no one word can be understood; Nancy Hamilton does a Katherine Hepburn, which amused even Miss Hepburn, who sneaked down from Olympus for the evening; there is a lively song entitled J Hate Spring, which shows you just how startling. are the ideas of the flaming post war theatrical generation, and, all in all, for forty-three scenes youth holds the stage and the old and aged roar with pleasure to see the little ones having wien a hell of a time. . The Group Theatre, which is the proud parent of Men in White, is opening Gentlewoman, a play by John Howard Lawson, on Thursday, and it should be very good indeed. Mr. Lawson’s last play concerned a sacred city in Thibet, and no one was at all interested, so this year he has moved York mansion of the vintage of 1934 and has created a love story that has all the sophistication that he found it impossible to put over in Thibet. Stella Adler and Claudia Morgan are. the two cheeriest souls in it — and there is also Morfis Carnovsky. Mean-: while, Men in White runs on, and the cast has to find new ways of keeping up interest in the thing after the two hundred mark has flown past them. On St. Patrick’s day they played the’ whole first act in Irish dialect and it went over beautifully except that Ed- ward Bromberg kept forgetting just which dialect was his native one. Beatrice Lillie is at present in Lon- : (Continuea on Page Four) All New York is talking - ae mT ae v THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three French Club Gives Superb- Performance Continued from Page One * The French. Club is also to be con- gratulated in its choice of a play, for | to an audience which is none too quick at understanding French, the presence of pantomimic action is an immense help. Le Barbier de Seville is so filled with action that the point and many of he incidents of the play could be conveyéd through the panto- mime without the assistance of one spoken word, and as a result the audi- ence seemed, to understand what was happening in this play better than in any of the French plays presented at Bryn Mawr in the past. The enunci- ation, however, was amazingly clear and distinct, and most of the clever lines were greeted with roars. of | laughter from the audience. ma It: is difficult to decide which of the | actors deserves the most praise, for each one played her part with natural ability, topped by careful and intelli- gent interpretation. The play was ad- mirably cast:. Miss Perkins and Miss Jarrett were naturally fitted to act their roles as well, we believe, as they could be acted; Miss Pillsbury show- ed a remarkable power of continually sustaining the difficult character part of Bartholo; Miss Stewart had all the proper gravity and earnestness for; the role of Don Bazile; Miss Fouil- houx not only looked and acted the part. of the romantic lover convincing- ly, but showed great versatility in the drunken scene; and the minor charac- ter parts of La Jeunesse and L’Eve- ille, were perfect to the tiniest detail. Miss Jarrett played Figaro with a gay vivacity and enthusiasm, remain- ed in character throughout the play, and succeeded in making the audience | enjoy her part as much as she was | obviously enjoying it herself. Her | lively, rapid movements as she bounc-'| ed merrily around the stage, made an | excellent contrast with the stiffness | and formality of all the other acting. | She showed remarkable understanding | of the French technique of acting, and | great skill in doing it with convincing naturalness. Her own personality was | merged with the character to the ex-| tent that it is difficult to image Fi- garo apart from Miss Jarrett. Her singing was clearly enunciated, pure | ‘congratulated for the natural ease we can do no more but give our high- est_ praise to .an excellent bit of double acting. Miss Stewart, as Don Bazile, spoke in excellent and very clear French and her manner fitted the part per- fectly, but we felt that she did not make so much as might have been! made of the famous “La calomnie” | speech. Her grave tones, her serious | acting, and her somber costume added, however, the correct note of contrast to the more colorful and entertaining parts of the other- major characters. - All the minor parts were well taken, La Jeunesse, played by Miss And- eregg, was a marvelously made up and costumed old man, and spoke with all the cross excitement of old age. Miss Boyd, as L’Eveillé, was stubborn to an amazing degree, and could not have been surpassed in her acting of the yawning scene. Miss Haskell, as the Notary, failed to get over to the! audience the humor of her perplexity over the two marriage licenses for Rosine, but was otherwise entirely perfect in her portrayal of a very French role. Perhaps the most interesting thing about this production was the French- ness of al] the acting: no one would ever have suspected that these were American girls acting a classic French play. The actors also deserve to be| with which they spoke to the audi- ence in asides, not meant to be heard by the rest of the cast. It is not.very easy to speak directly to an audience in order to convey information not intended for the other actors, in an era when, apart from Mr. O’Neill’s better efforts in that line, playwrights generally regard the audience as something not to be directly addressed | under any circumstances, on pain of a lingering death. The staging of Le Barbier. de Seville should bring great credit down upon the shoulders of Miss Janet! Barber, who designed and supervised the execution of the sets. The first set was, so. far as we know, Bryn! Mawvr’s first attempt at a street scene, and the effect of the grey buildings rising to towering heights in back of | the street houses was both austere | and very Spanish. Spanish lanterns were hung outside Spanish grilled windows and the furniture in the in-! terior scenes was authentically Span-| -voice conveyed her high intensity of | and in most cases better than any congratulate Miss Pillsbury on her. ‘mantic lover, the Comte Almaviva, in tone, and done without the slight- | : ; : aut stenin as though she were i y| ish. Interesting contrasts of light and sinaine iuak tow tha toy. of it 'shadow were used, especially in the| : 2 : ? first act; in which the sun hit, the| Miss Perkins acted Rosine with all | windows of the house while the streets the ‘sweetness, youthfulness, capacity | below was still in shadow, and in the for love, and determination whic the ‘fourth act, in which the stage alter- part calls fo Bs and had in addition an | nated between lightness and darkness Seen iat: ecm — Parra |whenever actors entered and exited eer ness and of Algn-| carrying lanterns. atvrung : gn os pin - generally | was always effective and unusually a ai al i rench race; she’ so in the first act, when the hooded might ‘easi tage abled — 2 shee | figures loomed large in the dark light. —— a oe rae her _— 'On the whole, then, this play was vidi saia galt desubigaretthewe Meena’ staged, acted, and directed as well as, feeling admirably, her distaste for aces play either in English or in him was delicately suggested, and her } versatility was. apparent in ley | = changes of tone, pitch, inflexion, and | gesture whenever she spoke to the) Count.: | Miss Pillsbury, as the cross, caret | cious old miser, Bartholo, had perhaps the hardest part of all to sustain, but | she never faltered for an instant. Her | cross, querulous, quavering voice was a marvel of characterization, her stiff, aged walk never changed except to be intensified into a run, and she man- aged to make the audience sorry for her without making them sympathetic with her.. The slight touch of ridicu- lousness in her love-making to Rosine after the fainting scene made lightly amusing a bit of acting which is rather hard not to overdo. As a mat- ter of fact, her whole part could easily have been- overdone, and we a Theatres, shops, and the goings- on about town are just a few blocks away when you stop at Hotel Tudor: And it’s in Tudor City, New York's smart residen- tial community. A new hotel— 600 rooms—all with private bath. Single rooms $2; double $3. Special rates by the week. ability to sustain it at just the right pitch. ae Miss Fouilhoux, who played the ro- did the nicest bit of acting in her Bryn Mawr career. She was never ridiculous, as amateurs attempting to play romantic lovers so often are, but kept the audience’s sympathy con- tinually with her and acted her love scenes with a convincing competency unusual in an amateur. Hers was the big scene of the play, judging from the enthusiasm of the audience, and we firmly assert that we have never seen an irrepressible, care-nothing, voluble, and. -thoroughly charming drunken man better played. When we add to this, that it was delicately conveyed in her acting to the audience Two blocks east of Grand Central 304 East 42nd St. Murray Hill 4-3900 The costuming ;> that her drunkenness was assumed,| Fred F. French Management Co., Inc. French that we have seen at Bryn Mawr.—D....T._S. hiieieiibechis CAST Le Comte Almaviva. .Anita Fouilhoux FORO 6s evince, Olivia Jarrett Bartholo? 7.7733 i, Elizabeth Pillsbury POUR is iss eck cds Emily Perkins DON TRORUO. .6i ca bs Alicia Stewart La Jeunesge......... Jean. Anderegg Ty URE ok ees selene Mary Boyd Un Notaire ...... Margaret Haskell Un Aleade ...2%7). Mary Hutchings Divigée par...o6.dcic-< Mlle. Maud Rey Décor et Costume...... Janet Barber Bryn Mawr Swimmers Conquer Swarthmore Continued from Page One The 40-yard free style seemed to be fated at the beginning. - After one bad start the field finally got under way, with Wylie leading at the turn. On the final lap, however, Michael, the. Swarthmore ace, slowly drew away and though Wylie made a great spurt at the end, a collision gave Simpson second place and Wy- lie and Heathcote tied for third posi- tion. Swarthmore took first and third places in the tandem with Cohen and Woodward coming in. second. Whit- ing and. VanVechten.got. off to a nice start, but broke in the middle of the pool to come in fourth. ] The diving was ‘anticipated with great excitement, for there was no doubt but that Swarthmore held the advantage on its own board. How- ever, though Daniels got off to a bad start on her first required, her form and-entry-on-her-other_requireds and optionals gave her first place in the event with 69.45 points. A close sec- ond, Stokes was’ showing excellent form, but lost out on her front one- and-a-half as her final optional, and ANNOUNCES jt - FLAVORED WITH They've made wine for ages— but it took Lucien Lelong to find the cleverest use for it—in a lipstick. Smooth and subtle as the finest vintage of France— sparkling and alluring as the red, . red wine—you've never known such a lipstick! All shades $1. Visit Lucien Lelong’s Lipstick Bar in your. favorite store.- not: up 4 ‘spite of “he unfamiliar diving board, brought her total to 69.3 points. Bur- -}| ritt, of Swarthmore, took third-place with a total of 67.85 points, bowing to both, Stokes and to Daniels in the op- tionals. On the »whole, Swarthmore got much more height than Bryn r, hut approach and entry were scratch. Bryn Mawr, in seemed (|! get excellent control when once stared. The relay seemed a bit anti-climac- tical after the diving, but much to Swarthmore’s excitement, its> team won out in 1744.8 seconds. Stokes and Smith were even at the end of the first lap, but Swarthmore drew away in the next two and Daniels _}was unable to make up the gap on the last. Thus ended our -first outside ath- letic meet and no more worthy team could have represented the college in such an event. May we have many more of them, for in the spirit of fair play, especially in basketball and swimming, it is a distinct disadvan- tage to our opponents to have to play us always on our own territory, The events were as follows: 80-yard Free Style — Daniels, VanVechten, Heathcote (S). “\ 40-Yard Back Stroke—Woodward (B), Huntington (S), Porcher (B). Medley Relay—Bryn Mawr. (But- ler;-Waldemeyer,.Hemphill,. Wylie). Crawl For Form—Whiting (B), Keyes (S), Harvey (S), and Bill (B). Tandem Crawl—Highly and Heath- cote (S), VanVechten and Whiting (B), Siccard and Huntington (S). 40-Yard Breast Stroke — Walde- meyer (B), Smith (S), Jones (S). 40-Yard Free Style—Michael (S), Simpson (B), Highly (S), and Wy- lie (B}. Diving—Daniels (B), Stokes (B), Burritt (S). Relay—Swarthmore (Smith, High- ly, Heathcote, Michael). The University of Arkansas is well represented in the councils of. the State’s legislators, for Neal King, .a freshman in that institution’s school of law, is a member of the House of Representatives of Arkansas. He is but 26 years of age, and has taught in public schools of Arkansas for a number of -years. Women require 25 per cent. longer time to apply brakes when driving an automobile than men, according to statistics compiled by Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists. setenv BEST'S * ARDMORE. ~ features \ *% ” SMART CLOTHES FOR YOUR EASTER CRUISE Pique Shorts Ensemble 5.95 Pique Hat 3.95 TT pique shorts and dress ensemble is typical of our bright new fashions —well within college budgets. Shorts. are the big news'this year and we have every variety. Bathing suits and halter- kerchiefs for swimming or sunning come in sprightly new styles and colors. Sweaters galore. Tubbables in silks and cottonsin.gay vivid patternsand luscious | pastels are irresistable and very practical. | -— | Gingham. and ‘seersucker organdie evening dresses are delightfully new and - flattering. Do come in, Best’s has every- thing from the latest beret to espadrilles =f -~ — to make your cruise a success. _ « Hest & Co. 4-4 Montgomery and Anderson Avenues ~ ARDMORE, PA. Ardmore 4840 * fie te _able merchants. v Page doit | THE COLLEGE NEWS a Mr. Hopkinson Talks on Art Appreciation, - Continued from Page One +“ : “rest. upon as it goes back to the pic- ture. That at least is the correct at- titude for the artist, that the model he is about to paint is not to be slav- ishly copied,‘but to be used to create reality by taking its place in a part of the artist’s predetermined: scheme of things: The artist is saved from photo- graphic art as well by the materials he employs as by his individual con- _cept of reality. The color ‘scale he possesses is less extensive than that of nature and constitutes a fundamen- tal obstacle to exact reproduction, Al- though an amateur may try to paint the color as he sees it, he fails, for ‘be cannot. duplicate the wide scale of. natural colors; He must arrange his scale to fit his own world. The Italian primitives of the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries Wid not follow the practice of the moderns, who attain more truth to nature in painting light and shadow by using neutral colors for shadow and strong for light, yet their pictures have vi- tality in spite of untruth to nature. Perhaps the reason may be found in the fact that, although they\reversed the modern process and put ‘strong colors in the shadow and made the lights paler, they adhered to a defi- nite color scale; they created a color hierarchy of their own, true in spite of its falsity to the laws of light and shadow in painting. An element of a picture especially interesting for the artist is its pat- tern. Any picture is more or less a pattern made by any arrangement of linés within a rectangle. The divi- sions are vertical, horizontal and diag- onal and if the pattern coincides with these divisions, so much the better will it fit its rectangular frame. The figures or other component parts of a picture must balance in form as well as in disposition of light and dark areas. i To attain this balance two fairly common rules of symmetry—balance and dynamics—may be used... The principle of dynamic symmetry was used again and again in Renaissance art, notably in Velasquez’ Surrender of Breda. The mean and extreme proportion of dynamic symmetry is extremely pleasing to the eye—a fact which may explain the appeal of square-rigged ships. The measure- ment of Greek temples and vases re- vealed the fact that eighty per cent. of them fall within the principle of dynamic symmetry. Any painter may follow his illus- trious predecessors in arranging: his composition; he has only to take a rectangle, draw diagonals in it and draw right angles from those diag- onals, putting objects, such as a head, the corner of a room, a table, on the lines of the angles and symmetry results. And a painter, especially a portrait painter, can get along very well in this fashion; but if he applies the rules of dynamic symmetry in a slavish, conscious fashion, the fin- ished picture will inevitably present a rigid pattern to the seeing eye. If one knows the principle behind the pattern of such a picture, the compo- sition seems tiresome. Certain litho- graphs of prize-fighting done by George Bellows are all designed on this same principle of rigid and un- deviating symmetry and, consequent- ly, lack subtlety. For the painter, the real subject- matter of a picture is something else than the object-painted or its associa- tions; the relation of lines, tones of color, light and shade interests him; and it is immaterial whether they centre about a tree or a gas pump. _.his_indifference to subject-matter..is.| . naturally carried over from concep- tion to perception of a picture by him, and if the layman wishes actual- ly to enjoy art, he must: imitate the artist. To gain perception it is use- ful to train the eye to pick out effects of light and shade in nature; and finally to train the vision by looking at good painting. Advertisers in this paper are reli- Deal with them. Phone 576 : JEANNETT’S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP, Inc. Mrs. N. S. T. Grammer -* $23 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. Art Exhibit Paintings by Julius Bloch are on exhibition in the Common Room by courtesy of the Little Gallery of Contemporary Art. News of the New York: Theatres (Continued ’ from Page Two) don and will not be with us until next season, when she will return to skate up and down our stages in her best manner. With her will come Noel Coward in his own play, Conversation Piece, with Yvonne Printemps. That is at present running in London and the English love it. Then Cochran will present Elizabeth Bergner in Escape Me Never. Miss Bergner is at present playing Catherine the Great in the English movie and has won the acclaim of all New York. A great piece of work on the part of her press agent’ managed to get the film banned from Germany because she is a Jewess and at present the Astor Theatre is a ‘sort of meeting place for all those wishing to register a protest with Hitler. They probably haven’t stopped to consider that Hit- ler may not care and that the Eng- lish company. is practically..erecting a statue to his fame as a result of the proceeds that_roll_in...Then the one and only Gertrude Lawrence will re- turn to these shores in Nymph Er- rant, the tale of a lady who wanders around Europe with the greatest of pleasure and sings Cole Porter’s mu- sic as\she goes. It sounds very much as though next season is going to be fully as amusing as the present one has been and, still is. And so to bed, gentle readers. Af- ter two years ofthis sort of thing we are retiring to the comfort of the Library, there to spend the remaining days of our life browsing\about among SS ee ee ee ee CECELIA’S YARN SHOP Seville Are =" BRYN MAWR PA. a ge a ae the history books we love so well. In view of the fact that we consider our- ' Selves partially responsible for the re- vival of the drama, together with Re- peal, which has had a good deal to do with the receptiveness of the pub- lic, we hope that you will all buy the volume of reminiscences. which we in- tend to publish before leaving these precincts for good and all. It will be entitled Down the Elementary Canal with Dean and President, and there will be a limited edition with illus- trations by Gertrude Stein and. lyrics by Yehudi Menuhin. We. plan there- by to accomplish the synthesis of the arts which has become our life’s am- bition. We want so very much to learn how to come to grips with life and effect a marriage between Ger- trude Stein and Wagner, and the pro- ceeds from our book will go to found a school of technical research in this field. Varsity Wins Game _ Against Swarthmore Continued from Page One ning of the season. The line-up was as follows: | Swarthmore Bryn Mawr MOUODE i ew. ) fe fA Boyd WeOOd oh. ce Lot A Faeth Sonneborn ....... Crete Jones MPOUCOIT Cokie e) SoC fri Larned EGOOM eo ®@ ——s poe Que (issn anaitnesnmmaiesannueel—byeeniasmentncerneies FOR LOWEST COST and GREATEST EASE... Use the inexpensive Station to Station serv- ive when you telephone Home. ing a “date” Call after 8:30 P.M., when the low Night Rates are in effect. (By mak- the Family is sure to be. there.) Just give the Operator your home telephone number and “hold the line.” Charges may be reversed. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA w—6 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five ——wiy : Campus Notes The following members of the In- ternational Relations Club have been eletted to serve as Bryn Mawr dele- gates to the Model League of Na- tions Assembly: “Vung-Yuin Ting, Eleanor Fabyan, Sarah Flanders, Margaret Haskell, Betty Blyth, Nan- cy Hart; substitutes, Grace Meehan, Lucy Fairbank, Betty Bock. They will represent China. This Assembly, for colleges and universities of ‘the Middle Atlantic States, will be held thé week-end of “April 13 at Bucknell University. This is the first time Bryn Mawr students have atténded. Dr. Helson’s studies in nerve regen- eration, on which he has been work- ing for the last. ten years with Pro- fessor K. M. Dallenbach, of Cornell, are now: nearing completion. He ex- pects them to go to press in the fall. The March issue of the Phi Beta Kappa magazine,. The American Scholar, contains an article by Dr. Miller, on “Individualism in the Fu- ture.” At the annual meeting of the ~ | FANSLOW Distinctive Sportswear Stetson Hats for, Women American Academy of .Political and Social Sciences, Dr. Miller will read a paper on “Some Pathological and Contagious Aspects of Nationalism, With Especial Reference to the —_ East.” Dr. Metzger has published three articles within the last few months. The current number of the BMLA contains an article on “Old High Ger- man galstar: Old English gealdor.” Papers on “Middle English run” and “Latin nitere-renidere-nidor’ have just appeared in the Journal of Amer- ican, Philology. The Zitschrift fur vergleichende Sprachforschung has accepted the fol- lowing articles for publication: do-Germanic Perfect and e-verbs: A contribution tothe Indo-Germanic Verb - System,” “Latin Lorare-ado- rare,” “Latin crudus,” “Latin sagis- Gothic sokeis,” . “Old English eart- Gothic sijum.” disk Filologi will publish “A aldinn mar (Edda) ,” “Zum Partizip der drit- ten schwachen Deklination im Altis- landischen,” and “Icelandic funn- geotr.”’ Dr. Metzger is now at work on a dic- tionary of Germanic words arranged according to categories of meaning. He will show which words were used at a-given time to express a given thing, and will define their meanings. Thus the vocabulary of different per- PHILIP HARRISON STORE BRYN MAWR, PA. Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Hosiery, $1.00 Best Quality Shoes in Bryn Mawr ARDMORE NEXT DOOR TO THE MOVIES Meet your friends at the Bryn Mawr Confectionery, (Next to Seville Theater Bldg.) The Rendezvous of the College Girls Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes, ‘ Superior Soda Service “Ty. The Arkiv for Nor- |. Music—Dancing for girl$ only SPECIAL Katharine Gibbs School L COURSE COLLEGE WOMEN Secretarial and Executive Training Course begins July 9 and September 25 For catalog address College Course Secretary FOR 90 Marlborough St. BOSTON NEW 247 Park Avenue YORE 155 Angell Street PROVIDENCE iods may be compared and the cate- gories of each dialect established. The following dialects. will be included: Old English, Old. Norse, Old Frisian, Old Saxon, Old High German, Mid- dle Low German, Middle Dutch, Harvard University ranks number one in the United States among those institutions of higher learning from the standpoint of outstanding scien- tists, according to a recent survey by Prof. S. S, Visher, of Indiana Uni- versity. Residential Summer School B Yco-educational) June 27— August” 1. Only French spoken. Fee $150. Board and Tuition. Elementary, Inter- mediate, Advanced. Write for circular to Secretary,. Residential French Summer School. McGILL UNIVERSITY MONTREAL, CANADA ies What? FINEST CABINS at TOURIST CLASS RATES? It’s true when you sail to Buripe via Red Star ET (the best of'things.. . the finest cabins, the largest public rooms, the highest decks on the ship.. -all at the low Tourist Class fare. When you sail on one of these four Red Star liners Tourist Class is the highest class on the ship. Regular sailings to and from South- ampton, Havre and Antwerp. Minimum fares— Tourist Class $117.50 One Way, $212 Round Trip; Third Class $82 One Way, $144.50 Round Trip. S.S. MINNEWASKA _S. S. MINNETONKA 22,000 gross tons S. S. PENNLAND 16,500 gross tons J . . See your local agent. His services are free. RED STAR LINE International Mercantile Marine Co. S. S. WESTERNLAND through your Jocal a 1620 Walnut St.,° Philadelphia ~ ~~ a ~ about Cigarettes po Practically untouched by human hands E’D like you to see Chesterfields made. We know you’d be im- pressed by the absolute cleanliness of our factories. The tobaccos are the best that money can buy. Expert chemists test for cleanliness and purity all materials used in any way in the manufacture of Chesterfield cigarettes. The factories are modern throughout. Even the air is changed every 4% minutes. When you smoke a Chesterfield you can be sure that there isn’t a purer ciga- rette made. a In a letter to us an eminent sci- entist says: “Chesterfields are just as pure as the water you drink.” a Inspectors examine. Chesterfields as they come from the cigarette making machines and throw out any imperfect cigarettes. esterfield the cigarette that's MILDER | the cigarette that TASTES BETTER » © 1934, Liccerr & Myers ToBacco Co, LIVE in FRENCH] Miss Park Announces POLITICS Mawr, 1932-34, cum laude. 41.5 per cent. ofthe Sen-| hart, Alberta Anne Howard, Mary Graduate Fell owships Ruth Catharine Lawson, A.B., Mount Emmy NoeTHER FELLOW ior class, 32.8 per cent. of the Jun-| Pauline Jones, Elizabeth Kent, Bar- Holyoke College, 1988; Scholar in| Carolyn Grace Shover, A.B. and B.S. ior class, 28.3 per cent. of the Sopho-| bara..Lewis,. Nora MacCurdy, Helen - Continued from Page one ee eee oe Bryn Mawr ger eee Univer- ; posse Say ‘ rite rd cent. of ibe Se eee see he cn * : ; ollege, -o4, sity, ; M.A,, 7, and Ph.D.,| Freshman class hold this rating. The|abeth Margaret Morrow, Susan Hal- ei re hapten eee Poy ., DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION 1931. yon ors decrease in pércentage through the lowell Morse, Shizii Nakamura, Ger- 2 hal os fe retain ge a Ethel Joyce Ilott, A.B., Bryn Mawr DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY classes is to be expected, as a student | aldine Emeline Rhoads, Mildred Mar- hi ag e mmmmy Noemer Sehow-! College, 1933; Scholar in Mathemat- | Estelle Merril Allen, A.B., University | in her own field does better work. lin Smith, Diana Tate Smith, Evelyn : : ‘ ics, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34, of Washington, 1931; M.A., 1932; Students holding a cum laude av-| Hastings Thompson, Vung-Yuin Ting, The first resident fellows of the DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH ‘University of Chicago, 1933-34. erage are as follows: Frances Cuthbert Van Keuren, Alma college formed part of the original| Dorothy Anne Buchanan, A.B., Smith DEPARTMENT OF PuHysIcs cl f 1934 Ida Aygusta, Waldenmeyer, Frances group of forty students who lived in} (College, 1930; M.A., Bryn Mawr | Sara Helen Kehler, B.S. in Education, J mn @ Fl Ellen Watson. Merion Hall. Money for these fel-| College, 1931; Scholar in English,| University of Pennsylvania, 1931;|_9®"¢t Barton Barber, Mary Anna i lowships comes eve ear from the : ; : | Barnitz, Ruth Bertolet, Lula Howard Class of 1936 Owships co ms Tv Bryn Mawr College, 1930-31, and M.A., 1933; Fellow in Physics, Bryn : 4 : income of the college. At a time when|. Instructor in English, 1931-32; In-| Mawr College, 1933-3. Bowen, Catharine Cornthwaite Bredt, Frederica Eva Bellamy, Betty Bock, every salary given by the college is} structor in English, Vassar Col- DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY Halla Brown, Loretto Lamar Chap-|Marion Louise Bridgmen, Caroline being cut, these twenty-one fellow-| lege, 1933-34. Charlotte Virginia Balough, A.B., pell, Helen Ball Corliss, Maria Mid- Cadbury Brown, Barbara Lloyd Cary, ships are being continued in full. To DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY | Bryn Mawr College, 1933;° Scholar dleton Coxe, Margaret Gimbel Dan-|Marian Claire - Chapman, Alice be a resident fellow, it is necessary| Alice May Dowsé, A.B., Tufts Col-| in Psychology, Bryn Mawr College, |"°2»@um, Alva Detwiler, Anita Au-|Hagedorn Cohen, Eleanor Brooks to have gone at least a year beyond| jege, 1930; Graduate Student Rad-| 1933-34. rora Pawolleck de Varon, Marianne | Fabyan, Marjorie Goldwasser, Jean that in which the A.B, degree was| liffe College, 1933-34. DEPARTMENTS oF ROMANCE Augusta Gateson, Betti Carolyn Gold- Holzworth, Margaret Cecilia Honour, taken. There were 192 applications Hepkerieer cr Caan tanner wasser, Suzanne Halstead, Janet. Eliz-| Barbara Merchant, Frances Callaway as for the 39 fellowships, which made| Elizabeth Barclay Burton, B.A., Uni-| Ruth Whittredge, A.B., Wellesley Col-| Sper Hannan, Ellen Naney Hart,| Porcher, Anne Blizabeth Reese, ae fF the choice very difficult. versity of Toronto, 1932; Universi-| lege, 1929; M.A., Radcliffe College, | Maree et un, tans CT en Re ee tte andes Tf The Resident Fellows for 1984-35 taet Frankfurt-am-Main, winter 1930; Scholar in French, Bryn = es ee er pphiiligrnsy, Poa gaggia Py Hy a ; : Landreth, Mary Elizabeth Lauden-} Simons, Ellen Balch Stone, Elizabeth 2a « are as follows: and summer semesters, 1932-33. Mawr College, 1933-34. ; ae, : et : 2 berger, Eva Leah Levin, Myra Wil-| Hope Wickersham, Elizabeth Porter ie Resi m DEPARTMENT OF GREEK DEPARTMENT OF SOOIAL ECONOMY AND ; i ’ ; iy esident Fellowships, 1934-35 ; ‘son Little, Elizabeth Murray Macken-| Wyckoff. i D R Emily Randolph Grace, A.B., Bryn SocIAL RESEARCH | ate Elisabeth Mead, Elisabeth Louise | R pig nean hay See ireapd Mawr College, 1933; Scholar in} CAROLA WOERISHOFFER FELLOWSHIPS d ; : ; Class of 1937 | Elizabeth Hazard Ufford, A.B., Bryn Meneely, Harriet Jean Mitchell, Mar- : : ' Mawr Collage. 1090: Scholar in Bi. Greek, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34.| Janet Montgomery Hooks, A.B., ion Gardiner Mitchell, Dorothy Havi- Marcia Lee Anderson, Rose Gilles- i Be, ee DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY OF ART Mount Holyoke College, 1933; Car- : py Baldwin, Letitia Brown, Louise 4 ology, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. 7 fs ; ' . ,/land Nelson, Gertrude Annetta Par- » Sass apaget oan i Marianna Duncan Jenkins, A.B., Bryn ola Woerishoffer Scholar in Social Atherton Dickey, Virginia Dorsey / ; nell, Evelyn Macfarlane Patterson, ’ ‘ ? ; DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Mawr College, 1931; M.A., Radcliffe, Economy, Bryn Mawr, 1933-34 Anne Bowen Edwards, Sylvia Hath i . : hp Aeon tance , ’ * _ .-| Frances Pleasanton, Jane Eveyln Pol- Warne, WytV atha- . ' : Edith F. Sollers, A.B., Goucher Col College, 1932; Fellow in History of | Ruth Fay Schumacher, A.B., Ohio avhek.- Maeearct Mitchell Righter: | W°7 Evans, Lucille Fawcett, Mary ‘a lege, 1931; Graduate Student, Uni-| Art, Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. State: University, 1933; Graduate E 3] : pi bs Macias 8 4 r ’! Sampson Flanders, Josephine Bond versity of Pennsylvania, 1933-34, DEPARTMENT OF LATIN Student, Ohio State University, Bias pani ‘ciel alas, yma iene Ham, Esther Hardenbergh, Elizabeth DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL Susan May Savage, A.B., Bryn Mawr 1938-34. : Holzworth, Margaret Gracie Jackson, ARCHAEOLOGY College, 1933; Scholar in Latin,| The departments of History, Span- Class of 1935 Kathryn Moss Jacoby, Margaret Rob- Jeannette Elizabeth LeSaulnier, A.B.,| Bryn Mawr College, 1933-34. ish and Italian will make their recom-| Joane E, Baker, Catherine Adams | inson Lacy, Ruth Levi, Elizabeth Dun- Bryn Mawr College, 1933; Scholar DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS mendations later. ' | Bill, Nancy Leslie Rutherford Bucher, | can Lyle, Katherine Mary McClatchy, in Classical Archaeology, Bryn} Madeline Levin, A.B., Hunter College, Miss Park also read the lists of un-| Elizabeth Margery Edwards, Ger-| Lucille Geraldine Ritter, Edith Rose, Mawr College, 1933-34. _ 19382; M.A., Bryn Mawr College, | dergraduates who will, if they main-|trude VanVranken Franchot, Ethel| Leigh Davis Steinhardt, Eleanore DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND 1933; Scholar in Mathematics, Bryn] tain their present average, graduate} Arnold Glancy, Phyllis, Walter Good-! Flora Tobin, Cornelia Ann Wyckoff. —_ — nn “=~ Lag Ne a radiate daidadanden miata cies didcaslieesmsdalaasaedeniamenindenssianannibadicis .<..c.,. acheimadenndanasilsinattliiatseateiaiatansnttaindieaasinsiiedisnelbuanatie) Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Seber ere ec ae eee sens eens seer on nn st Nt AERO ar; < Fs rE ” yal OW’ are YO THIS FREE B09 UR nerves ? —S< BOOK WILL TELL you ? . 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