& MEN oe epee ee ‘ pean fellowship is Jean Dulebohn, » messages about furloughs and dis- wa Page Four ne rn THE COLLEGE NEWS _ Faculty Names J. Dulebohn and F, Newihan : 1943 Alternates for European Fellowship / Newman Enlisted in WAVES; | Dulebohn Will Do Further History Work The first alternate to the Euro- a History major. Florence New- man, presented by the English. de- partment, was named second alter- nate. ’ Jean Dulebohn divided her ma- She worked with the Latin Department as well as| with the History Department. The | jor in two fields. “ Gombined efforts produced a paper | on the development of the ideal of | the ruler from the Roman | the Carolingian Empires based on| | Latin primary sources. | After a summer of relaxation in a victory garden,~Jean plans to continue the study of medieval civilization at Harvard or the Princeton Institute of Advanced Study with Dr. E. A. Lowe. She | might get a job in an office for a'| year before going on to graduate work. Although a position with the O. W. I. or a magazine has some attraction for her, she also has a strong inclination towards the law. Coming from Minneapolis, Jean was prepared by the St. Mary’s Hall, Faribault, Minnesota. At Bryn Mawr she has held the Rhoads and Amelia’ Richards scholarships.. “One of the main reasons I came to Bryn Mawr was to go abroad my Junior year—I still hope to get there,” she said. | The visiting of friends on a ranch | in Wyoming is a _ substitute for | Europe at the present. | Florence Newman is one of the | first of the graduating class to be inducted into the WAVES. She probably will not be able to find immediate application of her hon- ors paper on Elizabethan drama, but after the war she will either work in play production or in ad- vertising. The course given in drama at Yale interests her very much, and she would like to get her M.A. there. She has already taken a summer course in advertising at Columbia. A graduate of the Philadelphia High School for Girls, Florence has spent a great deal of her non- resident college life on the Paoli Local. Swimmirtg and bridge are her favorite hobbies, and she un- doubtedly has aided in the intro- duction of that evil ‘influence, a pack of cards, to the non-resident room. ; The Red Cross occgpies her ex- tra-curricular time’® Starting as | a stenographer, she now works in, an “emergency” department which ! is concerned with the sending of ; charges from the services. Alumnae Invade Dull, Exam-Weary Campus | , Continued from Page One of English at Bryn Mawr. ‘Thou Gracious Inspiration was written | by a member of the class of 1895 | and Pallas Athene by a member of 1893. Their weekend, which included luncheons, picnics, meet- ings, a dedication, breakfast with Miss McBride, was highlighted by an address by Professor Charles Andrews, the one surviving faculty member at Bryn Mawr from 1889- 1907, and a Pulitzer Prize winner. A few of them wonder if they will survive it all. Engineering Career ee Planned by Browne Continued from Page One i came to Bryn Mawr from England where she attended Thomas Parke and Cheltenham Ladies Colleges. Leaving England in 1940, she had first-hand experience of the war. “We were giving our farewell nly Aircjactges Spee! ve a } | FLORENCE NEWMAN War Work, Research Will Occupy Summer Continued from Page One which willybe given here this sum- mer. Miss Lanman will give the Analytic Chemistry course for the Engineering, Science, and Man- agement War Training division of the U. 8: 0. EB. Other activities on campus this summer include the nursing course, of which Miss Yaeger will be asso- ciate administrator, and will be in charge of the nurses’ recreation. Miss Kraus will hold her course in International Relief Administra- tion here and work on a book. If the demand is sufficient Mr. and Mrs. Diez will give a seven-week course in'elementary German. Several faculty will be in the vicinity of Bryn Mawr from pref- erence or due to gas rationing re- strictions. Miss Gardiner is stay- ing here to work in her victory garden, the Bryn Mawr Hospital, and the Interceptor Command. Mr. Broughton will be here also, com- piling a list of Roman Magis- trates; Mr. Patterson will be doing research work on his own. Mr. Sprague will also stay here most of the summer finishing his book on the stage business of Shake- spearean actors. Mr. Nahm is polishing his book on aesthetics which will be pub- lished by Harpers this summer, and Mr. Miller’s book, which is the August Book-of-the-Club selection, will come out in July. Mr. Velt- man will complete his book on Systematic Historical Study. Mr. MacKinnon plans to go to his blueberry farm in Maine as soon as he has finished his present book. Mr. Weiss also plans to farm in New England and to finish his book on ethics. In addition he will lecture to a group of French scholars, Les Entretiens de Pon- |, tigny, at Mt. Holyoke, and be present at a conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, of which he is a founding member. Mr. Chew has been appointed research associate at Huntington Library, San Marino, California, where he will investigate problems in Elizabethan Literature, which he has previously worked on there. Some of the faculty plans are naturally of a secret nature in re- | gard to the war, and many others have tentative plans for equally interesting and valuable work dur- ing the summer. months. party the night of the first blitz” she said.. ‘We just moved to the shelter and carried on.” trip to America, she missed the -excitement of a U-boat attack on the convoy. she explained. corp = od “T was at dinner,” MEET AT THE GREEK’S Tasty Sandwiches Refreshments - | Lunches - Dinner On. the : LAMPS & Degrees Conferred On Undergraduates Continued from Pave Three kee, Wisconsin A.B. University of Minnesota, to be conferred, 1943,-; ‘| Department of History HELEN ADAMS NUTTING of Northfield, Minnesota A.B. Carleton College 1940; M.A. Bryn Mawr College 1942, Department of Latin Fellowship in Medieval Studies ALICE DARGAN JONES of Darling- ton, South Carolina A.B, Bryn-Mawr College*1941; M.A. University of Chicago 1942. Department of Philosophy LENORE D. BLOOM of New York City A.B. Washington Square College, New York University, 1940 and M.A. 1941, e’ = . Appointments for Foreign Women Teaching Fellowships in French FANITA BLUMBERG of New York | City A.B. Doane College 1942. NICOLE HERRMANN of New York City Licence-es-lettres, Ecole des Hautes Htudes, New Yo.k, to be conferred, 1943. Teaching Fellowships in German HiLtpA LUISE RICHARD of New York City A.B. Wheaton College, to be con- ferred, 1943. ANNELISE THIEMANN of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Student, State School of Social Work, Germany, 1928-31, and Uni- versity of Hamburg, 1931-36; M.A. Bryn Mawr College, to be conferred, 1948. Graduate Scholarships Economics:and Politics LorA Pao-SuN Tone of Hong Kong, China A.B. Lingnan University 1941. Scholarship Under Special Correlated Program Scholarship Under Special Corre- lated Program HELEN RAE GOLDEN of Duluth, Minnesota A.B. University of Minnesota, to be eonferred, 1948. English SHIRLEY SEIFRIED ALLEN of Riv- er Forest, Illinois A.B. Carleton College 1942. MARGARET EVANGELINE WHITE of Charleston, West Virginia A.B. Bryn Mawr College, to be con- ferred, 1948. Non-Resident Scholarship JEAN REBECCA, LEHMAN of :Phil- adelphia A.B. Wellesley College, ferred, 1948. Linguistics MarIg ELIZABETH LEHM of Mars, Pennsylvania A.B. Pennsylvania: State College 1942; M.A. University of North Car- olina, to be conferred, 1943. French RuTH DoMINo of New York City Ph.D, University of Vienna 1934. Special Scholarship ANDREA ELIZABETH BLAKE of Nashua, New Hampshire to be con- A.B, Wheaton College, to be con- ferred, 1943. Greek HESTER ANN CoRNER of Balti- more, Maryland A.B. Bryn Mawr College 1942, History SHIRLEY ELIZABETH KING of Oak Park, Illinois A.B. Carleton College, ferred, 1943. ELISABETH ROSA LOESER of Jack- | son Heights, New York A.B. Smith College, to be conferred, 19438. HELEN MARGARET STOCKE of Kirkwood, Missouri 2 A.B. Carleton College, to.be cén-/| ferred, 1948. History of Art: NARCISSA WILLIAMSON of Mari- etta, Ohio 'g A.B. Mariette College 1925; University of Chicago 1931. to be con- M.A. GIFTS Inexpensive and Practical END TABLES RAG RUGS Hobson and Owens Lancaster Avenue * Elections The Ger Club takes great pleasure in arinouncing the election of the following officers for 1943-44: President: _Mary Susan Chadwick, ’44. Vice-President: Penelope Smith, ’44. Treasurer: ak Shugg, 44, A secretary will be elected in the Fall. The Philosophy Club takes pleasure in announcing the following elections: President: «Jean Potter, "45, Vice-President: Hildreth Dunn, ’44, : Latin CATHERINE CLAY ADAMS of Bal- timore, Maryland A.B. Wilson College 1941. MARY \VIRGINIA LANNING Canton, Ohio A.B. Pembroke College, Brown Uni- versity,,to be conferred, 1943. Eva» LOUISE PrRIcE of Ashland, Kentucky A.B. Duke University, ferred, 1943. Social Economy of to be con- Carola Woerishoffer Scholarships BRURIAH SZAPIRA of Philadel- phia B.S. Temple University 1937. MARIA EvA VARI of Haverford, Pennsylvania A.B. University of Louisville, to be conferred, 1943. Non-Resident Scholarships ELLEN SCHEIBERG EDELSTON of Media, Pennsylvania * A.B. Berea College 1943. LucigE MAYER of Philadelphia Student, University of Berlin 1929- 33, and University of Paris 1938-39; Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr Col- lege, to be conferred, 1943. Spanish ELINOR SYLVIA HILL of Down- ingtown, Pennsylvania A.B. Earlham College, to be con- ferred, 1943. Scholarship Under Special Correlated Program BARBARA BAER of New York City A.B. Bryn Mawr College, to be con- ferred, 1943. .. Friends’ College Scholarship “FRANCES JEAN BONDHUS of Os- kaloosa, Iowa B.S. William Penn College, conferred, 1948. Medical Scholarships Jane V. Meyers Memorial Medical Scholarships To be held in the fourth year at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine GENIEANN PARKER PATTON of Baltimore, Maryland To be held in the third year at the College of Physicians and to be Surgeons, Columbia Univer- sity KATHLEEN ELIZABETH KIRK of Ardmore, Pennsylvania To be held in the second year at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania HELEN LIEBER WASSERMAN of Philadelphia Hannah E. Longshore Memorial Medical Scholarship To be held in the first year at the Cornell University School of Medicine SALLY MATTESON of Cambridge, ; Massachusetts BATHING SUITS COTTONS TENNIS AND GOLF DRESSES @ Gladys Paine Cortright Ard. 6789 Haverford, Pa. Class Day Speeches — Bid Studies Farewell Continued from Page Two side of the lumbricus terrestris and surveyed the sister sciences with scorn. She reached the conclusion that ‘a chemistry stink is better than a biology stink.” “Sports made me wiat I am to- day,” ‘shouted Carla Adelt, beat- ing her chest. Arrayed in a con- glomeration of athletic equipment, Carla recounted her trials with re- quired sports and her four years of walking, all due to the inefficiency of the department. “Not many people know,” Carla said, “that the walk to Fords and Forrests is not as long as people think, specially because there is a method by which one can float back.” In a burlap sack and green greasepaint, Bill Williams named herself the missing book of T. S. Eliot. On the Library steps, Bill said, “The reason I never enter the Library is that I can never find any of the books I want”... par- ticularly the Hygiene books. La- menting the distressing number of women in the senior class, the dis- tribution of Beards, she deviated to campus animals and the “bellicose tendencies” exhibited by faculty children. 1893 Dedicates Vase As Alumnae Memorial ae Continued from Page One friends. Given by Mr. Emerson, the vase itself is dated Fifth Cen- tury B. C. Mrs. Fletcher was a student of Greek and the classics while she was at Bryn Mawr. After grad- uating, she studied in Greece. She married an Englishman, Mr. Harry Fletcher, and lived in Eng- land until her death. Her class has already done much to finance the library, and has partially fur- nished the seminar in her name. This dedication was part of the celebration with which the Class of 1893 observed its fiftieth anni- versary. An exhibition of pictures of Bryn Mawr from 1893 to 1900 was on display in the art lecture room after Miss McBride’s tea-on Saturday afternoon. Rene -- Marcel French Hairdresser 853 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr 2060 cane Hand Made Mexican Jewelry For Graduation Mexican Shop 69 St. James Place | Ardmore, Pa. FROM 151 COLLEGES are now enrolled at Katharine Gibbs, training to do their share for victo in important secretarial positions, and, incidentally, insuring their own eco- nomic safety in post-war days. Courses exclusively for college women begin July 6 and Sept. 21. Send for book- let, ‘‘Gipsps Girts AT Work.” Kath vi Gibbs. SECRETARIAL BOSTON—90 MARLBOROUGH ST. \ NEW. YORK—230 Park Avenue! J Compliments of : JEANNETT’S Bryn Mawr, Pa.