C asthe § THE COLLEGE NEWS 'T CLUB EXHIBITS _ ‘CAMPUS PAINTINGS Students’ Work Shown ommon Room, May 21.—The Art D gave a tea to open an exhibi- m. of its members’ work, and pieces at by the faculty from their private lections. Guests of honor at the Were the owners of works on ex- tion. Drawings in color illustrating the biden Fleece are among the mem- s’ work, also a symbolic water r of Taylor tower seen through hoops hanging beside a college ntern. Taylor, Goodhart and other ndmarks appear in five colorful oils done outdoors this spring. Two little nude figures_in clay are the work of Art Club students. eside these there is a large group life drawings in which Mr. Diez ended the “pure contours and fine postures.” Mr. Diez is lending a scroll ‘of a tiger, the Chinese symbol of *#power, for the intent expression .on the ani- ™mal’s face is taken to denote mental ‘power. The tiger can only be shown ‘in the house of a general, who unrolls it to show his guests on formal oc- -casions. Mr. Diez is the owner of a Korean reen painted with mountain scenery. he Oxabs which ‘he is lending were one by a Chinese painter who uses an ink painting style which has been aditional for a thousand years, and has. practiced each stroke so many times that he does it as you would | write your name. In startling cohtrast, on the other ‘gide of the doorway from the Crabs thangs Miss Woodworth’s Chagall. | Unlike the completely objective Chi- nese painting, the Chagall is a record ¢ thoughts drifting through a relaxed mind, Miss Woodworth likes it be- cause of the gay reds, and went on to explain that while the flowers are in the room where the man is play- ing, the lady is symbolic. “All the world is whirling in the enthusiasm of the music as he plays.” “Miss Howe, who collects prints and drawings, is lending a landscape by Harding, a nineteenth century fol- lower of Gainsborough, as well as a brilliant landscape watercolor by the Jraodern Philadelphian, Dasburg. . An early German woodcut, a biblical “scene by Altdarfer, is also -being ' shown by Miss Howe. Three West African fetish figures, examples of the kind of art which ' inspires modern primitives, are ex- hibited from the collection of Mr. | Herben and Miss Robbins. Going ' the rounds at the tea was a rumor, doubtless unfounded, that the female ure and the bearded male figure, s symbols for the owners. Mr. Gray’s collection is represented by a little bronze dragon, and a land- scape by the young Frenchman, }, with valued composition remi- miseent. of Cezanne’s Bathers, al- though the color method is quite dif- ferent. A flower study in brown, a Montmartre scene by Utrillo, and a watercolor which might be described as a spiral with nudes, blue predomi- nating, also belong to Mr. Gray, 1 helor of Arts | Conferred on“92 Psstinued from Page One wth Stoddard Pennsylvania CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY » Crespi Keith New Jersey ECONOMICS Blake, om 2 Massachusetts Margaret John Colorado Rauh - Missouri (with distinction in economics) y Saad ssccommmmaaae™ a Massachusetts a Richard — ty ; » . .. -New Jersey ‘ENGLISH Libby Bailenson Pennsylvania hina Pennsylvania ; Corey Ohio}. Connecticut Senioe Speeches Enlivened by Marooned — Geologist, Strip. Teaser and Gum Chewer Friday, May 19. — Chewing con- fidently on her wad of Wrigley’s best, Margaret Otis, ’39, squinted into the sun-and dropped a few pearls of wis- dom from Taylor steps for the benefit of the freshmen, sophomores, and juniors. Miss Otis, sporting. a jun- ior’s, gap and gown, seemed well aware of her responsibilities in opening the program of: senior’ speeches given yearly on the last day of classes. She helped along the less intelligent, or moré sleepy, members of her audience by giving them a careful outline of everything she said. fhe \“This is,” began Miss Otis, “a speech for _speech’s_ sake.” Commenting briefly on the meteoric rise of ‘her class to college fame and their équally rapid decline after Big May Day fes- tivities (“we put everything in it and we’ve not been the same_since’”) Miss Otis spoke with fervor and emotion. She pointed out that if they had been permitted to try out for extra-curricu- lar activities earlier they would have. run the campus freshman year. “TJ hope you realize this is-not the last time I’ll stand on Taylor steps,” concluded Miss Otis. “I'll, be back Monday, Wednesday and Friday, al- though my horrible gore won't let me chew gum’in exams.’ Barbara Bigelow took up ‘the 139 saga at Dalton. Miss Bigelow spoke feelingly of her encounters with the geology department »which has’ played a big part in her college career. Last year Miss Bigelow roomed with Doro- thea Heyl, a native of Easton, who indirectly caused a riot on the spring field trip of 1937-1938. While the geology ‘bus was parked at the top of a hill near Easton Miss Bigelow thought it would be friendly to run down and visit the Heyl family. Un- fortunately when she returned the geologists had left, and Miss Bigelow was marooned on the highest point of Easton with a-hammer (number 33). A short while after she was rescued by four-blushing Haverford students, the auxiliary force of the field trip. Miss Bigelow gaily told Mr. Watson ies the group finally. reached the bus that she’d gone to see her room- mate’s family. He looked at her ad- miringly and said “Miss Bigelow, if ‘that’s your story you stick to it.” She-has. _ Less dramatic, ‘but hardly less piquant were Mary Dimock’s*-experi- ences with college athletics. Mantled in a ’41 gym tunic and blazer which she removed piece by piece Miss Di- mock confessed that the most un; happy moments of her life were those dealing with the body. At finishing school she got off to a bad,start when ghe mistook a can of “what you wash out the tub with” for bath powder. Miss Dimock didn’t go into the de- tails of this calamity for at the mo- ment her head was caught in the tunic and the struggle to free it made her breathless. Getting her second wind she de- scribed the occasion on which she led a group of folk dance enthusiasts polking after her out the gym door. Her original plan had been to escape in seclusion. Miss Dimock and Miss Grant have not. been really good friends since. At the library Doris Ray attempted to encompass all the idiosyncrasies of the building and its inmates in a few short monologues and: anecdotes. She spoke of the problems that have beset her in this edifice for the last four years, the breathy conversations be- tween Miss Terrien and Mr. Sprague, the absence of Latin trots( the Latin department is generally using them), and the impossibility of concentrating in the magazine room where one is distracted by articles on 1 the sex life of a watermelon seed. In a moment of desperation, Miss Ray admitted, when she urgently felt the need to scream, she went to the stacks and found a philosophical justification for noise, silence is gold, communists hate gold, therefore, communists hate si- lence. Miss Ray’s last bit of advice, obviously taken from her personal ex- perience, was “never hang a cowbell on a professor’s chair.” 4 TENNIS TEAM WINS BRYN MAWR PLACE ON -FIRST LEAGUE} Philmont, _June_1.—Putting Bryn Mawr . into ‘the First League, the Varsity Tennis Team defeated Phil-} mont in the Challenge Round of the Philadelphia Women’s Inter-Club matches. The score was 7-0. The first singles ‘and first doubles were the: hardest fought matches. C. Waples, ’42, playing No. 1 for Bryn ‘Mawr, defeated M. Silver, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. The soft, steady game of the Philmont player bothered Waples in the first set, but she steadied her game in the next two sets which she won by her superior placing. E. E. Lee, ’41,‘and B. Auchincloss, 40, played M. Silver and M. Katzen- berg in the first doubles. The Bryn Mawr team won the first set, 6-1, but then both players lost control of their net shots during the second set which they lgst, 6-2. After losing the first two games in the third set, they ral- lied to win at 6-2. _ Jean Lida Morrill cum laude Myrtle; Danico Niccolls _ Missouri ; _ Massachusetts Julia Day Watkins Virginia FRENCH Esther Reed Buchen cum laude Illinois (with distinction in French) Margaret Haile Commiskey _.Maryland 1Grace Belle Dolowitz summa cum laude New York .. (with distinction in French) ‘Margaret MacGregor Otis cum laude’ . ‘New York (with distinction in French) ‘Catherine Jandine Richards: © cum laude New York (with distinction in French) Patricia, Ravn Robinson cum laude New York (with distinction in French) . Anne Campbell Toll : Suzanne Preston Wilson =~ a ennai @ Lorna’ Beatrix Pottburg Colorado}. Anne Erwin Ferguson ’ New. York Margaret Huyler cum laude Hawaii (with distinction in geology) Christie Delaney Solter cum laude Maryland (with distinction in geology) GERMAN Anne Janet Clark cum laude Maryland (with distinction in German) Eugenie Bowen.Coburn Connecticut Louise Herron cum laude Indiana (with distinction in German) .. GREEK AND LATIN Emily Watson Doak magna cum laude North Da (with distinction. in Greek): HISTORY © Frances Taplin Bourne cum laude (with distinction in history) Marian Baird Diehl . cum laude Pennsylvania (with distinction in history) Laura Estabrook’ . New York Helen Winifred Griffith * Pennsylvania Virginia Pennsylvania New York New York Doris Wick Ray Pennsylvania (with distinction in history) Constance Renninger Pennsylvania Mary Riesman Pennsylvania Mary Caroline Whitmer New Mexico Eugenia Francis Whitmore New York HISTORY OF ART Sara Blair Hentington Ballard Connecticut ment Ohio Fanny Robinson Hoxton Ingeborg Jessen Blanca Duncan Noel Margaret Fairbank Bell Adele Clement New Hampshire Frances Eleanor Heins ~ Connecticut Ethel Rosalind Mann Pennsylvania Sarah Tyler Meigs : eum laude ~ District. of Columbia ise Thompson. -,, Minnesota Kathleen Murchison “Vinup cum laude Maryland Alys Virginia Welsh Pennsylvania Florence Bennett Wiggin Connecticut ITALIAN Martha Eaton , cum laude | Ohio (with distinction in. Italian) _ ‘4Doris Jessie Hastings Illinois | Latin Faculty Feted At~ Classical Brawl Commén Room, May 18.—The gran- deur that was Rome temporarily re- vived at the party given for the Latin department under the direction of Doris Turrier, with Terry Ferrer as mistress of ceremonies. As guests of |, honor, Miss Taylor, Miss Tate, Miss Lake, Miss Marti and the Broughtons, all classically crowned with laurel, watched a program of skits, songs, and recitations, followed. by punch and refreshments. After’a general rendition of Gau- deamus Igitur, a translation of Jab- berwocky in Latin by Peggy Copeland, and duets and solos by Terry Ferrer and Camilla Riggs, the faculty were asked for contributions. Miss Lake read a parody of Greek drama, while Miss Taylor showed how the News’ account of Mr. Watson’s rainy field- trip would have sounded if an under- graduate were translating it into Latin. Miss Marti and Miss Tate ex- plained that they ‘were unprepared.” The faculty were then asked to com- plete and to solve Doris Turner’s un- finished mystery-story concerning the loss of a comprehensive just before After this, they wera individually crowned with laurel to an accompaniment of ‘appropriate songs of praise: an epic in honor of Mr. Broughton, by Doris Turner, a golliard song for Miss Marti, by Lilli i. examinations. ‘Schwenck and Hester Corner, and. a Virgilian eclogue for. Miss Lake and Miss Taylor, recited by Hester Cor- ner and Elizabeth Pope, while Helen Garth played a flute. Following ‘the old Roman custom, dice were-thrown for the privilege of mixing the punch, Mrs. Broughton winning ‘with three aces. The rest of the party was described simply in the program as “wine, women, ‘and song.” (with distinction in’ Latin) Pennsylvania Margaret McEwan New York}; Adele Thibault New Jersey Doris Gray Turner Pennsylvania (with distinction in Latin) ‘ MATHEMATICS Eloise Chadwick-Collins : Pennsylvania Anne Cabell Williams Virginia PHILOSOPHY Alice Alleyne Biddle Washington Suzette Flagler Watson cum laude (with distinction in philosophy) PHYSICS Elizabeth Ann Dewey Helen Hurd Hamilton cum laude Illinois (with distinction in physics) Gene Roberts Irish _ ¢ magna.cum laude Pennsylvania (with distinction in physics) POLITICS Cornelia Rogers: Kellogg cumtaude > Mary Gordon Wood PSYCHOLOGY Delia Page Marshall Pennsylvania Anne Wight Massachusetts SOCIOLOGY Jane Braucher cum laude Bertha Rauh Cohen Gordon Grosvenor cum laude Pennsylvania Caroline Van Dyke Ransom Georgia Lucile Jarman Sauder Pennsylvania Martha Corrin Van Hoesen ... magna cum laude Rhode Island SPANISH Caroline deLancey Cowl : magna cum laude Cer Jean Chandler Smith - - District of. Columbia CAP'N COPE INSPIRES HIS NINE TO VICTORY IN DECISIVE BATTLE Hockey Field, May 21.+In the seven-inning contest: between faculty and varsity, the score going into the _|last half of the sixth, was 10-9, in fa- New York New Jersey Illinois New York Pennsylvania -but-.she dropped it. New York| ‘|SCIENTISTS REVEL IN LOCAL MEADOW |Cow’s Diamond Thinned | ‘Enthusiastic Nines ~ By May 31,—Seventy-five scientists con- sisting of .undergraduates, graduates, and faculty, ate and played baseball in a local meadow on the annual sci- ence club picnic. The diamond, which had been deserted for the occasion by the cows of Mr. Watson’s landlady, was adequately trampled by. those who did not prefer the coolness of the brook. The biologists yielded to the fas- cination ,of the brook and made a wading expedition after crayfish, with success. A mixed group celebrated the day of their last examination by sitting» in the shade in quiet conver- sation. Several of the geologists dis- appeared altogether, and the coeds were particularly missed _ on the base- ball teams. The teams, ohouen originally by Tom Zirkle and Ray, Jr., were later scrambled so that most of the usual faculty team was on one side. The resultant walkover was hardly —no- ticed since everyone cheered and booed everyone else with indiscrimi- nate enthusiasm. Coordination of the sciences pro- duced excellent food; geologists find- ing rocks to bolster the fire built. by the physicists, and the biologists held the crowd from the brook when the water and lemonade gave out, until more could be obtained. three hits in the seventh to Seales the final score 12-11. Zirkle opened the faculty sixth with a hard single and went to third on™ Lattimore’s one-bagger; Fleming muffed Cap’n Cope’s easy grounder to short to fill the bases. Then Sloan lifted an easy fly to center field. Dethier got her hands on the ball, One run scored. Catcher Milt Nahm hit one to the same place. Dethier dropped that one. too, and Lattimore came home. On Broughton’s grounder to the pitcher, with none out, Tykie Alexander elected to play at first, and the win- ning run scored. fter the damage had been done,, Sloan was thrown out ‘at the plate, and Doyle popped out . to the second baseman to end the inning. This. was_a more evenly played contest than the first varsity-faculty game: Rapid-fire Doyle chalked up nine strike-outs, and Tykie Alexander eight. There were about 16 errors evenly divided between the teams. What ultimately won the game: for the faculty was their superior ability to run bases. It was the same thing that lost the varsity their game with ' Vassar. But to counterbalance this advantage, the faculty was ~ weak through ‘the middle. After Anderson hadthrown the ball away .a few times trying to get runners at second and third, Nahm came in from the picket line and replaced him behind |the mask. That—the fourth—was the varsity big inning. They made seven runs on six hits and a walk. The gem of the game, though, came in the fifth. With none out and ‘the ‘4 bases loaded, it was either Anderson or. second as the result of a double oz: Nahm coaching at third who de- cided to pull the hit-and-run, no sig- -. nals having been given. With Tykie throwing the ball up to Doyle, An- derson tore suddenly for third. Judy Shenton on_third, playing for the faculty membér that didn’t turn up, _. didn’t know what was going on. But © the Dogfish had a brain. He saw what was going to happen and did the best he could. By that time the ball was nearly on top of him. But he did the only thing. possible. He low. But -it. was too low, and he popped up to the shortstop, and a triple pjay was'set in motion. Flem- ing threw to Alexander, now playing second, to get Anderson, and Tykie | threw to Bechtold to. get Shenton: off = ‘| third. fs ; The starting line-ups: Varsity ; Waples, c. Alex’der;-p., 2b. Gumbart, 1b. J. Martin, 2b., cf. Bechtold, 3b. Faculty Anderson, c., lf. Doyle, p. Zirkle, 1b. .- Lattimore, 2b. fue th stepped out to" meee it and wane a __|vor of the vazsity.. Bat three. neared