Z-616 VOL. XXVII,; No. 13 BRYN MAWR and WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1941 eer Bryn ht, Trustees of awr College, 1940 PRICE 10 CENTS Community Work Sponsored Congressman Jerry Voorhis Of California to be Main Speaker A conference on Community Work, sponsored by the Bryn Mawr League, the Haverford Ser- vice Project, and the Swarthmore Service Committee, will -be held in Goodhart. on Saturday, Feb- ruary ‘15. The discussion will cen- ter.on the importance of commun- ity work at the present time, with emphasis onthe value of work done in college: Miss Fairchild will give the key- note address at the luncheon which opens the coneference in Rhoads at 12:45. From 2:00 to 3:30 there will be commission meetings in Goodhart. The com- mission on adult education will be led by Miss Fairchild, and that on group work in the community by Miss Kraus. Miss Ambler, head of the Social Workers of the Main Line Federation. of Churches, will lead the discussion on case work in the community, and Miss Jones, Secretary of the Eastern County Public Charities Association, will lead that on social legislation. Tea will be from 3:45 to 4:15, followed by the main speaker at 4:30. Congressman. Jerry Voorhis of California, was elected to Con- gress in 1936, and has been elected twice since then. He is a graduate of Yale, and is known for his work as headmaster of the Voor- his School for underprivileged boys. At present a member of, the American Federation of Teachers, he has had experience in many kinds of’ work. National Defense Forum As. the first talk in the Forum on National Defense, _ the Peace Council is spon- soring an informal talk by Miss Helen Arbuthnot of the British Library of Informa- tion on How English Women Are Helping In National De- fense, in: the Common Room on Friday, February 14, at 4.30. Calendar Wednesday, Feb. 12.— Vocational Committee, Isa- bella Van Meter, Time Inc., Common Room, 7.30 P. M. Peace Council, Helen Ar- buthnot, Common Room, 4.30 P. M. Saturday, Feb. 15.— Basketbal Game, Swarth- more, Gym, 10 A. M. Bryn Mawr League Con- ference, Genes 12.45- 5 P.M. Square Dance, P. M. Sunday, Feb. 16.— ; Memorial services, Good- hart, 4 P. M. Rev. Donald Aldrich, Mu- sie Room, 7,80,.P, M. Monday, Feb. 17.— Anne Howard Shaw Series, Dr. Ruth Benedict, Good- bess 8 P. M. Gym, 8 Conference by Three Colleges Miss Park Concludes College Assembly Held To Discuss Miss Bee Goodhart, February 11.—At the third college assembly, The Case of Miss Bee was presented by five members of the Self-Government Association. The hypothetical mis- deeds of a hypothetical student were outlined and discussed from various angles to explain the con- crete workings of the Self-Govern- ment Board. At the conclusion, Miss Park discussed the relation- ship. of the college to the Self- Government Association. Virginia Nichols, ’41, President of the Association, presented the stark facts of the case. Miss Bee signed out to the Covered Wagon, using the initials of a permission- giver whose permission she _had not asked. It was Sunday night and she found the Covered Wagon closed. Nothing daunted, Miss Bee went to the movies.in Philadelphia without telephoning her change of address. To cap her record of crime, Miss Bee returned to college 45 minutes late. Helen McIntosh, ’41, raised the questions of the man in the street, to express the division which may be felt to exist between the Asso- the remarks of the other speakers towards answering those questions. The function of the permission- giver was explained by Edith Vor- Continued on Page Five Combined Faculties Will Offer Courses Beginning next fall, a series of seminars for upperclassmen will be offered by the combined facul- ties of Bryn Mawr, Haverford, and Swarthmore colleges. The arrange- ments. will utilize more efficiently the combined resources of the col- leges’ Political Science and related departments. During 1941-42, two undergradu- ate seminars will be offered, which will be limited to six upperclass- men from Bryn Mawr and Haver- ford, In’the -first semester a | Swarthmore professor, taking the ‘place of the late Robert C. Rrooks, will hold at Haverford a seminar in ‘Democracies and Dictator- ships.” Inthe second semester Dr. Frances Reinhold Fussel, of Swarthmore, will lead a seminar in “Latin American Relations,” at Bryn Mawr. Besides undergraduate seminars, throughout the college year of 1941- Continued on Page Five First Shaw Lecture | Given by R. Benedict Goodhart, February 10. — Dr. Ruth Benedict, Anna Howard Shaw lecturer for 1941 and associate pro- fessor of Anthropology at Colum- first of a series to be given for six ture and Social Institutions.. Dr. ‘Benedict will also conduct seminars in_the social sciences during this ciation and the Board, and to focts bia, spoke on the Problems of An- thropology. This lecture was the|]- successive Mondays on Human Na- |. ' FIREMEN ATTACK DALTON BLAZE — Courtesy of 1941 Year Book Keep U.S. Out of War Debated at Congress Of American Youths Specially contributed by Evelyn Hodes, ’42 Six Bryn Mawr students at- tended the American Youth Con- gress in Washington, D. C., on Feb- ruary 8 and 9. The convention called by the American Youth Con- gress, and attended by youth or- ganizations from the whole na- tion, discussed primarily keeping America out of war, and the pres- ervation of our civil liberties. Chief among the spokesmen for peace, was Congressman Vito Marcantorio, who addressed six thousand young people; and urged strong, unified resistence to the pending Lend-Lease Bill. Passage of this bill, he stated, would inevit- ably result in war for America, The Congress also emphasized the necessity for guarding civil lib- erties. Speakers for organizations like National Intercollegiate Chris-' Cc. I. O., Southern| tian council; Continued on. Page Six i} Dr. Tennent Services will be held at four o’clock on Sunday, Feb- ruary 16, in Goodhart Hall, in memory of David Hilt Tennent, Research Professor of biology. Brief addresses in appreciation of the work of Professor Tennant as a scholar, teacher and member of the community will be made by Miss Park; Robert Ervin Coker, President of the American Society, of Zoologists and © Kenan professor of zoology at the University of North Carolina; Miss Gardiner, as- sociate professor of biology; Abbie Ingalls, ’38, student Canteen Sa Miss Reid, Common Room, 7.30 P. M.. Wednesday, Feb. 19.— The New Peace, Michael Heilperin, Haverford, 8.15 P. M. period. - The study of anthropology began in the nineteenth century when men, impatient with theological concepts of a static creation, fol- lowed Darwin’s- evolutionary the- ory and arranged human cultures Continued on Page Six ~ t ‘ at-theCollege.of.Physicians... and Surgeons of Columbia University and former stu- dent of Mr. Tennent; and William G. Hower, former, owner ‘and publisher: of the . Bryn Mawr Home News. ‘glance first at the table of cofiterits. || torial boards in the past. It may “rade an eyé on exchange only ; or College Conference Draws Up Proposals For Defense Program Last. Thursday Miss Park and Mr. MacKinnon attended a confer- ence in Washington of the defense committees of American. colleges and universities. The meeting was sponsord by the National Com- mittee on Education and Defense, and attended, Mr. MacKinnon esti- mated, by about five hundred col- lege and university representatives. Among the speakers at the general session were Paul McNutt, of the Federal Security Agency, who dis- cussed the relation of civilian mor- als to colleges, and Brigadier Gen- -{the call, Fire in Dalton Attracts Crowd And Fire Brigades Magnificent Work Done by Janitors and Firemen In Building by Elizabeth Crozier, ’41 On Thursday, January 23, a pro- fessor and his wife went to Atlan- tic City for a little excitement. When they got back, Dalton was in flames. The clocks in Dalton stopped at 6.05. Helen Jupnik, Huff Fel- low in Physics, and Anne Louise Axon were working in labs at op- posite ends of the basement—be- hind closed doors. The wires were shorted, which made the doorbell ring. Helen Jupnik listened for awhile, opened the lab door, saw the fire, broke the fire box, got Rosalie Hoyt ftom the first floor, and then went to Denbigh to put in “which was answered promptly and efficiently,” said Miss Gardiner, “by the Bryn Mawr Fire Company and the Merion Fire Company of Ardmore.” In the meantime, Anne Louise kept hearing the bell, finally opened the door, saw the smoke was so thick that it was impossible to get through, and went out the window on the Pembroke side. The fire started in the basement in the physics department, and got little beyond the first floor. Jean Continued on Page Five Guiton Gives Picture Of War in France Goodhart Common Room, Tues- day, February 11.—M. Jean Gui- ton, professor of French, who re- cently returned from France, spoke on his experience with the French army and as 4 liaison officer with a British division at the front, in Belgium, and at Dunkerque. After a few months of “com- fortable war” and training at a liaison school in Abbeville, M. Guiton was assigned to a British division at Lille. Defenses were erected as best they could be in the face of bitter cold and a dearth of eral Hershey, Executive Officer of | Cortinued on Page Two | supplies. Continued on Page Six Henderson Finds Winter Issue of ‘Lantern’ Provocative, Rewarding, and Full of Variety Specially contributed by Miss Henderson Perhaps the first impulse of other readers of The Lantern is 10° It is a sound impulse, and in refer- ence to the Winter Number, a re- warding one. This issue is not made by staff production. With , the exception of Hester Corner and |Frances Lewis, the editorial board is at rest. This is a good sign. It means the editor herself is on the job. To assume that there is not enough material to fill four’ num- bers of The Lantern in a college of some 500 undergraduates, is edi- torial defeatism. This has seem- ingly-been-the assumption of edi- 'be that the standard was too rigid, in developing new writdis. What- ever the reason, this year The _Eantern is alive and varied in its | contents. This variety of material in the Winter Number is one of its more winning qualities. Its contribu- tors range from the class of 1907 to 1944. Dean Schenck showed that she could resist the cult of ‘Shaw™~in~1907 and turn a neat triolet on’ the subject. And Dean Manning’s extra-curricular read- ing must have been doughty stuff if, as Olivia Kahn says-in her fair- enough editorial, the young writers’ style is the influence of “the liter- ary genre they are following.” ate Already in 1907 and 1926, Cor- nelia Meigs and Bettina Linn were top-notchers in fiction. Take an- other look at Miss Meig’s incisive writing in Pugnacious Pride, and note .as well. Miss Lirm/s ‘Owl-like observation of Alumnae Week-End in Three on the Campus. Was it really 1907 and 19267 It might be 1941. And this year of grace gives us a story, Drawn from Life by Syl- ~t via Maynard, 1944, which for at-~ ~~ mosphere and motivation seems as good a freshman tale as I have read for sometime. There is a particular pleasure in_ the emergence of Miss Maynard be- cause she is a freshman. There Pi Continued on Page Six ns s