partments THE COLLEGE NEWS a Page Threc vos Miss Petts Will Teach - At Austrian Mozarteum To Give Course Next Summer ~ On “Good Movement” (Especially contributed by. Donnie Allen, ’38.) It has, just been announced that Miss Josephine Petts, Director of Physical Education, will teach next summer at the .International Mo- zarteum Foundation in Salzburg; Aus- tria. Loo As a member of the davapietent. cd dancing Miss Petts will givé a special course, “Good Movement Through Dancing and Proper Coordination.” The famous summer Salzburg Fes- tival is the direct result of the Mo- zarteum established in 1841 and sup- ported by the Mozart legacy. Its de- include instruction in a great variety of musical instruments, voice, opera, drama, dancing, stage di- rection, ‘acting, scenery, costuming, French and German. The institute’s faculty is international. In addition to the opportunities for study at the Mozarteum there is the rare pleasure of living in the city of Salzburg—a city of. very special charm. Miss Petts knows Salzburg. very well, having spent“.many. summers there as student and_later as teacher of. dancing at the Elizabeth Duncan School which had its summer résidence at Schloss Klessheim, just outside the city. Constance Renninger Interprets Aquinas Continued from Page One proof also involves, for Thomas Aqui- nas, “the gradation found in things and his belief in the different degrees of being”; this presupposes a stand- ard of perfections which need not necessarily be accepted without ques- tion. “Saint Thomas believes that the in- tellectual has actual existence outside | NAUTICAL DANCE HELD IN GYM AFTER PLAY The Gymnasium, December 4.—The Undergraduate Association offered very successful dance for Br Mawrters to frolic at after the play. It was all definitely nautical, from the strings of flags which looped, from bal- cony.to balcony to the fishnet effect, adorning the walls. We deduced that this back to the sea movement orig: inated in the clam chowder. This un-: usual form of “refreshment” wags “Taiven free, eithér Campbell or Heinz doing a little unobtrusive advertising, Jerry Connor’s orchestra was good and those who could whipped the floor at a spanking pace. We saw ‘no one fall down or pass out or do anything very amazing, though all seemed gen. erally happy. The addition of various Intime Princetonians added a sophisti- cated note to the familiar diet of Hav-: erford. of man, because he identifies this prin- ciple with being.” The intellectual is thought of as independent of mat- ter. Matter, deriving its individuality from God, is potential, not actual. But “being is really in matter, be- cause that which cannot feel does not really exist, as perception is a feeling. It is impossible to separate being from matter.” “In intellection is man’s perfec- tion. Infinity, perfection, eternity, es- sence,—all these: qualities which one believes exist in God are conceptions of this faculty.” At the same time, “the knowledge of infinite things and perfection does not transcend the senses, but is unity, within. matter: Perfection for man is this infinity within his finite destiny.” It is in this sense that Thomag, Aquinas can say that actuality, as existence, en- tails perfection. More thaiithis, ex- istence for man entails consciousness or feeling. This perfection of matter is not to be thought of as involving division in time as opposed to God outside of time, but as unification, coalescence through- out time. o Players’ Club Gives “Bill of Divorcement b Continued from Page One young actress than, say, that of argaret. Miss Reitler made it her own and kept it without a false note, never -making one feel for a moment the uncomfortable embarassment that comes when an actor’s emotion simply fails to register, or is overplayed; as far as we were concerned, she was Sydney. Mary Sands’ part as Margaret was more difficult because it took her’ out of herself, that is, from youth to age, a transition which she did not quite make effective. One can disguise youth by “old” clothes, one can paint innumerable wrinkles on a young face, but it must be camouflaged from the inside out.. James Smith as Hilary, and Mary Reisman as Aunt Hester, were the only ones who man- aged this peculiar i Bi efface- ment. Sanford Etherington (Gray) looked like an earnest, pugnacious football star with powder in his hair; William Larson’s (Dr. Alliot’s) voice sounded singularly boyish even though one was momentarily hoodwinked by his haggard fifty year old face. Harold Norton, on the other hand, made the Rev. Pumphrey into a char- acter part, an eccentric Peter Pannish gentleman, who has never been young and thus becomes static in appear- ance from the hour of his birth. At any rate, he looked old enough to ex- plain the presence of young Kit (Clyde Hubbard) and both together very successfully turned their rela- tionship, aside-from age, into a kind of paradox,.though narrow-minded fathers -have been known to have broad-minded.'sons.’. In this case, Mr. Hubbard, the broad-minded son, was something other than a. .Princeton senior, just.as Miss Reitler: more or less transcended her’ own identity. Kit’s part had a good many objection- able . possibilities, and Mr.’ Hubbard bit at none of them. As we have said, Mary Reisman James. Smith, as: Aunt Hester Hilary, overstepped. the limits and and im- | JANE’ BRAUCHER, °39, HOLDS GRENFELL SALE The Grenfell Shop, which comes an- nually to Bryn Mawr, under the spon. sorship of the Bryn Mawr -League, will be open this week and next in Jane Braucher’s room, 54-57 Pem- broke East. All articles sold are ob- tained from the Grenfell Labrador In- dustries Shop which is maintained for the benefit of Dr. Grenfell’s con- structive work in Labrador, where there have been established “five hos- pitals, six nursing stations, four or- phanage-boarding schools, hospital ships, industrial stations, clothing dis- tribution centers, agricultural efforts, and other means to induce a better civilization.” The stock of the Bryn Mawr Gren- fell Shop includes gay-colored woolen socks, sashes, and :mittens, bars of maple sugar, Christmas cards, calen- dars, seals, witidow wedges, letter openers, napkin rings, curtain pulls, and ever-popular winter parkas; all sorts of excellent Christmas gifts. Purchases benefit both Labrador in- dustries and the Bryn Mawr. League, which receives a commission from the sale that helps it to carry on its nu- merous activities. posed on them by time, and trans- forméd themselves respectively, into a nasty old maid, and a man who has been through a kaleidascopic hell for more than fifteen years. Miss Reis- man achieved this partly by affecting a pursed-lipped, weary-eyed snappish- ness, partly by the inside-out process mentioned above. Mr. Smith’s tense characterization was entirely inside out and many-sided: groping and tenacious, helpless and powerful, all at once, and»particularly moving when contrasted with Sydney’s strength. The last part to consider is that of Bassett, played by Janet Gregory. It is hard to say anything about the inevitable maid except that Miss Gregory was as*good a one as we could have wished for, with none of the fripperies that some maids assume when. they .want to make their pres- ences felt. Haverford Defeats B. M. In Un-Hockey Game, 1-0 Visitors’ Idea of Rules is Vague But Power Undeniable November 30.—Only a faulty, one might even say non-existant, knowl- edge of the rules of field hockey pre- vented the Haverford soccer team from defeating the Bryn Mawr var- sity by more than a mere 1-0 score. Time and again Haverford swept down the field, only to be stopped short by a whistle for “‘off-side,” or “turning” by a referee undaunted by. yells of.“‘Robber!” In the cheering section. Haverford outnumbered Bryn Mawr, and strong masculine: voices drowned any femi- nine support. A_ misdirected shot brought a grunt of pain from a Bryn Mawr back, and cat-calls from the gallery: “Hit the ball,” “Dirty play- er!”. and ungallantly “Knock ’em down if they get in your way.” The game was not hockey, but as a mild type of free-for-all it proved satisfac- tory to players and spectators alike. Line-up: BRYN MAwr. HAVERFORD. BG, OCs 6 igesscs Di Wes clink dca Chatfield Taylor.r.i........ Welbourn he a a a Dies cece: Lewis ct MEUHD ties Lv... 2 eee MOIUEAR. Css i545 Pi Mieics cs Goldmark MOVAYIN 6 cis 4 os SS ees So ee a CEP Ore ft ES Whittier Willems, .... 6. ced Morris ~ MOOS Posi ce cc eee & cee DeWeese Goals: Lewis. Substitutions: Norris for Seltzer. ‘Referees: Grant, Sharpe. Looking back over the years, one is aware that the Players’ Club has sur- passed itself, perhaps because of its direction by Mrs. Marquerite Mc- Aneny, perhaps because of its new collaborators. Fortunately, it has not, like big May Day, set itself any hard and fast standards of perfec- tion, and there is no limit to the records it can break. Da. tt Des Seen em DO AMERICAS FLIERS APPRECIATE THE — COSTLIER TOBACCOS | OU bet they do! In aviation is one of the most dis- criminating groups of smokers in the country. The fa- mous record holder, Col. Roscoe Turner, smokes Camels. So do test-pilot Lee Gehlbach, Capt. Frank Hawks, and TWA’s chief pilot Hal Snead—to mention only afew. As Col. Turner puts it: “I guess you’ve noticed that men in aviation are great smokers. And, from what I see, most fliers share my regard for Camels. They need healthy nerves. That’s one big reason why so many of us stick to Camels.” And many millions of Americans — more people than smoke any _ other cigarette in the world — give a hearty o-kay to Camels! ARTHUR Senior in ment often long hours “they never Camel spends MILLIONS “Working out a tough assign- tuckered out. The second I feel myself getting tired, I like to get a ‘lift?’ with a Camel.” WINIFRED CASTLE works — smokes a lot, She says: “I * think there’s ‘hothing like Cari= els for mildness. I can smoke as many Camels as I please and WALDO, JR. is a College. He says: can make me feel all at her editorial desk get on my nerves.” ‘MORE FOR COSTLIER. TOBACCOS! Camels are a matchless blend of finer — MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS = Turkishand Domestic. ll A | | | PETER KILLIAN is a news photographer. His slant: “Camels are always in the picture with me—on the job—at home—and especially at the table. Camels help my digestion to keep click- ing day after day.” EDWARD HURLEY, a success- ful, busy architect, says: ““To my way of thinking, a man doesn’t teally kriow what honest-t6-good- ness natural flavor means until he ‘smokes Camels. ‘I’d walk a mile for a Camel!’ ” ED GRAFFE, gym in- structor, says: “Yes sir, I can smoke Camels all I please without getting jangled nerves..No mat- ° ter how much I dig into — a pack of Camels, they ‘don't tire my taste.” MARIE DRISCOLL, business girl, speaks for lots of stenographers ‘ when she says: “Camels ‘eertainly have every- thing I like a cigarette =A’ ARE > THE Il — N Copyright, 1987, R. J, Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina . NEW DOUBLE-FEATURE CAMEL CARAVAN nie Two great shows—“Jack Co" ToBtge a> Tap Cpehatan's “Swing School” — in/one fast, fun-filled hour. 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