oa ey a 7 a? PSYCHOLOGY OF ART -of experienced object and- therefore _ject_itself and the emotions produced| ti . art are merely by-preducts of these ~ ‘ference of student government presi- . Smith; Mt. Holyoke, Vassar, and Bryn delegate and was eléctted to member- ship at the final session, _ with notable exception.of self-govern- - Ment: rules. - ~ whole thing, said’ solemnly to her -.“As a matter of fact, we have little ' trouble with them.” Z-615 S EEEEEEETEe VOL. nesvaihdy Noi 19 Stas oo Koff " ~-Outlines Four — Art Theories Aesthetic: Emotion, Results From Reaction of Ego” With Object — OFFERS “~PROBLEMS Common Poort April 17.—In the first of two lectures for the. Art Sym- posium on Some. Problems in, the Psychology of: Art, Kurt Koffka,-pro- fessor of psychology at.Smith College; discussed: the work ‘of. art,as contain- ing both:subjective and objective: ex- perience for. the observer. “Psychol- 4» BY has to investigate the totality of * experience,” said Dr. Koffka, “the work of art becomes a particular kind depends on: both the objective work and the subjective reaction.” Considering primarily the psychol- ogy of the “art object” itself, Dr., Koffka began by pointing out that some works of art have survived through the ages while others have not. The question of why this is true can be answered only when the prod- ucts themselves can be investigated. The art objects determine the emo- tional reactions of the spectator and consequently must occupy. the central position in the psychology of art. Dz. Koffka described four theories of the relationship of art to the ob- by it. .The first is the theory of re- lease in which the stimulus—the art object—touches, off the emotional re- sponse of the spectator. The second theory, that of conditioning, states that all other emotional. responses to funda#mental emotions. A third the- ory connects esthetic enjoyment with wishful thinking, or wish fulfillment, Corptinued on Page Two All-College Problems Q _Debated At Vassar Anne (Specially contributed by Louise Axon, ’40.) Four Bryn Mawr representatives attended the annual five-college con- dents, which was held last week-end at Vassar. Members of the conference have been, up to now, Wellesley, Mawr, but this year Radcliffe sent a Bryn Mawr delegates were Jean Morrill, ’39, and Louise Sharp, ’40, Self Government, and Eleanor Taft, ’39, and Anne Louise Axon, ’40, Undergraduate As- sociation. Conferring, with or without formal conference -sessions, was the chief business of the week-end. The sub- jects of formal discussion included. financing of undergraduate organiza- tions, over-soliciting. for charities, re- - lations of small clubs to such organi- zations as the Undergraduate Asso- “ciation, management: of college news- papers, the National Students’ Feder- ation of America, and some dozen}, others. All the colleges represented had similar views on most subjects, Argument on this score waxed hot in the meetings, and con- tinued even into dinner, until finally a Vassar senior, deciding to end the neighbor, “And what about suicides—do you punish them very severely?” “Oh, no!” said the other, distressed; The conference is regarded as a very valuable one, especially to in- coming student officers. The similarity _of the problems of the six colleges makes discussions lively, pointed and helpful. Next spring the conference| Disp [Plage a ) Tas ay: _ Addition Published!| Mbrary will 5 Cra at | Ess ‘ Wing to. Increase - Stack Space and Feature | Reading Room t Final’ ‘plans | ‘for the .new Quita : Woodward * Memorial Wing of the Library ‘have ‘been’ published by thé |college authorities, and construction will begin shortly. .The three-story structure is planned to contain stacks, classtooms, ‘office space, and a gallery for display of drt material. “Total statk’ space in the college li- ‘be greatly’ increased though the provision in the new wing of a standard three-tiered stackroom, with space for 60,000 volumes. Under the'care of a special librarian and oc- cupying a major proportion of the basement and first floors, the stacks will contain all books, publications. and manuscripts in the field of art..and archaeology and their allied subjects. It is possible that the entire classics library will be. included. Through these provisions the serious over- crowding in the existing library will be relieved. A particularly attractive feature of the first floor will be the Quita Wood- ward Memorial Reading Room. pleasant sunny room with fireplace and built-in bookcases, it is designed to be a place for informal reading and relaxation. A_ portrait of Quita Woodward to hang over the fireplace is being executed by’-Miss Violet Oak- ley, noted Philadelphia artist. - One of the most significant changes that the completion of the addition to the library will bring is the removal lof all art and archacology—classes }|— from Taylor Hall to the new building. Two small classrooms are provided as well as a large lecture room for fifty students, equipped with a permanently mounted projector for showing slides. _ Continued on Page Four College Dance The Undergraduate dance, after the Saturday performance of Lhe Gondoliers; will be held ~from-ten to two in the gymna- sium. Tickets are on sale in the halls at $1.75 a couple and $1.25 stag. Frankie Day, who has proved popular at several hall dances, will provide a 12-piece orchestra and vocalist. Madge Lazo, ’41, with the help of a committee composed of Babe Black, Eleanor Wood and Helen MacIntosh, all ’41, has . planned decorations to follow the Gondolieri theme of the eve- ning. 4} fy areas A = | ton Nahm on Form and Func- 8 : versity. BRYN siatbabe AND WAYNE, PA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL: 19, 1939 Cofyright: TRUSTEES OF _ BRYNMAWR COLLEGE, , 1999 PRICE’ 10 CENTS Se 3. “COLLEGE CALENDAR Wididelag: April.-.19.—Dr. Kurt Koffka on Problems in th Psychology of Art, Music Room, 8.15. Thursday, April 20.—Peace Assembly, Pennington Haile on The United States and . the World Crisis, Goodhart Hall, 11 * a.m. Carl Sandburg on Anier- toan Folk Songs and Tall Tales, Goodhart: Hall, 8.30. .. Friday, April 21.—Haverford Spring Play, The Devil Passes, Roberts Hall, 8.30. R Saturday, April. 22.—Indus- trial. Group. Supper; Common’ } Room, 6 p.m. «. ait bg eat Sunday, April~:23.—Philoso-*" } phy “Club. Mortimer Adler-on :: . Plurality of ‘Logics, ‘Common. Room, 3 p.m. Jonathan Griffin on The’ Ukraine and: Hitler,: Deanery. Tea at 4 p.m. -Lec- : ture at 5 p. m., Chapel. C. Les- : lie Glenn, Music Room, 7.30. Monday, April 24.—Mr. Mil- tion in-ATT, Music Room, 8.15. Tuesday,” April 25.—Hetty Goldman on Aspects of Early Anatolian Civilization, Music Room, 4.30. Current Events, Mr. Fenwick, Common Room, 7.30. Last lecture on Art Sym- posium, Mr. Nahm’ on Form and Function in. Art, Music Room, 8.15. Wednesday, April 26.—Indus- trial Group Supper and Meeting, Common Room, 6.30. Bryn Mawr Portrays Rumania at League Rosenheim Heads _ Delegation To Bucknell University - Political Parley Lewisburg, April 13, ‘14, 15. — Headed by Joy Rosenheim, ’40, presi- dent of the International Relations Club, a group of Bryn Mawr students represented Rumania at the Model League of Nations at Bucknell Uni- They reported a_ successful trip, both diplomatically and socially. Joy Rosenheim .served as rapporteur at one of the conferences and also read’ a paper entitled Thoughts from Gene- va by Louise Morley, ’40. Haverford College, as France, won first prize, a cup, for the presentation and prepara- tion, while Temple University, The United Kingdom, took second place. The meeting was opened by a report from the president of the council, a delegate from Denmark (Cornell), who showed the decline of the League’s authority since 1931. ‘Problems con- _ Continued on Page Five Bryn Mawrters’ Pursuit Flops, Bouquet Fails _ As Stokowski Aids Disney’s Rapid Flight Celebrity Rushes to Hollywood Unaware of Brilliant Plan For Spanish Aid ‘Mr. Walt Disney came to Philadel- phia two weeks ago with the inten- tion of getting some work done on his new. feature-length prodiction in which Mickey Mouse, assisted by Sto- kowski and the -Philadelphia Sym- hony Orchestra, will give a ring-side seat to the “stuffed-shirt” ror of music. With-the Human Rights Roll, Ci Call ‘sounding over the campus, Frances Lewis and Doris Dana, 41, took up the cause of the European war _ vic- tims with a vengeance. They decided jto get an appointment with Disney through Stokowski, and ask him to talk. at Bryn Mawr for the benefit of the Spanish Refugees. Knowing Miss Ely to be a good friend of Leopold’s, the two conspirators went to her for advice. Miss Ely (who. had given up smoking for the time) champed a purple flower between her teeth and, stalking the floor, said, “Good idea, girls, good idea. We've got to get 2 ey.” : ; ant S +e _ will be held at Boys, Mow, Our first glimpse of the campaign | ‘ ae was Lewis and Dana, collared by an- gry guards, being thrust unceremoni- ously out of the stage entrance of the Academy of Music during intermis- sion. Musicians who witnessed the incident were not stinting in their scornful remarks, concerning youth and idolatory. Later, huddled in a corner of the smoky lobby and weigh- ing the prospects of getting to Dis- ney, they failed to see the cartoonist himself- ashe brushed by them. After the concert, the girls hurried over to 1716 ‘Rittenhouse Square, Sto- kowski’s little nest_ perched atop a quaint antique-shop. At their knock the door was opened’ by. some mechani- cal contrivance, anda pair of steep, | t green stairs all but hif them in‘ the face. At the top of the stairs, a blonde woman faced them. (She did not wear dark glasses and she had small feet.) Polite, but confused, she answered their questions (without a trace of a Swedish accent). Could they see Stokowski? He wasn’t back yet from the Stadium.—Disney?—He was out of town, too.—Mickey Mouse? —well, she’d ask him when he came} in. Dana and Lewis, half-wriggling their way up the steep, steep stairs, | Murder Play “[etective- Whitaker __——. {Rapid Action and Good Comedy. Sustained With Sleuthing And Shooting Goodhart Hall, April 14.—As their yearly play, the maids and - porters, under the competent direction of Fifi Garbat,.’41, presented Murder in Re- hearsal, a lively, action-filled mystefy _|| farce by Austin Goetz, Throughout |jthe intricate exposition of crime and detection, the actors maintained a rapid pace, seldom dropping out of ! dart and “interspersing suspense with some of the best straight comedy seen on Goodhart stage in a long time. | To outline the plot-within-a-plot, a director (Robert Bryan, Rhoads), is ' poisoned while playing the part of the hero in his play, when, at the same moment, two offstage shots are fired by his rival. (John Warren, Pem- broke). Shortly .afterwards, Sheriff Cullen (John Whittaker, Denbigh), arrives and takes control, spending the rest of the three acts in unprofitable sleuthing, accusing each of the cast in turn, even himself. The climax comes as a deVacle when it is revealed| to the audience that this was no crime at all, but merely the play in re- hearsal. ‘ From the moment he appeared at the back of the auditorium in ten-gal- lon hat and large gold badge, John Whittaker was the outstanding per- former of the evening. With much head-scratching and suspender snap- ping, he energetically and ingeniously carried out his investigations despite bad boy Chubby Forbes (Doris Davis, Denbigh), who” managed to throw aT monkey wrench into, each of-~ his theories as they sprang from his con- fused but fertile brain. In corduroy pants and orange sweat shirt, Doris Davis was so convincing in this réle, that many non-Denbigh- Continued: on Page Five SANDBURG’S PROGRAM TO INCLUDE POETRY AND FOLK CHANTS On Thursday, April 20, Carl Sand- burg will give a recital in Goodhart at 8.30 for the benefit of the Mrs. Otis Skinner Theater Workshop. The ex- act program is as yet unknown, but Mr. Sandburg has entitled his lecture: American ,Folk Songs and Tall Tales. It. will consist of readings from his own poetry, and American folk songs, rendered in his particular recitative, with guitar accompaniment. Mr. Sandburg was born of Swedish parents in Illinois in 1878. His early school education was fairly sketchy because it was necessary for him to start earning his living. at an early age. After school he spent several| years doing odd jobs and rambling around the middle west, working as he went. Throughout his youth he read as much as he could, and after serving fo’ eight months in the Span- ish-American War, he completed his education at Lombard College (at the age of 20). After matriculation from college Mr. Sandburg became a jour- nalist and eventually a lecturer and poet. Mr. Sandburg’s. original wel re- flects his knowledge of labor, and his understanding of simple people. He presents the rugged side of the Ameri- can scene, both in its rural and urban aspects; his rendering is often harsh, sometimes bitter, and always power- ful and direct. As a lecturer he is. unique. His voice adds tremendously to the poetry he reads, and his chant- ing of American folk songs (collected in his peregrinations about. the coun- try) has become famous. New President! On Saturday night, April 12, the college may have been star- tled to hear over station WOR that Mr. Fenwick, who was tes- tifying in Washington, was an- ae Lapecundantrsesocl ; Lo ee re ‘(College Council. Discusses. Plan: = ~ For Assemblies Bryn Mawr to Raise $3,411 _ Before Beginning Plan Of Workshop” ATHLETIC BUILDING | PROJECT ADVANCES At the first College. Council meet-; ing’ attended by riéwly’ elected ethcers( of campus organizations, the morning’ assemblies and May .Day;, the new Athletic building; and : the-. Theatre: Workshop were the main subjects of, discussion. It -was agreed that the Graduate: Day ‘atid May Day assemblies had been successful, thouglt more time might have been left for questions’ and discussion .at the last meetirig. Mrs. -Manning. and Mrs. Collins re- ported that they would be glad -to have a*small group come to them to ask further questions. before the hall discussions on May Day are held! year a schedule for the whole series of assemblies should be made out in advance so as to assure a “balanced ration.” For instance, one meeting might be held every year on current curriculum problems. It was also suggested that the hymn might now be omitted since the meeting is no longer a chapel in any sense. In Miss Park’s opinion, one of the chief values of the assembly plan should be : to demonstrate the importance of ex- act information;—and—to_teach the method of defining a problem quickly and. directly. Mrs. Collins reported that if $3, 941 can be raised by the college for the Theatre Workshop before June, Bald- win has promised to raise $2,500 to make up the $6,441- still needed so that work can be started this sum- mer and the building opened in the fall. The Baldwin~ School;-—Mrs. Collins: stated, has, this winter, raised a larger gum than the college. Baldwin very generously has given not only the barn but also an acre : Continued on Page Six eB Hofmann Interprets All- Chopin Program. Goodhart, jae 8 11..—-Perhaps the most noticeable feature of Josef Hof- mann’s All-Chopin conéert was the perfect assurance with which he played each piece. He, executed diffi- cult passages with the same ease and precision as the simple ones. Bril- liancy was coupled with emotional in- sight. Dr. Hofmann’s interpretation and contrasts of mood within the selections. showed a ,thor- Chopin. After a brief talk-on ia by Carlton S. Smith, Dr. Hofmann opened with a series of five short pieces. The Polonaise - Fantasie is well-named, as Mr. Smith pointed out, as its form is free. Dr. Hofmann brought out the short, quickly chang- ing themes, making a nice contrast with the following Impromptu in A flat major. This was very light and required. a perfection of technical de- tail. Throughout the evening, Dr. Hofmann showed his command of such technique. and C major), the left hand kept up the rhythmic % beat, while the right hand hesitated and rhapsodized in the true Chopin style.‘ ‘The more serious Ballade in G minor closed the first group. The climaxes’ and crashing chords, and especially the brilliant close with its forte runs, showed the true genius of the performer. This Ballade. represents a struggle ending | in defeat, Mr. Smith explained, and. Dy. Hofmann emphasized the gradual loss of hope in his renditien. The remarkable control that Dr. Hofmann has over his hands was Continued on Page Six The suggestion was made that next . freedom of . In the Mazurka (F. sharp minor - ough understanding of the~ “spirit of | Page Two See , Rees eee THE COLLEGE NEWS a a | the Coll ys, and d dur r Ho Mawr College. of Bryn Mawr aise at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and ave WITS ENI Tha ation weeks) in the interest = re ek es tor- a RTT Sy tt DACAAR oft Ta nt. Notht that a ‘or ath ut Written érni alate me quo News Baditor Susig INGALLS, '41 Berty Le Ber, ’41 EviZaBETH Orozitk, '41 Doris Dana, °41 ELmABSTH Doves, '4 NN BLLICcoTT, ’42 fOAN GROBS, '42 OLIVIA KAHN, "41 MARGARET MAGRATH, 42 Photographer Litt SCHWENA, 49 PEGGY Lou JAFFER, 41 Business M. Betry Witson, "40 . Nancy Busu, '40 RuTH Lear, ’41 Pein) Boor, ty t yt) Ww ie i EMILY 0 sep i... a Feature Bditor ELLEN MATTESON, '40 . Editors »Sports Correspondents Assistants E Subseription' Board - Manager ‘Rosaries } PETERS, 40 . PEGGY SQuiss, 44 Copy Editor ELIZARRrH Pope, "40 ISABEL MARTIN, ’42 AGNES MASON, '42- RvUtH McGovern, '41 ANB NICHOLS, ’40 ELEN RESOR, ’42 . VIRGINIA SHERWOOD, ’41 Dora THOMPSON, ’41 Isofa ASHE TUCKER, ’40 Musie Correspondent TERRY Farrer, 40 — CHRISTINE WAPLBES, ’42 Advertising Manager DororHy AUERBACH, ’40 LILLIAN Ssipiyr, '40 Betty Maki® JoNps, '42 SUBSORIPTION, $2.50 —— — SUBSCRIPTION s MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME MAILING PRICE, $3. 00 a eos ae Entered as second-class matter at the Wayhe, me, Pout Office tl i iit i a C omprehensive i in Allies In brooding over the old educational war of specialization versus the broad background, we hit upon It should at least give the background for one particular field; how- ever, this function is not automatically taken care of by the require- ment that we take one or two courses of allied work. Necessarily first year courses are chiefly devoted to the main facts and principles prerequisite to further work in one department. second year courses a limited part of.that field is. covered more inten- sively, but still we who come from another department have no par- ticularly clear idea of the interrelation. ism plus Eighteenth Century English does not equal a philosophic approach to literature, while the theories of value, money and exchange]. cannot be automatically superimposed upon the, history of modern To hammer through to the inevitable point of comprehensives, the operation of taking one examination in an allied field still: does not necessarily show the relation—or, to be technical, the application of one discipline to the problems being studied in the other connected field. At present, major-splitting turns out to. be specialization in two field’ whose relation is self evident and beyond that unknown. Aside from the fact that the faculty would resign at the sugges- tion, this gap cannot be closed by applying a connection course between the boundaries of each department. — who agitate for interrelation wants a unique * product ; philosophic approaches to literature do not lend themselves to a‘single The interrelation must be made by the student involved, and on the basis of material gathered in both, or several, departments. The result could be tested by an examination, probably made out by both departments, according to the particular ‘material the student has covered. This would replace, for such students, the third examination ordinarily taken ina given field, either in her major or ally. This will mean additional work for the faculty. However, we do not believethat an overpowering number of students have the inter- Europe. course. relation: complex, and in any case, a great deal more than composing extra examinations. tion is the os pened that would be given to change the allied eourse from a nomirfal requirement to a piece of work definitely contributing to the major — allied work as a potential way out. In For instance, German Ideal- In the first place each of those secondly, the extra work should not involve The justifica- ‘In Philadelphia Movies Aldine: Wuthering Heights. The Emily Bronté classic, with Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon. Arcadia: I’m From Missouri, with Bob Burns as a mid-western mule breeder. : Boyd: The Story of Alewander Graham Bell, with Don Ameche and Loretta Young. a Earle: You Can’t Cheat An Honest Man. The W. C. Fields-Charlie Mc- ; Carthy feud in pictures. Fays: Mr. Moto in Danger Island. ... Peter Lorre in further adventures of the Japanese sleuth. * Fox: Society Lawyer, with Virginia Bruce and Walter Pidgéon. . Karlton: Midnight. . Claudette Col- “Went bas Cinderella edventures in Paris after dark. . Keith’s: Broadway Serenade. The nightery singer makes the overnight _ jump to stage stardom. Jeanette ‘MacDonald, Lew Ayres. _. News: The Mighty Barnum (revi- val). +s Pegednfedrge lees: Veiller’s shee about the salesgirl framed into a jail sentence. Ruth Hussey. Also The Crisis, story of the Czechoslovak grab. Stanley: Dodge City. Errol Flynn brings six-shooting law to the Kan- sas cattle town. Olivia De Havilland, Stanton: Women in the Wind. Aviatrix Kay Francis wins the wom- en’s air derby. ; Studio: ‘Double bill of two former hits. The Thirty-nine Steps, Mayer- ling. Suburban Movies - Seville: Thursday, Friday, Satur- day: Gunga Din, with Cary Grant, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Sunday, Mon- day and ‘Tuesday: Leslie Howard in| Pygmalion. Wednesday: Yes, My Darling Daughter. Wayne: . Tuesday, Friday, Satur- day: Made for Each Other, with Ca- role Lom®ard and Cary Grant. Sun- day and Monday: Gunga. Din, with Cary Grant and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Tuesday: Honolulu, with Elea- nor Powell and Robert Young. Suburban: Tuesday: Carvle Lom- bard and John keened,. “ blue eye is ttapidly ‘nearing me. H is ¢arryihg a compass in his han@,| || tense I’ve displaced the north pole.” |the work of art? Dr. Koffka said, One day Schitzi. was sitting on a gatepost in front of :Pem Arch brood dling oad herself, .,‘Here I am,” she, Phrenia “ands Greek: God of a man with a crimped dark curl and a: fire He but today my Slavic mood is 80 ins “So it’s you that’s been holding us up. Oome on, hurry up, get in the bus,” commanded the young m with the fine blue eye, fla8hing a brea in thet magnetism, Schitzi was 4b mad she jerked the fed lantern o the Pem Arch chain and laid him flat out on the pebbly driveway. It dées not do to cross & Russ. “That’s the Unetle Vanya in me,” she sighed, climbing back on the gate- post all serene until she saw a band of figures with little pickaxes coming around the. yellow forsythia bush, “Qh bortsch,” Schitai muttered, mak- ing the sign of the Greek Orthodox cross, “it’s the brownies ahd I have; no pan of milk for them.” She nheetin’t have ity eo the brownies were all 1 ted in the prostrate young man. Silently, they gathered in a circle about a large capable individual with a blond braid Who had rushed up from Rock, exclaiming, “Oh, goody, I’ve always wanted to be a-doctor. ‘Stand back!” Bending over the beautiful motionless form, the girl wiped its blood away with a pocket torn from a blue-jean. Schitzi’s eyes brimmed tears at the futile tragedy.of the scene. “Why,” she asked ‘herself, “do I always bring about these things, day after day, year after year, always’ the same, always. sad.” “I’m synclined to think there § an ignéous fault in his conglomeration,” remarked a brown-haired, rather freckled Brearley girl, “we must get down to bed rock to Avoid an anti- climb-axe.’ L “You shut up, Choose'h Filler, this is no time.” The blond girl waved her white .hand imperiously to the brownies. “Gnomes, pick up the corpse and follow me.” Chanting Vachel Lindsay’s Congo (they were accompanied -in this by Whitaker’s quartet who were calling on Beryl at the Pem East maid’s entrance that day) the solemn procession moved off into the black shades of Pem West. “Hullo, Schitzi,” said a biggish white-faced girl, coming up from be- hind. “What have you been doing?” “Committing murder,” said Schitzi. “Ohhhhh,” said the white- faced girl, “Kant said . “Kant can’t seate 1 me. a scourge of sae “s “Ohhhhh ..... Well, I’m give to tea. Are you inter-rested?” “Where tea?” “At the Bice’s.” “Never been there, but as well there|j as anywhere else. It’s not the sor- row, it’s the tedium of life. Of course, I take my tea in a glass. Heavily sweetened with jam.” “Jam,” repeated the white girl nervously, “Don’t worry Schitzi, there’s always Rudish Evil’un at the Bicg’s if your conversation gives out.” ‘Tm a Slav, Dr. Koffka Outlines _* Four Art Theories); Continued from Page One as art must have a human appeal to satisfy the inmost feelings of the in- dividual.’ The fourth theory, discussed - by Dr. Koffka in more detail, is that of Empathy, developed by . Theodore Lipps. It postulates that all esthetic objects can.be appreciated only by a projection of the emotions of the self or ego into the object. The theory of Empathy contains two hypotheses: that our bodily movements and emo- tions precede the. movements and emotions seen in the work of art; and that the zsthetic qualities of the work of art are really «products “ot the spectator’s emotions. | ~ To investigate the theory of Em- pathy, the ~ psychologist must ask, What is the relation between the sub- jective and objective or the ego and “Perception is not identical at all ti for all ; particularly not i “the and the _ object. chiizi ‘(to rhyme with ritzy) | | Gomtnunity Theatre, Settlement Playhouse Told By Miss Lords, ’35 Te EXISTING CONDITIONS _ IMPROVED BY PLAYS Pwo, years dee. Olu Neighbor-| V hood Playhousé ifi lower New York City was transformed into the Street Settlement Playhous transformation was i ‘Ipervised by Elizabéth Lord, ’35, and Toutes Dyer, ’31, ‘who ‘believe the popular theatre has an important fus ture. Since that time they have been constantly widening the field of their activities so that today the Settlement Playhousé is a’ community enterprise, “We are trying to create a com- munity theatre dramatizing current neighborhood ‘problems and national political and economic events which directly affect the people in this dis- trict,” said Miss Lord, who has. re+ cently been visiting Miss Park, in an interview for .the News. The Play- house stands in a densely populated part of the city where ‘poverty and unemployment have bred social diffi culties. Miss Lord and Miss Dyer hope to help improve conditions by educating the people through the me- dium of the theatre. : .In competition with the W. P, A.’s One Third of-a Nation, the Henry Street Settlement Playhouse presented a play about housing requirements which Miss Lord believes was influ- ential in establishing housing reform: The Playhouse directors are now planning the production of a Living Newspaper ‘on Socialized Medicine, suggested by the Wagner bill and re- cent Albany legislation. It is essential for the group that it -be-sppported by persons interested in the subject matter of this type of drama for, as Miss Lord pointed out, no aspiring young actor will lend his talents to a serious, heavy play unless its theme.is significant to him. Miss Lord and Miss Dyer do not give formal courses in acting, preferring the actors to learn by experience. Because the subject matter is taken from existing conditions the actors usually play roles familiar to them, and, once before the footlights, are absorbed in their characterizations. The stage villain may be beaten black and-blue before the final curtain. The ideal of the group is to have the scenarios of the plays worked out cooperatively. For instance, last year the Credit Union wanted to have a play produced dealing with its his- tory and importance. ‘ The Playhouse company divided into three groups and each of these rapidly improvised on the main theme. The final dia- logue was adapted from these impro- vizations. __The productions, created taneous, Recently a Cooperative Theatre has been organized for those who want theatrical experience more: than educational opportunities. ‘We didn’t want a small, arty dramatic group,’ said Miss Lord, “so we fixed. member- ship fees of ten cents.” This divi- sion of the Playhouse prbduces “ready-made” plays, usually those with social implications such as Hav- ing Wonderful: Time. A negligible admission is charged for these pres- entations. The Settlement Playhouse also sponsors community singing, and a pupil of Hanya — supervising a dance program. Rehearsals of the plays are open to outsiders who are invited to come and “kibitz.”’ the ego is almost annihilated, and perception in, ; which the ego is driven or- completely "attracted by the object.” Enjoyment of art usually occurs s be- tween these two-extremes. All of these four theories of the psychological approach to art were considered by Dr. Koffka inadequate unless they recognize the “required- ness nature” of the art object itself, “requiredness” being used by the speaker in the sense of Wolfgang of Value in the World of Fact.” Ar- tistic appreciation is aroused not only by the emotion of the ego but also by the physiaghomic characteristics of the work of art. It is only by the coming together of the two fac- ,|tors, the ego and the art “object itself, that weathetic emotion. is — tht of the pure spestator in which] tate ‘ Kohler in His recent book, The Place’ Spatial ‘Value’ of Color Developed by Cezanne. ~ aa 4 ‘ | Sloane Finds Artist Caps. Work Experiences at Henry ‘Street Of Impressionists Coinnann: Root April 16.—Speaking at the last. of the Art Club series of exhibitions, Mr, Sloane, associate pro- fessor of history of art, discussed Cézanne’s development of the spatial value. of color. Perfettion “of this technique enabled the artist to com- bine the Impressionists’ use of light with the earlier achievements in drawn forths. : In the evolutionary development to- wards realism, Cézanne’s technique was thé nécessary suceéssor to that of the Impressionists. Introducing his development of this point, Mr. Sloane defined painting as the representation - of three-dimensional form on a two- dimensional surface. The elements with which the painter has-to deal are mass, space, color, and a fourth element, light, which pervades the other three. Attempts had previously been made to produce forms in natural rather than conventional light; ‘however, in achieving the color of the instant, the Impressionists had largely disregarded the surfaces of the form and the mass was dissolved. In* Cézanne’s painting, the planes are turned to or away from the eye by the alteration of color, for specific colors tend to take up a position in space in regard ‘to the eye. Whether or not Cézanne realized the principles involved, in his best pictures. he was able, Mr. Sloane believes, to give the appearance of a solid in space by forcing the colored planes together in the proper direction so that the myriad tints would add up to a ser- ies of forms. “Since the eye/must stop to assimilate these values, the har- mony.of a Cézanne can only be real- ized slowly. - Cézanne’s treatment of -color itself also differed from that of the Impres- sionists, who had tried to set down the-colors-of nature in a certain, mo- ° mentary light. Believing that a “least common denominator of color” persisted through light changes, Cézanne discarded brilliance in an attempt to find the universal tones of nature. When he was_ successful, said Mr. Sloane, his pictures can take their light from the outside. In his watercolors Cézanne tried to solve the same problems on which he was working in oils. Mr. Sloane stated that the watercolors were slighter, and usually more difficult to realize, because of the larger spaces left be-— tween the tones. aa PENNINGTON HAILE TRAINED IN LEAGUE OF NATIONS AFFAIRS The World Crisis rae American Foreign Poly will be the subject of Pennington ( Haile’s address at the Peace Demonstration on April 20, at 11 o’clock, in Goodhart Hall. Haile is assistant director of the »League of Nations Association, and has spent two years at Geneva study- ing the League in action. The resolutions drawn up by mem- ber organizations’ of the Peace Coun-. cil will be presented by Anne Louise Axon, 40, president of the Under- graduate Association. As in previous years, Baldwin and Shipley Schools and the maids and porters have been invited to attend. All Students will be excused from classes, -y . 0 Ne ANCIENT ASIA MINOR IS TOPIC OF GOLDMAN A: series of three lectutes on tlie Aspects of ‘Early Anatolian Civiliza- tion will be_ given by Miss Hetty Goldman on Tuesday afternoons, April.25, May .2;.and. May. 9, at.4.30. in the Music Room.” These lectures will present an ‘arch- aeological synthesis, never before at- tempted, of Asia Minor in remote an- tiquity. © In her capacity as director of the joint excavation of Bryn Mawr ‘College, and. the Institute for Ad- vanced Study of Princeton, Miss Gold- man is probably best fitted of any living scholar to undertake the task. The program of the ‘Tectures will be as follows: April 25: The Hittite Em- pire; May 2? Southern Anatolia; May 9: Western ec gogcate a Mr. /* rf THE COLLEGE NEWS’ Page Three _.MR. FENWICK REVEALS WASHINGTON OPINIONS ‘OF NEUTRALITY LAWS ‘ Common Room, April 14.—“Any neutrality legislation is: likely to be .. unworkable and illogical, but no. one : " j in ined} eos Piday snd Saturday, . April cag eseiagar y< ae ett ithte i” ‘stataa lt?” Sunday afternoon, although the Réading, Indefifdent Work, taking Europe Sitice 1870 but, sincél 91 and 22. The president, dean, and : >... .,|dudging of the pictures will take place y she has never had the Continental faculty..s : fM Mr. Fenwick, professor of Political , Recommended : ‘ ; ONS, LACUS: FOPENNEBT VOD cunt : ’ , on Saturday, the 29th. ; History, she is reading about the 16th, Holyoke, Smith, V d Welle: SRS G8: Wa LOTR: MONS Se: Caen The pictures may be on‘any. subject ; 17th and 18th centuries with Miss Rob-|) aie wt - t + Mise Pa k’ he se : 1e pi : “t, : : : real : ey are to meet at Miss Park’s house ~~ the resolutions to be presented” on The episode in Amateur Night|yi., in her private work. Another 4 Peace Day. He had just returned from Washington, where -he testified before the House Foreign Relations Committée, which is considering amendrhents to our present neutrality Ws. ; In" Weshingion, he went on to say, he found tw extreme points-of-view on. neutrality, together with all de- grees of compromise opinions. One extreme is represented by such isola-} tionists as Charles Beard, who say, “Stay at home in the event of war, and let*the government do the abso- lutely necessary trading in commodi- ties like rubber and manganese.” They believe that this policy would prevent the situations that caused our = entry.into the World .War. At the other extreme are _ those who say that the American public “would not cut itself off from trade during a war, and that such isolation could be maintained only at tremen- dous sacrifice. They seek to revive the old “freedoni of ‘the Seas” policy.» The two most. important compro- mise policies are the Pittman Bill and the Thomas and Guyer Amendments. The Pittman Bill is a cash-and-carry plan, whereby belligerents could buy supplies without credit and take them away in their own ships. Its sup- porters assert that it prevents any risk to us, as no financial interests would be involved. The Thomas Amendment in the Senate, and the Guyer Amendment in the House, both propose to lay an absolute embargo on both sides at the beginning. But if the President de- cides that one side has broken a treaty to which the United States was a party, the embargo upon the opposite PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST ENTRIES ARE’ INVITED The Nucleus Camera Club will hold its third annual exhibition from April 29 to May 6, in the Common Room. The exhibition ‘will open with a tea and will be divided into “on campus” and “off campus” classes. All pic- tures should he at least 5” by 7” in’ size (there is a good enlarger avail- able to club members’ in their Dalton dark-room) and be mounted on 16” by 20” mounts( these may be obtained in any of the camera stores in Ardmore). The following rules do not apply to club members: only four prints may be submitted by any one person; these should be accompanied by an entry fee’ of 25¢ to cover cost of hanging. For further information, see Fair- child Bowler, ’40, or Doris Turner, ’39. All pictures must be in by Thurs- day, April 27. We Read Newspapers Bryn Mawr College, repre- — sented by Laura Estabrook, ’39; Frances Bourne, ’39, and Joce- lyn Fleming, °42, defeated’ the Cheney State Teachers’ College of Pennsylvania in a current events--contest.sponsored by the Eastern Pennsylvania League of Nations Committee. The con- test was broadcast over the N. B. C. network as a part of the program Youth in the World. Each competitor was asked four questions and the answers ’ were rated numerically on a basis of 100 points. The final score was 1050 to 925. side may be lifted wholly or in part. Other compromise bills include the Rogers Bill, which prohibits arms only. Various other groups wish to prohibit war “materials as well as arms, but would allow the shipment of food. History Dept. Uses. -England’s Tutorial System of Study Exams in Allied Fields, Summer e “Miss Robbins” of the history department ‘said that she always counts on her seniors for dates has foundation in fact. If a history major does not know a date or a fact off hand, she is. able to find it in record time. By graduation she has a thor- ough mastery of the library. Even in Minor History the student avoids summary texts, reading instead books which treat topics more fully. As she works in the more advanced courses she spends increasing time in making reports on a private topic from scattered material. By senior year, particularly if she is doing fhonors, she is working with much the independence of,a graduate student. For Mr. Gray’s Europe Since 1870 a reading knowledge of French is re- quired in order to study the pre-war state documents, and German is recom- mended. The History department, for the |comprehensive preparation, has_ set up a tutorial system of study, like that of the English universities and lof Harvard and Yale. One-third of ‘Miss Robbins’ time is scheduled for conferences with the majors, singly or in pairs. One senior has defined this individual attention as “a private course ‘in what you have left out.” Each. of the three comprehensive examinations covers the work of sev- eral courses. At least two are in the fields as listéd in the college calendar, while the third may be in an allied department. Two of this year’s sen- iors are taking a third field in the de- partment of politics, based on Mr. Wells’ course in Comparative Govern- ment, while another takes her third field in English. . The total of history courses must include Minor History, two units of second year work,. and one advanced course, One senior, who will take all. of her. examinations in history, has chosen two fields of English history and one in Modern: Europe. She is senior is reading to fill a gap in Eu- ropean history between 1789 and.1870 | since she has not had The French Revolution and Napoleon. Throughout the courses the empha- sis is upon particular topies. rather than upon getting a hasty summary fof the entire field. In Minor History for example, the first semester is de- voted ehiefly ‘to the history of. state and church. In this way the course differs from “survey” courses in ether. colleges. The honors topic of one senior takes her to the Taylor stacks to investigate public opinion about immigration between 1918 and 1924, while another is reading the works of Fielding in her study of the life of a laborer. in 18th century Lon- don. Summer reading is required in both history and politics... Last summer, |}. Miss Robbins said, after each student had discussed her home library 'facili- tigs with her professor, she “made a treaty to read -a given number of books. By this arrangement all the books agreed upon were read, and the seniors had come to know the early history of France. In the comprehensive interviews the seniors fire questions at the in- structor. If a student has been unable to find out about a background as- sumed in her recent reading, she asks for further. books on the subject. The independence of work on private reports allows the student to choose topics closest to her personal inter- ests. -One senior has congistently written on subjects that relate to the present. : Even in. courses *nominally con- Five College Council To Meet On.€ampus The annual meeting of the Five College Council will be held at Bryn for dinner Friday evening, and at the Deanery for lunch on Saturday. The conference this year will deal chiefly with methods of admission. A characteristic: problem is. the use of “Plan D,” which allows for ad- inations, of students in the upper seventh of their class at schools which do not ordinarily give college preparation, or which are located at a great distance’ from the college. Interpreting the qualifications strictly, Bryn Mawr makes-little use. of this plan, while Mount - Holyoke and Wellesley admit many students in this _ way. Neo-T homist to Speak Before Philosophy Club Mortimer J. Adler, associate professor of law at the Univer- sity of Chicago, will speak on The Plurality of Logics next Sunday afternoon at three o’clock. The lecture, sponsored by the Philosophy Club, will deal with the problem of whether there can be multiple logics as there are multiple geometries or whether one and only one logic can exist. Dr. Adler, who is a neo-Tho- mist, has written on diverse sub- jects,- among them, Art and Prudence, a Study in Practical Philosophy, and Musie Appreci- ation: An Experimental Ap- proach to its Measurement. Tea will be served after the lecture. parallels are drawn: In the first week of the course in Europe since 1870 e cerned with the past, contemporary. ———e ( “Tt’s Refreshing to Let up_Light up. V4 7 rv TELEVISION EXPERT SAYS: . - a.mild, good-tasting Camel” _ THE SMILE OF ANTICI- mission, without college board exam- - the-class_read Mein Kampf, —_____ a RECEIVING‘the show with a home set: Mrs. Dorothy Temple, who runs a home, has a jobtoo. She is enjoying a cigarette—a Camel—for, like so many-women, she finds just right for steady smoking. Let ‘a delicate fragrance.in Camels that is very up—light up a Camel, the cigarette appealing. “Camels taste so good,” she . of costlier tobaccos. . says.“They dohave a wonderful mildness.” Z READY? A television broadcast is about to begin. Everyone feels excitement in the air. Philco engineer Richard E. es Waggener knows exactly what to do. He ‘passes Camels, takes one himself... a mild, good-tasting Camel! “It’s grand for” one’s poise to let up—light up a Camel,” . PHOTO OF Waggener directing . -Katharine Aldridge and Shane Kelly. ‘Dick is one of many experts in tele- vision who find Camel’s mildness PATION: Dick finds a spare moment to enjoy a Camel.. “Camels are quite different,” he says, “mild, full-flavored. I smoke.all I want, and they nevet_jangle my nerves.” ~ ' ‘ i: > ee ; : + ry ‘ . a : Ce schon cindhdbats ; Ne, PRES BOO SS ee Seon “ome SMOKING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST— a | me 4 be SOS ye ERs ! : ‘Prenat ibrng Sr Dos COLUMBIA STUDENT, John C. Wright, Jr., class of ’39, speaks a for many a college man when he says: “Camels are what I call a real é cheerful smoke. They have a rich, ripe taste that I like, and Camels : certainly are- mild! Yes, Camels sure set me right. I don’t wonder.’ ; that people say: ‘I’d walk a mee roe a envi Eaten | Soe = CAMELS 4 * Copyright, 1939, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. Pe} 6 ae it , * CAMEL ...THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER. TOBACCOS - Describes Cyclés of Painting) From Conceptual Origins ® To Symbolism 4 Music Room, April 12.—In his sec- * ond lecture on the Archeological Ap- proach to Art Mr. Rhys Carpenter described the course of art in the last five centuries, from the conceptual art of archaic times to the logical conclu- sion of realistic art and return to symbolism. The painter’s palette has ae from Byzantine gold red, green and blue, through the darkening process to Rembrandt’s chairoscuro, and back to flat color areas ‘again. In subject matter the trend has been the same: from ideal to realistic and back again. Mr. Carpenter explained archaic art in terms of the évery day act of seeing objects. We see only patches of color, at first, he said, which take shape by .retreating inside outlines. Therefore, archaic painting always uses line and local color. . Giotto’s - simplicity and concentra- . tion are due to his inability to draw more realistically, Mr. Carpenter in- sists, although he does not count this a fault in the painter. As archaic limitations were over- come*by the introduction of perspec- tive, foreshortening, and modelling in light and shade, the rise of portraits and the anatomical nude marked the end of truly religious painting. Sig- -norelli’s hell is filled with nude bodies rather than naked souls. ' ' But the course of realism went far beyond anatomy. Truth, it” painting is not what one knows, but what one sees. Botticelli knew how many petals a flower has and showed them all. The truth a painter seeks today is in him- self. He may paint the interior of a theater as he sees it sitting in the audience. _ The most subjective ‘im- pression is not wholly optical, but is ~~ tinged. with the feeling of the sito —and-therefore, expr ing impressionism. ~ In explaining the present era in arts, Mr. Carpenter said that as long as artists could advance in realistic d technique they sought realism; when there was no more perfect technique possible they fell into mannerism, and now,_seeking new beginnings, they re- vert to the primitive. Plans for. Library Addition Published Continued from Page One Graduate seminars, an art study room and offices for department members make up the rest of the second floor. A long gallery for the display of art pictures occupies the top floor. The archaeology department will have cases there forthe exhibition _ of valuable collections of study material already in the possession of the col- lege. : ' ‘In working out the plans, Miss Lois A. Reed, librarian, and the Fac- ulty Committee, under the chairman- ship of Dr. Rhys Carpenter, have pro- . vided for several striking additions to library equipment of the college. One of these is the purchase of a projector! for the .use of microfilms of books, documents and other records, A li- brary of such films will be gradually accumulated and will be stored in the projection room set aside for this purpose. Very popular with the stu- dents is the plan to have individual desks by each of the windows which run the length of the stacks. Forty- eight students are provided with private study desks in answer to the long expressed desire for quiet study} space outside the main reading room. A Treasure Room, to exhibit rare books and first editions possessed by the college, or material of historical value or particular significance to Bryn Mawr, is to be created out of GLAMOUR & FUN . Under Summer’s Sun. North Shore. Fashion mod- cling, figure conditioning, grooming, fencing, dancing. Enrollment limited. Refer- the swinging door. much,” she said, but we were forced to disagree with her. Exclusive summer school on} We strolled down the chat day investigate the inner workings of fh College Inm Miss"Davis, its ger, took us in hand. “The Inn’s hi purpose, she informed , us, is “ ter to the caprice of the appetite.” She noted, however, that these days appetites are not as capricious as they once were. Once peas and poached eggs, tomato bouillion and prufies, were run-of-the-mill requests, but we are a generation of hamburgers, brownies and toast. Even chop-eat- ers are few. Miss Davis and her assistants do their best to encourage individuality. The Inn tries, she said, “to create a friendly place where the girls can be themselves. That’s why there are no restrictions, Of course, in the Din- ing Room we wouldn’t allow them. to ——_—..” Tactfully she did not fin- ish the sentence. ¥ When we inquired about the all- important food itself, she turned us over to Miss Reddick, who admitted us into the Great Unknown behind “It’s not very The first thing that we saw was a large and shining ice-cream con- tainer. “Electric,” saidy Miss Red- dick, and added the information that it would hold. 120: quarts—60 dollars’ worth. We then entered the Tea Room Kitchen, which is equipped with a pie-and-cake oven, a voluminous toaster, a broad grill, and an impos- ing automatic beater. Miss Reddick said that this was only a small one. It came up to her shoulder. The refrigerators were next in- spected. The refrigerator for the Tea Room is a whole closet to itself; that for the Dining Room is another, with the added distinction of two smaller hoavities chiefly for ‘eggs, vegetables and butter. . The Dining Room Kitchen is, as Miss, Reddick said, “the works.” Down the’ middle of its shining floor runs a steel-topped work. table—“just for general work”—and a steam table, with porcelain jars sunk in its depths. Faint wreaths of steam coiled lazily upward. A. massive range occupies one wall; a deep “zine” fills another. On, another table what was to become dinner for the evening was spread out: five chickens, three ducks, large roasts of beef, and asparagus, string beans and sweet potatoes innumer- able. The Pantry, used forddishwashing, is the third division of the holy of holies. It contains an automatic dish- washer, whose action we couldn’t pre- tend to, understand, a, two-fold sink for glass and silver, “and for some reason, a gigantic, shining coffee urn. We questioned Miss Reddick as to the personnel of this warm, gleaming Eden. She told us that there were, besides the maids, a general handy- man named Eric, Mr. White, the Pan- try-man, ‘and two cooks, I. J. Ruff and Fred Washington. Miss Minnie Henry supervises all ghese mere men, as,is only fitting at Bryn Mawr. We were unable to make her acquaintance because, from the noise from a back room, the staff, was engaged in an energetic game of Fan-Tan. As we finished our tour something out of place in all the neatness caught our eye. On a window ‘sill, totally neglected, sat. a large yellow wedge of rat-cheese, with a small: red to- mato perched tiltedly on top. We were afraid to call this slightly sur- realistic exhibit to Miss Reddick’s attention, and passed with regret back through the swinging door. N. E. a. MISS POTTER QUITS COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE The resigration of Miss. Genevieve Potter from the staff of the comp- troller’s office has been announced. Joining the staff in 1907 as first book- keeper and assistant, Miss Potter has been in continuous service longer than any other member of the office, with the exception of Mr. Foley. Comment- ing on her resignation, Mr. Hurst, the comptroller, said, “Miss Potter has been a loyal and valuable member of the staff throughout her 32 years of service.” Born and raised in Philadelphia, Miss Potter held a business position there before coming to Bryn Mawr. Until the past few years, when the comptroller’s office began cashing checks for students, she saw very lit- tle of the undergraduates. When asked ‘about her plans, Miss Potter replied that she intended to “go on to new adventures and to. en- joy herself.” . She has liked. the work at Bryn Mawr and found that “the 32 years here passed like five min- utes.” Miss Potter is very fond’ of music, and for eight years attended almost all of the Saturday evening concerts in — part of the space made available in she present fi + sen by the transfer of the Art and Archaeology departments to the Quita Woodward Wing. Architects for the Woodward Wing are Thomas and Martin, of Philadel- phia, who also drew the plans for the recently completed Chemistry and Geology Building and for Rhoads | Work Camp Planned ‘AFTER LONG SERVICE| To Help Refugées| As a partial solution to the prob- lem of rehabilitation and assimilation for the refugee, the Intercollegiate Committee is cooperating. with a group of educators in establishing the first work Camp for Democracy. This will be a summer training camp of work, study and recreation. It will be-in-session from August 7 to Sep- tember 4, at West Park, opposite Poughkeepsie on the Hudson River, New York, the site of the Bryn Mawr Summer School/earlier in the season. The campers( will include men and women: collega students from all parts of the coyntry, young workers from trade unions, representatives of negro youth organizations, and _re- cently arrived refugees, most of whom will be from Central, Eyxope. A resi- dent staff and faculty apdmany guest speakers will é special studies and condwét seminars’ revolving around_a positive definitiqn of democ- racy and a consideration of its eco- nomic, sociological, political and civil libertarian problems. to 60 students. The student body will be restricted The cost for fout weeks will be $65, and a limited num- ber of scholarships will be available. Students are invited to.make applica- tion for themselves and to suggest Numerous Applications Received For Student Assistants And Scholarships _ Miss Jean Carter, director of the Bryn. Mawr Summer School, an- nounced that the school was trans- ferred to its new headquarters on the Hudson shore last Friday, April 14. Numerous applications for admissiort' to the school this summer have been received, foreign as well as domestic. Two English workers have enrolled, one a London bus conductoress, the other a textile worker. A Swedish pocketbook maker has been accepted, but Denmark has not yet raised suffi- cient funds to transport a student. American applications have been re- ceived in as large numbers as usual, and although there are positions open to only six collegé students, 19 have already applied for this. work, seven from Bryn Mawr. The directors in- tend to take two Bryn Mawr under- graduates if they are as well qualified as those from other colleges. Vassar wishes to have two students picked as the proximity of Summer School to their campus has stimulated new; interest in the project. Wellesley, Mount. Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Goucher, and the Connecticut College for Women also have ‘one applicant each, ' The new school will have a house- ‘warming, open to former students and staff, on May 13 and 14. Accommo- dations will be available for 60 per- sons, most of whom will probably be New Yorkers, though Boston . and Pittsburg are also to be represented. The alumnae have all shown enthusi- asm for the new location of the school, and the independence it will give. The new site covers about 55 acres —an area equal to the Bryn Mawr campus—running from the highway to the Hudson River. The campus boasts a continuous frontage on the in the: summer months. Two large houses stand at either end of the campus, and near each of. these is a smaller house and barn. So that classes will be equally convenient for all students, each house will contain classrooms and dining rooms as well as dormitory facilities. -Last year a total of 143 dollars was raised by the students for scholarships and similar purposes. The New York City group alone has pledged 400 dol- lars, or two complete scholarships, for the coming session, while Pittsburg is contributing 200 dollars. The money is-largely raised by raffles and dances, and one group swelled the fund with a “bunko” party. profit by their attendance. dent_who will be responsible for car- yéar will be given special consid- eration. Those interested in the Work Camp should address inquiries immediately . to the ‘river where students may swim dur- the names of students who “would The stu- Page Four . oe THE COLLEGE NEWS , ———— a = —- ~ - share ne of College Inn Encourages Individuality New Summer School |Bryn Mawr Portrays “< Traced by Se But Modern Appetites Fail to Respond Prospects Outlined er | eee Continued from Page One fronting its continuance and _ rein- forcement were also presented. ,| In, speeches\gt the first séssion al- most all the member “nations” asked for changes in the structure and poli- cies of the League. France recom- mended curtailment of the League’s.-. tion on social and ‘economic problems. | ‘several members withdrew from the League altogether, following Italy’s example last year. This action, however, céased to be effective upon repetition. Bryn Mawr, as Rumania, stood for \ the policy of a strong League en- dowed with political as well as eco- nomic pawers to uphold sanctions. Since it is a small nation, Rumania needs the security granted by the. League and therefore supported the principles of the present covenant. However, it agreed “to co-operate in any expedient compromises on practice necessary to meet_the current situa- tion.” At. the closing session several re- visions of the covenant were adopted, though changes were not as sweeping as had been expected, owing to a lack of unanimity in replacing proposals voted down. The article of. sanctions against aggressors and that- guaran- teeing territorial intergrity of mem- ber nations were finally deleted tem- porarily, to be restored when member- ship in the League should become uni- versal. “The first plenary session resem- bled a political convention,” said the New York Times of April 14. “The 200 delegates from 27 Middle Atlantic colleges and: universities sat in groups marked off by signs for the countries - they represented.” The speaker from Haverford gave an address in French, artistically translated by ‘a fellow delegate with a strong French accent. Another realistic touch was providéd by the corps of uniformed messengers, who bore notes between delegations. ne Usually reliable sources report that = = — the contents varied from military threats.to invitations to lunch. “The Devil Passes” The Haverford spring play, The Devil Passes, will be given © Friday night, April 21, at 8.30, in Roberts Hall. Cars will leave Pembroke Arch at 8 p.m. Tick- _ ets may be obtained in each hall from a member of the Theatre ,,.Workshop Committee. GREEN HILL FARMS City Line and Lancaster Avenue Ardmore .. 3600 A reminder that we would like political powers and great concentra- rying on the refugee aid work next}, to take cate of your parents and friends, whenever they come to visit you. For reservations: Intercollegiate C. GEORGE CRONECKER Committee. HENRY B. WALLACE Caterer and Confectioner DINING ROOM Estimates given _ 22 and 24 Beyn Mawe Aviains | Bryn Mawr, Pa. Hall, the new dormitory. A summer’s ‘round-trip to tw tovelng Towit Cas on Amerie salle “MAY"31, JUNE 28 Or sail alternate weeks on the s.s. Pres. Harding and s.s. Pres. Roosevelt for as little as $312 round trip, Cabin Class. Comfortable 3rd Classaccom- modations are still less expen- sive. Services direct tolreland, England France, Germany. At pon RAYE AGEN] for complete details or ONEBROADWAY,NEWYORKCITY orate lines @ Most long d ~~"gseven. and all-day Sunday. - ao. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA istance rates are reduced every night after li Bie 9.5 “ing i equally-good, providing hilarious slap- THE COLLEGE a NEWS Page Fixe Muvder. Bley Stars. =< Detective Whitcker Continued frpm Page One ites did: not recognize her and thought Fifi had borrowed talent from the Merion. Lower. High. Trilby, the maid (Pear) Edmunds, Denbigh), was stick with her fear of ghosts and corpses and her khee-knocking which almost threw her fellow performers into the footlights, — Daffy Carmichael, a hand-waving, mystery-mad half-wit, was amusingly played by Carl Smith (Pembroke), and John Henry MacKnight (Merion), as the “black-faced comedian, was no- table for his retord sprint from the stage to the box-office telephone. With much shouting and arm motion, Rob- -ert Bryant, the overbearing ‘director, made himself sufficiently obnoxious in the opening scene to make his murder credible, Hilda Green (Denbigh), as the heroine, Frances Ward (Rockefeller), as het mother, Mabel Ross (Denbigh), as her rival, and John Warren (Pém- broke), as her admirer, were quite adequate as foils to the comedy parts. Ann White (Denbigh), and Louise Simms (Wyndham), were amusing in minor réles, and last, but by no means least, Amy Harper (Pembroke), made} a most attractive if somewhat minute “soda dispenser” in sailor cap and white jacket. Scenery was unnecessary since the action was laid on a “bare stage,’”|: and the one in Goodhart can fulfill that part by being itself. Lighting, too, was no problem, and was, more or less, just Goodhart' in its true colors. The costumes were everyday clothes, without any effect of staginess, and ‘Chubby’s outfit was especially good, including the inevitable little boy keds and brown knee socks, : To present a fast-moving mystery play is always daring for amateurs. Action may. lag or lines get lost and the audience usually stops caring whether the murderer gets caught-or ~ finishes off the rest of the cast in one wholesale slaughter. Here, Fifi triumphed. over natural odds and pro- _ duced a. play which never dragged, and yet managed to get every bit of humor out of the better-than-average lines, “ ee The climax of the performance came when Chubby pulled back a screen, to look at the corpse. With al ¢ bewildered face, he explained to the rest. of the cast, “There ain’t nothing back here but atmosphere,” At which point, Trilby said, “Doh’t give the Sheriff any more clues. He’s all tripped up in ‘the ones he’s got now.” Lb aes =o Car penter-to Go to Rome Mr. Rhys Carpenter has ac- cepted the post of Professor-in- charge of the Classical School ofthe American Academy in Rome for the year 1939-40. This will coincide with the Sab- batical leave which Mr. Carpen- ter intends to. take next year. |Bryn Mawr League : ‘graduate student, played first violin. +Benditt played first violin, Miss Rice, | Holds Benefit Recital All-Instrument Musicale Shows Competence and Careful . Preparation . Music Room, April 16.—Contrary to the usual plan, the Bryn Mawr League’s annual musical benefit was entirely instrumental, and for this reason attracted a large number of outsiders. The musicians themselvés were competent, and showed that they had spent. much time in prepar- ing their material. The mood of the entertainment was well set by Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik. This lively piece of chamber-music was played by~an en- semble of twelve under the direction of Miss Helen Rice. Eleanor Benditt, 39, Louise Herron, °39, Henrietta hButler, ’42, and Blanche Anderson, Miss Rice played second violin, with, Nicoline Samsom, graduate student, Helen Hamilton, ’39, and Mary New- berry, ’40. Violas were played by Helen Bacon, ’40, and Polly Coan, ’41, and ’cellos by Naomi. Coplin and Helen Garth, graduate students. The Minuet and Sarabande which followed are rarely-heard works by Murschhauser. Together with the Sonatine by Handel, they were exe- cuted by Helen Garth on the recorder, with Mary Jane Cook, ’42, accompany- ing at the piano. : Eleanor Benditt, violinist, accompan- ied by Mary Jane Cook, next per- ‘formed the Adagio from Bach’s Con- certo in E flat for violin and oboe, (played on the flute). The violin part was played with confidence and color, and the technical passages for flute were well-executed. Miss Waples, accompanied by Bernice Schultz, ’41, skilfully performed the different runs in the next selection, the Rondo from Mozart’s Concerto No. 1 in @ major for flute. Cease ee 3 | A piano solo of much fire and ex- cellent technique was rendered by Gordon Grosvenor, ’89, the Etude heroique of Leschetizky, and the Me- phisto Waltz, Liszt-Busoni.. The Al- legro and Minuet from Mozart's Quin- tet in G minor followed. Eleanor second violin, Louise Herron, first viola, Helen Bacon, second viola, and Naomi Coplin, ’cello’ The evening finished in a climax with the First. Movement of Rach- maninoff’s Concerto No. 2 in C minor FANSLOW “Tailored Clothes” Stetson Hats fot Women Braemar Sweaters Seville Theater Bldg. SAKS FIFTH AVENUE presents A Debutante Shoe Collection at § 8 ‘ Our representative will be at the College Inn on Wednesday and Thursday, April 19th and 20th, with a large assortment of debu- tante ; shoes for day or evening. ep 75 LTRs ee ocesetiiadeimnempenemammmaniienees cient i eS Christine Waples, ’42, flutist, and} ~ scence PUBLIC OPINION | Miss Rice’s Musicale Gives "Inspiration to Artists To the Editor of the College News: - Many of us who heard the League’s Musicale on Sunday want to sing loud the praises. of Miss -Rice and he¥ group of musicians. It is heart- ening to know that young musicians, with such warm encouragement... as Miss Rice must’ give them, can gather together to play chamber music. Our aspiring actresses display their tal- ents through Players Club, and our singers have their chance in Gilbert and Sullivan. But the violinist or flutist or pianist has been ignored. Now she need not play only for her own ears in the noisy practice room of Goodhart. Now she can go to Rhoads to spend happy hours trac- ing the melodies of her favorite com- posers, abetting the efforts of similar players. We-are glad that Miss Rice and her friends, especially Eleanor Benditt, Louise Herron, Helen Garthy Christine Waples and Gordon. Gros- venor, Wanted to share their musical delight with us. Let us hope that the painters and sculptors of the col- lege will receive encouragement, like Miss Rice’s, and will continue to’ de- serve it-as the musicians have. Hon- est art, be it acting or singing or fiddling or painting, is always worth doing for its own sake, but it is so much better to let others enjoy if, too. MARGARET BELL, 39. for pidno, played by Gordon Gros-| venor and Stafford Newhall on two piahos, and Miss Grosvenor encored with one of her own compositions en- titled The Wanderer, a_ brilliantly technical piece. (oe Fae IN THE BOOKSHOP ‘LENDING LIBRARY The Case of the Leaning Man by Christopher Bush - If you can enjoy the story” of an incredible murder, committed, for in- credible reasons, by a completely un- believable* criminal, then you may find some entertainment in The Case ‘the Leaning Man. Ludovic Tra- vers (“six feet three of lean fitness’’) may be one of fiction’s foremost de- tectives, but in this case he has let his public-down badly. — The plot itself is coherently worked out and may even be called obvious. No attempt is made to cheat the read- er with mysterious death-rays or South American philters distilled by mad scientists eager to dominate the world: one victim is simply stabbed and the other is simply poisoned with cleaning fluid. But the motivation of both crimes seems entirely fnsuf- ficient; in order that they may be committed and solved, all the persons inyolved have to act in violent op- position to the characters already established in the mind of the reader. Even more’ annoying than this is the fact that no maps or drawings are provided, although both. murders were “place” crimes, whose success depeniled ‘cbmpletely on the ‘position © of certain buildings in relation to one another. ‘The facts of ‘their location are given in the story, but so. inade- quately and. piecemeal that the reader is confused: and likely to feel unfairly deprived of information with which he might have solved the crimes himself, : E. M, P. GRIFFIN TO DISCUSS .. ‘UKRAINE AND HITLER Jonathan Griffin, British author and correspondent, will lecture in the Deanery, Sunday, April 23,.on The Ukraine and Hitler. Mr. Griffin is an authority on Central Europe, and has traveled there widely. He was in Prague at the time of the September crisis and took part in the broadcast descriptions of the German occupa- tion. BE. 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LOUIS JULY 8° ALL-EXPENSE TOURS OF EUROPE —~ in connection with "End of Term" sailings ach Ship ROPA 21-July 8 presses - get the Your Travel Agen — " =] HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE rz KeaNTORTH GERMAN WAL 4711 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. . tf, or "YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE"-—The | book will repay its small cost many times over in time and money saved through its countless hints on travel to and in Europe. It represents the practical ideas and experiences of two great steamship lines, one 82 years, the other 92 years in the trans- «> Atlantic service. Send for it to be sure you HAMBURG-AMERICAN - LINE NORTH GERMAN LLOYD 1711 ‘Walnut St., Philadelphia, Penna. | enclose 25 cents (stamps accepted) for the 1939 edition of “YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE”. ~ Just call on yournearest travel agent or at a Hapag- Lloyd office. And whether you go Cabin, Tourist or Third, you'll find scores. of other college men and women on liners of Hapag and Lloyd enjoying the many entertainments, the exhilarating sports, the glorious days and glamorous nights that come only at sea. Plan now—and talk it over with othersy OUR EDUGATIONAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT will gladly assist with information on summer study in Europe. A copy of "SUMMER COURSES ABROAD", -how in its ninth edition, will be sent free on request. BIKING, MOTORING [especially for small groups). ou can save through special con- cessions in many foreign currencies. Germany offers considerable savings through Travel Marks and 60%, reductions on the German Railroads for visitors. DEUTSCHLAND * HAMBURG It covers 145 courses in 15 countries. aes Si pec Th t ‘Eu abc on many, enjoyable and e ways to see Eur ‘ NEW YORK * HANSA inexpensive, whether by HIKING, FALTBOATING, July 6 July 13* THE ANNUAL OR RAIL. And @ : 939 edition of this 230-page most out of your European trip. Name. oa » Address. ~ PENT Se LESS CeneneeS OEE e PG" a See isis OF ‘NEWS’. ty Oh "FAVOR FORUM COLUMN punicialaaions Aeimins of! the News united in w desire “for. “less' rehashing of ‘what has’ al< ‘ready been said,” and more “original creporting”: in’the shape 6f features, minor informal articles °and “inter- views:~ Particularly it was felt that more campus dissension should be re- flected in ‘the News. To this end, seven suggested a Forum column with | ‘signed articles by. students-and faculty on topics of main current interest. ~ This proposed ‘Forum célumn- was, Sh’ general, to be distinguished from ‘Public Opinion in that contributions ‘would often be definitely solicited and “Would always be on subjects of more than purely campus interest—that is, ‘usually politics. « In the cause of more short grtdcles} ‘faculty’ notes and reports of class and club meetings were mentioned, and-several-suggested_fuller. advance notices of dutside speakers, and also ‘of. plays, concerts and art exhibits in Philadelphia and the Main. Line, f Among those.mentioning News re- ‘views of, entertainments and co ‘plays, two -schools of thought ap One-asks that we “‘step beyond the high--schoot ° attitude - everyone. was good “compared with ‘what they might havebeen,” while the other has “the feeling that the reporters con- sider no criticism to be of any worth unless .it. is somewhat - unfavorable and, therefore, invariably make it a point to say something deprecatery.” ~ The following blank is for the bene- fit of other News readers—and non- readers. Tear out the blank and answer Yes, No, or,’ in the first sec- tion, Indifferent. 1. In general would you favor: - A Forum Column as _ suggested above; Reports of Club and Class Meet- ing decisions; Fuller reports of Philadelphia and Main Line events, mainly theatre, movies and —art. ex- a ce on Monday, April 24. mtrary to first reports the re- hibits; Fuller advance notices of college entertainments and speakers; More news, of other colleges; Full reports of chapel sermons; In general,-do you now read: Reviews Book Reviews Wit’s End Lecture write-ups (The blanks will be collected after dinner on Thursday. : College Council Discusses Plan for: Assemblies Continued from Page One and a half of ] One of the reasons for‘the delay in get- ting the workshop started has been the fact that there was a mortgage on the whole property and some money has been lost because some of the pledges are so old that they are college and from- tke School). ¢ not now collectible. The gift of suf- ficient money to release the acre and a half of land around the barn, made by the Alumnae of’ the Baldwin School at its Fiftieth Anniversary last October, has removed this reason. A meeting to complete the legal ar- rangements has been arranged by Mr. Thomas Raeburn White, the lawyer for the college, aiid Mr. Robert Dech- ert, the lawyer for the Baldwin School, to be held at Mr. Dechert’s ipts from the Philadelphia Story benefit were $2,000, not $2,200, since additional bills have come in. A $90 profit for’ the workshop was cleared at Amateur Night. On {the gubject of the ngw Athletic building, it was reported an estimate| - _. of $65,000 has been submitted by Mr. Sidney L. Martin, architect for Rhoads Hall and other new college Mawr : 2 We Deliver [ Phone, Bryn Ma Ee ee a sant ee asia y's. The Main ‘Line Florists = | “The: fifteen ‘tryouts bespthtering ‘eri- |" _ buildings. This includes squash, bad-| _ minton and a basketball court, as well | H fofmann Interprets Alb @hes*: aed ~ Continued from Page ‘One shown ‘in the Sdénata in B minor, Op. 58. His attatk ‘was ‘most ‘vigorous, especially-in the-segond, movement, or Scherzo, and in the Finale. Here: he. entered into.the «spirit of the musie viously shown: » In: the third: move- ment, Dr. Hofmann again illustrated his ability to’make’ the theme stand out from its surroundings and often enveloping accompaniment. . te Dr. Hofmann uses two: kinds. of brilliant forte passages, and a lyric, light touch which contrasts sharply. In spite of the smallness of Dr. Hof-; mann’s hands, he ean cover the key- board in an ‘instant. This may be, explained by the -special instrument: which Dr. Hofmanrf uses. The width, of the: keys on his .keyboard is: nar- rower than that of an ordinary piano key so as to allow his hands:. the ordinary reach. For this. reason, -Dr. Hofmann keeps a Steinway in each of three central cities in the United States, -the nearest. of which is r.|shipped to his concert. Mr. Smith opened the second half lof-the-conicert with: some-aniusing re-> | eyeing marks on’ Chopin’s ‘fickleriess; and’ his music as seen by George Sands. The following: sélections were more fa- miliar. The sad Polonaise in C sharp minor was played ~simply and with 4/ great feeling. It was most interest- ing to hear another interpretation of the Grande Valse. Brilliante and of the Scherzo in C sharp minor, Dr. Hofmann’s closing’ piece, after Myra Hess’s rendition of a few weeks ago. In comparing the two methods of treatment, Miss Hess ‘seems to have a smoother and more lyric interpre- tation. But Dr. Hofmann’s ‘more pre- cise playing and ‘freedom of tempo are much to be admired. He puts an entirely fresh stamp on two such time-worn and played-over pieces by .as—a—lounge—and_shower—and_locker} rooms. It was agreed that’ the previous feeling of vague suspicion and dis- trust of the whole project: had been largely dispelled at the meeting held on March 23. Miss Petts described the new Wellesley recreation building as a’model, on a larger scale, of the kind of building needed here. Re- cently, a great many colleges have been adding a building of this sort, or else a whole new. gymnasium as Vassar has done. Miss Park stated our advantage, from the point of view of cost, in that the building need not be elaborate outside since it will not be on'the upper campus. Mrs. Manning reported that the German. House has been planning to save rooms for the three students who hope to go to Zurich next year, in case the crisis in Europe prevents their going. Miss Park believed that rooms should be saved gince living in language houses probably means more to these students than to some others. Mrs. Manning was not of this opinion, but agreed that, in any case, both houseg,should follow the same policy. 5 / It takes skill to land in the career you want. ,. the kind of skillso many college women acquire through Katharine Gibbs training e * » preparation to step imme- diately into an interesting, well- paid position, with advancement ahead. The Placement Depart- ment never has enough Gibbs- trained college women available * to fill all calls. : © Ask College Course Secretary for “Results,” i booklet of place- ment information, and catalog. e Spectal Course for College as Women opens in New York and Boston. September 26, 1939. © AT NEW YORK SCHOOL ONLY same course may be started July 10, preparing for early.placement.” Alo Oneffand Two Year Courses for preparatory and high school graduates. BOSTON ... 90 Street NEW YORE... . 230 Park Avenue with more abandon than he ‘had pre-j) attack, the dry, clear-cut style for|~ “THE COLLEGE ‘NEWS. Se a nee Biot 5 jhe. ways the “hoped “of Lewis and) COAL. REGION STUDENTS: Vogue Content: aoe maruuan, 38, “who won . 1° se¢onad prize in Vogue’s Pri “dee Paris. contest. last spring, ig:Row working in New. York “as the magazine’s college .Fepresenta-,’ ,, tive. She wouldikeyto meet’the juniors. who are interested. in- ..the 1940-contest on. Monday, April 24, in the Deanery, at, 5. p. m. Siokowski H. elps Disney — To Flee Bryn Mawrtyrs Continued from Page One and wendy. for. an attack, retreated when they saw her reach her hand toward the lever of the closed-door mechanism.. - Once: more_ they . found themselves turned out into the streets. The. cause of* Spain. would have to wait until the maestro should return.. As yet nothing had been accomplished. | Shortly before the last Paoli pulled out to: Bryn..Mawr, two, .bedraggléd figures were- seen. standing on the street corner opposite 1716 Ritten- house Square. A stream-lined .road- ster drove up and parked in front of the musician’s door. A man got out and went into the building, furtively, the _ vulture-like shadows. crouching close to the building across approach to the emotions. The Nocturne in E major separated. the two above-mentioned works. This typical work received high treatment, despite Dr. Hofmann’s detac atti- tude. He appears to have: thought out his emotional interpretations very carefully, so that they’ did not seem spontaneous like Miss Hess’s. But Dr. Hofmann is never cold, an impos- sibility for one so closely identified his contrasted moods and intellectual}. Dana, incorporated . reached a low. ebb when they saw Rim go in’ the Wrong door. He emerged shortly, walking up ‘and: dowm: for a: >few moments} locked ...his , car,-,. trying . the...handles carefully, and also, those of the cars parked nearby: “One more suspipions glance and he faded away... -... . The two figures ‘darted . ACTOSS.. th kowski’s door. gram with a note entreating. Mr... Sto- kowski to arrange an appointment for them with Disney. On it-were pinned two 15 cent gardenias. . Just: then a woman came gmt (the. same plonde), noticed the p§per and laughed with erackling scorn’'— “My -word— flowers!’’ She flipped them inside and went on her way. — The next day the girls ‘received a message that Disney was not in Phila- delphia. Then came a letter saying, that he would be at the Warwick Hotel for.a week. Attempts to catch that he had gone to New York. Act 2—New Yotk. cene — the. theater showing French of Snow White. Disney was there. The cause of Spain came too, 15 minutés after he’d left. Phone calls and gasoline expenses ran up to preposterous sums. Back in pailindelphia bone next week him ‘by phone only brought to light | PFO" VISIT BRYN MAGE aor ‘ “seniors from’ the’ Demonstration High School of the. University of .West Virginia, will attend a picnic supper ; in. the Common. Room, Saturday, ' April. ees as guests of the Industrial Group. ‘ They hé f the cdal-min- sires and thrust a paper “under. “Sto+} hey have come. from the in It wasa concert spe ale areas and wil] spend the’ day at a conference of schools atiBaldwin. Everyone who. wishes to eome’ should: tell. Judy Bregman, “Pei East; ‘or Elizabeth Aiken, Rhoads. *Supper' ‘is 25 cents and will be put on:Pay: Day. more phone calls were made, the flag of the cause still feebly waving: al- though there had not been. so. ;much as a glimpse of either Disney or Sto- Miss Park alone would .inter- ~ kowski. view them. A final phone call——“Mr. Walter Disney? He’s gone back.,to the coast. Said the maestro had_al-+ ways warned him against women.”’ , . D. D.:; Secretary to Playwright Typing and ability to take initiative for research required. Knowledge of Spanish (Colloquial Mexican). helpful -| but not requisite. Mail qualifications and-picture. to Box DA, the College News. Breakfast Lunch a - MEET your FRIENDS The bias Mawr: College Tea Room .» fora SOCIAL CHAT AND RELAXATION Hours of Service: 7.30 A. M.—7.30 P. M. For Special Parties, Call Bryn Mawr 386 Tea Dinner with Chopin. e The right combidéition for a satisfy- i de HAVILLAND in DODGE CITY cs” ORME a a ing Lace By mane satisfying smoke is Chesterfield’s best cigarette tobaccos. ' py ues . OLIVIA de HAVILLAND ing show is ERROL FLYNN & OLIVIA i i The right combination for a really: ‘ 5. can't-be-copied blend of the world’s i ‘ Vi y ; eae ee im. ae SROarrEmncnemriner seer eee Chnsasa s Happy Combination (blend) of the finest American and Turkish tobaccos satisfies mil- - lions because it gives them smoking pleasure they getfrom no othercigarette. Refreshing mildness,bet- . ter taste and more pleasing aroma are Chesterfield’s featune attractions with smokers everywhere. : When you try them you will know why ——---— Ghesterfields give millions of men.and women __ more smoking pleasure... why THEY SATISFY esterfield “acme seniaintee hte world’s best cigarette tobaccos, wares muDen THEY TASTE GETTER. _Coppight 1939, Laccgrn & Mirens Toncco Oo. an onan. steams \