—_ ‘ THe COLLEGE NEWS r VOL. XLII, NO. 1 11 ARDMORE” and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, sANUARY ad 1946. cig? bee Trust ees of Bry. Miwr College, LS a PRICE 10 CENTS: Duties of Dean To be Shared: Broughton Head Until a new Dean of the college is chosen by the authorities, a two- dean system will be set up to take «are of the upper classes after Mrs. Grant’s departure on*January is. Mrs. T. R. S. Broughton, now Acting Dean of Freshmen and of Admissions, will also become Act-' ing Dean of the college. Miss Dor- othy Nepper will become Assistant Dean. The duties: of the Dean of the college will be divided between them in order to give both time to maintain their present positions. Continued Om Page 4 Student Delegates Will Form Model Of United Nations The Intercollegiate United Na- tions ‘Conference, formerly the Model League which met two years ago at Bryn Mawr, will hold an- other meeting this year at Lafay- ette College, Easton, Pa., February 8 and 9. The Conference will follow the form of a meeting of the General Assembly of the United Nations under the United Nations Charter, and will consist of four delegates and-an adviser from the various colleges. This’ year Bryn Mawr will: represent France, and all those interested in attending should sign on the Alliance Bulletin Board. Since the delegates are assumed to be government representatives, they should be acquainted with the Charter and the positions of: their | respective countries. The work of the Conference will | be divided into four Commissions, legal, economic, political, and so- cial. The opening session will take the form of the Economic and -So- cial Council, consisting of eighteen delegates, at which the topic will be full employment, a _ subject which the United Nations are ask- ed to consider, while Friday night will feature a prominent speaker. The Legal Commission will be concerned ‘with the . clarification and interpretation of certain im- portant articles in the United Na- tions’ Charter; the Economic Com- mission, such subjects as capital movements and investments, mon- Continued On Page 4 ‘Art Night’ Plans Tryouts for Plays - Tryouts for the plays written by students on campus and to be'pre- sented at the “Arts’ Night” per- formance scheduled for March __will be held-on Tuesday, February 12th at 8:30 p. m. Hall. a In announcing this, Mr. Freder- ick Thon emphasized the fact that the tryouts are open to anyone on in ' Goodhart campus regardless of experience. The plays to be produced will be chosen Thursday from those writ- ten by the members of Mr. .Thon’s ‘course in Playwriting. Because of can be produced on Arts Night, although others may be published. \ \ Relief Packages Sent to France Reach Destination Packages sent by Bryn Mawr’s Relief for Europe, to France have arrived safely at their destination according to the following letter from the head of the Maison Fra- ternelle at Paris. “Chere mademoiselle, Les paquets arrivent rapidment et font la joie de tous ceux aux- quels ils sont destines. Je garde ceux qui contiennent des vetements et les distribue moi-meme d’apres la taille et la grandeur des -per- sonnes. Grace a vous, nous feterons re belles fetes de Noel. Pour vous tous, Noel beni et ‘belle et heureuse nouvelle annee, toute illuminee de l’amour de notre Pere celeste. Merci a tous ceux qui aident a soulager nos famillies cet hiver. Votre Soeur Dora’”’. As yet there has not been time for an answer from either Italy or Holland. Although participation in pack- ing food and clothing has been good, more help is still needed and Alliance representatives in »eaeh hall are now recruiting. additional packers, Relief for Europe is also going to begin sending articles such as hot water bottles in these packages. A Box will be placed in Taylor for smaller items like pen- cils, pens, shoelaces, blades. An article in the December Alumnae Bulletin about the Re- lief for Europe project has brought contributions amounting to $120 ‘and numerous articles of clothing. In addition, the Faculty Defense Group has voted a donation of $75. Packing will be suspended at the | beginning of the examination per- iod, but will be resumed the first Monday of the second semester. ‘Mexico’s Glamour Delights Students This year two Bryn Mawr stu- dents, Nanette Emery and Rosalie Scott, have joined the Smith Col- lege group spending their Junior year: in Mexico. From all reports \it seems to be a great success, as they have decided that. “south of the border” is definitely the place -| to live. After spending their first month in Morelia, they moved into an old mansion in Mexico City, which has jall the glamour of a palace, with patios, fountains, and palm trees, plus eleven baths for the eighteen girls. But luxury is not the only pleasant side to life. Apparently there is much to be said for the Mexican “senores,” of which there seems to be no shortage, while they have met such people as Robert Stackpole and numerous Latin movie stars and producers. On the serious side, they are both taking private courses with professors from the University of Mexico and regular courses, includ- ing Spanish literature and poetry, Mexican history and phonetics. During the vacations they t | Fairchild, and razor’| travel | Miss Fairchild — To Leave B. M. For I. L..O\ Post Miss Mildred Fairchild will leave the Sociology Department of Bryn Mawr on February 14th to serve with the International Labor Or- ganization in Montreal. No one has yet been named to replace Miss who is also director of the Graduate Department of So- cial Economy and Social ‘Research here. Miss Fairchild will spend a few months in preparation for her new position, after which she will fol- low the United Nations Organiza- tion wherever it may decide to put up its headquarters. She will head the secretariat controlling condi- .tions under which women and children may be employed. Her office, which is one of the several chapters of the UNO, gov- erning food, drugs, and other. mat- ters of international importance, will try to regulate the kinds of jobs, the number of hours, and con- ditions of health, so that women and children can work § safely throughout the world. This Labor Organization, which Miss Fairchild is to head, is the same one started by the League of Nations after World War I. It has kept operating in Geneva, but now has been incorporated into the UNO. Four Professors Return to F aculty | Four professors from the His- tory of Art Department and the science departments, return to Bryn Mawr with the coming semes- ter after leave of absence to serve in war work. . In History of Art, Mr. Joseph C. Sloane, associate professor, re- turns after three years service as a lieutenant in the naval service in the Pacific. Mr. also associate professor, major in the Marine Cerps Reserve, plans to institute a new course in Far East- ern Art next semester. Students interested may register for this the rest of the year. Mr. Walter C. Michels of the Physics Department and Mr. Don- ald W. MacKinnon of the Psychol- ogy Department both return to Bryn Mawr ‘after being engaged in secret war work for the past years. Mr. MacKinnon will resume his classes in Social Psychology and the Psychology of Personality. Engagements Shirley Goldberg. ’47 to Mar- vin Goldberg. to John Joan LeGrand °49, Hellyer. Marion Moise ’47 to Lt. John Bierwirth. Barbara Taylor °46, to Lt. Donald’ Schon. Miss Kathleen Briner, ward- en, Rhoads North, to Donald Mead. Miss Larhylia Whitmore, war- den, Denbigh, to Star Wood. Alexander Soper, | course in planning. their work for; ‘fuse to accept the charges. Title’ Editor Clarifies Policies . Of Magazine in Open Meeting Conference Held To Discuss Plans For U. N. 0. Study): Representatives from Bryn Mawr attended a sponsored by the American Asso- ciation for the United Nations, Inc., to discuss plans by which the United Nations might become a living reality to college students for work in the colleges regarding the United Nations. Students from eight other colleges attended: American, Barnard, Columbia, Cor- nell, New Jersey College for Wom- en, Rutgers, Smith, and Swarth- more. It was decided that the Associa- tion could offer to college students three important services: a column for college publications on United Nations news, the facilities of the speakers bureau, and literature on the -UnitedNations._A-column_ giv- ing a factual summary of up-to- date UNO developments will ap- pear in the College News each month, Uy At the conference it was agreed that such groups as the Interna- tional Relations Club at Bryn Mawr should become informed spearheads of activity becoming leaders of opinion on campus and in the community. The Carnegie Endowment has¥ already worked out plans for twelve regional meetings of the International Relations Clubs throughout the country. Thirty- six Middle Atlantic colleges are to participate in a three-day model United Nations meeting at Lafay- ette College in March with each college representing. one of the United Nations. Similar model meetings of UNO can be organized as a special cam- pus activity or as an inter-college forum. Plans are being considered for a Summer Institute preferably at or near the site of UNO where students may ‘study the actual functioning of UNO, attend meet- ings and see and hear internation- student conference, al personalities as they shape UNO policy. Limited Representation Of ‘Title’ Criticized By Students Common Room, January 14. “The purpose of The Title is to publish the best quality of writing, both critical and ereative, on the cam- pus,” stated the-editor, Patsy von Kienbusch '47, at an open meeting held in responsé to current criti- cism, that The Title is not a rep- resentative college magazine. - In this meeting the editors tried to show that some of the criticism was unfounded, and that they felt that the majority of the rest did not pertain to The Title in view of its stated purpose. The Title board however will act on certain sugges: tions raised at the meeting. As Chairman of the Undergrad- uate Council, Patricia Behrens °46 reported the various student crit- icisms which had caused the editors to call this meeting. Many people have felt that The Title is too re- stricted in its scope and only rep- resents “the work of a clique.” Others have objected to the maga- zine as being “too highbrow.” In answer to this last the editors explained that “the aim’ of The Title is to publish “good writing.” They emphasized that the m zine has literary, but not caotale A standards. They stated that they welcome contributions on any sub- ject from anyone on campus. . In. reply to the criticism that The Title contains no humor, the editors pointed out that they had made w specific appeal for such material. Accused of having limiting stan- dards, the editors described their method of selecting material. A contribution is judged on the basis of the excellence of the writing. The fundamental problem of whether The Title should continue to maintain its high standards or cater to the less serious demands of the campus reading public: was also raised. — In answer to the question that they strive for a more universal appeal, Miss Stapleton, faculty ad- visor of The Title, stated that the function of a good literary maga- zine is to represent “only the best,” and not to concentrate on repre- Continued On Page 2 Phoney Excuses Irk Operators As ‘News’ Stupidity Baffles Bell by April Oursler, ’46 The-only way to tell your family you're still alive is to call them col- lect and say hello, even if they re- es. - But only the other day we saw a, girl writing home to her parents, and not even asking for money. In view. of this, the News presents a sum- mary of the phone strike at Bryn Mawr. “Personal privacy suffered a blow when the phone company. began questioning our reputations. It seems one girl’s husband, having just docked at San Francisco,,nat- urally ‘wanted to phone her. But the only urgent emergency he could think of was that she-was‘going to the hospital that day sto have a baby, The operator wanted to know was it so. (No.) -around- Mexico to~such~ places as Acapulco, where Nanette has just a ‘. Ae on De TEM STEYR aE Se spent three weeks. Marriage Elizabeth Jones_ hf to Amos Worth. ° : # ~~ ~Self-Gov. was disrupted Monday night. when two girls were signed out only 2 minutes before they re- | A me, turned. By actual figures it took one hour to reach any permission giver, and 35 minutes to relay the \message to their hall. But it wasn’t till Tuesday night when one of our own local opera- . tors embezzled thirty cents from a ‘News reporter that we lost faith. No nickel came back after a busy signal, so our reporter spent a dime to ask for the nickel. The phone spat back the dime, and the operator said nothing about the nickel. Again she tried. This time there was just stony silence. No dime. Irate, she deposited her last coin, a quarter, feeling that the re- sulting loud bong might rouse the operator. It did. “What are you doing?” the voice with the smile - ‘Again the story was- repeated, Continued On Page 2 ~ a ae neers Page Two THE COLLEGE NEWS. A. ved THE COLLEGE NEWS (Founded in 1914) Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest of Bryn M:wr College at the Ardmore Printing Company, Ardmore, Pa., .and Bryn Mawr College. The College News is fully “protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief. ee | * Editorial Board Aprit OursLER, *46, Editor-in-Chief Nancy Mokexouse, °47, Copy .Emmty Evarts, 47, News Rosina BATESON, °47 BETTINA KLUEPFEL, *48, News THELMA BALDASSARRE, 747 Mary Lee BLAKELY, ’47 Lanier DuNN, °47 Editorial Staff MonnleE BELLow, *47 Laura DiMonp, 47 Joan Brack, °47 _ HELEN Hate, 49 ' KaTRINA THomas, 49 BARBARA BETTMAN, °49 HELEN ANDERTON 749 HELEN Martin, 49 JupitH Marcus *49 Marcia DEMBow, °47 Louiss GoxiamM, *47 Harriet Warp, *48 DorotHuy Jones, *47 MARIANNE GRAETZER, 748 HELEN GOLDBERG, ’49 _ PRIscILLA BOUGHTON, °49 AuicE WapswortH °49 JEAN E.us, ’49 Sports Photographer “EuizaBETH Day, ’47 ROSAMOND Kane, 748 | Business Board ' ANN WERNER, 47, Business Manager ANN Kinossury, '47, Advertising Manager H CoNnsvELo KuHN, °48 Caror BAKER, 48 ’ Nancy Buscw °49 Joan Rossins 749 Mary BETTLESTONE °49 I Subscription Board Nancy STRICKLER, ’47 Manager HELEN GILBERT, *46 v/ ¢) Wancy Kunnarot, *48 Euise Krart, °46 ANNA-STINA ERICSON, *48 BaRBARA YOUNG, *47 Sue KELLEY, *49 SALLY BZAMAN, 749 Subscription, $2.50 Mailing Price, $3.00 |. Subscriptions may begin at any time Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Past Office Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912 Turning Point The infancy of The Title is over. It is high time for this two-year-old magazine to grow up, to pull itself to its feet and take a few steps.. It has reached the turning-point of its career. The future of The Title will, we feel, be clearly deter- mined in this. period between the meeting Monday night, and th appearance of the March issue. When a college magazine does not succeed in being of « interest to a large percentage of the undergraduates, the statement is always made that the contents and policies are effected by the too-small group of students who make up the Board. Unfortunately, the policy of The Title remained unde- fined for so long that many of its original aims became ob- secured. When, two years ago, a small group of students started the new magazine, the first issue was of necessity the work of a small, tightly-knit organization who planned, exe- cuted and completed it. It was the wish of these students to begin the next year with the idea that anyone who was in- tetrested could and should share i in some way in the develop- ment of the baby magazine. 3 The original editors lacked experience, particularly the experience of working with and for a large group of people with varied tastes and ideas. Because of a lack of good pub- licity, resulting in a mysterious haze around its inner work- ings, it seemed as if The Title board was, if unconsciously, setting itself up as the judgment seat before which only eru-' dite theses, and products of the hard gem-like flame of gen- ius would or could be considered. This misconception seems to have grown into an unfor- tunate reality. In spite of the efforts made along this line by the editors, the fact remains that such an idea does exist in the minds of all undergraduates and this is as fatal as thé re- ality itself. Regardless of whether the Board considered Monday night’s suggestions of concrete value, they must - wake up to the fact that the campus: sist is not satisfied with the magazine as it now stands. If The Title continues to ignore popular opinion, a new " magazine must inevitably result. .It may be that there is room.for two magazines on campus: a “literary” and a “ resentative” magazine have not the same aims. But they need not be mutually exclusive aims. Theoretically it is fectly possible forThe Title to meet both demands. If the edin this respect the value of nes meeting will not have lost in the shuffle of controversy. Current Events “We have to meet the Russians ‘on their ‘own ground, but most im- portant we have to realize what our own commitments and responsi- bilities are,” said Mrs. Manning in a discussion. of. Russia andthe United States. Russian international policy, in Mrs. Manning’s opinion, is a re- expression of Russia’s historic aims particularly in respect to an outlet in the Baltic and Black seas. Mrs. Manning cited the view that Russia is still pressing the aims of international communism, but believes that the pursuit of non- ideological gains takes precedence in present Russian policy. Contrasting with the American, Russian leaders are enabled to pur- sue the policy established relative- ly uninfluenced by popular opinion which supports but does not con- trol the government. The Russians are in no position and have no de- but are using the fluid state of af- fairs as an opportunity to press for and frequently obtain their aims by a clever strategy of bargaining. The United States, on the other hand, presents the opposite picture. The government is very much con- ‘| trolled by popular opinion which, at the same time, has failed to show the government its willing- ness to support a constructive pro- gram of international action. The United States, Mrs. Manning point- ed out, is the only nation in a posi- tion to bargain effectively with Russia and put a check on her most nationalistic desires, yet we have | denied the responsibilities both po- litical and military which that po- sition entails. Donations Asked In Clothing Drive Bryn (Mawr .College students have been asked to aid the victims of World War II by supporting the Victory Clothing Collection for overseas relief, a drive which runs till the end of this month. The Alliance, with the approval | * of the Undergraduate Council has decided that the most sensible way for Bryn Mawr to contribute is through the college Relief for Eu- rope organization. It is hoped that increased incentive of the current nation-wide drive will increase clothing donations for campus overseas boxes. The. national goal is one hun- dred million serviceable, used gar- ments in addition to shoes and bed- ding. The urgency of the need for ‘| still insufficiently clad.” such clothing is illustrated by the fact that although the-drive last spring clothed ‘about 25,000,000 ppbnleeutat each one who received an American garment—a dozen are Policy Of Magazine - Clarified By Editor Continued from Page 1 senting every group, or every grade of writing. “I should hate to think that Bryn Mawr wouldn’t support a good literary magazine,” she added. Membership on the hoadil of The Title is open to anyone with the necessary qualifications, “prefer- ence being given to people who have shown a sustained interest in writing for the magazine,” ex- plained the editor. Tryouts will be held in the spring and the fall. The editors admitted that the mechanism for stimulating interest in the magazine has not been ade- quate. Several constructive sug- gestions were offered, among them -} that they _givemore. to their activities and requirements. sire to precipitate armed conflict,’ ° In Gibennirtate Roxa Emmons Lee Peakes, . for- merly a member of the class of 1946, died in Winter Haven, Flor- ida, on December 28, 1945. The News has received the following letter from Roxa Lee’s mother: “T enclose a death notice of my daughter. Roxa Lee Peakes, who was a member of the class of 1946. She left college a year ago last fall to marry Edmund Peakes, March 11, 1945. On December 28, 1945, a son was born who is doing well but Roxa, after an uncompli- cated easy delivery inthe hospital here, died of a’ post partem hem- orrhage, quite inexplicably.. Her husband was in Guam at the time and is now on his way home on emergency leave. “I can see no way of getting this tragic news to her many college friends and mine but to make sure the notice will appear in your next issue, Truly yours, Mary M. Street.” Freshman Show The Freshman class takes pleas- ure in announcing the election of the following Freshman Show of- ficers: Chairman, Nancy Bell Wesson. Stage Manager, Ann Seideman. Business Mgr., Lilian Streeter. ‘Music, Patsy English. Dancing, Sally Loomis. Costumes, \Helen Hale. iExams Students are reminded that all changes in the examination sched- ules will be made on the lists post- ed on the Taylor bulletin board. Students are responsible for check- ing their schedules with these lists themselves. Oral Change One of the recommendations made by the student curriculum committee to the faculty commit- tee concerning changes in the pres- ent oral system. Effective with the | coming examination for conditioned Seniors, the time limit for each of the three sections has been length- ened from half an hour to forty- five minutes, making the total length of the examinations two and a quarter hours. League The Sophomore class takes pleas- ure in the announcement of Rosa- mond Kahe as their representative to the Bryn Mawr League. ew Magazine The Undergraduate Association ivéd a complimentary and introdictgry subscription to Junior Bazaar. Since all students are ipso facto members of the association the magazine will be kept in the library Periodical Room. Phony Excuses Irk Operators Continued from Page 1 and again there was silence, until the unmistakably sound of the whole thirty-five cents could be heard disappearing into the depths of the machinue, Then the opera- tor spoke for the last time: “You couldn’t have been that stupid. No further statement could be extracted from» the telephone com- pany before the News went to press. ‘“ aaeea | “Calendar Saturday, January 19 9:00 a. m. German, Spanish, Italian orals for conditioned Seniors, Room G. German language examinations for M. A.’s and Ph. D.’s. Sunday, January 20 7:30 Chapel services, Rev. W. Norman Pettinger, Music Room. Monday, January 21 7:15 Current waved Common “Room. i - yon seca — "Opinion ‘ Angry Students Decry Intellectual Snobbery _At ‘Title’ Meeting. To the Editor: We went to the meeting called for those interested in the future of the Title. A spirit of intellec- tual snobbery and intolerance pre- vailed which shocked and angered those who attended with no pur-. pose other than to advance con- structive suggestions. We thought that the T:tle edit- ors honestly wanted opinion. They merely advanced a defense of their activities and policies. We went in a friendly mood genuinely inter- ‘ested in the welfare of the maga- zine, because we felt that Bryn Mawr should have a good maga- zine, and also. that a good maga- zine can be representative. We consider ourselves represen- tative undergraduates, but our tastes do not run to the stream of stylized subconsciousness always filled with strong bits of other au- ° thors. We too like literature and good literature, even if our criteria .do not conform to those of the Board of the Title. ‘Since we think that as college students we are reasonably intelli- gent, we believe that anything rep- resentative is not necessarily non- literary or banal. The two points of view are not incompatible. We would like to have a maga- zine on campus to which everyone would feel free to contribute, re- gardless-of-her style—a magazine whieh within a systematic frame- work would maintain a high stan- dard in all fieds. We like our Joyce and Eliot in the original, not tainted by the pseudo-intelligentsia. We also be- lieve that we can be proud of what undergraduates can produce. It is not necessary to varnish the’ pro- duct with a deliberately obscure style which often fails to congeal the lack of contents. Is a new magazine necessary ? Dory ‘Smith 46 Marion Wheeler °46 Lucretia Duncan 46 Although we did not attend the meeting, we contributed to the writing of the above letter and agree with the opinions expressed In it: Hoyt Sherman ’47 Corky Pickens ’47 Amy Campbell ’48 Jean Pearson 49 Gale Minton *49 Toni Morris ’49 Jean Ellis "49 Radio Program | WBMC—Bryn Mawr WHAV—Haverford WSNR—Swarthmore Wednesday, January 15 8:00-9:00—Clasical Hour, WBMC 9:00-9:30—Piano Concert WBMC 9:30-10:00—WHAV 10:00-10:30—-WHAV 10:30-11:00—Popular Music WHAV Thursday, January 16 -8:00-9:00—Classical Hour “" WHAV. 9:00-10:00—Swarthmore WSRN.. 10:00-10: 05—Campus News WBMC 10:00-10:30—Drama, WBMC. 10:30-11:00—Popular Music WBMC. Monday, January 20 8:00-9:00—Classical Hour WBMC. 9:00-9:30—Interview, WBMC. ° . 9:30-10:00—Haverfored Band WHAV. 10:00-10:30—WHAV. — 10:30-11:00—-WHAYV. @ Tuesday, January 21 8:00-9:00—Classical Hour 9:00-10:00—-WSNR. ue THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three Library Seeking Brakely’s Letters Dr. Elizabeth Brakely, Bryn Mawr ’16, has been in Europe with the U.N.R.R.A., and in order to show what experiences such a pod- sition might entail, the Public Li- brary of Montclair, N. J., has un- dertaken to compile a collection of excerpts from letters written by . Dr. Blakely. Selected portions of the letters will, acording to present plans, be typed in triplicate, one going to the Montclair Library, as part of its collection of archives on local hjs- tory, a second set going to the Bryn Mawr College Library, and the third to be given to Dr. Brakely herself. A plea has been sent to anyone who” has been in correspondence with Dr. Brakely, by.the: Montclair Library, to send in the original let- ters, or copies or photostats, say- ing whether such. material shoula be returned. Display Features French Paintings An exhibit of 87, reproductions of paintings provided by the French Government was featured by the French House during the past week. The paintings, representing the various schools of modern French art, are being shown in various colleges throughout the United States in order to acquaint American students with contem- porary French thought and cul- ture through its art. The reproductions range from . modern art to classicism, including both water colors and oils. Several examples of the work of Picasso, including his. well-known “Woman in White” and his cubistic “Green Still Life’ were shown. Rouault’s paintings were represented by “Christ Mocked by Soldiers” and “Pierrot Bleu,” and Cezanne’s fa- mous “Pines and Rocks” was one of several of his works displayed in the exhibit. Landscapes by several celebrated French artists, including Marquet, Derain, Segonzac, and ‘Cezanne were shown, together with “Les Canotiers,” by Renoir, and Monet’s _ \ “Le Jardin de L’Artiste.” The Poin- tiste school of painting was repre- \-~. sented by several works, and var- ious paintings by Dufy, Braque, and Signac rounded out the collec- tion. . The exhibit was officially opened on Friday afternoon, January 11, at a reception for interested stud- ents and faculty members, given in Wyndham by the French Club. Cuttino Appointed ) To History Dept. The appointment of Mr. George Cuttino to take Mr. Charles Wen- dell David’s place in the History department next year has been an- nounced by President McBride. Mr. Cuttino, appointed jointly with Swarthmore College, will teach Medieval history. He receiv- | ed his A, B. from Swarthmore, and a Evans. [lustrates Theory Of Colors Goodhart, January 11. How to take, how to exhibit, and what ‘to expect of colored tilm, explained and illustrated with special slides, was the subject of Ralph Evans’ address to the Bryn Mawr chapter ot Sigma Xi. Mr. Evans, chairman of Eastman Kodak’s color department, empha- was a ‘graduate assistant in His- tory at the University of Iowa un. | til 1086, "? He then studied for two years | at Oriel College, Oxford, where he | was a Rhoads Scholar. Mr. Cuttino was at the Institute for Historical Research at the University of Lon- don for a year, and received his PhD from Oxford. Upon his return to this country he taught at the University of Iowa for a few years. Mr. Cuttino is now on terminal leave from the Army, and will. be at the Univer- sity of Iowa this spring Vassar Planning Far East Forum An inter-collegiate conference on the problems in the Far East is be- ing planned by the Vassar Politi- cal Association for the week-end of Feb. 8 and 9. Bryn Mawr has been asked to participate and the Alliance has posted a list on the Taylor bulletin board where any- one interested in attending the con- ferece is asked to sign. Delegates will be chosen from the list by the Alliance board at its meeting next Monday. “The Far East, Playground of Power Politics,” is the subject of the conference which will open Friday night with a speech on U. S. aims in the Far East. The remaining time will be taken up with discussion on such subjects as the function of UNO in the solution of Far Eastern problems. The delegates chosen will be asked to do some reading before they go so that they will have some background of information for the discussion. For this purpose Vas- sar will send a bibliography as soon as its plans are completed. 4 6 fr “Where the ELITE Meet to Eat” THE LAST STRAW Haverford om . Recent Bryn Mawr graduates: Train for a career in aptitude testing with the Johnson O’Connor Research Fdtn., 11 E. 62 St. New York, N. Y. Fellowship basis, $85.00 a @ Cotton blouses by “Jackie Grey’”’ Will surely make your wardrobe gay. ‘They’re white, with ruffles or plain batiste Come in and give your eyes’a feast TRES CHIC SHOPPE. LANCASTER AVENUE ' BRYN MAWR sized the fact that while objects re- corded by the eye appear real be- cause the brain tells us they are, those copied by the camera need artificial aids to make them seem natural. The eye is controlled by the brain, and will automatically correct colors that it sees to ap- proximately the colors they ought to be. ms The best conditions for exhibit- ing a poorly-colored photograph there, are on a screen in a darken- ed room where, the eyes will have no standard of comparison. The light the pictures are taken in should also be much stronger than the normal light they are In actual living sight the brain is conscious of another di- seen in. mension which it automatically adds to the object the eyes per- ceive. The camera, however does not do this, depending on a certain amount of shadow and contrast to contribute depth. Feel like a witch? Perk up with a flower. from JEANNETT’S : — J f- MAYO and PAYNE Cards Gifts RADIO Parts . Repairs 821 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR Chapel. Committee. Asks Suggestions wae eesesee_e ke saes_<—a