THE COLLEGE NEWS ~ Page Three Bryn Maur Defeated by Penn In Fast Twilight Hockey Game Specially contributed by Lenci Abell ’50 _ The Bryn Mawr hockey team, playing its fourth game of the season last Thursday, was defeat- ed 6-3 by Penn. Although play- ing on a slippery field, and pressed by. oncoming darkness, both teams played a very good game. In the opening minutes of the game Penn scored the first goal. The ball went back to center, Betsy Parker, Bryn Mawr’s fresh- man inner, received the ball from the bully and raced down the field with excellent dodging to make the first Bryn Mawr score. This fast play made the Penn team wary and on their toes. The first half was well fought, but the strong Penn team with their pre- cision passes and dodges tallied four more goals to leave a’ half- time score of 5-1. In the second half both teams appeared to be tired and the play- ing was not so neat as that of the first half. The Owl backs put up an able defense, and Kathy Geib held the goal skillfully, making excellent stops all through the game, so that the Penn team could only score one more goal. As darkness covered the field, it ‘was anybody’s game as the backs ‘ could not see what their forwards were doing, and the ball moved from one end of the field to the Cast Captures Mood Of Saroyan’s Play Continued from Page 2 tremely funny and had good com- mand of his stage action. Krupp and McCarthy were well-related in spite of a tendency on both parts to sound adolescent and uncon- vinced. John Marvin’s Arab look- ed and. spoke’ extraordinarily enough so that one could easily have thought him anything. The smaller—parts—were—well- handled, especially Bernice Robin- son as Nick’s mother and Jack Gailey as the drunk sailor. Set Is Restrained The set was restrained, as it should have been, but no Pacific Street saloon ever had a fishnet for atmosphere, and the pinball machine might have been rented, since it was highly unfunctional ‘ind gave Lee Haring as Willie an insoluble problem. The foghorn was a wonderful touch, though San Franciscans know that ‘there is fog in the daytime too! Mr. Thon is, as always, to be congratulated for his extremely able direction, and while one might have’ questioned the choice of plays when this one was announc- ed, The Time-of.Your Life proved to be an excellent vehicle to show off the character talents of a great number of people as well as their ability to work together and finai- ly create successfully one of the most difficult moods in the modern theatre. - MEET AT THE GREEK’S Tasty Sandwiches Refreshments Lunches - Dinner Compliments of the Haverford Pharmacy 4 ; Haverford other with every shot. However, “Bryn Mawr was able to make two more goals. Frannie Edwards made one, and Sheila Eaton made the third B. M. goal in the last few minutes of the game, making a final score of 6-3 in favor of Penn. ' In past games of this year ‘our team has won one game, tied one and lost two. In the match betweea the second teams on Thursday, Penn won 6-0. The line-ups of the teams were as follows: Bryn Mawr Penn S. Hayes LW Lee F. Edwards LI Budd S. Eaton CF McConnell B. Parker RI Millick M. Shaw RW Arrison E. Bagley LH Zell A. Newbold CH Brown L. Rogers RH Welsh S. Savage LF’ Funk B. Focardi RF Burton K. Geib G Savidge Denbigh Defeats Pem West Octet Undaunted by the absence of its inimitable band, Denbigh entered the finals of the hall hockey series by defeating Pem-= West 3-2 on Sunday afternoon. Pem West’s spirit was hampered by their lack of team. Starting wtih six players, they managed to recruit two more, but this was still not enough to down indomit- able Denbigh! The fourth Denbigh goal was called back for “offsides,”’ however. | The hall finals will be played off next Sunday, when Denbigh meets Rhoads (the team with the invincible ‘“drawbacks’’). This match will follow a match between the Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate team (on which there are two Bryn Mawr—members) andthe Keystone Club, on the Bryn Mawr field. Special Foreign Fellows at B. M. Report Impressions of College Life and Activity By Jean Ellis, ’49 adnor, the traditional home of Bryn Mawr’s gratluate students, has become a real _ international house this year. Among the for- eign students there are four girls who hold special Trustees’ fellow- ships which have been awarded for this year. Esme Daniel, who comes from the Rhondda Valley in South Wales, explains her coming to Bryn Mawr as “pure accident.” She had been studying at Aberyst- wyth College in the University of Wales and saw a notice one day about a fellowship being given here. “So I sent in my applica- tion and took a chance on getting it.” Esme is doing her graduate work in economics and is enthusi- astic about her courses here. Next year she plans to return home and continue her research there. This is Esme’s first trip to the United States and she is greatly impressed by Bryn Mawr. “The campus is the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen,” she says, “and I have only two objections, one, not being able to smoke in my room, A. A. CONSTITUTION The Athletic Association is re- vising its Constitution. The old constitution is posted on the- A. A. bulletin board in Taylor. Any suggested changes will be welcomed by the A. A. Board. JONQUILS PETUNIAS GLADIOLAS CARNATIONS GARDENIAS PANSIES CHRYSANTHEMUMS HYACINTHS ROSES JEANNETT’S American Cleaner and Dyer For Quality Work Call Bryn Mawr 0494. JOSEPH TRONCELLITI Proprietor 880 LANCASTER AVENUE ACROSS FROM THE FIRE HOUSE Mary, Mary, what a dream— How adorable you seem From your cheek of velvet rose To the tip of dancing toes! Adding glamour and an “‘air”’ Is the lovely hose you wear— HOSIERY Mb: Yor iw fe be FULL-FASHIONED bay and two—there’s not very much } for a grad student to do.” How- ever, Esme has discovered that she has 84 relations somewhere in Tex- | as; so finding them should keep her busy. And just for the record | we asked how the Welsh pronounce Bryn Mawr and it seems it should !be “Bryn Mauer,” to rhyme with hour. . Wadad Habib also came to Bryn Mawr by chance. Having gradu- ated from the American University in Cairo, in 1946, she was teaching music there last year, when a friend of hers showed her the an- hnouncement of a Bryn Mawr fel- lowship. “I certainly was surprised when I heard that I was to come,’ Wadad explained modestly. “T think the campus is beauti- ful,” she continued, “especially the trees turning red in autumn. We have nothing like that at home and this is the first time I’ve left Egypt.” Wadad is doing her work in the Philosophy department and plans to return to Egypt and teach next year. She loves Radnor and her fellow grads; and she prefers the small houses around Bryn Mawr to New York. Ch’ih Chi Shang, who also holds a special Trustees fellowship, is continuing the work in geology which she did at Bryn Mawr last year and Rose-Mary Kunzh, the fourth Foreign fellow, has not yet What To Do Stores and magazines often ap- ply to us in search of Campus Agents. Although very few stud- ents are engaged in this type of | work at present, it has proved sur- |prisingly profitable in the past, 'girls selling articles to as many as 'three hundred students. An ad- vantage is that the work can be done in your spare time and you can work as much or-:as little as you’wish. We still have a few agencies available if anyone is in- terested. The Knit Twist Company would like a campus agent to sell a com- bination one-piece hat and scarf. Information and sample are in Miss Bates’ office, Room H, Taylor Hall. ‘oa Please fill out the green ques- tionnaires and return them to the Hall Presidents. Try RICHARD STOCKTON’S for That Week-end Hostess Gift! arrived from Switzerland. —~ Getting Down to Fundamentals "Turse PEOPLE ARE TELEPHONE EMPLOYEES, building a telephone system. Not a real one, it’s true, but a table-top replica that illustrates the fundamental problems which management meets every day in planning, financing, developing, and expanding a telephone system such as the one that serves your home town. They raise miniature telephone poles. They: string mini- ature telephone lines between homes and stores and the central office. They plot the changes required when a new telephone is installed... when a subscriber moves .. . when additional lines are needed in outlying sections of town. And they keep representative records of the money involved: where it comes from, how it is used, and how repaid. Such training in the fundamentals of the business, as well as in technical matters, is part and parcel of a tele- phone career. It is background for good management ... and good management, by trained and ex- perienced employees, helps provide you with the best possible. telephone lowest possible cost. . service at the THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA _|