the garnet Volume VI Number 2 January, 1942 Studente i^Activities ilii! ¿{See Page 9 |j j t h garnet left e r ALUMNI WEEKEND AT BUEKHILL HP HE IN N at Buck _L Hill Falls will again be the site of Swarthmore’s MidWinter House Party to be held on Feb­ ruary 6, 7, and 8. Fourteen years ago a group of undergrad­ uates began the now traditional w i n t e r weekend vacation in the Poconos. Since then a party of Swarthmoreans has made this pilgrim.age each year to pay homage to the gods of skiing, tobaggoning, skating, dogsled riding, etc. High Rocks to the twelfth hole on the golf course, has been developed for expert skiers, while the Red and Blue trails have been placed in excellent condition by widening and unbrushing for use by all types of skiers. The ice toboggan chute at Deer Lake has been length­ ened, making the ride down Chestnut Mountain and out over the Lake a longer, steeper and faster one than ever before, while the road to the Lake has been widened, and parking facilities near the ski slopes and trails have been extensively enlarged. M The team of huskies, known nationally for their rescue work at Westport, Connecticut several years ago, are being trained by Stanley Bender for the houseparty weekend, and passengers will enjoy thrilling dogsled rides over snowcovered roads and trails throughout the 4000-acre estate. The Ski Lodge, located in The Inn, holds many sur­ prises in store for Swarthmore wintef sports devotees, for it has made a number of improvements to its facilities, including the addition of a special waxing room. This year the party takes on an 'official Alumni flavor’ for the first time. At a recent meeting of the Joint Coun­ cils the House Party was endorsed as an authorized Alumni function. Faculty and students will turn out in good numbers and here is the ideal opportunity for Swarthmoreans to take a joint holiday free from the everyday routine of a troubled world. Indoors there are to be talking pictures of latest release, on both Friday and Saturday evenings, a chat by the fireside on ski instruction by The Buck Hill Ski School’s two instruc­ tors on Friday night and dancing Saturday evening in the South Lounge with Junior Maguire and his popular elevenpiece Orchestra furnishing tuneful melodies for the occasion. - Ski enthusiasts will welcome the news that a new fifteen hundred foot tow is now in operation and provides ideal skiing on the slopes of Camel Back Hill as well as on the fifteenth, sixteenth and eighteenth fairways of the 27-hole golf course, while the 1100-foot tow on Swarthmore Hill, familiar to all Swarthmoreans as a popular skiing center, is also in operation this year, making two tows to help devotees of the sport up the hills and thus enable them to enjoy a longer day of activity. The Orange Trail, a new, four-mile downhill run from Non-skiers can learn, and proficient skiers can improve their technique, thru the expert instruction offered at The Buck Hill Ski School by Miss Emily Barclay, a graduate of ____________________Middlebury College, Vermont, and Mr. 38*” Russell Geller, pastpresident of the Poco Ski Club, who is now director of the Division of Phys­ ical Fitness of the U. S. Office of Ch vilian Defense in the Philadelphia area. The outdoor bar­ becue, one of the outstanding s o c i a l events of the houseparty weekend, is to BP take place at mid­ night, on Friday. Make your reser­ vations at the Alum­ ni Office not later than February 4. ALUMNI RATES FOR BUCK HILL HOUSE PARTY—American Plan Single room, running water ............ $ 6.50 and $ 7.00 Single room, with toilet ................ 7.50 Single room, private bath ............ 8.00 and Double room, running water ........$13.00 Double room, with toilet .............. 14.00 9.00 Double room, private bath ............ 15.00 to $18.00 Extra person in room— $6.00 E n te re d a s s e c o n d -c la ss m a tte r J a n u a ry 10, 1941, a t th e p o st office a t S w a rth m o re, P e n n s y lv a n ia , u n d e r th e Act of A u g u st 24, 1912. F ro nt C o v er P hoto b y T ed G o o d m a n , '43 . . from the President . . . . E ARE at war. Those who knew Swarthmore in 1917 and 1918 will know that that means a profound dislocation for the college. It was bad enough then, but this is worse. We live to­ day in the midst of total war which affects every person, every institution, every aspect of our normal lives. "Busi­ ness as usual” is as obsolete for colleges as it is for auto­ mobile manufacturers. The college faces new problems of utmost gravity and with very little precedent for guide. I am not exaggerating when I say that the future of the college depends upon the wisdom and the courage with which we face these problems,—the collective wisdom and the shared courage of all who feel any concern for Swarthmore. The most immediate problem is posed by the men who are destined to enter the armed forces. The draft age has been set at 20. It is more than probable that it will be lowered to 19 before the war is over. Some men have already volunteered; some have been drafted. As yet the numbers are not large, but they will mount at a disturbing rate. One important step has already been taken. The board and faculty have decided to operate the college on a year ’round basis. For the first time in the history of the college we shall be in session in the summer. By the addition of a third semester between June and September, it will be possible for students to graduate in three years or even less. Present juniors will be able to complete their eight semesters by Christmas 1942, and present sophomores can, if they wish, graduate in late August, 1943. We are under no illusion that a college education crammed into three years will be as good as the regular four-year program. But it will be better than one-half or three-fourths of the pre-war course of studies. If ever a college education has value, it is in time of war. I am thinking less at the moment of the technical training useful for military purposes than of the basic char­ acter of a liberal education. The insights, the understand­ ing, the values of educated people are at a premium now. The college has a responsibility to make intelligent human beings out of the material from which armies and navies are fashioned. A three-year program must be optional. Not all men will want to accelerate their course of study. There will be some who cannot afford to do so. While we anticipate that many of the women will want to graduate as early as possible, they are not yet under the same pressures as the men. A second problem concerns the program of instruction. There are certain courses which have a high utilitarian value in time of war. All work in engineering is of this kind. So also are courses in mathematics, physics, chemistry, astron­ omy, psychology, and economics, to mention the more obvious. Both the army and the navy need men with a speaking knowledge of a foreign language. Familiarity with such things as carburetors, distributers, transmission sys­ tems, and the like may mean the difference between life and death to those who have to repair trucks, jeeps, or tanks W without benefit of a garage around the corner. A committee of the faculty has been studying this problem. We plan to introduce within the curriculum or on an extra-curricular basis new courses and modifications of old courses to meet the new needs. There will be many shifts in program and these will put a strain on adequate instruction. The govern­ ment is not making a solution easy by calling to Washington members of the faculties in just those fields where the load of instruction will be greatest. Six have already gone, and the departure of others is imminent. t It would not become a Quaker college to adjust its program to war-time needs without making equal or greater provision for the non-combatant activities so close to the enduring work of the Society of Friends. There are many ways of contributing to the present emergency. We should be forgetting half the student body and disregarding the convictions and talents of others if we did not plan for the relief of suffering, the binding up of wounds, both human and national, the gigantic task of reconstruction. W e should be forfeiting our heritage and our opportunity if we did not emphasize the training of men and women with vision and good-will. The present crisis is grave, but that of the post-war world will be even graver. This task also calls for new adjustment within and without the curriculum. And what is more, the training of men and women to be useful in a future world demands imagination on the part of those who do the training. These problems are chiefly concerned with what the college can do. There is also the question of what the war will do to the college. It will do a number of things, all of them unpleasant. Indeed, the process has already begun. We shall lose men. They are going to war, into defensive industries, and into the graduate and professional schools which are coming out with attractive offers to men without an undergraduate degree. W e can meet this situation in part by accepting more women. That will help, but it will not solve the problem. On the one hand, we face a shrinking enrolment, how great and how rapid no one can tell. On the other hand, we face the rising costs of nearly everything we need to run the college. Either alternative would be awkward—to use a mild word—for a college which operates on a nicely balanced budget of income and expenses. The two together create an almost desperate problem of making ends meet. And on top of that comes the third semester. Even if all students were to take the accelerated program and could pay the full charges for tuition and other expenses, there is no way as yet devised for wringing an additional 50% from the endowment funds. Roughly half the cost of a Swarthmore student’s education, exclusive of board and room, is covered by income from endowment; half is paid by the student in tuition and other fees. The same amount of income from endowment will now have to be spread over three semesters instead of two. The assumption made at the beginning of this paragraph is, of course, inadmissible. Many students, or their parents, cannot afford to pay for education half again as much in any calendar year. While the total cost of education would not be increased, the charges would fall within three income-producing years instead of four. And many students use the summer vacation for earning enough additional money to see them through the two semesters of ( Continued on Page 8) 4 th e garnet letter SWARTHMORE'S ALUMNI FUND By AMOS J. PEASLEE President, Swarthmore College Alumni Association S SWARTHMORE ALUMNI last year, we inaugurated the custom of annual contributions for the support of our Alma Mater. It is a custom long honored by many colleges in America. A [ Charles E. Rickards — so known to his parents, but Chink to us — has accepted the general chairmanship of the Alumni Fund for this year. He was the president of his Class in 1927. He is a distinguished Swarthmorean and is the immediate past president of the Swarthmore Club of Philadelphia. He has a record of accomplishment as Assist­ ant Actuary of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia. We salute him and pledge our support. L d Î t c ( ti h $17,454.00 was contributed by 1750 loyal Swarthmoreans in 1941. We hope and ex­ pect that those amounts will be repeated or increased this year. Swarthmore has, in all, about 6700 alumni and ex­ students. There are many who have not yet availed them­ selves of this opportunity to be of service to the College. An all important era lies ahead. It is an all-out effort for Swarthmore. Each $10,000 contributed to the Fund annually is equivalent to the income from a quarter of a million dollars of additional endowment invested at 4 per cent. Your co-op­ eration will be a fitting demonstration of your approval of John Nason’s administration. Frank D ’Olier gave the fund a magnificent inauguration. His own class, 1907, led the percentage of contributors throughout most of the campaign last year and finished with the remarkable record of 67.8% of contributing graduates and 56.6% of total graduates and ex-students. It was nosed out at the finish by 1916 with 80.2%, of contributing gradu­ ates and 59.0% of the total class. The Class of 1916 also led in total contributions of $1346. The Alumni Fund should have 100% support from every alumnus and ex-student of the college. Your con­ tribution, whether it be large or small will — with the spirit' of loyalty and affection for Swarthmore which goes with it, be most gratefully received by the Alumni Association and College. Please give the committee a whole-hearted re­ sponse, for the honor of your Class, and for the building ever of finer accomplishments and standards for Swarthmore College. Your total debt of gratitude can never be repaid. t e Ij r t V V f a ti ti 1 a n 7 e a e I 1 c 2 5 WAR CHANGES Three faculty members and one administrative officer have just been granted leaves of absence from the College because of the war emergency. Robert MacLeod, Chairman of the Psychology Department, will be on leave the second semester to work in Washington with the Bureau of Agri­ cultural Economics, Division of Program Surveys. Also serv­ ing with him in this Division will be Richard Crutchfield, Assistant Professor of Psychology, who has been granted partial leave, returning to the campus for weekly seminars. No additional appointments are to be made in the Psy­ chology Department, for Edwin Newman will be acting Chairman, and Professor Wolfgang Kohler has cancelled his scheduled leave. Mr. Newman is returning from a year’s ab­ sence during which he has directed a civilian service camp in California. The Chemistry Department has likewise been affected by the withdrawal of Samuel R. Aspinall, Instructor, who will work in the Office of Scientific Research and Development in Washington. He has been replaced by Howard Potter, who received his Phd. -from Harvard University, and who comes to us from the Michigan Department of Agriculture. The College Physician for Men, Paul T. Strong, ’30, is leaving for active army service as captain in the 52nd Evacuation Hospital, a unit organized last year at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. Dr. Strong’s position at the College is being filled by Dr. Morris Bowie, of Bryn Mawr. , j* C t f Frances Reinhold Fussell, ’32, has resigned her position as Instructor in Political Science. She is now in Washington working with the Office of Production Management. For the past year Howard M. Jenkins, ’20, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering, has been working for the Government with the Navy Department as a Civilian Expert. It is known that before the printer’s ink is dry on your. Garnet Letter several others members of the faculty will have been called for Government Service, but definite information is not now available. Many of the professors remaining on the campus are combining defense work with regular classroom duties. A drastic change in the College Calendar has been decided upon by the faculty and the Board of Managers. Although exact details are not yet worked out, the dates have been set for the next semester (see calendar below). In anti­ cipation of the first summer session in the history of the I ê a t f !, c r 5 Ì \ * r \ r r t he garnet 5 letter DUR GOAL - YOUR CONTRIBUTION By CHARLES E. RICKARDS General Chairman, 1942 Alumni Fund P WARTHMORE as it is J today has been vividly described by President John Nason on another page of the Garnet Letter. No one can read this ac­ count without being proud of the college for the way it has prepared to adjust itself to present emergencies. Of equal significance is the state­ ment that Swarthmore needs help to meet the problems which face it now and which will face it in the immediate future. It seems particularly appropriate, therefore, that the Joint Councils of the Alumni Association are continuing the plan of Annual Giving which was so successfully begun last year. Let us review the situation briefly. Swarthmore is neither a rich college nor a poor college. On the basis of endow­ ment per student we stand about half way between these extremes. Last year the income from endowment represented a high rate of return (4.3 per cent net) in relation to the experience of other educational and fiduciary institutions. Nevertheless, the total amount was $14,500 less than in 1940. Present indications are that there will be a further decrease of approximately $15,000 for the college year ending June 30, 1942. The decline in endowment income is only one of Swarthmore’s numerous problems to which John Nason refers. A serious reduction in operating income due to de­ creased student enrolment, an abnormal rise in maintenance costs, and the financial difficulties encountered in stretching the endowment income to cover three semesters a year instead of two are but a few of the additional problems. ^Ve need go no further to demonstrate how significant the $17,454 contributed by the alumni through the 1941 Fund has been during the current year, and how important the 1942 Fund contributions will be. We recognize, of course, that each of us is facing new problems and increased burdens during the coming year. Many demands will be made upon our financial resources. We urge strongly, however, that you give evidence of your pride in and loyalty to Swarthmore by contributing to the Alumni Fund this year. Our goal is not to be expressed in dollars. W hat we want is a pledge from EACH alumnus who is able to contribute. No amount is too small. Last year 27.3% of all alumni and 36.6% of the graduates gave financial support to the college through the Alumni Fund. It is our hope that these percentages may be substantially increased this year. Our plans for conducting this year’s fund are not elaborate ones. In fact, we hope to complete our job as simply and quickly as possible. To this end we are enclosing with this Garnet Letter a pledge card. It will help us greatly if you will fill this out and mail it immediately. While you’re about it why not enclose your contribution at the same time? Checks should be made payable to SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. You realize, of course, that these contributions are allowable deductions in computing Federal Income Tax. W AR CHANGES (Continued) College the Administration is considering a plan of co-opera­ tion with Bryn Mawr and Haverford whereby their combined facilities might be merged for the summer semester. A special faculty committee has been formed to make provisions for the granting of degrees during the emer­ gency. It has been recommended that any student, drafted after the completion of the first semester of his senior year, be granted his degree; also that any student drafted be given full credit for the interrupted semester, provided, in both cases, that the student’s work is in good standing. This recommendation does not apply to students who volunteer. Since the beginning of the school year five men students have withdrawn, one of whom was drafted. This number will, of course, increase considerably in the next few months. Under the auspices of the Engineering Science Manage­ ment Defense Training program, four extra-curricular courses will be offered by the faculty of the College to students and residents of the town of Swarthmore. These courses are in radio engineering, engineering mathematics and drawing, physics, and chemistry. The Mathematics Department is offer­ ing to juniors and seniors a special course designed to meet some of the requirements of the Navy Department, and a faculty committee is considering other desirable new courses. Countless changes and adjustments are being made in every effort to meet the abnormal conditions of a war period, and yet preserve the basic ideals of a college of liberal arts. This is a difficult task. REVISED COLLEGE CALENDAR Midyear Examination Period ................. January 2 6 -3 1 Second Semester Begins ................................. February 2 Spring Vacation .........................................March 21 -30 Final Examinations ................................... May 1 3 -1 9 ALUMNI D A Y .................................................. M A Y 23 Commencement............................................May 23 or 26 6 t he garnet letter BOARD APPROVES OFFICIAL ALUMNI REPRESENTATION Hilda Lang Denworth, 17, First Woman to be Chosen 7\ T THE October i l meeting of the Board of Managers of Swarthmore College a r e s o l u t i o n wa s adopted whereby the Alumni will be asked to name an official representative to the Borrd each year, such representative to serve a four year term. In order to incorporate this new plan without waiting four years for four vacancies to oc­ cur, it was decided by the Board that inasm u c h as Edward Pennock Palmer, ’06, and T h o m a s B . McCabe, T5, h a d been nominated by the Alumni Council for membe ship on the Board, they are to be considered the H ilda Lang D enw orth official alumni repre­ sentatives f o r the duration of their term of service with that body. Their terms will expire in December 1943. The other two alumni representatives are to be women. The Board asked the Alumni Council to present the name of an alumna to be elected at the annual Board meeting in December. Amos Peaslee, ’07, appointed a Nominating Committee with Nan Oppenlander Eberle, T3, as Chairman, and the Alumni Council as a whole voted on the two can­ didates suggested. As a result, Hilda Lang Denworth, T7, was proposed as the official alumna representative, and duly elected by the Board to serve a four year term. The second woman repre­ sentative will be chosen in December of 1942. Hilda Lang Denworth’s activities are varied, but educa­ tion in many phases is undoubtedly her greatest interest. After graduation from Swarthmore in 1917 she studied at Wisconsin, Columbia, and the University of Pennsylvania, where she received the Masters degree in 1921. The follow­ ing year she was Instructor in German at Swarthmore. Now married to Raymond K. Denworth, living in Swarthmore, and the mother of four children, Hilda manages an amazing number of committee and board chairmanships. She has served the Philadelphia School of Occupational Ther­ apy as a member of the Board of Directors, as Chairman of Personnel, as member of the Executive and Curriculum Com­ mittees, and as Chairman of a committee which has just completed a study with the School of Education of the Uni­ versity of Pennsylvania. The successful result of this study is an affiliation between the School of Occupational Therapy and the University. The mothers of Swarthmore consult Hilda Denworth in many matters of education for their youngsters. Her official position on the School Board, as Secretary and Chairman of Public Relations, is partially responsible, but she also is known as a person of good judgment, clear thinking, and a wide knowledge of modern educational methods. Her civic activities are not limited to the school however, for she is on the Board of the Swarthmore League of Women Voters, and Chairman of the Swarthmore Junior Red Cross. For the College, she is a member of the Alumni Council, and one of two non-faculty members serving on the Admissions Committee for Women. These honors and duties have been awarded to Hilda Lang Denworth because of her very apparent ability, her loyalty, and her willingness to devote herself unselfishly to the tasks assigned to her. Appraising all of these qualifica­ tions, the Alumni Council chose her to represent the entire Alumni Association on the Board of Managers of the College. do< tioi nie the he; ne; P see res on' Th un coi ou Tr Ti­ are chi lex W in po wc Nc oo Two prominent alumni were elected by the Board to serve the unexpired terms of Edward M. Bassett, ’05, and Hugh F. Denworth, ’16. They are Boyd T. Barnard, ’17 and Theodore Widing, ’28. Boyd Barnard is a member of the Jackson Cross Com­ pany, real estate brokers, of Philadelphia, and as such makes appraisments for many of the major financial institutions in the city. His knowledge and judgment is respected not only by his business associates, but by his fellow Swarthmoreans as well. Last year he was asked to serve as Chairman of the Special Gifts Committee for the annual Alumni Fund. The results of that campaign are evidence of his success. He is at present a member of the recently appointed alumni com­ mittee on Engineering, and an active member of the Alumni Association. His wife, Ruth Cross, was a graduate in the Class of 1917. They have two children and live at 528 Lafayette Road, Merion, Pa. Ted Widing has had spectacular success in his profession of writing life insurance for the Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company. In 1938, 1939, 1940 and 1941 he led all agents in that company in new business. Life membership in the Million Dollar Round Table is granted only to those who have written a million dollars worth of life insurance, or more, in three successive years — and Ted is a life member. He and his wife, Esther Wilson, ’28, are active members of the Swarthmore Monthly Meeting of Friends, and, with their three sons, live in Moylan, Pa. cn C0J se: 0 of "f sii Uf ar p; m va ei VARSITY SW A R TH M D R EA N S "Varsity Swarthmoreans” is an attempt to focus your .attention on some of our fellow alumni who are doing a commendable job in the game of life. This feature will be repeated from time to time, and we invite nominations from Garnet Letter readers. "Standing i n t h e doorway of the Na­ tional Theatre a few nights ago, watching the audience leave, we heard a young snob near us exclaim: 'Let us go now, Tom! W e’ve seen all the ladies. The rest of these women are only Treasury Clerks!’ The remark affected us unpleasantly, and we could not help asking ourself: 'Are not the Treasury Clerks ladies?’ The majority of them are, but it is a melan­ A n n a M. M ichener , ’16 choly fact that they are looked down upon by Washingtonians as be­ ing of a lower order. There are about 600 female clerks in the service of the Government in Washington. Their positions are not to be envied, and ought to be shunned by women who can obtain honest employment elsewhere.’’ —The quotation is from Sights and Secrets of the National Capital, published in 1869. This sprightly volume occupies an honored position in the well-stocked library of one of the Treasury Department’s present administrative offi­ cers—the Assistant to the Director of the Division of Re­ search and Statistics, Anna M. Michener, Swarthmore T 6. (Yes, T6 in the official college records, despite the feeling of many ’17ers that Mich rightfully belongs to them because she entered with their class.) It is a long jump from the despised lot of 1869’s "female Treasury clerks” to Anna Michener’s highly respon­ sible job of conducting part of the fundamental research upon which the United States Government’s revenue estimates are based. Not only now in wartime but for several years past it has been an extremely busy job, too, with office work making heavy inroads into evenings and week-ends and vacations. In the case of Mich this is no minor deprivation, either, for she was'raised in the country and still looks on life in the city'as only half-way living. Give her a week-end or a week free from figures or departmental cares or social obligations or apartment-keeping chores, and she’ll garb herself in breeches, moccasins, and leather jacket, toss a forty-pound pack lightly on her back, and be off for a crack at a mountain top or a plunge into the wilderness, the brierier the better. In her New York days she was one of the mainstays of the Green Mountain Club, and in Washington her allegiance has been transferred to the Appalachian Trail Club. With such energetic spare time pursuits serving effec­ tively to sublimate the Daniel Boone side of her character ( Continued on Page 8) If Lloyd Lewis has ever been tired no one has ever known about it. Keeping up with the pace he sets for himself would leave ordinary humans exhausted after a few months, but Lewis has been living at a strenuous tempo ever since collecting his sheepskin from President Swain in 191 \ and today sparkles with an alert energy, at once charming and challenging. An unflagging capacity for hard work combined with a versatile talent has enabled him all at the same time to be sports editor and daily columnist for the Chicago Daily News, to act as its drama critic, and to gain a national reputation as author and historian. You can ask him about Dizzy Dean, Ethel Barrymore, or President Lincoln, and he will talk quickly, pointedly, persuasively about any of them. His interest and enthusiasms are contagious, his information voluminous. In college the higher learning received benefit of only the side currents of his energy, its main stream being directed into publications. The Phoenix flourished under his editor­ ship, and so vivid was his reporting of football that it attracted the notice of the editor of the Penrose-hating Phila­ delphia North American, who offered him a job. Before going to work for the paper, he had to go back to help shock wheat on the farm in Indiana. Swarthmore and the home of his parents in Pendleton were far apart on the map but close in tradition. Both his father and mother were Hicksite Friends, as their families had been for genera­ tions before them. The influence of that liberal tradition is evident today in Lewis’s view of the world. He worked on the North American as feature writer and reviewer of "second shows” for two years, but hope and opportunity lay in the west, and in response to an offer from James Keeley, hero of the young newspapermen at that time, Lewis went to work for t h e Chicago Herald. One morning in the Sunday section of the rival Chicago Tribune he saw a poem that knocked his eye out. He gave the author a ring, and from that call dates a friendship with Carl Sandburg, enliv­ ened by their common interest in Lincoln. Other young men later to be famous were his friends in Chicago. John Lomax, having de­ nounced Governor Fer­ guson of Texas, was L loyd L ew is , T3 hiding out from Gov­ ernor Ferguson’s wrath and working for a brokerage firm, collecting American ballads in his spare time. Ben Hecht was doing his ( Continued on Page 8) 8 t h garnet LEWIS letter FROM THE PRESIDENT ( Continued from. Page 7) daily bit for the News. Tom Peete Cross, professor at the University, was making his reputation as a scholar. During a stint in the Navy in 1918 Lewis met humorist Donald Ogden Stewart and persuaded him to write parodies which were used in connection with the Navy program. During the ’20’s Lewis directed his forces into adver­ tising and publicity. His work as press agent ranged from theaters to evangelists, from moving pictures to state teacher associations, from steamship lines to charity drives. Somehow while doing all this he managed to spend part of each summer in Colorado helping a partner operate their huge sheep ranch. The publicity work for the theaters and a lifelong inter­ est in the stage led naturally to his association with the News as drama critic in 1930. A few years later, when the sports page was sagging, the editor turned to Lewis to give it new life. Lewis, with his gift for seeing the dramatic instead of just muscle and sweat, put wallop into the section. Today his column The Voice from the Grandstand” receives a steady stream of eager and sometimes belligerent correspond­ ence from its wide audience. Probably his most lasting contribution is his work as author and historian. The recent choice by Fadiman, Woollcott, Sinclair Lewis, and Carl Van Doren of his Myths After Lincoln for The Reader’s Club speaks for itself. His literary work shows characteristic versatility. He has collab­ orated with Sinclair Lewis on a civil war play, has written on Chicago, General Sherman (the definitive biography), and Oscar Wilde and America. His enthusiasm and ability as a historian have won him wide recognition. A few years ago he acted as lecturer in history at the University of Chicago, and the story goes that efforts were made at the time to persuade him to leave newspaper work to join the history faculty. He is President of the Friends of the Library at the University, and trustee of the Illinois State Historical Library. His newest book, John S. Wright; Prophet of the Prairies has just appeared. The subject is indicative of the author. Whight was a middle westerner, a fighting reformer, a lover of democracy.' Lewis himself by background and enthusiasms is midwestern to the core. He has written brilliantly of midwest heroes, of Illinois’ Lincoln and Ohio’s Sherman and Grant. He has collaborated in writing a best­ selling history of the midwest’s capital, Chicago. Two of his close friends and idols, Carl Sandburg and Frank Lloyd Wright, are thoroughly midwestern. He and his wife live in a prairie house built for them by Wright. He regards the midwest still as the land of hope and opportunity. By no stretch of working could one call Lewis a reformer, and he would probably wince at the mere idea. But he is an ardent lover of Democracy, a fighter, without political aspirations, for the good of The People, a man who since 1932 has freely volunteered his invaluable services as writer and speaker for the causes in which he believes. "O. K.,” Lloyd Lewis would be likely to say at this point, "let’s get back to Zorina, and the Chicago Bears.” FRANKLIN PORTER, ’33 ( Continued from Page 3) a normal program. For them the accelerated course would be doubly difficult, if not impossible. Greatly increased scholar­ ship aid will have to be given if many are to make use of the summer term. And this must be managed with rising costs of operation, decreasing return on endowment, and rapidly decreasing income from students as a result of falling enrolment. ^It: ls not a pleasant prospect. You will understand why I said at the beginning that the future of the college depends on how we all of us—face and solve the problems that lie ahead. For us the words of the popular English song might be paraphrased to read, There shall always be a Swarthmore.” If we face our problems honestly, with resolute courage, there will be. But we must pull together. MICHENER ( Continued from Page 7) and to reconcile her to the necessity of city living, she has shown remarkable directness and tenacity of purpose in carving out her career. From college she went to Columbia University, where Swarthmore’s Lucretia Mott Fellowship and a variety of part-time and full-time jobs at the University and the Bureau of Municipal Research sustained her while she earned her master s and doctor’s degrees. Then came nine years of business and commodity research with the National Bank of Commerce in New York, followed by a year as associate editor of the New York Journal of Commerce, and she was ready for the Washington plunge. Her first government position was with the Economics Division of the Federal Farm Board. From there she went to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the Farm Credit Administration before being appointed in 1934 to the Treasury Department s Division of Research and Statistics. Mich insists that she has had absolutely nothing to do with thinking up the manifold taxes which now confront us all. But when it comes to telling precisely what she does do in her capacity as assistant to the division’s director, this reporter will have to beg off. Anyone who knew Anna Michener in college will remember that although she did enough to keep two people busy it was almost impossible to get her to talk about herself. Well, she hasn’t changed; she’s still the same. FRANCES WILLIAMS BROWIN, ’19 the garnet letter 9 COLLEGE ORGANIZATION FOR CIVILIAN DEFENSE By PHILIP M. HICKS, Chairman, Central Executive Committee N DECEMBER 11, 1941, at the request of the College Council of the Pennsylvania State Council of Civilian Defense, President Nason appointed a Central Execu­ tive Committee, consisting of ten members from the faculty and ad­ ministration and ten from the stu­ dent body, to direct and unify the emergency precautions taken by the college and to integrate them with similar measures adopted by the borough of Swarthmore and the Delaware county defense organization. At the same time seven sub-committees were also appointed by the President to direct the various phases of emergency defense under the jurisdiction of the central com­ mittee. These sub-committees are also composed of members drawn from the faculty, the administration and the student body. The Air Raid Warning Committee, Mr. N. O. Pittenger, Chairman, is in charge of the designation of wardens for the various dormitories and the issuance of instructions for procedure in the event of an alarm and the selection of places of the greatest comparative safety within the buildings. The Black-Out Committee, George C. Bond, 1942, Chairman, has appointed student inspectors charged with the extinguishing of lights on the campus and in instructional buildings. Trial blackouts have been held very successfully for the dormitories and recommendations made for the pur­ chase of materials in the few instances where additional precaution seemed advisable. The Fire Protection Committee, Mr. Norris Jones, Chairman, is studying the fire hazards peculiar to each build­ ing on the campus for the purpose of recommending the most efficient means of reducing the hazard and of protecting the buildings in case of hre. It is also planning the enlist­ ment of student and faculty volunteer firemen to assist the Swarthmore Fire Company and the Swarthmore College Fire Brigade organized by Superintendant Simpson among the employees of the college. It is expected that plans for the training of such volunteers will shortly be worked out. The Committee on the Preservation of Property, Dr. Laurence Irving, Chairman, has requested the chairmen of G each department of instruction in the college to consider the problems of storage and salvage, in the event of damage to buildings, of especially valuable items of equipment and to designate members of the departmental staffs who shall be responsible for carrying out the measures adopted. The Committee on Medical Aid, Dr. C. Brooke Worth, Chairman, working in close co-operation with a similar committee of the borough physicians and with the nearby hospitals, has perfected plans for the conversion of the two college infirmaries into first aid stations, for the establishment in conjunction with the borough of a station in the prepara­ tory school buildings, and the possible establishment of a fourth station in the basement of the Martin Building. The hospitals are co-operating in the matter of supplies and equipment and arrangements have been completed whereby members of the college group who desire to do so can give blood for the preparation of plasma for storage. Arrange­ ments are also being made for the use of space in the college buildings and the supplying of the maximum number of beds and cots available in the event of any sudden emergency in the Chester district. The Committee on the Emergency Use of Buildings, Dr. Robert K. Enders, Chairman, is working in close co-opera­ tion with the Committee on Medical Aid in determining sites for the facilities that have just been outlined and is making a somewhat broader survey of the emergency housing situation as well. The Committee on Defense Activities, Dr. J. Roland Pennock, Chairman, is at present offering a course in first aid training given by Dr. Dorothy Ashton. It is expected that this course will be repeated at least twice during the remainder of the college year. Other courses under con­ sideration are Canteen Service, Nurses Aid, Motor Mechanics, Surgical Dressings and Navigation. The attitude of these various committees is not one of alarm over immediately pending danger. The college has desired to take every possible precaution for the safety of its students and to be prepared to co-operate fully with the community of which it is a part should necessity arise. To this end it has seemed wise to inaugurate a thorough study of the measures that might be demanded in a sudden emer­ gency, to take such steps in preparation thereof as seem immediately required and to be organized for prompt and efficient action should the occasion occur. SUPPORT YOUR ALUMNI FUND THE COMMITTEE CHARLES E. RICKARDS, ’27, Chairman FRANK H. GRIFFIN, ’10 ELLEN FERNON REISNER, ’31 W. STAUNTON MOYLAN, ’21 NORA STABLER WORTH, ’03 IO the garnet letter NEW YORK AND PHILA. ALUMNI CLUBS ACTIVE NEW YORK ALUMNAE CLUB PHILADELPHIA ALUMNAE CLUB The annual Luncheon of the Swarthmore Women’s club of New York was held on December 6 at Stouifer’s restaur­ ant in New York City. There was no regular business meeting but lots of interesting entertainment. Mrs. Roberts of the Philadelphia Club spoke, so did Dean Blanchard, Jane Vogt 42 and Mary Hornaday ’27, who gave a most amusing account of some of her experiences as a newspaper woman in Washington. To date the activities of the Philadelphia Alumnae Club of Swarthmore have been centered in a Dessert Bridge Party held in Bond Memorial on December 2 for the benefit of the Alumnae Club Scholarship Fund. Approximately one hundred and seventy persons attended, and $265.71 was cleared from the sale of tickets, the bake table and donations. The Club treasury has had an income of $388.71 so far this year, $123.00 of this sum representing dues. As the Club contributes $350.00 yearly to the Scholarship Fund, awarded each year to an incoming Freshman on the same basis as the Open Scholarships, a portion of each member’s dues as well as the proceeds of the Bridge Party, goes to this Fund. The club is going to run a fashion show in the spring to raise money for the scholarship fund. Auguste Knaur 15 is in charge. There will also be a business meeting in the spring. We would like to remind the most recent graduates that those living in our vicinity may come to our meetings for the one year following graduation without paying dues. And may we have any changes in address for our files. ELIZABETH VAUGHAN BERRY, ’28 Secretary-Treasurer SWARTHMORE CLUB OF NEW YORK The Swarthmore Men’s Club of New York held its yearly business meeting at the Shelton Hotel on December eleventh. Thirty members of the local alumni attended, and enjoyed one of the most interesting meetings the club has had for some time. Amos Peaslee, 07, gave the club a graphic and stimu­ lating talk on his experiences during and after the war of 1914-18, and drew inferences for our contemporary prob­ lems that unquestionably will be of great value to those of us who were fortunate enough to hear him. Another feature of the meeting was the report of the committee that visited the College last spring, and visiting classes and seminars as well as associating with the students in their social life. This report was received most enthusi­ astically, and the members present were unanimous in their feelings that similar relationships and activities should be carried on by the Club in connection with the College. 0c N. MABEL CLEMENT LEE, ’34 Secretary SWARTHMORE CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA The Philadelphia Club established a precedent this year which may become part of Swarthmore tradition—a joint luncheon meeting with Philadelphia members of the Haverford Alumni Association. The luncheon was the first joint meeting in Philadelphia Club history. It was held during the week before the renewal of the Swarthmore-Haverford football game. Two hundred alums attended. Swarthmoreans were the hosts and President Felix Morley of Haverford was guest speaker. Swarthmore’s Presi­ dent John Nason presided. Other guests were the athletic directors, football coaches and football captains of both colleges. \ ne ( en The Club is continuing regular monthly luncheon meet­ ings on the first Wednesday of each month in the University Club Building, 16th and Locust Streets, Philadelphia. The annual dinner is scheduled for Saturday, February 28 at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel. Club president for the current year is Herbert L. Brown of the class of 1916. Other officers: Thomas S. Nicely, ’30, Vice President; William F. Lee, '32, Treasurer. ROBERT H. WILSON, ’31 Ti °í i V