2 the garnet letter AN INTERIM REPORT "V' O G R E A T E R inspiration fo r the current A lum ni Fund Cam paign can be found than that which is provided by let­ ters and gifts we receive from our alumni overseas. These letters make us feel proud o f the College for w hat it has accomplished and m ake us believe ever m ore firmly in strengthen­ ing it fo r the. future. W e are proud o f these alumni fo r their loyalty, their faith in the College, and their H O W A R D S. T U R N E R '33 great generosity. W e would like to fill this page w ith quotations from these letters, but a few sentences must suffice. A n officer on the Italian fron t w rites: "Tw enty-nine m onths overseas hasn’t helped my financial status any, but here is a m oney order to throw in the pot. It has become increasingly evident to me that the combination o f intellec­ tual freedom , stim ulation, and tolerance which abound at Sw arthm ore are not com m on enough in our educational system. I am very happy to have had the opportunity o f going to college where and when I did, and it is a pleasure to help how ever slightly in its perpetuation.” A soldier whose studies at Swarthmore were interrupted by the draft, writes as follows from southern Fran ce: "W h ile I am n ot yet really an alumnus, I felt I would be neglecting the C ollege if I did not, when I was able, con ­ tribute w hat I could. I w ill not try to tell you how much the College and the associations I form ed there have meant to me. T h at would fill a book, and even then, my remarks would be inadequate.” College experience means not only education in the bookish sense, but also the form in g o f fast friendships and the opportunity fo r a well-rounded development. This is a very im portant part o f our concept o f Swarthmore. W e want to perpetuate this, as well. A fter the w ar the College must be sturdy financially if it is to be properly fitted fo r the job ahead. Some— w e hope many— o f these " e x students” will be com ing back to take up their studies. O ne o f these w rites: . . when the war is over, I am looking forw ard to my return to C ollege and the com pletion o f my w ork there. T h at has been m y objec­ tive ever since I was drafted. A n d my years in the Army have brought about no change in my attitude.” It w ill be a function o f Swarthmore College to help these, returning veterans and to offer them the best in education and en­ vironm ent. A fte r the war, other students attending colleges fo r the j first tim e, will be m aking their choices o f institutions in the norm al m anner. Com petition fo r the best o f these students will be keen. Swarthm ore must be prepared to m eet this com petition. Y o u r gifts w ill help achieve this goal. Y o u all know, o f course, that Swarthmore was selected as the college to receive the group o f Chinese N aval officers sent to this country by their governm ent fo r a long period o f training. Y o u probably do not know that these men, after a stay o f only 8 months, recently gave expression o f their adm iration fo r the College by sending a g ift o f substantial size to the 1 9 4 5 A lum ni Fund. In fact, they become the first class to reach 1 0 0 % participation in any o f our five A lum ni Fund cam paigns. A s we g o to press, 1 2 1 1 alumni have contributed $14,1 6 7 .3 0 to the 1 9 4 5 A lum ni Fund. If you have not done so already, please see that your name gets on the donors’ list ; w ithout further delay. Send your g ift now. H O W A R D S. T U R N E R ’33 J 1 c £ 1< S a f Ì s< n a< I ai tc tl tc n ai ir bi tl u] ir ss Vi Vi w n< a tb st in G eneral Chairman 1945 A lum ni Fund A dc “ B yw ays in Q u a k e r H is to r y ” “S w a rth m o re S in g s” Q N S A T U R D A Y , A pril 14th , the Swarthmore College G lee Club m ade a recording o f College songs w hich will be on sale on or about June 1st. This recording was m ade in the W O R Playhouse in N ew Y o r k City under the m ost favorable conditions. T h e perform ance was described by professionals as excellent. Fo u r hundred o f these albums have been purchased in advance by the student body. T h e rem aining six hun­ dred w ill be offered to A lum ni, students, and friends o f the College. I f you are interested send your Check fo r $ 3 .2 5 (m ade payable to Swarthm ore C ollege) to the Alum ni Office. T h e follow ing songs are included: A lm a M ater W e ’re G oing to the H am burg Show N avy Hym n K w ink Song It’s the T eam T h at W ears the G arnet Bl A B O O K o f special interest to Swarthmore A lum ni has just been published. It consists o f a collection of historical essays by leading Q uaker w riters written in honor o f Professor W illiam I. H u ll, Who was associated w ith Swarthmore College fo r nearly fifty years. The m; authors are: Jan et P . W h itney, Rufus M . Jones, Henry or thi J. Cadbury, C. M arshall Taylor ’0 4 , D . E lton Trueblood, W illiam W is ta r Com fort, Thom as E . Drake, Charles F. Jenkins, Bran d Blanshard, G eorge A . W alto n , Charles M . Andrew s, H ow ard H . Brinton, Frank Aydelotte. T h e price o f B y w a y s in Q uaker H is t o r y is $2.50. H ip H ip Song It may be obtained by w riting to the Publications Secre­ H ere Comes the Team tary, Pendle H ill, W allin g fo rd , Penna. Richm ond P. Student Song Everybody Takes T h eir M iller (Sw arthm ore ’2 4 ) in review ing the book fo r The F rien d w rites: " W e urge everyone to keep it right out H ats Off to U s E rie Canal on the library table where it may be picked up and read again and again. It is a book to becom e a constant com­ (Arrangements for many of these songs were made by Herbert 1L. Brown ’ 16) fa ad in pc wi th. panion and not to be catalogued and laid away.” ap Cc be to th< th< if aft bai cai me lo\ as the garnet letter 3 THE FIRM OF BLANSHARD AND BLANSHARD 7JH, distinctly I rem em ber, it was in a fair September that i l the firm o f Bran d and Frances first appeared upon our campus. In nineteen hundred twenty-five th at was. T h e m aster firm o f Frank and M arie Aydelotte had been keeping the col­ lege spinning since 1 9 2 1 , with a special im portation o f Rhodes Scholars into the faculty, the introduction o f H onors w ork as a stimulating m ethod o f study, and a general impetus on every front. H ere was another O xonian, one deeply concerned for the Honors system, one who, like Frank A ydelotte him self, had so impressed O xfo rd dons in his day that he had been per­ mitted, contrary to custom, to continue in academe though accompanied by a w ife. A sympathetic quartet this, to keep Swarthmore in coeducational harm ony! Brand Blanshard, trained at M ichigan, Columbia, O xford , and H arvard, w ith teaching experience at the University o f Michigan, had com e to Swarthmore, not to fill a vacancy, but to expand the departm ent o f Philosophy. F o r his first year there was required also a part-tim e instructor in the departm ent to substitute fo r one who was absent on leave. " Y o u can do no better, was the advice from M ichigan, w here Frances after an apprenticeship at H ollins and at W ellesley had been teach­ ing at the Y p silan ti State T eachers’ College— " Y o u can do no better than to use the services o f Mrs. B lanshard.” A nd so, for the year 1 9 2 5 -1 9 2 6 th e Firm o f Blanshard and Blanshard set up in'Philosophy. A t the end o f that year the then dean o f wom en was determ[ned. to embark upon a lon g delayed sabbatical leave. A sabbatical fo r a dean at the tim e seemed out o f the question. W hat was to be done about the unfinished Bond M em orial ? W hat o f the new system o f interviewing fresh m en ? W h a t would be done about this— what, about th a t? " Y o u can do no better, echoed the persistent dean who had been observing a thing or two fo r herself, "you can do no better than to use the services o f M rs. B lanshard.” A nd so Frances Blanshard started upon a career o f deandom , fo r several years in an act­ ing and associate capacity. Occasionally th ereafter Frances indulged in courses in Aesthetics, but these she term ed her "hobby.” Soon she settled down to the job o f deaning, and the Firm o f Blanshard and Blanshard expanded its sphere to include the interests o f both acuity and administration. B rand as an idealist in philosophy, adding research to a very vigorous teaching program , soared into the empyrean, w hence h e ultim ately deduced, in two ponderous tomes, the abstract Nature o f Thought. Frances, a wizard for organization, gradually acquired assistants, tackled the chaos norm al to a dean’s office, plotted and ordered the mass, and through countless interviews fo r admission to college or advice to the troubled, becam e involved o ft in denatured thought— but it was all very concrete. It would be impossible in these brief notes to attem pt to appraise the contribution o f th e Blanshards to Swarthmore o ege and to educational principles and ideals that reach eyond Swarthmore. B ran d Blanshard, as was expected, helped 0 initiate and to m ould the H onors m ethod o f study fo r which e College is widely known. Syllogisms and philosophical , , T eS ^ave k.een sought through his classes and seminars as ey were plums— so effective is his presentation th at year iter year testing sharpness o f observation, he can stage a sham attie with a student and g e t away with it, as many, caught, m [estify; A t Swarthmore he becam e chairm an o f the depart1 en, ? Philosophy. Afield, h e captured a Guggenheim Felws ip , for a year h e was summoned to Colum bia University visiting Professor. Elected by his peers at large, he became president o f the A m erican Philosophical Association. U nd er their aegis he participated in a comm ission on Philosophy in Education, which aided by a R ockefeller grant, toured the country. H e has recently contributed chapters to a handbook for the A rm ed Forces Institute. H e has reached the heights of his profession, but he has rem ained the same affable, approach­ able, understanding friend. H e is a fan at tennis matches and at baseball gam es. H e w ill interrupt the chosen retirem ent o f his study to act th e gracious host on— oh so many occasions! H e w ill break a reverie on a walk w ith P ixie Cocker to chat with a neighbor or acquaintance. H is experiences in W o rld W a r I, in India and M esopotam ia w ith the British, in France with the A .E .F ., have broadened and deepened his sympathies. Frances Blanshard has developed a technique fo r the ad­ mission o f freshm en Which has been bringing a fine group o f w om en students to Swarthmore. She has travelled fa r fo r them. Latterly she has dropped the confining tag " o f w om en” and has become one o f T h e D eans. As interviewer she has shown keen insight into personality and student needs. A s adviser she sought to develop independence and judgm ent in students by m aking them themselves responsible fo r their m anners and their ways. A s hosts she and B rand have welcom ed so many groups and com m ittees th at their hom e and board are as fam iliar as Parrish, W o rth , or W h arto n . T h e Extended Som er­ ville P rogram whereby a group o f alumnae return fo r several days to inspect new modes o f A lm a M ater is one o f M adam e D ean s special concerns and has achieved high success m ainly through h er impetus and organization. H e r newsy talks to alumnae w herever assembled, choice tidbits happily selected and salted, are greatly relished— I m yself have gone many miles to discover so piquantly w hat is happening on campus. A nd in the m atter o f "Introd uction s” she is masterly, w ith quiet wit and graceful phrase. Frances B lanshard’s abilities have been m anifested in many quarters. A graduate o f Smith College, w ith a M aster’s degree from Colum bia U niversity when s h e . came to us, she has secured a P h .D . from Colum bia in the m idst o f busy deaning days. She has published a num ber o f papers on educational m atters, had early in h er stride edited the Letters o f Ann Gillam Storrow to Jared Sparks, and has now on the press a volum e on T h e Retreat fro m L iken ess in the T heory o f Painting. She has served as president o f the Pennsylvania Associa­ tion o f Deans o f W om en , and president o f the College Section o f the N ation al Association. In the A m erican Association o f University W o m en she has been especially active in the P hila­ delphia Branch, T h e W o m e n ’s U niversity Club, o f w hich she is at present vice-president and chairm an o f its Education C om ­ m ittee; in this capacity she recently staged an inspiring C on ­ ference w th A P rogram for W om en T od ay ,” featu rin g am ong the speakers two o f our Congress W o m en and M rs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt. A s a m em ber o f the International Fed era­ tion o f University W om en , Frances has taken Sw arthm ore to the International meetings at London and at Stockholm. N o w Why should these two good people who have become so thoroughly identified w ith Swarthm ore, this Firm o f B lan ­ shard and Blanshard so strongly established, tran sfer them ­ selves to Y a le ? O ur students w ill miss th em ; th e faculty will miss th e m ; the alumni will miss th e m ; the Sw arthm ore M eet­ ing w ill miss th em ; fo r both have becom e Convinced Friends, are pillars o f the M eeting, and B ran d is steadily contributing to Q uaker literature. F o r the answer to the question posed, we knock at the door o f Destiny. Perhaps it is D uty, stern daughter (Continued on Page 32) the 4 garnet letter VICTORY SHIP NAMED FOR THE COLLEGE T H E G O O D S H IP SW A R TH M O R E H A S JO I N E D T H E F L E E T !! N a recent statem ent by a In deadweight tonnage, the representative o f the U nited V ictory Ship approxim ates the I Liberty’s 1 0 ,8 0 0 . States M aritim e Commission the follow ing announcement T h e U nited States Lines in­ was m ade: form s us th at the skipper will "T h is vessel, S.S. Swarth­ m ore Victory, is one o f a ham Smithies, good looking be Captain and ican colleges and universities. thirty-three years old. H e was N am es born in Los Angeles in been selected feet Cunning­ series being named fo r A m er­ have six A llan four, who is 1912 from a list made up o f all and has been with the United senior colleges in the U nited States States having a student body o f m ore than five hundred. 1 9 3 9 , when he joined the S.S. American Im porter as fourth The order o f assignment fo l­ officer. H e has also served in lows, as closely as possible, that capacity and in higher the chronological order o f the Lines since January, Broadway, ranks on the S.S. American Farmer, American Manufac-I turer, the C-2 Shooting Star the Liberty Ships Charles J. Folger, A bbott L. W ells, and Henry ,E. Huntington. He N ew Y o rk City, fo r operation served as third officer on the; under the W a r Shipping A d ­ new America, the largest and; m inistration.” m ost luxurious passenger ship.; dates o f founding. T h e S.S. Swarthmore Victory will be delivered, on or about A pril 12, 1 9 4 5 , to the U nited States Lines Company, 1 ever built in this country and T h e launching took place on M arch 14, Richm ond, California, also on the W ashington and; 1 9 4 5 , at the Manhattan, ship­ second largest! yards o f the Perm anente M etals C orporation. Representing the A m erican passenger liners, before they w ere taken over by the College at the launching cerem ony was Edw in A . Cottrell. ’0 7 , N avy to be used as transports. Since the w ar he has served on Dean of the Social Science D epartm ent at Stanford U niversity. the S.S. "John Ericsson” (fo rm er K u ngsholm ) as third officer,; The ship’s sponsor was M rs. Thom as Butler, Jr ., w ife o f the H e has been a m aster since September supervisor o f assemblies at the shipyard. H er husband is one of 16, 1943. . - - T h e Swarthmore Victory carries a crew o f fifty-four— 22: 20 the thousands of young men who have risen from the ranks to in the D eck D epartm ent, in the Engine D epartm ent, and 12| take im portant positions in our expanding shipbuilding in­ in the Steward’s D epartm ent. dustry. This new V ictory type ship, designed by the M aritim e Com ­ mission as an im provem ent o f the Liberty Ship, is a faster R e c e n tly , th e vessel, with finer hull lines and equipped w ith turbine-gear A l u m n i A ssocia­ propulsion m achinery of m ore than twice the horsepower of tion sent Captain the reciprocating steam engine used in the Liberty. A llan C u n n i n g ­ G reatest advantage o f the V ictory Ship over the Liberty is ham Smithies a set her increased speed. T h e Liberty has a speed o f a little m ore o f S w a rth m o re 11 knots, w hile the V ictory is designed fo r 15 knots or C o m m e m o r a tiv e more. A nother difference between the two types o f ships is Platew are fo r use the design o f finer bow and stern lines fo r the V ictory to con­ in form to its greater propulsion power. q u a rte rs than T h e new V ictory Ship also has slightly greater length— 4 5 5 feet com pared w ith 4 4 1 .5 feet fo r the Liberty. T h e V ic­ tory has a beam o f 62 feet, while that o f the Liberty is 57 feet. the C aptain’s of th e S. S. Swarthmore Victory. . . . Swarthmorean Cottrell and Sponsor Butler . . . II thin volv whir Fror to ii num 11,0 Mar in h plan the 1 in 1 ! swin and for t won: Back The upor mer ridin comj pletii with to dc Re rienc nine versil work suppi forge away Com] ment youn; Soi adopl a bui $1,18 meml in 19 hand him I signei they 1 the garnet letter 5 SWARTHMURE'S PITT RETIRES he he in- 'ill nS is las 12 ed ry.l 1 ■th: in 1er an\ m I ar, nd de :he: nd. »1 nd nd est he. on er. 22 ' 12' O n Ju n e 3 0 , 1 9 4 5 , the name o f N . O. Pittenger w ill be written on a Swarthm ore College check fo r the last time. Y es, P itt and Cornie are retiring to Pittw illow Farm on the O ctorara. Son Jack— now six feet one inch tall— will get ready fo r his first term at E xeter Academ y. D aughter Jan e— after a sum m er’s vacation— will take up residence with G rand­ m other Chapman, so she may con­ tinue her training in the Swarth­ m ore Schools. If we want to be absolutely accurate "retirement” is som e­ thing o f a m isnomer, fo r in P itt’s m ind the change simply in­ volves devoting all his m any talents to his farm enterprise which by this tim e has reached rather sizeable proportions. From a run-down country place in 1 9 2 6 Pittw illow has grow n to include 3 3 4 acres o f land, two very livable houses, a like number o f w ell-kept barns, and a dairy herd which averaged 11,000 pounds o f milk fo r the months January, February and March. Currently 1 0 0 acres are under cultivation, 5 0 acres are in lush pasture, and the hillsides are flourishing with 7 2 ,0 0 0 planted trees, 7 ,0 0 0 o f which w ere set out the year P itt bought the farm. The dam site in fron t o f the house, which was started in 1929 is now providing good canoeing and somewhat muddy swimming. C ornie’s flower beds are at the peak o f their beauty and the big house is undergoing renovations in preparation for the grand hom ecom ing on Ju ly 1st. U p the creek aways the women s A .A . cabin is doing a rushing week-end business. Back in the barn is a miscellany o f chickens, ducks and pigs. The vegetable garden is b igger than ever before and shelf upon shelf o f canned goods is m ute evidence o f Cornie’s sum­ mer industry and o f many good meals to come. P itt’s three riding horses are in top condition and just rarin ’ to go. T o complete the happy picture a reliable farm m anager is completing his second year o f faithful service to the Pittengers with the result that the "L o rd and Lady” w ill have m ore time to do their share o f reflective thinking. delphia and back a g a in ), which aggregate $ 1 3 ,3 2 2 ,0 3 8 .0 0 . But when he thinks about the college m ortgage p ortfolio, he should radiate absolute satisfaction. (Since 1 9 3 5 the college m ortgage holdings have been under P itt’s personal supervision and the p ortfolio has increased steadily to its present value o f $ 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 . T h ere has not been a single foreclosure on a m ortgage taken during this period and the net interest therefrom , has yielded an approxim ate 4 .9 % annually. O ne Philadelphia bank executive calls this the m ost astute m anagem ent o f m ortgages in his recollection .) Furtherm ore, he w ill take great delight in rem iniscing over his many successful "h orse trades” and those which he should have m ade but didn’t. Strangely enough, rem em bering his m oney transactions will probably interest him far less than the m em ory o f his helping those dozens o f "h ard -u p ” students to make financial ends meet. N om inally P itt has been ranking financial officer o f the College— actually h e has been a great deal m ore. Significant as his financial genius is, his greatest contribution has been in the field o f hum an understanding. A t times, a hard taskm aster with faculty and students alike, h e has been truly unselfish in his desire to help the other fellow when the other fellow is w illing to help him self. H is apparent abruptness at times is nothing m ore than an obstacle which the man o f strong char­ acter is supposed to h u rd le; fo r behind P itt’s seem ing unpre­ dictability, is a sound reason fo r virtually everything he does. H is attitude tow ard his job has been to see how m uch he can do in the course o f the day. H is periods o f reticence are simply milestones in a perpetual m otion o f thought given to College problems. T en in the W h en ago, it years ago the Pittengers moved into their present hom e m iddle building o f the old Prep School dorm itories. these dorm itories w ere named by the college five years was significant and appropriate that the one in which (Continued on Page 7) Reflection for P itt should be a rich and adventurous expe­ rience. In his spare m om ents he is bound to think about the nine years it took him to g et a B .A . degree at Indiana U niT O ity -h o w during this trying period he, in alternate years, worked for an undergraduate education and helped with the support of his family. Likewise, it w ill be difficult fo r him to orget the mom ent in 1 9 2 3 when Frank A ydelotte weaned him w ay from the Indiana University bookstore and m ade him omptroller of Swarthmore College, and how his first assign­ ment, once he arrived on the Quaker campus, was to mind young Bill, Prexy’s son. Sooner or later he will recall the many efficient changes he adopted in the handling o f Sw arthm ore’s operating budget— I l l s 6t Whidl in 1 9 2 3 was $ 3 5 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 and in 1 9 4 5 is $ ,1 8 2 ,7 5 0 .0 0 . H e is sure to smile contentedly when he re­ members the rise in college endowm ent from $ 3 ,3 3 0 ,5 0 4 .0 0 P 1923 ^ present $ 8 ,0 6 5 ,6 5 3 .0 0 . H is usually steady right , an *s 'p e ly to grow a bit shaky when circumstances remind im that in his period o f twenty-two years o f service, he has signed approximately 1 5 0 ,0 0 0 college checks (laid end to end mey would stretch from P itt’s office to the City H all in Phila­ P IT T . I JA N E . . C O R N IE . . JA C K £ the garnet letter GRUENBERG'S TRAVELS T H R IL L IN G w ar odyssey has been told recently and the hero is Swarthm ore’s Captain Ernest M . G ruenberg ’37. A In 1 9 4 2 , after receiving his m edical degree at Johns H opkins, G ruenberg entered the Arm y. Follow ing a period o f special training at Carlisle, P a., he joined the Paratroops. A t the time of the N orm andy invasion, he was attached to the now famous 10 1 st A irborne Division. Fortyeight hours after "ju m p in g” on D -D ay, G ruenberg was captured by the Germ ans. T h e transport carrying them from England to France had overshot its m ark and dropped its paratroopers about 25 miles back o f G erm an lines. In July, he was loaded into a b oxcar and shunted back and forth across France for 23 days while en route from Rennes to Chalon-en-M arne, a distance o f 1 0 0 miles. D u rin g that journey not one man am° n£ the 3 0 0 on the train, except Captain Gruenberg, who tended the wounded, was allowed to stand up. T h e wounds o f every injured m an becam e infected and there was scarcely enough w ater to drink— absolutely none was available fo r washing. F o r three m onths he was a prisoner at Oflag 6 4 at Synbin, Poland, when suddenly th e Russians began their w inter ad­ vance. A t this point the G erm ans herded the A m erican officers together and started them in a westerly direction just ahead of M arshal Zhukoff’s First W h ite Russian A rm y. T h e sick and wounded w ere left behind. T h e band o f A m erican officers sud­ denly found themselves w alking down a secondary Polish road jam m ed w ith "frigh ten ed fat G erm an housewives, perspiring devoid o f a single item about him self, and is reproduced in part as follow s: " I have been trying to think of w hat aspect of my experigficgs would be o f greatest interest to the readers o f the G a r n e t L e t t e r , It occurred to me that the problem o f education as I saw it vividly in Poland and w hich has not been emphasized in the papers, would be a m atter about w hich they would care to read. I spent about three weeks in Poland after being liberated. O ne week was spent in the town o f K cynia taking care o f the m edical needs as best I could. T here were no civilian doctors there at the time. I go t to know several families fairly well and became acquainted w ith many others. A side from the health problems o f the comm unity, the fact w hich struck m e most forcibly was that there had been no education o f Poles for five years. B y education I mean, of course, form al education o f the young people. In 1 9 3 9 education came to a dead stop. This means that there have been no high school classes which graduated during this period and no college classes. This fact in itself would be devastating enough to a country Which had never had a large num ber of university graduates, but the added systematic exterm ination o f Polish intellectuals by the Nazis turns it into a national calamity. O f course this is just one aspect o f the tragic picture Europe has becom e because of the dom ination o f the N azis. It is, however, to m e one o f the key problem s fo r the future. T h ere are not enough educated people left to teach those w ho are now young and who are destined to becom e the national leaders. T h ere w ill be a tre­ mendous need fo r educated people to organize the disorganized foot, G ruenberg hardly ever walked, fo r always a truck or train gave him a lift. A s an A m erican, nothing was too good fo r him and no one ever asked for m oney or tickets. Finally he entered M oscow in a car reserved fo r Russian officers. T h e entire westward trip was negotiated in absolute safety and com parative com fort because o f a little slip of paper given him by a Russian wom an doctor. A m iracle o f simplicity, it had proved a m agic passport— it simply stated th at Captain Gruenberg, an A m erican prisoner o f w ar and a surgeon, had helped care fo r Russian wounded in a m ilitary hospital at E xin, Poland. O nce in M oscow he was taken to the A m erican Embassy. Several days later he arrived in W ash in gto n after a 56-h ou r flight from the Russian capital. Several days ago the A lum ni Office received a letter from Captain G ruenberg in answer to our request for inform ation concerning his fantastic experiences. H is m odest reply was j J 1 ) i t i < t 2 £ a i t f 1 a s o C a v slaves.” Finally, G ruenberg and his fellow officers w ere shoved into a barn on a m anor estate w hich had been confiscated by the Germ ans. M eanwhile the Russians w ere m oving westward eral Sherman tanks. T h en began a long 14-day trek eastward. Starting out on ! j , but these tw o factors w ill not begin to m eet the needs o f the countries w hich the Ueberm ensch has tried, unsuccessfully, It seems to me that it is in this connection that Swarthmore can be o f positive assistance in the reconstruction o f Europe. and drink. D u rin g the repast, the Red A rm y rolled up in G en­ r h ti to return to a medieval state o f ignorance. Americans m ade contact w ith some Poles w ho provided food l countries. Some o f this w ill be satisfied by the im portation of teachers from other lands and some by the return o f refugees, m ale civilians, m inor mem bers o f the N azi party and Polish too rapidly fo r G erm an com fort. A s the Russian tanks came hearer the G erm an guards disappeared. Shortly after, the j | It w ould seem inevitable that m any young people w ill have to come from the form erly occupied countries fo r a general and technical education and return to their homelands to become educators and leaders. I can think o f no greater service Swarth­ m ore could render than to shoulder a large share o f this burden. I w ould like to see a special scholarship fund raised from alumni subscriptions to bring young people from Europe { C h k st c< SI g- S< and pay for their expenses while studying at Swarthmore. Special attention should be directed to getting young people who had already demonstrated their capacity for leadership and the sincerity o f their patriotism by becom ing leaders in the re­ sistance movem ents. In this way Swarthmore w ould be per­ form ing a real service in the reorganization o f the liberated countries and would benefit by personal contact w ith some of the outstanding young leaders of the European resistance move­ ments. T hose o f us w ho have been in the arm ed forces— and many o f those w ho have not— have been working these last few years tow ard the exterm ination o f fascism and the liberation of Europe from tyranny. A lthough that job is not yet finished, even Goebbels can see that it is nearing its end. T o follow up and m ake this job w orth w hile we w ill have to do our part in returning w hat we can o f the academ ic tradition to Europeans. Pitt shou In of S’ tiona been moth the j the < SUpp( frien tion ( comp Last July 4 9 Chinese N aval Officers, who had been study­ ing at Swarthmore since N ovem ber, 1 9 4 3 , left the campus to pursue a course o f further training at Massachusetts Insti­ tute o f Technology and at Annapolis. These men left a profound impression upon the College comm unity and we hated to see them leave. Oiir disappointm ent, however, has been eased somewhat by the presence o f a group o f six Chinese civilians w ho are now enrolled as special and regular students. Two o f this group have com e to us with international reputations. One, Robert T . Chang, a form er Captain in the Chinese A rm y A ir Forces and the other, D r. Chen Yen-Sen, the Chinese surgeon who gained prom inence in this country following G eneral D oolittle’s epic raid on Tokyo during the early stages o f the w ar. Recently the A m erican public has been seeing D r. Chen portrayed in the film entitled "T h irty Seconds O ver Tokyo.” Bob C hang is a pleasant, vivacious young man who enlisted in the Chinese A rm y in 1 9 3 7 . A fte r prelim inary training he was assigned to the A ir Forces where he made a very creditable record. Shortly after the U nited States entered the war, C hang was released from A rm y duty and assigned to the Chinese N ation al A viation Corporation, a government organization concerned prim arily w ith the air transport o f essential w ar materials and personnel to China from India. W o rk in g w ith A m erican A irm en exclusively, he served as co-p ilot on 3 0 6 missions over the "h ump ”— a trip across the H im alaya M ountains which has been de­ scribed as the m ost hazardous air route in all the world. On one flight from C hungking to Calcutta his plane carried General D oolittle soon after that great A m erican airman had made his raid on the Japanese capital. D u rin g C hang’s travels over the w orld ’s highest m ountains he spent 1 4 0 0 air hours covering 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 miles. In N ovem ber, 1 9 4 4 , he was granted an indefinite leave o f absence by the Chinese Government. H e arrived in Swarthmore on M arch 1st w here he is studying our language and customs and im proving his knowledge o f aviation mechanics. In contrast to lively Bob Chang, D r. Chen is a quiet, studious medico who left a w ife and child in C hina so he could come to this country fo r further w ork in the field o f surgery. H e w ill stay at Sw arthm ore until he has sufficient grasp o f our language to m ove on to H arvard M edical School for advanced surgical training. P rior to the first Credit Philadelphia Evening Bulletin CH EN AN D CHANG A m erican air raid on Tokyo, he was an obscure doctor who had been p racticing m edicine in a small Chinese village in Chekiang Province. D u rin g this great raid a num ber o f A m erican crews w ere forced down in or near territory occu­ pied by the Japanese. D r. Chen helped in the rescue o f many o f the fugitive fliers, tended their injuries and finally guided them to safety across 1 0 0 0 miles o f China. F o r his heroism, he was decorated by G eneralissim o C hiang K aishek. Subsequently he offered his service to the Chinese A rm y and served fo r two years as flight surgeon w ith the air force. T hen came the offer by our State D epartm ent w hich gave him the opportunity to visit A m erica and to study m odern m ethods o f surgery at H arvard . H e arrived in W ashin gton in the m iddle o f M arch. T h e day before he entered Sw arth­ m ore he was given a trem endous ovation when presented to the Congress o f the U nited States. S w arth m o re’s Pitt Retires ( Continued fro m Page 5) Pitt had given so much wise counsel to undergraduate m er should be called "P itten g er H a ll.” In 1928 Pitt m arried Cornelia Chapman, an honors graduate o warthmore in the class o f 1 9 2 6 . Cornie, as she is affeclonately known to h er hundreds of. Swarthm ore friends, has een a model w ife and one o f the com m unity’s outstanding Hi° fA voidinS 111 lim elight, she has devoted herself to e jo of rearing tw o fine children, taking an active p art in e campus activities, providing h er fam ous Sunday night uppers for the men in the dorm itory, and catering to P itt. H er tin60 pinf,ss’ Sincerity’ and unselfishness have won the admiracom M B ^ h° have known her. N o account o f P itt w ould be P e without paying tribute to the significant p art Cornie has assumed in this m em orable Swarthm ore partnership. Indeed, Swarthmore A lum ni w ill miss the P itten g ers! In any m ention o f fam ous Swarthm ore families their names will stand high on the list. L ast w inter on the occasion o f the 57th annual banquet o f the Sw arthm ore Club o f Philadelphia, P itt was presented a handsom e silver bowl in hon or o f his loyalty and devotion to Swarthmoreans o f all generations. O n the bowl was inscribed th e follow ing legend: A n able A dm inistrator, a real friend, a loyal Sw arthm orean.” Such are the desserts o f P itt s twenty-two years at Swarth­ m ore. O n hearing the recent news o f his retirem ent, one Sw arthm ore alumnus rem arked " W e ll h e’ll be succeeded but never replaced.”