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VOL. XIX, No. 22
BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1933
Copyright BRYN MAWR
COLLEGE NEWS, 1933
i PRICE 10 CENTS.
Miss Park Announces
Awards for 1933-34
Mackenzie Leads Juniors, Di-
vides Hinchman Prize ©
With Barber
AWARDS | ANNOUNCED
At May Day Chapel, the following
fellowships and scholarships were
announced by Miss Park:
Resident Fellows, 1933-34
HELEN SCHAEFFER HUFF ME-
MORAL RESEARCH FELLOW—
Marion Helen Armbruster, A.B.,
Mount Holyoke College, 1930;
Graduate Scholar in Chemistry,
Bryn Mawr College, 1930-31; Fel-
low in Chemistry, 1931-33.
ARCHAEOLOGY — Virginia Fitz-
Randolph Grace, A.B., Bryn Mawr
College, 1922; M.A., 1929; Student
at American School of Classical
‘Studies, Athens, 1927-28; Fellow
in Greek, Bryn Mawr College,
1928-29, and Fellow in Archaeol-
ogy, 1929-30; Fanny Bullock Work-
man European Fellow, 1930-31;
Research Worker and Student in
Greece, 1931-33.
BIBLICAL LITERATURE. — Emma
; Hope Broome, A.B., Mount Holyoke
College, 1927; M.A., Bryn Mawr
College, 1932; Scholar in Latin,
Bryn Mawr College, 1931-32; Fel-
low. from Bryn Mawr studying at
the University of Chicago, 1932-33.
BIOLOGY—Ona M. Fowler, A.B.,|
Hillsdale- College, 1918; M.S., Uni-}
versity of Michigan, 1919;’ Gradu-
ate Student, University of Michigan,
1926-27; Graduate Scholar in Bi-
ology, 1929-30; Graduate Student,
Bryn Mawr, 1932-33. °
CHEMISTRY — Elizabeth Hewston,
B.S., George Washington Univer-
sity, 1929; M.A., 4830; Fellow in
Chemistry, George Washington
‘University, 1929-30; Fellow in
Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College,
1930-82; George Washington Uni-
_ versity, 1932-33.
ECONOMICS AND POLITICS —
Vera Josephine Vicek, A.B., Univer-
sity of Illinois, 1932; Candidate for
of Illinois, 1932; Candidate for
M.A., 1933.
EDUCATION—Helen Stuart Bagen-
stose, A.B., Wellesley College,
1931; Harvard Graduate School of
Education, 1933; Wellesley College,
1931-33.
ENGLISH — Anna Pauline Locklin,
A.B., Middlebury College, 1920;
M.A., University of Illinois, 1924;
Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr
College, 1982-88. .-
GEOLOGY—Mary Brewster Draper,
A.B., Wellesley College, 1924;
M.A.,, University of Wisconsin,
1930.
GERMAN—Mary Sturm Chalmers,
A.B., Oberlin College, 1930; M.A.,
Northwestern University, 1931;
Part-time Instructor in German
and Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr
College, 1931-82; Scholar in Ger-
man, Bryn Mawr College, 1932-33.
GREEK—Faith Prindle Baldwin,
AB., University of Vermont, 1928;
M.A., Bryn Mawr College, 1931;
Scholar in Latin, Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1930-31; Kirsopp Lake Fel-
low, 1931-32; Holder of Boston
Alumnae Fellowship from Ameri-
can Association of University
Women at Johns Hopkins Univer-
sity, 1932-33.
HISTORY—Beatrice _ Nina _ Sied-
schlag, A.B., Lawrence College,
(Continued »%n Page Three)
Mr. Alwyne to be in London
Mr. Alwyne has been engaged to
appear as soloist with the British
‘ Broadeasting Symphony. Orchestra in
London on June 16. He will play a
concerto and a group of solo pieces.
The Orchestra, which consists of 120
players, is considered one of the fin-
est in Europe.. The Concert will also
be heard ona national broadcast.
On September 6 Mr. Alwyne will
appear as soloist with the Bourne-
mouth Symphony Orchestra, under
the conductorship of’ Sir Dan God-
frey. = bens RF
‘Best College Students
Rely on Scholarships
Calendar
Thursday, May 18: “Dr.
Dulles will speak in Chapel on
“Inflation,” 8.45 A. M.
Friday, May 19: National
Delegates of the Junior League
will meet in Goodhart, Hall,
10.00 A. M. Miss Park will de-
liver the welcoming address.
Friday, May .19:~ Bryn
Mawr Glee Club’ will. present
Patience. Goodhart, 8.20 P. M.
Saturday, May 20: Varsity
50% of B. M. European Fellows
Depend on Scholarships
for Education
WIN ENTRANCE AWARDS
Statistics show that fifty per cent.
of the European Fellows’and seven-
ty-three pér cent. of those doing the
— Match’ vs. Vassar. 10 best work in their major subjects
é 1 } }
Saturday, May 20: Bryn from 1914 to 1932 would have been
unable to g rough college without
the aid of schdlarships. It also seems
to be a significant fact that of the
twenty European Fellows in the
years 1914 to 1932, only one had
held or won ho~ previous scholarships
jin college. Fifteen had won the Ma-
iria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Memo-
rial—Scholarship for the highest. av-
erage in all work done through the
Junior year, and seven had won the
Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Schol-
arshop for the most excellent work
in their major subjects.
Eight had been Matriculation Schol-
ars on entering; three had won the
Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Scholarship
in English; and two the Elizabeth
Duane Gillespie Scholarship in Amer-
ican History. Two had won Eliza-
Mawr Glee Club will present
Patience. Goodhart, 8.20 P. M.
Saturday, May 20: Dance
in Gymn, 11.00 P. M. to 2.00
A. M. Noble Sissle’s Orches-
tra.
Sunday, -May 21: Isabel
Cooper will give a dance recit-
al in the Cloisters at 7.40 P. M.
Vernon Hammond will accom-
pany her at the piano.
Monday, May 22: Mr. Phil-
ip Johnson will speak on “Ger-
‘man Romantic Architecture,
1800 - 1850.” .Common Room,
5.00 P. M.
Monday, May 22: Miss
Charlotte E, Carr will speak ||
on “Women Industry and
Personnel Work.” Common : : .
Room, 8.00 P.M. beth S. Shippen Scholarships, one in
Tuesday, May 28: Mr. Phil- Science and one in Foreign - Lan-
guages, and one of the Sheelah Kil-
roy Scholars also won the Horace
White Prize in Greek Literature.
ip Johnson will speak on “Rich-
ardson and the Middle, West,
1870-1910.” Common Room,
5.00 P. M : Three had enterd on Alumnae Reg-
Wednesday May 94. 7 ional Scholarships, two on Trustees’
Philip Johnson will speak on Scholarships, and one on a Philadel-
“Modern Architecture.’ Since _ phia City Scholarship. Four had
the War.” Common Room, 5.00 held the James Rhoads Scholarship in
P. M. their Sophomore year, and five in
their Junior year. Of the ten Fel-
| placed shots and steadiness gave her
lows who held scholarships through
College, all but two won the Maria
L. Eastman Brooke Hall Scholarship,
and seven won the Charles 8S. Hinch-
man Scholarship.
In; the years 1918 to 1933, there
: have been twenty-six Charles S.
Account for Tennis ‘Team’s ;Hinechman Scholars, of whom seven
Second Defeat were Matriculation Scholars, -five
: Alumnae Region Scholars, two Trus-
VASSAR GAME IS NEXT | tees’ Scholars, and one, a Philadel-
phia City Scholar. Eight also won
Swarthmore avenged her: other de-|the Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall
feats this year by winning from the | Scholarship, three the Sheelah Kil-
Varsity tennis team, 3-2, on Monday|roy Prize, two the Elizabeth Duane
afternoon. Gillespie Scholarship, one the Hor-
Faeth, playing number one against|ace White Prize in Greek Literature,
Chidley, won the first four games in and one the Elizabeth Shippen Schol-
good form. The players kept up long arship in Science. Four held the
rallies, but one or the other usually| James Rhoads Scholarship in their
lost out on her backhand. Chidley| Sophomore year, six in their Junior
lost many points on Faeth’s service,| year, and three held it in both years.
the speed and curve of which she; Four had held or won no previous
seemed unable to gauge. Faeth drop-|scholarships, and nineteen had held
ped the next’ three games on wide/scholarships through college.
balls, but rallied to’win the first set, :
6-3. The second set was much more
erratic. Faeth won her serve, only
to lose to Chidley’s because she tried |
too often‘ to kill the serve rather than |
to get the ball in play before trying |
for the point. Chidley, however, fail-
: A The eleven articles for. which M.
ed to. stand up ageinst Faeth’s serves’ Canu was awarded the Strassburger
and also to return many side-line|
: ‘prize this spring are extracts from
shots, thereby dropping the set and the manuscript of a book, Les Etats-
the matgh to Feet, 6-4. — Units en Automobile, which M. Canu
Collier lost the number two match is hoping to publish.
to Tomlinson, 6-2, 6-8. Collier's The volume will contain the story
phe ib lected power. and “er net of a trip around the United States
drives, although flat_and low, did not witet-iM—- Gant-rmautte—with two-other
Have the speed an Contra wpich _ = Frenchmen. He relates his impres-
neve: nee anna really’ effective. sions of Americans and their way. of
Tomilinson’s superior form, neatly- life, giving descriptions of the larg-
er cities, such as-Chicago, San Fran-
cisco and New Orleans. . :
When they began their trip, the
|tourists had ‘had little experience in
Varsity Loses Match
With Swarthmore, 3-2)
Bad Weather and Orals May
M. Canu’s Prize Articles
~ to Appear in Bé6k Form
(Especially Contributed by
Olivia Jarrett)
a great advantage and won her the
match.
The thigd match, in which Bowditch
was playing Geddes, proved to be :
besa Ee (driving, and little or none of Eng-
t of all. i :
a Se a eondaer mS They had several amusing ad-
out wildly, her serves often wide of: : :
the mark, her drives either dropping|Ve"tures; for instance, in Cleviand
into the -netor.soaring far beyond they_were mistaken for-a ‘delegation
the base line. Geddes was playing | °f Masons from Colorado, and were
her usual calmn game, returning | Welcomed to the national convention
serves: and drives easily and softly, With all the ceremony of the brother-
and winning the first set, 6-4. In the | hood.
next two-sets, Bowditch settled down; To the European reader, who is al-
a little and began to get her serves| ways amazed at the fabulous number
in the court and to put more power of automobiles in America, M. Canu’s
into her strokes. In spite of the fact; Sketch of America on Wheels throws
that she still ‘ticked the net many|light on one of the most character-
times; Bowditch took advantage of|istie features of life in the United
(Continued on Page Five)
States. .
— —+> =
Faculty Show Evokes Unrestrained Applause
and Laughter From Appreciative Audience
Show Comparable to Democratic National Convention in Effer-
vescent Enthusiasm; Warburg
_ Praised for Verve
REPETITION RECOMMENDED EVERY FOUR YEARS
(Especially contributed by. Miriam
Dodge, except for. the Warden’s Skit,
which was reviewed by J. E. Han-
nan.)
A hardened theatre-goer, I haye
never witnessed such an ovation as
greeted the Faculty Show last Wed-
nesday night. As a matter of fact,
the closest this old traveler has ever
come to experiencing anything of the
sort was last summer at the Demo-
cratic National Convention, when no |
amount of heat and crowd could re-
duce the public ardor for the man in
the brown derby. The cultivated
gentleman who has since become the
hero of this volatile nation was ob-
viously a put-up job and met with a
calculated reception—but not so “the
people’s Al!”. Buxom belles | and
creatures whom I can scarcely call}
gentlemen vied with each other for|
yelling-space. Faces were stepped
on, but the marvelous wave of sound
swept on and filled the huge stadium
to its farthest corners with the ef-
fervescence of enthusiasm about
something, about anything—it didn’t
matter. The expression was its own
excuse. No one could speak definite-
ly of the future, but the genial little
man with the red face was the peo.
ple’s chosen symbol of their un-
quenchable interest in living. I hope
Dr. Fenwick will not mind my. com-
paring him with Mr. Smith, but his
entrance with the balloons really
seemed to inspire us in like manner.
Title notwithstanding, I think the
Faculty Show made the student body
toss the cap of its admirable restraint
over the mill cgmpletely. And _ the
stimulus was much needed; I can
only hope that it was the opening
shot of the war that I-have been on
the point of declaring these several
years.
coming shouts of the audience were
finally checked by the winning master
of ceremonies. And here I can do
no better than felicitate Mr. War
burg, whose inimitable verve neve1
flagged for a moment throughout the
evening and completely obviated the
pauses inevitable in the most brilliant
amateur revue. With Mr. Warburg
at the helm, there was never a mo-
ment of ennui, and we will cherish
the information that shredded wheat
calls imperatively for cream, and the
timely advice about the riddance. of
mice. And I could never tire of the
wistful and gaping goldfish. But the,
audience took Mr. Warburg tg its|
bosom and he needs no futher com-
mendation from me.
should like to know—is that a spe-
pecially-tailored suit? And might I
venture to suggest that he try Harpo,
Marx next?
When the curtains parted, the
opening chorus was greeted with
cheers. The assembled multitude was
apparelled in sombre cap and gown,
but they ‘were engaged in an unfa-
miliar performance, which proved to
be a gay parody of Gilbert and Sulli-
van. Their song was infused with a
feeling. for unity, never attained by
the prosai¢c.hirelings of Of Thee I
Sing. Mrs. Tennent sang the solo
part with grace and contagious spirit,
so that benevolence spread to the au-
dience, and the mood for the eve-
ning was definitely established.
When Mr. Warburg pulled back
those beautiful red curtains with the
assurance of a magician about to ‘pro-
“Residence in Paris
Mlle. Alice Rey will receive «
in her house, 28 rue la Fon-
taine, a few students who are
intending to spend some time ”
in Paris. For further infor-
mation apply to Mlle. Maud
Rey, 129 Radnor road, Bryn
Mawr.
On the eventful evening, the wel-
One thing I:
Program of Faculty Show
“RESTRAINT NECESSARY”
May 10, eight o’clock
Act I.
Opening Chorus.
Miss Park’s Greek song.
S. A. King’s reading.
Men’s quartet.
Bldgs. and grounds skit.
Dr. Gray’s monologue.
Ed Wynne.
. Men’s May Day.
;. INTERMISSION (Dr. Fenwick
auctions posters)
Act II.
1. Potter’s wheel (Ibsen skit).
2. Chemistry act.
38. Manning-Crenshaw Duet.
ee
4. Professors Alwyne and Wil-
loughby.
6.—Chorus—Dr. Turner’s , solo.
6. Horse act.
7. Warden’s skit.
8. Final chorus.
|
| duce a series of animals from his
|hat, the atmosphere was. electric—
| but none was quite prepared for the
/appearance of Miss Park in a. black
velvet evening gown. Previous dis-
plays faded into insignificance, for
the audience went berserk. Duse’s
most inspired public never -offered a
better demonstration, I feel sure.
Nothing less than a Delphic utter-
ance was expécted at that moment
from our president, whose response,
| however, was as unpredictable as
‘genius. When she could be heard,
| she did render a Greek song, not a
|classical number, but. a catchy tune
‘learned from a muleteer. ’ It hhd
| great charm and its sweetness of
tone should place it among the old
favorites.
| Mr. King was the next feature on
| the program, and Mr. Warburg care-
fully enunciated Mr. Samuel Arthur,
'so.that no one ‘should mistake him
|for the artist of our magnificent post-
‘ers or any other of that proud fam-
lily. Mr, Samuel Arthur King then
| gave us a narrative poem, using such
|a variety of gesture, in addition to
| his expressive voice, that no subtle
'shade of meaning was left undefined,
| The coat-tail motif was particularly
| provocative.
As for the Men’s Quartet, compris-
/ing . Messrs. Herben, Blanchard,
|'Watson and Turner, I can only say
‘that we were all horrified at the type
and tint of the sheets which those
igentlemen were perusing. Our faith
in their integrity was only partially
restored by the round from the col-
,lege catalogue with which they fav-
ored us. >
The Buildings and Grounds skit
was one of the cleverest of the eve-
ning. Mrs, Smith wore a handsome
‘costume, very Red-queénish, and her
‘lines were extremly amusing, while
Dr. Smith and Dr. David were ap-
pealing in their impersonations of
workers on the old plantation: Dr.
Diez was impressive as the effulgent
Mr. Foley and Mrs. Diez the best-
looking statue we have ever laid eyes
upon, though we were afraid that
(Continued on Page Three)
Vocational Meeting
Miss Charlotte E, Carr, of
the Pennsylvania Department
of Labor and Industry, will
speak-on opportunities for wom-
en in,positions associated with
industry, including the person-
nel work now being done by
State departments. The meet-
ing will be held on Monday eve-
ning, May 22, at eight o’clock,
in the Common Room of Good-
hart Hall. Everyone who is in-
terested is cordially invited to
attend. Coffee will be served.
Page Two
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The College News is fully ‘pl tected by copyright. Nothing that appears in
it may be reprinted either wholly or in part witheut written permission of the |
Editor-in-Chief. $ : i
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Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
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| Object Lesson
The-coincidence of ideas of the amusing is one of the ties that bind.
Many of us knew before Restraint Necessary that beneath classroom exter: |
iors lurked many a trenchant wit; but the monster demonstration on Good: |
hart stage last Wednesday night gave the student body material upon which |
to base its vague suspicions. |
The unusual spectacle of all Bryn Mawr, faculty and students, losing |
its academic calm for the space of one evening was chastening and uplifting. |
For those. who doubted that Bryn Mawr was anything but a large academic |
calm, the show revealed-unknown storms underlying the s¢renity. |
Although we dislike the phraset “object lesson,” and shrink from apply- |
ing it to the faculty show, we can find no better designation for it in view |
of our present purpose. That is to point out the beauty of a less staid and;
intellectual relation between instructor and instructed. |
Undergraduates, who do not assume a formal personality when brought ;
into contact with members of their faculty, exist, but as a class which stands |
in brilliant distinctiofi to the masses. Seldom do the masses emerge from |
their self-appointed shells, and then only to nod and smile carefully as they |
pass professors of their major subjects on the Goodhart-Library treadmill. |
. |
|
|WIT?S END
|What sort of creatures faculty
«FA CULTY. DESCENSUS.,..
When I was very young,—I think
It must have been last year,—
Were, wasn’t very clear.
I judged them by their earmarks
To be homo sapiens,
For their clothes were almost human
And they carried fountain-pens,
In mentality I held them
(After really thinking lots)
To’ be rather more than mortals,
But, somewhat less than Gotts.
Then since pondering,. out of lessons,
Is.a thing I don’t do best,
I thought of them henceforth as just
The voice behind the desk.
I bought my ticket to the show
With not a touch of frenzy, -
But just because the facult
Forgot assignments Wednesday.
The crowd had not my ennui,
Shouts rose, and wild acclaims,
It even seemed some people knew
The super-things’ nick-names.
I blench till now whene’er I think
Of that which met my sight
When sidewards jerked the curtains
* On that historic night.
The whole put me into what can
_ Be only called a berl.
I fearily crept home at dawn,
A disillusioned girl.
When Dignity cast off his pants
And pranced to greet the May;
When Wisdom rode a coaster-wagon
All I could do was pray.
When dea secunda dearum
Five fateful words let drop,
When: dea supreme dearum—
Well, I had better stop:
—The May Pole Cat.
OPEN LETTE
Dear Sir—
I languished in front of your pic-
ture of Sweeney among us Nightin-
gales for fifteen minutes by the Li-
brary clock (erratic perhaps). I am
R TO. DR.. HERBEN
(Very chic, you know, with chétks!)
We saw a burning tiger :
And other things from Niger;
There were the scrawny emus
A-mating with the she-mus.
There-wasa-whole--house—full of.
jaguars and minks,
And cages by the dozens of fearsome-
looking skinks.
There were elk and bison
And game to feast your eyes on,
And packs of intrepid wild goats
And animals with Joseph’s’ coats
Of futuristic pattern.
But others still were slattern,
That dwélt in deep morasses.
We almost missed the asses,
The hippos and the kangaroos,
The lions and the cockatoos,
The cheetahs and the wild cats
(That look just like our mild cats!),
And then there was the peba,
(All those from one amoeba?!)
The. air was full of odorous skunks,
With ferrets, and with small chip-
____munks._ nae
And there was a scaly crocodile
Cavorting in a New York Nile.
We gawped at many musk ‘ox
And several cagy springboks,
The fields were full of caribou,
And specimens of rare poyou;
A whole tank full of swimming seals
-~t
| And different kinds of slippery eels,
And terrapins, and weasels, and
awesome bandicoots,
And mongeese and lemurs and mel-
ancholy newts,
And gophers and porpoises and:
pumas and lynx,
And catamounts and antelopes, and
funny kinds of ginks
Like the mountain-climbing chamois,
And the toad with surface clammy,
And the funny, punny gnus,
And the ludicrous kudus,
And the turtles and the tapirs,
And gazelles engrossed in capers
To astound the stolid boa
(Doubtless former chum of Noah),
The boars and stoats and tropic
harte-beests,
And ornamental leopards and other
arty beasts.
News of. the New York Theatres
The foreign stars onthe various
American stages are being put on
the “public enemy” list with the gang-
sters, hoarders and communists, and
portation by our Minister of Labor.
i The ministry has decided that be-
lcause of the depression’ (but chiefly
because the foreign actors are better
than the domestic brands) they had
better be got out of the way, so our
own little Thespians will have a
chance. Consequently, passports, vis-
iting permits and all the red tape
imaginable is being invoked, and
many foreign actors are leaving our
shores on “vacations.” The plan is
to keep all foreigners out of the the-
atre and the movies. until all our own
people have work, but if a director
feels, he. must have overseas talent.
he can get it by filing a sworn’ affi-
bedi with the government saying
that no one but his pet particular
star can play the role in question.
Then an inspector checks up and if
he thinks the director is right, all is
well; if not, ‘everyone goes to jail.
|France is doing the same thing—but
lonly on ‘a percentage basis. Only ten
per cent. of the actors and singers in
dramatic, lyric and vaudeville the-
atres and in the cabarets may be ie
eigners after June 1, Since Jose-
'phine Baker is about nine per cent.
of the whole works, it\looks as if
| Jeannette MacDonald had better come
home.
| The Theatre Guild’s latest opus,
| The Mask and the Face, seems doom-
jed to be a complete and utter fail-
ure. Mr. Maugham’s adaptation of
| Luigi Chiarelli’s grisly farce deals
with infidelity and interment, and
jis set practically in Lake Como. A
| fiery Italian threatens to kill his wife
if she is unfaithful, whereupon she
isets to work, but doesn’t get killed.
Instead she is exiled and her husband
| says he drowned her... Then comes
| the dandy burlesque burial scene,
wherein the wife is supposedly bur-
‘lied, while she actually is engaged in
are being threatened: with speedy de-. |
: vs »,; ordering one as fast as ever I can fou
. ‘ acher’s | °F &
Undoubtedly the trouble lies. far back in childhood when “teac iy phiataerapk albiim. which Fas its
pet’’ was a pariah and intercourse with ong’s precentors strained. The atti-!}; gh anota, but none a0 hgh assuin
a reconciliation with hubby behind a
The full array is nigh incredible |tombstone. And the Theatre Guild
Of bird and beast;
_ tude of hostility. was natural then, and perhaps a necessary defense against |
the adult world, but we deplore its presence in an institution of higher
“\ _. Bachelor Mother—a tale of an old
learning, where one is preparing for contact with society at large.
We hesitate to guarantee the reaction of the faculty if an era of |
faculty-student rapport is inaugurated; any optimism that we have about
such a movement is based upon Restraint Necessary and upon our undying
belief thi-t-the-exception does not prove the rule.
IN PHILADELPHIA
Theatres
Forrest: Last week of Dinner At
Eight, with Constance Collier, Con-
way Tearle and Ann Andrews. An
excellent opus, showing that a host-
ess . never really knows anything
about her dinner. guests.
Shubert: The Pulitzer Prize-win-
nigg Both Your Houses. Another
fast poke at our government; done
competently by the* Guild.
69th Street Playhouse: Skidding
—a comedy concerning the humor of
dire domestic disasters which has
been funny for ten years.
Coming—May 22
Forrest: Katherine Cornell in
young man.
~ Karlton: Katherine Hepburn con-
tinues to be consuméd’ by a forbidden
love for a married M. P. (Colin
Clive). Miss Hepburn is excellent,
but the movie! Ach!
Europa: A ‘Russian romance done |
at the command of Stalin and called
Shame. Has a musical accompani-
ment and is amazing.
Boyd: A_ blood-and-thunder ad-|
venture film, Hell Below, with Rob- |
ert Montgomery, Walter
Madge Evans and Jimmy Durante.
}
|
Huston, |
¢ ‘ Local Movies
| Ardmore: Wednesday, Al Jolson |
|in Hallelujah, ’'m A Bum; Thursday, |
| Richard Dix in The Great Jasper; |
| Friday and Saturday, King Kong,|
|
Sidney Howard’s Alien Corn. An in- | with Fay Wray and Robert Arm-|
consequential tale of the middle west,
but Miss Cornell is well’ worth an
evening. One week only.
Movies |
Fox: Elissa Landi and David
Manners in the extremely funny
Warrior’s Husband. All about Ama-
zons and their husbands—and what
happened when the Greeks came. Ex-
cellent.
Stanley. Ramon Novarro as The
Barbarian goes through a pretty flim-
sy two hours philandering about the
desert, singing like the Lorelei to
Myrna Loy, ete. A
_ Earle: Dorothy Jordan and Louis
Calhern in Strictly Personal—where-
in is disputed how Park Avenue play-
boys are fleeced by lovely girls at the
Lonely Hearts Club, run by an es-
caped convict. What more is there to
be said? And Joan Blondell is on
‘the stage.
Stantony Robert Montgomery and
Sally Eilers in Made on Broadway—
a high-speed
. a waitress out of the river and makes
her his playgirl. And it’s funny!
‘Also Krakatoa erupts in a selected
short subject. | ;
Keith’s: Margaret Mann _ in
* lady from a home adopted by a rich
ee er Gee
an about town picks |
jstrong; Monday and Tuesday, Our
Betters, with Constance Bennett;
‘Wednesday and Thursday, Diana
| Wynward and Lewis Stone in Men
\Must Fight.
| Seville: Wednesday and Thurs-}
iday, Broadway Bad, with Joan Blon-
' dell and Ricardo Cortez; Friday,
Mae AVest in She Done Him Wrong; |
| Saturday, Sailor’s Luck, with James |
; Dunn and Sally Eilers; Monday and}
Tuesday, Luxury Liner; Wednesday |
and Thursday, Private Jones, with}
Lee Tracy.
Wayne: Wednesday and Thurs-
day, The Keyhole, with Kay Francis
and George Brent; Friday and Satur-
day, What! No Bee? with Buster
Keaton and Jimmy Durante; Monday
‘and Tuesday, Pleasure Cruise, with
| Genevieve Tobin and Roland Young;
' Wednesday -and Thursday, Grand
Lukas. o
- Bottle, Licker, Glass, Stein, Pep-
ner, Bass and Ales, although they
sound like items on the shopping list
of. a night club hostess, are really the
names of students who registered last
semester at Long Island University.
The last name on the list was To-
‘around Mr. Eliot’s face.
| terest you, and be useful for future
| In tubes and subways gritty;
Slam, with Loretta Young and Paul)
‘maine—(NSFA.) _
snapshot of Mr. Eliot at the recep-
tion.
You should see my album, pretiy
provocative some of the pirtures are
—such as the one of the lady who
lectured on mouse-breeding last year,
and was such a dear, I ‘thought. I
caught her while she was stuffing in
a well-aged tea cake. The expression
of surprise is almost perfect, but
doesn’t come up to the prize of my
collection,—which preserves as a fly
in amber the twisted grin on the face
of Dr. Ogle-Bogle when he entered
the Common, Room. and saw lines and
lines of Nightingales waiting for him;
just waitng with that sort of dumb
look in their eyes, ~
But, Dr. Herben, I must ‘admit
that Sweeney is better than any of
the “little snapshots” in my collec-
tion and I hope you may not think
it small of me if I regret the mist
It may in-
reference, to know that Sweeneys have
a protective coloring which they in-
variably throw out in the presence
of Nightingales and cameras.
Yours for albums,
Florence Nightingale.
ZOOWARD
We burrowed ’neath the city
And hurtled through the “upper air”
To reach the beasties’ distant lair;
And as we prowled throughout the
Zoo
The animals quizzically asked, “Et
tu?” =
They nodded their heads and kept
scratching their coots,
After deciding that we, too, were
Brutes.
We saw the many stages
In rows of armored cages:
The chimpanzees and apes
With awe-inspiring shapes.
We looked at funny birds
And fields of bully herds;
And there we saw a lizard
That never felt a blizzard.
We went to see the donkeys,
We laughed at all the monkeys,
The yaks and the gorillas,
The wolves and armadillos.
We looked at all the peacocks,
The parents and the wee fox;
We saw a bunch of rhinos
And giraffes equipped ‘with high nose,
Perched upon their lovely necks,
And ’tis surprising which are edible,
Fit for a feast.
For some there is a culinary fate—
To be consumed as food;
But there are othe?s no one ever ate,
The futile ones,
Inutile ones, °
And these are zooed!
—Campusnoop. |
|
|
DISILLUSIONMENT
Alas, how devastating
Is Physics’ zeal so burning;
How pitiless the searchlight
> That it insists on turning
On literature, etc.
And our illusions shake
When we ‘are told that stony walls
Do -not a prism make.
Tribute to the Freshmen
Like Polykleitos, we once thought
That beauty lay in measure,
And only certain measuremnts
Could give esthetic pleasure;
But now our pet ideas
Are crumbling into dust,
For this year shows that ’36 |
Is not a perfect bust.
|
|
Girls when in. the sun’s fierce rays |
Once dressed like Mother Hubbard;
The gym roof sees a modern phase— |
They dress there like her cupboard. !
—Adamant Eve.
So there you are—a Zoo column!
The Faculty What-Is-It, nightin-
gales, the gilded cages of our golden
age (pfiffle with inflation), and our
good-old friend, the nursery canine.
Signing off the missing link.
Cheero,—
THE MAD HATTER.
Canoeing from Corvallis to Port-
land is anticipated by two sophomores
at Oregon State College, as a means
of getting home at the end of this
quarter. Munro and Dudley Moss,
ex-’83, in chemical engineering, made
the trip atthe end of last spring
term. The distance from Corvallis
to Portland by river is 118 miles.
—(N. S. F. A.)
At the University of West Vir-
ginia prior to 1911 a bell was rung
every night at 9 o’clock, warning stu-
dents that they must go to their
rooms. At 6 A. M. a cannon was
fired at the armory to get them out
of bed.—(N, S. F. A.)
| read advertising.
| put it on!
Helen Morgan has taken up resi-
dence on the piano of the Embassy
Club (151 East 57th Street) for an
“indefinite engagement,’ so the
management informs us. She hasn’t
heen as busy. this season as_ she
would like to have been,-but even so,
we are a little surprised. My, my,
— how are the mighty fallen — al-
though we’ll admit there are more
j bumpy landings than the Embassy.
Design For Living is being adapt-
ed for the movies by Ernest Lubitsch
and Ben Hecht, without the help of
Mr. Coward, who, it is said, cannot
bear the sight of blood. For various
and sundry reasons the play is being
slowly and gleefully dismembered. We
quote Mr. Lubitsch: “There will have
to be certain changes in Mr. Coward’s
script for film adaptation because the
faney goings on betwen Leo-and Otto
and their joint girkfriend can’t be
enacted quite so frankly for a film
public, but we think that without
making ginger ale out of champagne
we can translate it for public con-
sumption. Its people will be uncon-
ventional, but normal.” Won’t that
be just dandy! Dear movies!
. New York is a mass of revivals at
present. June Moon, of 1930-31, is
coming back with Harry Rosenthal
in the lead; Rachel Crothers’ When
| Ladies Meet is back, as is Of Thee I
Sing, both with the original casts.
And Counsellor-At-Law begins a two-
week revival engagement at the Am-
bassador on Monday. Alien Corn has
closed and is getting ready for the
road, and Another Language has just
returned from the Styx. Design For
Living and Twentieth Century will
see the evening star for the last time
this coming Saturday. Also. Uncle
Tom’s Cabin will open May 29, with
John Daly Murphy, Mary Nash, and.
George Gaul in the cast. Now don’t
ever let us hear anyone accuse us
of talking too much and saying too
little in this column! Ag a matter
of fact, we will admit that we have
rambled on vaguely on occasions, but
it was always in a lofty cause. An
upstanding paper can never come
out, or, as the faculty would say,
“hardly ever” come out with an emp-
ty column, and therefore, whether we
like it or not, we have to keep going
—just as we are doing now.
It pays to advertise; it pays to
wat
i]
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
se
Fencing ‘Team Loses
to N. Y. Fencers’ Club
Mr._Fiems. Praises Vigor, Com-
bativity, Form and Readi-
ness to Touch
“FAST PLAY APPLAUDED
On Friday, May 12, 1938, the Bryn
Mawr College fencing team met a
team from the New ,York Fencers’
Club, and lost to them by a score of
six bouts to ten, and 7f touches to
65. The teams were:
Gateson, Douglas, Coxe and Hayes;
from New York, Morris, Seligman,
Wasey, and Fergusson. The victor-
ies for Bryn Mawr were run up by
Douglas and Gateson winning two
apiece, and Coxe and Hayes: one.
It--was natural that the New York-
ers .should lead in the first part of
the meet, but toward the end Bryn
Mawr seemed to have found her way
and started to win the bouts which
marked the final score.
Mr. Fiems, the fencing master,
when asked what he thought of the
meet, said that he was pleased withs
the way the Bryn Mawr fencers. had
been working, especially as to form,
combativity, vigor, and readiness to
touch and defeat their epponents as
much ag they could. He thought the
main reason for their not going into
action right from the start of the
meet was due to a lack of experience
in competition. bouts and negligence
in not warming up among themselves
beforehand. With some more prac-
tice in competition, the, team~-will do
better, and as all the.fencers are ex-
pected back in college next year, we
may hope to build up a strong com-
bination for the next fencing season.
The New York fencers were ex-
tremely fast, dexterous, and aggres-
sive. Morris and Fergusson starred,
each winning three out of four bouts,
while Seligman and Wasey won two
out of four.
The bouts were directed in master-
ly fashion by Mr. Agnew, of the
Sword Club, assisted by Mrs. H. Van
Buskirk, of the New York Fencers’
Club, and Mr.” Chas.’ Kolb, of the
Penn A. C., acting as judges. The
spectators, though few, were keenly
interested and applauded the fast
play.
We congratulate the Bryn Mawr
fencers on their showing, and wish
them the best of luck for the next
season.
RESULTS:
Gateson defeated Seligman, 5-3; Wa-
sey, 5-4; lost to Fergusson, 3-5;
to Morris, 2-5.
Douglas defeated Wasey, 5-4; Mor-
ris, 5-3; lost to Seligman, 4-5;
to Fergusson, 3-5.
Coxe defeated Seligman, 5-4; lost to
Morris, 2-5; to Wasey, 3-5; to
Fergusson, 1-5.
Hayes defeated Fergusson, 5-3; lost
to Morris, 1-5; to Wasey, 3-5; to
Seligman, 3-5.
Gleanings
Students who have.entered college
since the depression have hung up an
all-time record for scholarship, ac-
cording to the dean of Dartmouth.
“In former years,” he ald, “about
70 Freshmen flunked out at the end
of the first year, while this year jonly
5 failed:’—(N. S. F. A.)
“The basic thought of a nation is
embodied in its universites,” said Dr.
Walter Kotschnig, in a recent ad-
dress at Vassar College on “The
University in Social and Internation-
al Relations.” “If we understand the
outlook of the universities in a coun-
try we will comprehend the- point of
view of the country itself.”
—(N. S, F. A.)
The University of Chicago has an-
nounced ‘another revolutionary idea.
“Lhe purpose of. the plan is to remove
the overlapping of courses in the last
two years of high school and the first
two of college. In order to carry out
thisplan, the dean of the college will
oversee the work done in the junior
and senior years in high school and
the freshman and sophomore years
of college. Thus the college would
become a two-year-unit, from which
the scholarly-minded students would
go onto university work. -
from college, |-
Faculty Show Evokes
Continuea trom Page One)
those ashen cheeks again.
Dr. Gray’s monologife
and construction.
talons of the cave-woman, the clas-
sical restraint of the manicures of
ancient Greece and the discreetly
pearly finger-tips of the Victorian
dame. Evidently our crimson lacquer
has its source with a fat alumna of
Bryn Mawr, who hoped to counter-
balance her grossness by her start-
ling nail-dress. Surely a lesson to
any blatant offender! And one which
will be recalled whenever she sees the
gently reproachful figure of Dr. Gray
running about the campus. :
ly funny episode, particularly when
we hear of the stress undergone by
our professors in learning those ob-
scure one-two-three hops. It is very
difficult: to say which among them
succeeded best in capturing the spirit
of grace.
M, Canu’s distressing difficulties with
this appropriated figure.
’ The intermission saw us. well-nigh
exhausted with mirth and only able
to be restored by Dr. Fenwick, who,
we felt, showed admirable restraint
in not using) his masterful powers as
an auctioneer just a bit in favor of
his own portrait.
The aptly-named “Potter’s Wheel”
was perhaps the most finished skit of
the evening, though it must be re-
membered that we have Mr. Leacock
to thank as well as the actors. Dr.
Watson and Mrs. Nahm shared the
honors as the persecuted couple. Their
posturings were strikingly effective
and nothing if not explicit. In a less
obtrusive part, Mrs. Potter was
charmingly piquant, while Dr. Dry-
den was quite haunting as the bilious
“other man.”
A Chemistry Major assures me that
we little realize the perils undergone
by the interpid Dr. Richtmeyer in his
demonstration, where simplicity of
appearance was only gained by ex-
traordinary deftness.
The Manning-Crenshaw duet rival-
led Miss Park’s solo in popularity,
and the bashful couple could not have
been more perfect. I could only re-
gret that Mrs. Manning did not favor
us with more selections. I would
have welcomed especially, “I’m Only
A: Bird in a Gilded Cage,” ‘Hello,
Central, Give Me Heaven,” or “Now
I Have To Call Him Father.”
Everyone will agree that Mr. Al-
wyne and Mr. Willoughby were the
dramatic finds of the evening, for
their marionette show was the most
completely delightful event of the
show. Their manipulation of pup-
range of expression, facial and vocal,
added incalculably to the effect.
Now lack of space forbids my dwell-
ing on Dr. Turner’s sad lesson that
“a professor’s life is not a happy
one” or on the “Horse Act,” which
ored the north or south end. Dr
trian.
restraint was used.
the
mously treated by our wardens and
other prominent members of the ad-
ministration. Imitations of persons
vied with types for the applause of}
the audience, which recognized its
friends in effigy with shouts of joy.
Although no one was in doubt as’ to
the “Who’s Who” on the stage,’ one
performance stood out above the rest,
Mrs. Flexner’s imitation of S. Jones.
It: extended beyond mere mimicry of
physical characteristics to the inner
soul. Mrs. Collins displayed as re-
markable histrionic ability as her pro
totype, J. Marshall, and gave a fine
burlesque performance. Miss Ban-
croft’s imitation/of M. Dodge was
excellently done as to dress and ges-
Phone 570
/JEANNETT’S
BRYN MAWR FLOWER
Ss ‘SHOP, Inc.
/ Mrs. N. S. T. Grammer
f 823 Lancaster Avenue
Unrestrained Applause
the flush of health would never stain
upon that
fascinating topic, the female finger-
nail, was a masterpiece of researgh
With histrionic
fervor, he reviewed the blood-tipped
The Men’s May Day was a riotous-
ture, but less perfect in the realm of
voice and line. We perceived some-
thing rather vicious in the elan
the Warden (Miss Park) after a late
-arrival,.derogatory .to. our. manners
and morals, but too true to life. We
are sure that a great deal of sup-
pressed feeling -was behind the whole
performance, giving. it weight as
a work of art.
I was not permitted to review the
Warden’s skit, because of my im-
portant part therein, and I admit _ it
to be very difficult to view one’s self
impartially from afar. However, I
must be allowed to add my tribute to
Mrs. Flexner, Mrs. Collins, and last,
but scarcely least, to Miss Bancroft.
The final chorus renewed the Gil-
bert and Sullivan theme and brought
to a close the Faculty'Show though
the rapturous audience could scarce-
ly bear to leave the hall-and seek
their beds. I have a feeling that the
eclat of the performance will be his-
with which Miss Ward swung’ past |:
Certainly no one else had]
pets was extremely adroit, and their}
tory. At any rate, a prominent psy-
chology Ph.D. recommends its repe-
tition every four years.
‘Natiorial Contest
A National Playwriting -,Contest of
possible interest to undergraduates is
to be conducted by The Prairie Play-
makers of Omaha, Inc. The Prairie
Playmakers have for their purpose
the encouragement of talent in the
writing and producing of original
plays, and expect to produce four
original long plays and possibly a few
one-act plays during the
1983-34,
In an effort to interest amateur
playwrights, they are conducting a
nation-wide contest, beginning March
1, 1938, and closing August 1, 1933,
and will give an award of $100 for
the best play submitted. -The organi-
zation plans to produce the winning
play and possibly others that receive
honorable mention, if satisfactory ar-
rangements can be made, contestants
submitting with this understanding in
mind. Judges of recognized standing
in the dramatic world will pass on
manuscripts.
1. Plays must be original and must
not have been produced up to time
of announcement of award.
2. Each‘ play must be three acts,
or the equivalent, and- of two-hour
playing duration. .
8. Manuscripts must be typed,
double spaced and written on one side
of paper only.
4. Name of author must not ap-
pear on manuscript. Name and title
of play must be typed on separate
pieces of paper, place in sealed en-
velope and enclosed with manuscript.
5.
ope must be enclosed for return of
manuscript. While the organization
will make every effort to return man-
uscripts, it will not assume responsi- |
bility in this matter.
6; All plays must be in the mail
and so post-marked by midnight Au-
gust 1, 1933.
if
thereafter as possible.
season |
.BIOLOGY
Stamped, self-addressed envel-
The award will be announced
October 1, 1933, and production of
the prize-winning play given as soon
couldn’t have been more delicious. I
was unable to decide whether I fav-
Hedlund was a picturesque eques-
The Wardens’ skit was not bitter
enough to be a satire, for necessary
The follies of
smoking-room were magnani-
All manuscripts should be address-
ed to E. M. Hosman, Contest Chair-
-| man, The Prairie Playmakers, Mu-
nicipal University of Omaha, 3612
North 24th street, Omaha, Neb.
A series of “Dawn Dances’. was
held at the University of Alabama for
the benefit of those students who
study late. The danges ran six to eight
A. M.~(N. S. F. A.)
i si cts celiac allan ied elbaaditnasiacatiiecalimaiimbcantinss
LUNCHEON, TEA. DINNER
Open Sundays
Chatter-On Tea House
~ 918 Old Lancaster Road
Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185
a
Camp Kokatosi
Raymond, Maine
A modern camp built for
Older Girls and Women —
A healthful, inexpensive, different
vacation. Real rest and relaxation
or every opportunity to enjoy all
“outdoor sports. Excellent saddle
horses. Electricity, modern plumb-
" ing. : ‘
A camp in which the mature wo-
man or girl of twenty is equally
at home. ° :
' Write for our beoklet. It will
interest you
Miss Margaret Cole Day, Director
—(N. S. F. A.)
| :
=
2 BRYN MAWR, PA.
Miss Park Announces |
| ENGLISH — Constance Marianne
|
1930; M.A., University. of _Minne-|
|
|
|
Awards for 1933-34
\ a...
(Continued trom Page One)
sota, 1982; Graduate Student, Uni-
_ versity of Minnesota, 1932-33.
HISTORY OF ART—Marianna Dun-|
can Jenkins, A.B., Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 19381; M.A., Radcliffe College,
1932.
LATIN—Agnes Kirsopp Lake, A.B.,
Bryn Mawr College, 1930; M.A.,|
1981; Non-resident. Scholar in Bib-
lical Literature, Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1930-31; Fellow at the Amer-
ican Academy in Rome, 1931-33. |
MATHEMATICS Vera Adela
Ames, A.B., University of. Sas-
katchewan, 1931; M.A., 1932; Fel-
low in Mathematics, Bryn Mawel
College, 1932-33.
PHILOSOPHY—Tabitha McKeehan
Petran, A.B., Smith College, 1932;
Graduate Student, Smith College,
ee ees
PHYSICS. — Sara H. Kehler, B.Sc.
in Ed., 1931, University of Pennsyl-
vania; M.A., February, 1933;
Graduate Student, University of
Pennsylvania, 1932-33.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES — Cath-
arine Soule Hall, A.B., Boston Uni-
versity, 1925; M.A., Middlebury
College, 1931; Scholar in French,
Bryn -Mawr College, 1932-33.
lydia Whitford: Mason,
Brown University, 1981;
date for M.A., 1933.
SOCIAL ECONOMY—Carola Woer-
ishoffer Fellowships:
Mildred Mary ‘McWilliams, A.B.,
University .of Minnesota, . 1982;
Carola Woerishoffer Scholar, Bryn
Mawr College, 1932-3.
Mary Sandilands Leib, A.B., Le-
land Stanford Junior University,
1932; Graduate Student, 1932-33.
Graduate Scholars
SCHOLAR OF THE SOCIETY OF
PENNS Y¥e¥ ANIA WOMEN IN
NEW YORK — Mabel Frances
Meehan, A.B., to be conferred,
Bryn Mawr College, 1933.
ARCHAEOLOGY —Jeannette Eliza-
beth Le Saulnier, A.B., to be con-
ferred, Bryn Mawr College, 1933.
Dorothy Annette Schierer, A.B., to
be conferred, Mount Holyoke Col-
lege, 1933.
A.B.,
Candi-
Elizabeth Hazard*
Ufford, A.B., Bryn Mawr College,
1929. °
Laura North Hunter, A.B., Bryn
Mawr College, 1932; Graduate Stu-
dent, University of Pennsylvania,
1932-33. — |
CHEMISTRY — Margaret Dorothy
Schaffner, A.B., Barnard College,
February, 1932; Columbia “Univer-
sity, Feb.-Sept., 1982; New York
University, 1932-33.:
Margaret Agnes Belle Isle, A.B.,
Emory University, 1932; Scholar
in Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College,
1932-38.
ECONOMICS AND POLITICS —
Ruth Catharine Lawson, A.B., to
be conferred, Mount Holyoke Col-
lege, 1933.
EDUCATION — Olivia Futch, A.B.,
Florida State College for Women,
1927; M.A., August, 1927; Fellow
The Country Bookshop
30 Bryn Mawr Avenue
Lendin g Library—
First Editions
Bryn Mawr,
Pa.
GREEN HILL FARMS
City Line and Lancaster Ave.
Overbrook-Philadelphia
Luncheon
Dinner
Shore Dinner every Friday
$1.50
No increase in price on Sundays
or holidays
-
in Education, Bryn Mawr College, -
1929-31, and Graduate Student,
1932-33.
Brock, A.B., McGill University,
1928; -B:A:, Oxford” University, |
19380; M. A. (honorary) due from
Oxford at the end of the winter
term, 1933-34.
Grace Patricia Comans, A.B., to
be conferred, Mount Holyoke Col-
lege, 1933.
FRENCH—Ruth Whittredge, A.B.,
Wellesley College, 1929; M.A., Rad-
cliffe College, 1930.
Virginia Houghton,
ton College, 1929;
Lyon, 1980-31.
GEOLOGY—Helen Hoppe Balk, A.B.,
Hunter’ College, 1932; Scholar in
Geology, Bryn Mawr College, 1932-
33.
Elizabeth Jeanne Armstrong, A.B.;
to be conferred, Barnard College,
1933.
A.B., > Carle-
University of
GERMAN—Esther_ Metzenthin, A.B.,--
Duke _ University, 1929; M.A.,
Bryn Mawr College, 1930; Gradu-
ate Scholar in German, Bryn
Mawr, 1929-30 and 1931-32; Ger-
man Exchange Fellow, University
of Bonn,-Germany,—1930-31;—Anna
Ottendorfer Europea Fellow,
1932-33.
GREEK — Emily Randolph Grace, |
A.B., to be conferred, Bryn Mawr
College, 1933.
HISTORY—Phyllis Lorimer, A.B.,
Mount Holyoke College, 1932;
Candidate for M.A., Radcliffe Col-
lege, 1983.
HISTORY OF ART—Ruth Miriam
Jacobson, A.B., to be conferred,
Barnard College, 1933.
MATHEMATICS—Madeline Levin,
A.B., Hunter College, 1932; Schol-
ar in Mathematics, Bryn Mawr
College, 1932-33; . Candidate for
M.A., 1933.
Edith Haggstrom, A.B., to be con-
(Continued on Page Tour)
TRAPHAGEN SCHOOL OF FASHION
1680 Broadway (near 52d. St.), N. Y.
Intensive Six Weeks’ Summer Course
All phases of Fashion Illus-
tration and Design. Classes
in History of Costume, Stage
and Textile Design, Draping
and Construction. Incorpo-
rated under Regents. School
maintains free Placement.
Bureau. Send for Catalog M,
or Phone COL. 5-0277.
Investigate Before Registering Elsewhere
Step ashore at
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‘115°’
(up) Tourist
_ Class
$193 (Gp) Round Trip
and enjoy every minute
en route!
OW is the time—when
Pina costsare down, when
the value of your dollar in Europe
is up—now is the time for that
trip to Europe! In Tourist Class
on United States Liners, you'll
find your own congenial college
crowd aboard... enjoying gay
good times in the American
manner.
College people are choosing
these ships: Leviathan; Man-
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fastest Cabin liners; President
Harding; President Roosevelt. Four
“‘one-class’” American Merchant
liners directto London. Fare $90.
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1620 Walnut St., Phila., Pa.
Agents Everywhere
SS SS SS
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COLLEGE INN AND TEA ROOM
SERVICE 8 A. M. TO 7.30 P. M.
Daily and Sunday
Luncheon, Afternoon Tea and Dinner
A la Carte and Table d’Hote . :
PERMANENT AND TRANSIENT
STUDENTS’ CHARGE ACCOUNTS
BREAKFAST
2
THE COLLEGE NEWS |
Page L'our : sy | :
tricts and in order of rank in class School, Trustees’
under. each: district.) oo
Miss oak Announces 1982-
Awards for 1933- 34
Scholar, al Sihaine 1931-33; Amelia Rich-
ards Memorial Scholar: 1932- 83°
School, Boston. Alumnae Region-
al Scholar, 1931-32; Leila Hough-
BALTIMORE— _| FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIP —| JAMES E. RHOADS MEMORIAL teling Memorial Scholar and Shee-
" (Continued from Page Three) Anne Elizabeth Reese, of Balti-' Caroline Cadbury Brown, of,.West-| SCHOLARSHIP (awarded for a} lah Kilroy Memorial Scholar in
st ferred, Barnard College; 4933: __more, Md. . (1936), Alumnae) . town, Pa, Prepared by the West-| high degree of excellence in work).| English, 1932-33.
Regional Scholar, 1932-33.
DISTRICT IV—
Catherine Addams Bill, of Pen:
land, Ohio . (1935). Alumnae
town School. Matriculation Schol-! -Diana Tate-Smith, of New York.
ar for Pennsylvania and the South-| Prepared by the Brearley School,
ern States and Foundation Schol-! New York. Alumnae Regional
ar, 1932-33. . Scholar, 1931-32; James E. Rhoads
Ethel Joyce Itott, A.B., to be con-
ferred, Bryn Mawr College, 1933.
PHILOSOPHY—Mary Alice Geddes,
Scholarships to be Held in the
Senior Year
(Arranged in order of student’s
rank in class.)
ig tition oa neneuiags Regional Scholar, 1931-33, MARIA HOPPER SCHOLARSHIP) Scholar, 1932-33. MARIA L. EASTMAN BROOKE
; ne | DISTRICT V— —Mary Emmet Askins, of Easton,, TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP AND| HALL MEMORIAL, SCHOLAR-
Mawel arr ie go ogg Esther Bassoe, of Evanston, Ill.| Md. Prepared by Oldfields, Glen-| SPECIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIA-| SHIP, awarded e a +, tae on the
1982: eanats : Student, Cornell (1936). Alumnae Regional Schol-| coe, Md., and the Misses Kirk’s}’: TION SCHOLARSHIP—Alma Ida| ground of ccholagi the mem-
Waivawelte. 1932-33. ar, 1932-33. School, Bryn Mawr. Alumnae Augusta Waldenmeye#, of Philadel-| ber- of the j class |with the
PSYCHOLOGY—Charlotte Virginia EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA— - Regional Scholar, 1932-33, phia.. Prepared by. thé Philadelphia |. highest’ record.
d Marianne Augusta Gateson, of SECOND MARIA HOPPER} High School for G rustees’ Elizabeth Murray Mackenzie, of
Balough, A.B., to be conferred, Philadelphia (1934). Alumnae) SCHOLARSHIP—Alice Hagedorn| Scholar, 1931-33. Pittsburgh, Pa. Prepared by the
Bryn Mawr College, 1933.
Elizabeth Vanderbilt Fehrer, A. B.,
Bryn Mawr College, 1930; M.A.,
_ Columbia University, 1931; Fellow
in Psychology, Bryn Mawr College,
1931-33.
n Block, A.B., Barnard Col-
ege, 1932; M.A.\to be conferred,
Columbia University, 1933.
’ SOCIAL ECONOMY—
Carola Woerishoffer Scholarships:
Ruth Fay Schumacher, A.B., to be
conferred, Ohio State University,
1933,
Janet Montgomery Hooks, A.B., to
be conferred, Mount Holyoke Col-
Allegheny High School, Pittsburgh.
Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1930-
33; James E. Rhoads Scholar,
1931-33; Sheelah Kilroy Memorial
Scholar in English, 1932-33.
THOMAS H. POWERS ' MEMO-
RIAL SCHOLARSHIP AND
TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP —
Alva Detwiler, of Philadelphia. _—
Prepared by the Philadelphia: High
School forSGirls. Trustees’ Schol-
ar, 1930-38.
TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP —
Ruth Bertolet, of Philadelphia. —
Prepared by. the Philadelphia- High
School for Girls. Trustees’ Schol-
: Cohen, of Pittsburgh, Pa.-._Pre-
Catherine Cornthwaite. Bredt, of; pared. by the Winchester School,
West Orange, -N.. J. (1984).| Pittsburgh.
Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1930-| CONSTANCE LEWIS MEMORIAL
33. | SCHOLARSHIP — Sophie Lee
Mary Pauline Jones, of Scranton,| ‘Hunt, of Kendal Green, Mass. Pre- Lee’s School, Boston. Evelyn
‘ Pa, (1935). Alumnae Regional... pared by Concord Academy, Con-| Hunt Scholar, 1932-33.
Scholar, 1931-33. cord, Mass. Alumnae Regional CARY PAGE MEMORIAL SCHOL-
Ruth Hilda Osborn, of Elkins Scholay, 1932-33. ARSHIP — Elizabeth Kent, of
Park, Pa. (1936). Alumnae|SPECIAL SCHOLARSHIP — Ruth| Brookline, Mass. Prepared by the
~ Regional Scholar, 1932-33. Konover Stokes, of Allenhurst,) _ Winsor School, Boston. Maria
NEW’ ENGLAND— N. J. Prepared by the Asbury; Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1932-
Anita Aurora de Varon, of Bos- Park High School and the Misses! 33.
ton, Mass. (1934). Alumnae Kirk’s= School, Bryn Mawr. TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP—wMil-
Regional Scholar, 1930-33. ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMO-; dred Marlin Smith, of Altoona, Pa.
ANNA HALLOWELL; MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP — Gertrude Van
Vranken Franchot, of Boston,
Mass. Prepared by the «Park
School of Buffalo, N. Y,, and Miss
‘Regional Scholar, 1930-33.
the . Germantown
lege, 1933.
Robert Valentine Scholarship:
Helen Elizabeth Malcolm, A.B., to
be conferred, Oberlin College, 1933.
Lillian Alfrebelle Russell, of Rox-
bury, Mass. (1934). Alumnae
Regional “Scholar, 1930-33.
- Elizabeth’ Margery Edwards, of |
West Roxbury, Mass. (1935).
RIAL AWARD—Margarct Cecilia ;
Honour, of East Orange, N. J. Pre-
pared by the East Orange High |
School. Alumnae Regional Schol-|
ar, 1932-33.
|
|
}
|
Prepared by
High Epoch Philadelphia, Trus-| 27, 1980-33.
tees’ Scholar, 1931-33, and Maria GEORGE BATES HOPKINS ME-
Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1932- MORIAL SCHOLARSHIP IN MU-
33. SlC—Gertrude Annetta Parnell,
EARLHAM COLLEGE SCHOLAR- ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMO-) | JAPANESE SCHOLARSHIP — of Germantown, Philadelphia. Pre-
SHIP—Elizabeth Stewart,
Earlham College, 1932;
lege, 1932-33.
fa
Earlham
College Scholar, Bryn Mawr Col-
Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1931-
33.
Sophie Lee Hunt, of Kendal
Green, Mass. (1936). Alumnae
Regional Scholar, 1932-33.
RIAL SCHOLARSHIP AND|
ALICE FERREE HAYT MEMO-,
RIAL AWARD — Alice Russell |
Raynor, of Yonkers, N. Y. Pre-
Shizu Nakamura, of Tokyo, Japan.
Prepared by Tsuda College and the
Misses Kirk’s Schodl, Bryn Mawr.
The Misses’ Kirk’s Scholar, 1931-
pared by the Germantown High
School. . Frances Marion Simpson
Scholar, 1930-33; Pennsylvania
State Scholar, 1930-33; Anna Hal-
lowell Memorial Scholar, 1932-33.
Fellowship and Scholarship Awards
Maurine Boie, B.S., University of
Minnesota, 1927, and M.A., 1932;
Carola Woerishoffer Fellow at
Bryn Mawr College, 1932-33; has
been awarded a Non-Resident Fel-
lowship by the Family Welfare So-
ciety ‘of Philadelphia for study at
Bryn Mawr next year.
32, .and ‘the Japanese Scholar,
1931-33.
LEILA HOUGHTELING MEMO-
RIAL SCHOLARSHIP — Evelyn
Hastings Thompson, of Brookline,
Mass; Prepared by tte Winsor
pared by Miss Beard’s School,
Orange, N, J._Alumnae. Regional |
Scholar, 1932-33.
Scholarships to be Held in the
Junior Year
CHINESE SCHOLARSHIP—Vung-
Yuin Ting, of Shanghai, China.
-Prepared by the McTyeire ‘School,
Margaret Carolyn Wylie, of Dor-
chester, Mass. (1936). Alumnae
Regional Scholar, 1932-33.
NEW JERSEY—
Anne Goodrich Hawks, of Summit,
N. J. (1985). Alumnae Reg-
ional Scholar, 1931-33.
Margaret Cecilia Honour, of East
AMELIA RICHARDS. SCHOLAR-
SHIP (awarded by the President).
Suzanne Halstead, of New York.
Prepared by the Hillside School,
“(Continued on Page Six)
Ellen Stanbery Nichols, A.B., Ob- Orange, N, J. (1988). Alumnae| Chinas stid:-the Shipley. School,
erlin College, 1932, and Scholar in Regional Scholar, 1932-33. 2 = eet ee
History of Art at Bryn Mawr Col-| Alice Russell Rayyor, of Yonkers,
EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP
lege, 1932-33, has been awarded a N. Y. (1936). Alumnae Reg- i
Carnegie Art Scholarship through ional Scholar, 1932-33. (founded in 1982 by the beqycat of
: : the late Eva Ramsay Hunt in}
the Institute of International Edu-] NEW YORK— memory of Mivelst: Hunt’ of the|
cation for study at the Institute], Janet Elizabeth Hannan, of Al- Class of 1898 ete asktendhine
of Art and Archaeology, Univer- bany, N. Y. (1984). Alumnae| — : P
awarded” by the Faculty to two stu-
dents on the basis of the excellence
of their academic work).
Mary Pauline Jones, of Scranton,
Pa. Prepared by the Central High
School, Scranton. Alumnae “feg-
ional Scholar’ and Pennsylvania
State Scholar, 1931-33, and Scran-
ton College’ Club Scholar, 1931-32.
Maria Hopper Sophomore Scholar, |
1932-33.
MARY E. STEVENS SCHOLAR-
SHIP’ (awarded by the President).
Catherine Adams Bill, of Cleve-
land, Ohio. Prepared by the Laur- S a Ft [ [ »” |
el School, South Euciid, Ohio. Ma- | f i,
triculation Scholar. for the West- | ay é O O é
ern States, 1931; Alumnae Region- s
home SF, olks at
Harter Past Erennz?
Regional Scholar, 1930-33.
Betti Carolyn Goldwasser, of N. Y.
(19384). Alumnae Regional
Scholar, 1930-33.
Elizabeth Margaret Morrow, of
Caldwell, N. J. (19385). Alum-
nae Regional Scholar, 1931-33.
Betty Bock, of Buffalo, N. Y.
(19386). Alumnae Regional
Scholar, 1932-33.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA—
Dorothy Haviland Nelson, of San
Francisco (1934). Alumnae Reg-
ional Scholar, 1930-33.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—
Frances Cuthbert Van Keuren, of
Chevy Chase, Md. (1935). Alum-
nae Regional Scholar, 1931-33.
WESTERN PENNSYVANIA= == =|
Elizabeth Murray Mackenzie, ot} ‘The Modern Idea in travel
Pittsburgh (1934). Alumnae
Regional Scholar, 1930-33. TOURIST is HIGHEST |
CLASS
Scholarships to be Held in the
on these great liners
sity of Paris, this summer.
Grace Sybil Vogel, A.B., with Hon-
ors, University of Manitoba, 1932,
and Scholar in, Latin, Bryn Mawr
College, 1982-33, has been award-
ed a Fellowship in Latin at the
University of Chicago for next
year.
Helen Georgia Stafford, Mary
Elizabeth Garret European Fel-
low, 1932-33, has been awarded the
Joshua Lippincott Fellowship by
Swarthmore College to continue her
work in England.
Honor Cecelia McCusker, Gradu-
ate Scholar in English, Bryn Mawr
College, 1930-31, and Fellow in
English, 1931-32, has been award-
ed a Fellowship by Brown Univer-
sity to continue her research in
England.
Flora Elizabeth Hurst, Grace H.
Dodge Scholar in Social Economy,
Bryn Mawr College, 1929-31, and
Research Assistant in Social Econ-
omy, 1931-82, will remain in Mos-
cow another year, where she is
studying Economic Planning at the
Planning Institute.
Dorothy Burr, Ph.D., Bryn Mawr
College, 1931, will continue a sec-
ond year as an Agora Fellow ex-
cavating in the Agora at Athens.
Sophomore Year
FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIP—
Elizabeth Hope Wickersham, of |
Ventnor, N. J. Prepared by the
Westtown School, Westtown, Pa.
JAMES E.. RHOADS MEMORIAL
SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIP
(awarded for a high degree of ex-
cellence in work)—Elizabeth Por-
ter Wycoff, of New York. Prepar-
Mary Zelia Pease, who was award-| ed by the Brearley School, New
ed a Special European Fellowship| York. Anne Dunn Scholar, 1932-
in 1932, and who will receive her} 33.
Ph.D. in Archaeology from Bryn] MARY ANNA LONGSTRETH ME-
Mawr in June, will continue a Re- MORIAL SCHOLARSHIP —
search Fellow of the American| Frances Calloway Porcher, of Co-
School in Athens cataloguing the} coa, Fla. Prepared by the Cocoa
new museum in Corinth. High School and the Misses Kirk’s
}
|
|
| O TO the telephone at 8:30 P. M. STANDARD
| TIME (9:30 P. M. Daylight Saving Time) and
give your home telephone number to the operator.
In less than a minute it will be “Hello, folks!” and
you'll be enjoying the thrill of the week.
What fun you'll have to share the family news. What
a joy for Mother and Dad to hear your voice! Keep
a regular date with Home to call each week. It’s one
Campus Pleasure that really satisfies!
TO EUROPE —
It is the modern way to go—college people
And don’t forget the time—8:30 P. M. (Standard
UNIVE
thre Tao Wala St, Philadelghin, Pa.
Aline Louise Abaecherli, Ph.D., School, Bryn Mawr. Alumnae are discovering the advantages of the ex- . * °
Bryn Mawr, 1932, has been award-! Regional Scholar, 1932-33. clusive yet democratic travel on these ships Time). Low Night Rates then go into effect on sane
ed a two-year Fellowship at the} TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP-—-Lil- eee is eH na Saat Minne. tion to Station calls. It’s a worthwhile saving, as these
‘ . S . : : waska, Minnet i Western- ‘
American Academy at Rome. lie ane Rice, of Philadelphia. land. The fi pi a wiia “cishaaseslp Piest typical rates show. The charges, of course, can be
Prepared by Frankford High ge
: : ; sie Class ...the latter two smart Cabin liners. d :
The scholarships given by the alum- - 2 Newall isle oavile reser : . reversed.
: iia “ w all their privileges, all the enjoymen
nae of various districts were read LIVE In FRENCH of luxurious public rooms and roomy
first; those awarded by the scholar-: mee : 2
Sie cabins are yours at the low Tourist rate.
ship committee of the college fol- Residential Summer School ,
lowed : (co-educational) in the heart MINNEWASKA - MINNETONKA Bare Seve Se
of French Canada. Old Coun- PENNLAND - WESTERNLAND Sree CRNe “wes
Alumnae Regional Scholarships try French staff. Only French From $106-3° from $189-°° round Wherever applicable,
(Arranged alphabetically by dis- spoken. Elementary, Interme- oe tied Federal tax is included.
diate, Advanced. Certificate Regular weekly sailings to South- from BRYN MAWR to — Day Rate Night Rate
or College Credit. French en- ampton, Havreand Antwerp. Make READING, PA $.35 35
; tertainments, sight - seeing, careful note of these ships — then SERVICE MONTCLAIR N mee & : 65 $.
4 sports, etc. apply to your local agent, the travel SCARSD Ny ee She. 4 35
Tee $150, Board and_ Tuition. authority in your community. ee ALE, N. Y..... .75 40
: * eietnar do Yaasrotan Rest EVANSTOWN, IL. 2.273133
4 dential French Summer School RED STAR LINE ; eB 1.55
M-wW—4 <
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
‘one admires, but by working toward
°
Book Reviews
| such a goal, one comes to be more
| . . . :
‘like. himself, an improved and
| strengthened “self.” All students ex-
“Not-To- But AWE NOt For Le, | perience some metamorphosis, but or-
by George Weller. Harrison Smith) 5: iarily laa sie hae Gabinde oan dhitinc
and Robert Haas, publishers. selves than they were upon enter-
Not To Eat And Not For Love” in| tne Some find themselves through
the cynical title of the new book | religion, very much in the manner of
about undergraduate life at Harvard,| John Donne, Harvard’s favorite poet,
written by a young Harvard man who|who advocated “looking into one’s
graduated a few years ago. Critics | self and praying.”
considére,it the most faithful and| While Not To Eat And Not For
straight-forward portrayal of modern; Love is: extremely interesting as a
college life. that has-been put.on the | revelation of modern college methods
market recently. It lacks the senti-j|in “general, it is still more valuable
mental, emotional quality of Kath-|in that it is permeated with that at-
erine Millet’s “Against The Wall,”| mosphere which is to be found at
and is an unequivocal expose of pres-!Harvard alone.—C. B. R.
ent-day university systems of educa-
tion, social usages, and living ar-
rangements.
In the early part of the book there
is a lecture to a number of entering | bany to Buffalo, travelled the words:
freshmen, in which Harvard’s cus-| “It’s the .water coming through..
toms are presented to these uniniti-| Thus opened the Erie Canal, the
- ated newcomers. Many of the feat-| thoroughfare- that opened up the
ures mentioned are applicable to any | great West, that caused more. towns
college or university in this country | to be built than the Gold Rush, that
with some exceptions to be granted | moved the center ofr wealth, and of
on-the-grounds of different total en-| commerce from Philadelphia to New
rollment or geographical location. | York. With these dramatic results
The students are told that at Har-| of the Canal we are quite familiar;
vard they are more alone than in a| but we have heard very little of, the
desert, in the sense that they ‘are
.
Erie Water
By Walter D, Edmonds
Clear across the State, from - Al-
ten years of toil that went inté its
building.
In Erie Water, by Walter D. Ed-
monds, is the story) ofthe making
of the “canawl.” Young Jerry Fow-
ler, starting for the west to buy him-
self land—and by the west he meant
Holland Purchase—is arrested by the
red hair of a Redemptionist girl on
the Albany wharf, buys her papers,
and takes her along. They are mar-
ried on the road and settle down in}
Utica, where Fowler gets'a contract |
to work on the canal locks. Then |
follows. the tale of. digging the
“ditch”? through woods, through
rocks, over hills, and in swamps; of
the fever of adventure which made
men leave their wives to follow the;
digging, then shot their nerves with |
strain and the loneliness of the coun-
try; of new inventions for driving
piles; of land bought for three dol-
lars and sold for a hundred when
the canal was. put through it; of Ne-
groes racing with Irish bog-trotters
to get through the swamp first; of
the brain-power of those engineers
who constructed locks and gates and
levels; and of thé farmers’ who
thought the very world was _ being
swept ‘from under their feet by this
new-fangled invention. :
Through ll this the
runs
the locks, leaving his wife, Mary, to
follow the work, tempted by the flir-|:
tat.ous...Norah,..and_..finallycoming
acme ag the first boats come through
-he Canal—his Canal. ”
Not only is Erie Water beautiful-
ly- written in clear and compact
prose, but every man and woman is
vigorously alive, and every line is
crammed with. the color and the
flavor and the texture of America in
1820. Mr. Edmonds, born in Boon-
ville, has livcd in the cana] country,
whcre he gathered his material from
the tales of farmers, of boatmen, and
of tramps. In this latest book, one
feels that he is himself one of these
peoplc; he is a master of his mate-
rial as well as of his expression.
Erie Water is epic in character, the
epic of the men who built the Erie
Canal.—C. F. G,
Uncmployed college graduates in
New York have formed an organiza-
tion to present their problems to
government officials in an. effort to
create jobs for their members. Spon-
sors of the plan, according to the
statement of the executive committee,
include’ John Dewey, Norman Tho-
mas, and. Reinhold. Niebuhr.
: —(N. 5S. F. A.)
tory of Fowler, engineer of | Varsity Loses Match
With Swarthmore, 3-2
(Continued from Page One)
Geddes’ falling behind to take the.of-
fensive and win two straight sets,
6-1, 7-5. :
Bryn Mawr lost both matches in
the doubles to Swarthmore. Little
and Fabyan were evenly matched
against Stubbs and Cresson, but lost
to them in the last set, 6-4, 4-6, 5-7.
Little and Fabyan were not workj
at all well together at first, but ca’
up sufficiently to win the second set,
on Little’snet.shots.
In the second doubles, Swarthmore, —
represented by Harvey and Sonne-
born, swamped Collins and Wood by
the score, 6-2, 6-1. Neither of the
Bryn Mawr players was up to the
mark and both were playing too in-
dividyally to accomplish much against
their ‘slower but more co-operative’
opponents.
In spite of the close defeats admin-
istered by Beaver on May 9, also
8-2, and by Swarthmore on Monday,
we realize that Orals, Patience, re-
hearsals and generally bad weather
have had an unfortunate effect, and
are hoping, thatthe future may. be
more cheerful.
- Don’t forget the Vassar match on
Saturday, May-20th! ;
leading their own lives. They may
cut all the classes they wish, sleep
during the days, and: go out at night,
without any interference from those
in power, provided, of course, that
they are not caught in any scandal-
ous situations.
ect
They will undoubtedly engage in
athletics and attend classes with in-
numerable men to whom they. will
never be introduced, or with whom
they will never enter into a speaking
acquaintance. This condition is de-
scribed as “Harvard indifference” by
the outside world, but the term is!
never used there. The Harvard code
is to obtain three C’s and one D, and
to keep out of the newspapers, Har-
vard is unquestionably a bad place
in which to sin publicly, for it has
often been described as the “con- °
science of New England.” Although |
Harvard assumes an aloof attitude |
there is a fundamental vital tradition |
which sustains itself without difficul-
- ty. No one is forced to study or
spend many hours in the library, but
the result of diligence in study, or a
lack of it is written upon the face
of the senior on Commencement Day.
There is. hardly anyone who _ is
worthy of the title of “all-around”
man for four years, and although
there is a distinct Harvard type, no we
student ever completely resembles it.
Each man works out, as it were, his
..all you
could
individual refinements upon this type,
—geographical distinction figuring to
a slight extent. One usually does
not come to resemble a man whom
neue
Just two
words...
Yes, I have heard about two
words; and now and then
three words—but ‘“They Sat-
a
isfy” means ‘‘To gratify fully.”’
Why do these two words
“they satisfy” fit Chester-
fields? Because Chesterfield
Cigarettes are milder. Be-
cause Chesterfield Cigarettes
taste better.
Chesterfield’s way of blend-
ing and cross-blending fine
Turkish and Domestic tobac-
cos brings out better flavor
and aroma.
They Satisfy !
It’s STCA
Time
WAKE UP and sail...or at
least get ready to... plan
now to hop aboard any
“dam” ship ... that’s where
you'll find STCA . .. which
meats all your friends and
all the fun... don’t wait to
ét to Europe before your
un begins...sail STCA in
tourist class ... round tri
$170 up ...all former secon
class accommodations .. .
WAKE UP... count your. }
: pennies and if you can't af-
ord STCA, sail third class
for $131.50 up round trip
... Why stay at home?
Ask about our STCA Hand-Me-Down . . .
Drive Yourself service . . . Paris shopping
service...and other special features,
®
my
hestertield .
the cigarelle thals MILDER
—— the cigarelle that ‘TASTES BETTER
See .. Your Travel Agent
Or
Student Tourist
Class Association
| HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE |
29 Broadway, New York City
# :
© 1933, Liccerr & Myers Tosacco Co,
Page Six
Q
6
THE COLI-EGE NEWS
\
Miss Park Announces
Awards for 1933-34}.
EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP
ANNA H. POWERS MEMORIAL
SECOND AMELIA’ RICHARDS
FRANCES
(Continued from Fage Four)
Norwalk, Ccnn. Special Alumnac
Regional Scholar, 1930-31; Alum-
nae Regional Schclar and Sheelah
Kilroy Memorial Scholar in Eng-
lish and Maria Hopper Sophomore
Scholar, 1931-32; Amelia Rich-
ards Memorial Scholar, 1932-33.
(awarded for excellonce in schol-
arship).
Marion Gardiner Mitchell, of Rock
Island, Ill. bicparedwby Rosemary
Hall,, Greenwich, Conn.
SCHOLARSHIP—Elizabeth Louise
Meneely, of Troy, N. Y. Prepared
by the Ethel Walker School, Sims-
bury, Conn. George Bates Hop-
kins Memorial Scholar in Music,
1931-33.
SCHOLARSHIP (awarded by the
President).
Harriet Jean Mitchell, of Duluth,
Minn. Prepared by the Duluth
Central High School and the Misses
Kirk’s School, Bryn: Mawr. Mary
E. Stevens Scholar, 1932-33.
MARION. SIMPSON
SCHOLARSHIP —Mary Elizabeth
Laudenberger, of Phillipsburg,
N. J. (1934). Prepared by the
Phillipsburg High School. Maria
300K
Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1931-f nationale, Switzerland.
32, and the Book Shop Scholar, ;
1932-33.
ANNA ~ POWERS MEMORIAL!
SCHOLARSHIP — _ Catherine
Corn.hwaite’ Bredt, of . West
Orange, N. J. Prepared by the
Shipley School, Bryn Mawr. Ma-
tiiculation Scholar for Pennsylva-
nia and the Southern States, 1930;
Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1930-
33; Georg: Batcs Hopkins Memo-
rial Schiller in Music, 1931-32;
Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Scholar
in English, 1932-33.
SHOP SCHOLARSHIP—
Mary Ruth Snyder, of. Brookville,
Pa. Prepared by the Baldwin
School, Bryn Mawr.
SPECIAL SCHOLARSHIP — Eva
Leah Levin, of Baltimore, Md. Pre-
pared by the Forest Park High
‘School, Baltimore. Alumnae Reg-
ional Scholar, 1929-30, 1931-32.
ABBY SLADE BRAYTON DUR-
FEE SCHOLARSHIP — Frances
Pleasonton, of Brookline, Mass.
Prepared by the Lee School, Bos-
to Special Alumnae Reg-
ional Scholar, 1930-31; Alumnae
Regional Scholar and Book Shop
Scholar, 1981-32. -
SUSAN SHOBER CAREY MEMO-
RIAL AWARD—Esther. Elizabeth
Smith, of St. Paul, Minn. Pre-
pared by the MWwaukee-Downer
Seminary, Wis., and L’Ecole Inter-
Holder of
the Susan Shober Carey Memorial
Award, 1932-33.
Distinction in a Special Subject .
KLIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOL-
ARSHIPS
IN FOREIGN LAN-
GUAGES, awarded for excellence
cf work in foreign languages. ~
Alva Detwiler, of Philadelphia, —
and .
Halla Brown, of Boston, Mass.
Prepar-d by the Winsor- School,
Boston. Matriculation Scholar for
the New England States, 1930. Jun-
ior year in France. Miss Brown
headed a class of 65 in her work
abroad last. summer. , Margaret L.
Haskell took -third place.
ry
ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOL-
ARSHIPS IN SCIENCE, award-
ed for excellence of work in science.
Eva Leah Levin, of Baltimore, Md.,
and i
Sarah Fraser, of Morristown, N. J.
Prepared by the Brearley School,
New York.
SHEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIPS IN ENGLISH—
1. Awarded each year on the rec-
ommendation of the Department
of English for excellence of work
in Freshman English — “based
on the Freshman year. paper;
supported by good work in the
course.”
Marion Bridgman, of New Canaan,
Conn. Prepared by the Hillside
Sehool, Norwalk, Conn., and the
Shipley School, Bryn Mawr.
2. Awarded:each year on the rec- , eens
ommendation of the Department Janet Barton Barber, of Bethesda,
of English for excellence of work Md.~~Prepared by the ‘Madeira
in First Year English. » ,, School, Fairfax’-County, Va.
Gertrude Van Vranken Franchot, .
of Boston, Mass. Friedrich Wilhelm Von Prittwitz,
3. sAwarded each year on the rec-; German Ambassador to America, and
ommendation of the Department] the rest of the German Embassy staff
of English, for excellence of] figured in a farce put on by Sen.
work in Second Year English. <= Huey P. Long for a reporter for the
Marianne Augusta Gateson, of| Princetonian. The story relates how
Philadelphia. Prepared. by ‘the| the Louisiana Senator, wishing to
Bethlehem High School. *Alumnae} create a “news” event for a Prince-
Regional Scholar, 1930-33; Mary} ton cub reporter, called up the Ger-
Anna Longstreth Memorial Scholar,| man Embassy and declared that the
1931-32; - ~ ++ German Government had insulted the
and American Government. It developed
Maria Middleton Coxe, of Philadel-| that the insult was merely the fail-
phia. Prepared by the Agnes Ir-; ure of Herr Von Prittwitz to serve
win School, Philadelphia. beer to the Southern Senator, when
" SCHOLABSHIAG 1 GILLESPIE | the latter visited the embassy: ~
Elizabeth “Murray Mackenzie, of
Pittsburgh, Pa., °,
and
SCHOLARSHIPS IN AMERICAN —(N. S. F. A.)
HISTORY, awarded for excellence : °
in scholarship. “Most people would rather go to a
Marion Gardiner Mitchell, of Rock; movie than a ‘mediocre play,” said
Island, Ill., Noel Coward, in a recent interview
and with a Princetonian reporter. “As
Ellen Nancy Hart, of Bloomfield, a result the screen has weeded out
N. J. Prepared by the Bloomfield the poorer. stage productions. This,
High-School. has-been hard-on. the road_companies,
CHARLES S. HINCHMAN MEMO-, but has raised the general standard
RIAL SCHOLARSHIPS, awarded| df the legitimate stage, and first class
tothe student whose record shows| plays are-as successful as ever, since
the greatest ability to’ her major| everyone would rather see a fine play
subject. than a good movie.”—(N. S. F, A.)
——
DAYS FEATUR
The Vanishing Bird Cage |
— Done With Live Canary /
HOW IN THE WORLD DID
THE MAGICIAN MAKE THAT
BIRD CAGE VANISH IN THE
MAGIC ACT WE SAW TONIGHT ?
.+. THE CAGE WAS
COLLAPSIBLE, AND
ATTACHED TO A STRING
WHICH WAS JUST
me), (ce [eliich mre mcie)
UP ONE SLEEVE,
ACROSS THE SHOULDERS
AND DOWN TO THE
OTHER WRIST,
WHEN HE MADE THE
THROWING MOTION
THE CAGE FOLDED UP
AND WAS DRAWN
INTO HIS SLEEVE —
BIRD AND ALL.
So
SS,
THE CAGE AS SHOWN
TO AUDIENCE.
THE STRING
COLLAPSED
B/RD CAGE
YOU ALWAYS
~ | KNOW EVERYTHING
_ [€D. WANT A CIG-
_ | ARETTE 2
THANKS, I'M
GLAD TO SEE
THAT YOU
VE FOUND OUT THAT "IT'S =
MORE FUN TO KNOW’ ABOUT FS
CIGARETTES. ED.
counts!
THAT'S THE GIRL! THERE ARE NO} | @ AWS MORE FU N
TRICKS IN CAMELS — JUST
MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS.
Camels are made from
finer, MORE EXPENSIVE
tobaccos than any
othér popylar brand.
‘That’s why they give
you more pleasure.
It’s the tobacco that
MATCHLESS
BLEND
uate, 1933, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
College news, May 17, 1933
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1933-05-17
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 19, No. 22
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol19-no22