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VOL. XVI, NO. 18
BRYN MAWR (AND es PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1930
Subject of Tea Dances
Favorably ‘Discussed
A joint. meeting of the Undergradu-
and Self-Government Associations
ate
was held at chapel time on ‘Wednesday,
February 12. The first ,
the Undergraduate™ Association
whether there should be a tea-
dance before Varsity Dramatics as well
as before Glee Club.’ The date of the
Varsity production was named as the
estion be-
fore
was
week-end after spring vacation, while
the Glee Club -performance. will be in
May.-A-vote was taken and the mo-
tion for two tea-dances was carried.
Miss Baer was elected to choose and
head a committee for the Varsity Dra-
matics dance, and a faculty reception
committee was agreed upon.
The next question up for discussion
was whether Bryn Mawr should join}
the N. S. F. A. (National Student Fed-
eration of America) this year.
years, although scarcely conscious of
the fact, and that there were certain
definite advantages in it. For instance
by sending a representative to the an-
nual conference we. see the problems
of other colleges and keep in touch
with their movements.
however, such as those dealing with
fraternities and cheating at examina-
tions; do not concern us. On the other
hand at the last conference .in Palo
__AAlto,-our representative; Miss Martin,
was able to make some very valuable
and helpful suggestions to the other
students. After a short discussion a
vote was taken which’ decided that
Bryn-Mawr-was-to join N.S. F. A.
again, ‘but with more spirit and inter-
est than previously shown. The Un-
dergraduate Association Board was
also empowered to bring the. archaic
. book of Undergraduate laws up to
date.
The meeting was then turned over
‘to. the Self-Government Association,
but the questions to be discussed were
not brought to the vote since a quorum
was not present. The executive board
wished to be empowered to clarify the
smoking rule by rewriting it. A ten-
tative vote on the suggestion that the}
rule of no bridge-playing in the smok-
ing rooms on Sundays be changed
seemed to favor the change. The third
question brought: before the meeting
was whether men should be allowed.
in the girls’. rooms unchaperoned on
weekdays. The-.ensuing discussion
centered on two points: that of having
special permission for weekday guests,
and changing the hours slightly for she
convenience of those who are dressing
after athletics. The object of having
special permission on weekdays was
pointed out as giving opportunities of
checking up on the male visitors in the
halls. Miss Thompson suggested that
men be allowed to have tea in the
halls on Saturday and Sunday after-
noons without special permission,. and
~~ ~~orr_ afternoons froni.Monday-to Friday
with permission. No conclusions were
reached on this. subject,.and the meet-
ing was adjourned.
Calendar
Thursday: evening, February 20:
The Varsity Players will pre-
sent Sparkin’, by E. F, Conkle.
Friday evening, February 21:
Doctor L. C. Graton, Professor
of Mining Geology at Harvard
University,. will speak on “How
to Behave Like a Human
Being When a Mile and a Half
Below. Ground.” This lecture
will be given under. the aus-
; pices of the Science Club, in:
Goodhart Hall, at a varie” past
—_ eight_o’clock. a
Stonitay, February. 24: The ‘Peint
Club of Philadelphia “will opefi
an exhibit in the old musi¢
room in Wyndham.
Tuesday evening, February 25:
. The French Club will | oem
* Hernani.
Miss’
Perkins said that the college had be-:
longed to this organization for two’
Many of the
‘problems discussed at the conference,
+
tas. hard. as she -can.
Education Is Not Offered
~ °On a Silver Platter
On Tuesday, February 11, :-Miss
Millicent Carey spoke at chapel in the
Music Room on the complaints and
criticisms of the students which have
been brought to the ‘Dean’s office.
There have been more changed courses
this. year than ever before and this
presents an extremely. interesting prob-
lem since it shows up the student, en-
lightens the administrator by throwing
light on the curriculum needs, and es-
tablishes certain opinions on what ed-
ucational institutions should give. The
first two points need little discussion.
The complaining student often shows
by her criticisms that it is*she whois
lacking, and she is in reality criticizing
herself. Plans are being made by the
Faculty and Student Curriculum Com-
mittees for a complete revision¢of the |:
present curriculum. In many cases the
student complaints that there is too
much to do in short courses, and that
there are too many lectures’ in some
courses are completely justified. The
most common criticisms of the educa-
tional plan are that some of the pro-
fessors are dull, that many courses
contain too much ground work and de-
tail and do not meet the student’s in-
terests, and that present courses are
far_too remote from: life.
It is‘a-strange and unfortunate. truth
that certain students cast the job—of
giving ‘themselves an education upon
the college, especially in courses that
have interviews. It is as though they
said to the college, “Well, here I am.
What are you going to do about it?”
This attitude is based on an entirely
mistaken educational philosophy. ° In
the first place alf arguments must be
conducted on the premise that Bryn
Mawr is a _ spetialized college, and
those who come here know.that. The
students. are carefully selected from
among those wanting: to do decent,
thorough, scholarly work at college,
and not to sit around and talk about
life and take courses in’ which, all of
human knowledge -is« ~ synthesized,
Bryn Mawr wants to train people with
a scholarly point of view, ‘and feels
that the best education for a student
lies in the honest, hard-analysis of the
subjects she is taking. With such an
education she:is completely equipped
to do first rate graduate work, and
also best equipped to do other things
since she knows how to think, to use
any materials as tools, and to work
‘The objections
to the dull professors do not seem well-
founded, for the teachers ‘have been
chosen as. best fitted to present the mate-
rial which the student wants. She has
no right to complain because the profes-
sor does not put over this important
material with high-powered salesman-
ship. Because the teacher does: not in-
spire his class, individual student re-
sponsibility does not end. If a“stu-
{dent feels that she is getting nothing
from her education, and. would be bet-
ter doing something else, she is a mis-
fit-and does not belong in college.
That ideal educational quality which
the student is seeking must be supple-
mented by her own. efforts.
Whitehead’ in his “Essay on the Aims
of Education” sums the situation up
very well: “There’is no royal road to
learning through an airy path of—bril-
liant generalizations.”
French Club to
Present ‘Hernapi’
(Specially contributed)
The Frenth Club of Bryn Mawr Col-
lege announce a centennial reproduction
of the famous premiere of Victor. Hugo’s
Hernapi\on February twenty-fifth in the
auditorium of. Goodhart Hall. .The date
is extremely. well-known in literary _his-
tory as_the-culmination of the romantic
theories proclaimed in Hugo’s Préface de
Cromwell itt 1827.” As such; the’ first
representation of Hernani, on February
25, 183 \ occasioned a storm of comment
enor since.
= :
4 liant climaxes,
Prof.’
| Cuids Program
Singular Success
Miss Sanzewitch Charms With
‘Symphonic Variations’ of
Franck.
{DON JUAN OUTSTANDING
On Wednesday; February ‘12, 1930, in
tute Orchestra gave one of the out-
standing concerts of the year. Under
Emil Mlynarski as conductor, the young
musicians showed delightful: warmth of
feeling and exuberant. enthusiasm..From
the sustained beauty of the second move-
ment+of the Brthms to the thrilling free-
dom “of the! Strauss, the players were
sensitive to the peculiar. value oi every
phrase. Remarkable for their oneness in
movement and spirit in the numbers for
orchestra alone, they were equally skil-
ful in combining with solo instruments,
They caught up and developed themes
with fulness and color, and with nice
feeling for the balance between orchestra
and individual artist. ae
‘The peak of a beautiful program was
undoubtedly the Symphonic Variations
of Cesar Franck, the piano part played
by Tatiana de Sanzewitch. From the
first Crisp, clear-cut notes, Miss Sanze-
witch showed herself complete mistress
of-her-instrument and feader of her or-
chestra, which responded to her shades
of feeling as if inspired. The aloof ‘glory
of the piece’ caught the young pianist,
body and spirit, until every’ note was
charged .with rare significance: From
subdued introductions and rising devel-
opments, Miss Sanzewitch swept to bril-
carrying not only the
orchestra, but her entire audience with
yt bate
High as was the level of Miss Sanze-
witch’s work, the rest of the program
certainly did not suffer from comparison
The opening number was-Beethoven’s
Overture . to “Egmont.” The heroic
themes, although fluent, lacked the vigor
of utterance which was to characterize
the rest of the program, and to dominate
the Strauss in- particular.
The first movement of the Brahms
Double Concerto, ‘intellectual and intri-
cate in character, was difficult:-to handle.
_The violin themes of Miss Poska and
Mr. Machula too often were lost against
the orchestra, and the effect, while flow-
ing and thoughtful, was lacking in con-
viction. In the Andante :and Vivace,
however; thé orchestra reached’ the
height which it was to maintain there-
after. Less complex in. structure, these
movements were also shorter and easier
Continued on Page Three
Start Now!
The L. C. Page Publishing Compatiy
has just -announced a contest which
should be of great interest to Bryn Mawr
people. They plan to publish, in 1930,
a book entitled. The College Girl of
America, the text of which: is to consist
of articlés written by students of Rock-
ford, Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Wellesley,
‘Radcliffe, Simmons, Barnard, Vassar,
Goucher; and Bryg’ Mawr.” These ar-
ticles are to be a3, ee on “the ‘college,
its history, traditions, ideals, and their
exemplification in the kind of el it is
graduating today.”
A contest is to be held in each college,
and the writer of the best article, which
is to be chosen within the college and
then submitted to the publishers, will
receive a prize of fifty dollars. ‘The judg-
ing committee at Bryn Mawr is to con-
sist of Miss Carey, as a representative
of the English Department; Dr. Vir-
ginia Kneeland Frantz, Alumnae Direc-
tor, as a member of the governing board
of the college, and Erna Rice, ’30, Edi-
tor of the College News. The winning
-manuseript must have—been—selected__by
April first, at the latest, so those who
are interested in entering the competi-
tion aré advised to start thinking about
their articles.
right of awarding no prize, and of sub-
mitting*-none of the articles to L.~C.
Page. and.. ny if, in their opinion,
are worthy of publication.
iain ageimesTme:
Goodhart Auditorium, the Curtis Insti-}.
The judges reserve the}
PRICE, 10 CENTS
=—<—<—=—=
soe
Mrs, . Manning Biclaieas
Tuition Rise :
“My main object is calling you to-
gether this morning,” began Mrs.
Manning in chapel on Thursday, “was
to announce that in December the Di-
rectors had voted that the fee for
undergraduate tuition be raised one
hundred dollars and the fee for gradu-
ate tuition: be raised fifty dollars.”
Mrs. Manning said that this anounce-
ment was one that might be made al-
most as a matter of routine, since we
are gradually becoming accustomed to
the increased cost of’ living, It has
been the general policy of the college
in any financial crisis to ask for sup-
port from the Alumnae and the friends
of the college outside or else to, bor-
row money. Only when the annual
budget of the college has proven too
small, and when the inevitable rise in
prices has made it necessary, have the
fees increased. This year, however,
the announcement of the increase in
the tuition fee marks’an important de-
velopment in. the financial policy of the
college which every student here ought
to understand.
The step has been taken after a
serious reconsideration of the whole
problem by Miss Park and the Direc-
tors. Comparison has shown that the
cost—of—teaching it” Bryn Mawr is
higher than in the other women’s col-
Jegés=It ~is“apparently impossible to
meet the gap between’ tuition fees and
teaching expenses solely by increase
in endowment,’ There-are_a—number
of reasens why the cost -of-education
at Bryn Mawr must be higher than at
the other colleges. First of all,. ex-
pénsive arrangements have been made
for taking care of students, such as the
system of dining. in separate halls;
then, as a small college we maintain
departments—Music and Art, for ‘ex-
ample—which are ordinarily omitted
in the curriculum of colleges. of this
‘| size; finally, on the whole, Bryn Mawr
is a residential suburb and thus a very
expensive place in which to _ live.
However, very obviously these factors
Continued on Page Four
Players to Present
Conkle’s ‘Sparkin’
“Sparkin’,” a‘one-act ‘play, by E. P.
Conkle; will be given by the Bryn Mawr
Players in Ggodhart Hall, Thursday
evening, February 20, at 9:30 o'clock.
The play “is one of a seriés. which Mr.
Conkle calls “Crick Bottom Plays—
Sketches of Mid-Weitern., Life.” “The
author,” says. Barrett Clark,-in his pre-
face to the collection of plays, ‘‘based his
work ‘entirely upon the life he knew.
Until he was nineteen -he had not trav-
elledsmore than twenty-two miles from
his home, a typical town in Nebraska.
“Tt is perhaps: unnecessary to say that
not all the people in Nebraska and its
neighboring States are like these he de-
picts in his plays. Hi¢ interest reverts
to the tillers of the-soil who drive teams
of horses and-not trattors. They came
from Tlinois’ and Indiana, some even
from Virginia and North Carolina.
Their quaint and sometimes rich” idio-
matic speech, like their religion and their
philosophy, have now almost disappeared.
They ‘didn’t read much,’ Mr. Conkle
tells-me,‘but-they-were wise. And they
have now been relegated to the past,
along with their coal-oil lamps, their
spring buckboards, and their homespun
clothes. Their daughters and sons are
ashamed of them. I’ve known and loved
these people and have thought them
werth recording, They shouldn't be
doomed to the great oblivion that is to
engulf the rest of us’.”
The cast is ‘as follows:
Granny Painsberry,
Ethel Chisuteatt Dyer, ‘3!
Lessie Hanna Janet Marshall; ’33
Susan Hanna..... Margaret Reinhardt, 32
Orry Sparks.......... Catherine Reiser, ’31
“Mary Polk” Drake,
It has béen found necessary
the price of admission to 35 cents in
order to cover expenses. Varsity. Play-
ers=ar€ anxious that the charge should
31, is directing.
Players haye not covered expenses.
to raise}
Freshman Show es
Reveals Talent
hesion, But Single Acts
Good.
| ANIMAL: IN SMALL PART
1933 offered to 1931 and others
liberal entertainment in the form of
their “Palpitating Pinafores.” Fresh-
man show was presented with avowed
humility, but it scorned tradition and
ignored the- unfortunate animal until
the bitterend. Further, the show was
not a continuous palpitation as the
name implied; it was a series of “skits”
and “specialties,” each giving evidence
of careful organization within itself,
but not assisting the unity of the show
animal. The faults ofthe show were
perhaps advantages ‘in view of enter-
tainment; the fact that the animal was
thrust aside, gave opportunity for
greater variation in material; the fact
that the show was broken up into nu-
merous unrelated parts, allowed better
exploitation of talent. Skits are dan-
gerous devices because they are ‘de-
these be too much for the audience,
+as—they—inevitably—are-in-amateur~—at=
tempts, the action drags heavily. The“
modern revue has lessened these dan-
gers By the use of the chorus; the
Freshman show. eked out what- might
have been othérwise flat lines with
clever, and .well-drilled songs and
dances, in evident emulation of the
professional stage. If the progress
was-at times slow and pointless, it was
counteracted partially by the happy in-
sertion of choruses. Specialties are
apt to cheapen a performance,sand, al-
though they were pleasant interludes
and served as fillers-in, they might
have been better introduced into the
action itself. The show could not rely
on spectacle for its effect; the skits
made no particular artistic demands
upon their background, but: one scenic
achievement was produced—the im-
pressive (though translucent) wall of
Pembroke (or was it Rockefeller?);
the costumes of the choruses were
effectively designed, but otherwise
costuming was a negligible factor. .As
a production, ‘“Palpitating Pinafores”
was, carried through with smoothness
and assurancé, despite the lack of co-
hesion in its parts.
The curtain song was woettiy of
note because the words could actually
be heard, and laughter could therefore
be genuine. As to the palpitation of
the pinafores, it was confined to the
opening chorus—ah original creation of
33; the pinafores themselves were
white ruffled affairs on blue checked
dresses cut low in the back, and_|it
was their movement to the syncopated
song that stimulated the unwieldly
show into motion—if not into palpita-
tion; One Trégretted that the opm
Continued ‘on Page Three
Organ Is Missed in
Musical Service
of -the
in the
The Sunday—evening—service
Bryn Mawr League was _ held
Music Room of Goodhart Hall, Febru-
ary 16. The meeting was~led by Con-
stance Speer, ‘30.
Due to the temporary indisposition of
the organ, the musical service was neces- .
sarily bereft of Mr. -Wittoaghby’s usually
much-enjoyed numbers.
The program given-by the choir was
as follows: :
Ave Marie Brahms
“Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus
técum, Benedicta tu in mulieribus, et
benedictus fructus tui, Jesus.
Sancta Maria, ora pro .nobis.”
Sanctus and Benedictus Tschaikowsky
ventris
“Holy holy, holy, Lord God of
Hosts, Heaven‘and earth are full of.
Thy gtory: Glory be to Thee O Lord
most high.” “Blessed is He that com-
Jiterary_qualities| none of the manuscripts “submitted tobe “as—smallas—possible,_but-so—far—the|—eth-in-the-name-of the ‘Lord: ~~ Hosanna
‘|. them
in the oxo
Series of Skits Devoid of Co-'
as a whole, and quite forgetting the .
pendent-on-their-witticisms, anid should
=pamcccles
q
2 Mawr ee
~stated that the plirpose- of prohibit=
‘a quieter atmosphere.
‘who is truck-driver will totter with
.turbed by any traffic through the
. might be well to repair the roads,
-«dles the dampened group waiting
then, the vicious vehicle expelled
all? » Sigs
Page 2
THE COLLEGE NEWS
The caller News
(Founded in 1914)
blished weekly d College Y:
SPS cite
Maguire Building, Pa.,. and
Editor-in-Chief Copy Editor
Erna S. Rice, ’30 CATHERINE Howe, 30
Editor Graduate Editor
‘V. Suryocx, °31 H. Pascor
Assistant Editors ~
O. Perkins, ’32 ~ GW. Pace, ’30
2. Harri, 32 L. Sansorn, 732
‘Business Manager
Dorotrnea Cross, ’30
Subscription Manager
E. Baxter, ’30
Assistants
DO. AsHer, 31
M. Armore, °32
M. E. Frormmncuam, 731 Y. Cameron, '32
F, Rosinson, 731
iption, . sey Maili: Pp 3.00
Subscriptions Mf Ads xg rat hee Time
Entered’ as’ ane " quatter at the
PP i Pa.,- Post Office.
THE VICIOUS ‘VEHICLE
The. vaulted ‘arch. of Pembroke
has served its day. Its retirement
from active service began, perhaps,
when its position as dignified en-
trance-to-the-college-was- changed
to humble back door. - But now,
alas, though it remain a thing. of
beduty forever, no longer .can it cast
its shadow over friends and_ foes
driving out beneath it. Through
it no longer will the postman’s
whistle, joyous sound, echo to our
expectant ears. And though many’
feet will continue to pass, by, the
outside world is barréd’ forever.
The vicious vehicle will have access
to. the campus no more.
Apparéntly the traffic problem is
—
more acute than we realize. It was
ing cars on the campus is to. en-
hance the beauty of the college
grounds and to assure-a calmer and
But what
solution, will be made. to those prac-
tical complications arising which
cannot be overlooked? Officially,
we do not know... Is the, mailman to
lug his heavy packs to Radnor, to
Merion, to Taylor and the Lib.?
Is it.expected that the human being
his load of books and food and such
supplies from the outside. road to
the Book Shop? Or will exception
be .made to maii-carriers, truck-
drivers, and delivery wagons? Of
this.we have not been informed, yet
it is *reasonable to suppose that
e exceptions will ‘be made in
order that the college may -go on.
It seems, however, that these are
the Very. vehicles which make the
greatest noise and are, aesthetically,
the most objectionable. Further-
more, we frankly have not been-dis-
grounds, although we admit that it
thus eliminating splashing, and to
enforce more strictly the No Park-
ing rule. But from continuous
moving traffic we have rarely suf-
fered, visually or auditorially.
After considerable © pondering
along such lines, we have finally hit
upon what we think may be the
underlying reason for this recent
decision. It is the taxi problem.
For Pembroke and Rockefeller this
is not so serious, but aha! Suppose
that this were. a future Friday
afternoon, cold, rainy. From Mer-
ion, from Radnor,
they come—can you see them—be-
ribboned —for the . week-end, —be-
splashed and bemuddled and woe-
begone. . About the back gate hud-
for the collected taxis to untangle
themselves in the roadway where
it is too narrow to turn around. Is,
from the campus perhaps as a sub-
tle inference that it would be more
beautiful,
‘ansint not to take any week-ends at
dence
(Tue News is not responsible for
opialiais expressed in this omega
To the Editor of the Couece..N EWS 7
In an age of at least pseudo-democ- |
racy,
sete Sperone sees 0!
from Denbigh | -
more _convenient,. more | —
jast|-
still exist in an alarmingly apparent
form,
Enough criticism, in varying ‘degrees
has béen’ broached
concerning our system. of self-govern-
‘of_constructiveness,
ment.:. But the feelings of the under-
gradtiate jody have heretofore always
had the privilege of expression—disap-
proving or otherwise—and thereby . have
had some weight, oné way or another,
in shaping the governing policy.
Regulations which .seem to us more
‘|burdensome and unreasonable, and con-
cerning which we are to have no power
of veto, are now being forced upon us
by our Superiors. We may approve or
disapprove. Our feelings must be kept
latent, our actions conform.
and. should not attempt
The
It may
We cannot,
to oppose the progress of the ages.:
automobile has come to’ stay.
be an ugly contrivance, but the advan-
9 . . .
tages of convenience should, it seems to
us, ofttimes take precedence over the dis-
advantages of a minor blot upon the
panorama of a perfect landscape.
Cony.
To the Editor of the Covctece News:
PARADISE REGAINED
ony
THE NEW WONDERLAND ©
Alice—And_ what does this “B. M.”
stand for?
Rabbitt—My dear, hush! It is—it is
“Beauty-Motorless.”
Alice—And what does that mean, pray
tell ?
Rabbitt—
I thought I saw a motorcar
Parked near. to Taylor Hall;
I looked again, and saw the road
Was turned into a Mall,
Where gardened, clad as ; farmerettes,
~The former Vestals all.~
Alice—Indeed, these rows of flowers,
arranged, as I see the sign says, in class
colors, “where once the..road -was, are
most fair.
Chorus of Maidens (from distance )—
Beauty hath returned,
Old, yet ever new!
Come, sister, spade away;
Our-class flower is -blue.
Alice—I, too, thank heaven, have al-
ways abhorred the machine age. When
I was but weaned and saw my first auto-
mobile, I screamed ‘lustily.
Rabbitt—
“O murder !-What-is that, papa ?
My child, it is a motorcar,
A most ingenious toy! ;
Designed to captivate and charm,
Much rather than arouse alarm. ...
Alas! ©The ingenious toy no longer
captivates and charms—it is now deemed
by some ultra-aesthétic souls to anni-
hilate all beauty. But—lo! Here comes
a. maiden.
Maiden—-
-In my room entowered,
“ -T was fain to work;
But though with books embowered,
Something made me shirk.
Rabbitt and Alice—A gmotorcar !
Maiden—
At first I had fondly believed
The cause was the morning
truck;
Until this ear-sore was rémoved,
Aesthetics were in bad luck.
Rabbitt and Alice—Hear, hear!
Maiden—
But the Board of .Directors assembled,
“When Liberty’s form stood in view,”
Decided, in voices that trembled,
That, Motor, the brunt was on you!
Rabbitt- and Alice—Hear,-hear !
Maiden—
New York has its Grover Whalen,
Who, when criminals elude,
Changes several traffic rulings,
*—~Beautifies the policemen rude.
Rabbitt—No,
”
milk-
in respect to beauty, I
see that you are not negiected here
either. “Ah! ‘What is beauty?” asks
my soul, amazed.
Enter Board of Directors, in sprightly
manner, bearing pogo-sticks, kiddie-cars,
hansom éabs and other aesthetic substi-
tutes for the motorcar.
Chorus of Directors—
This institution free must take the lead!
(Have we not always been the fore-
“Host women’ S-college?)
Since Princeton (as they say) has put
away the need°
Of campus traffic as an aid to knowl-
edge,. « ‘
So now we follow in their train;
Locomotion’s on the wane! (except the
|. _« aesthetic-delivery truck).
: All—Hurrah for the new era! .
_Linis_
AL A. BH. and F. F.
Sod )
‘|}sian family,
‘| included
In Philadelphia
The Theatre.
.. Adelphi: The - Professional Players
‘present Constance Collier and an Eng-
lish Company in a dramatization of G. B.
Stern’s The Matriarch.
Chestnut» Fritz Leiber in Shakes-
pearian Repertory, presented by the Chi-
cago Civic Shakespeare Society.
Forrest: Another, return engagement
of Blossom. Time. —
Lyric: A+ Roman Gentleman with
Mary Duncan playing the leading fem-
inine role, to the tune of Nero’s fiddle.
Keith’s:| A revival of The: Merry
Widow, with Donald Brian playing
Danilo, ‘a part he originally created. ,
Broad: Dracula: the “vampire
thriller.”
‘Garrick: A good negro revue, Connie’s
Hot Chocolates.
Shubert : George *White’s Scandals.
Walnut: The very gruesome . criminal
play, Rope’s: End.
Coming.
Garrick: Strange Interlude; opens,
with Judith Anderson, February 24.
Broad: Moscovitch in, Ashley Duke’s
dramatization of Power; opens Febru-
ary 24.
Walnut: Bert
opens February 24.
Shubert’ A Wonderful Night leah
stription of .Die Fledermaus); opens
February 24.
The Movies.
Mastbaum: Conrad Nagle heads the
cast of deMille’s first talkie, Dynamite.
Stanley: Bessie Love and Charles
King, of musical comedy fame, in Chas-
ing Rainbows.
Fox: Harold Murray ‘of Rio Rita atid
Norma Terris of | Shogeboat sing to-
gether in Cameo Kirby. This scenario
was written by Booth Tarkington and
Harry Leon Wilson, and is set-in the
good old days of the romantié Missis-
sippi.
Earle:
Command.
Erlanger: Conrad- Nagle and EitaEee
in Second Wife. —
Fox-Locust: “Tense sub-sea
in Men_Without_Women..
Stanton: Betty Bronson in a domes-
tic melodrama, The Locked Door.
Boyd: Maurice Chevalier looks and
sings in the same Chevalier way in The
Love Parade.
Film Guild: Emil. Jannings. as. Louis,
XIV and Pola Negri as a French mil-
liner: in. the. Lutbitsch production, Pas-
sion.
Band Box: Czar Ivan the Terrible;
hurrah; its not a talkie!-
Little: Die .Meistersinger ; paradox-
ically enough, .this too is silent!
Coming...
Aldine: Dennis. King as the film
Vagabond King; opeps February 22.
Mastbaum: Nancy Carroll and Rich-
ard Arlen in Dangerous Paradise; opens
February 21.
Earle: Loretta Young and Doug Jun-
ior in, Loose Ankles; opens February 21.
The. Orchestra.
The Philadelphia Orchestra, under the
direction of Ossip~ Gabrilowitsch, will
play the following program on Friday
afternoon, February 21, and on Satur-
day evening, February 22:
“Haydn—Symphony: No;. 12,
major.
Beethoven- —Overture,
Brahms—Concerto No. 2,
Piano and Orchestra.
“The piano soloist at these concerts
will be Vladimir Horowitz.
“Vladimir Horowitz is an artist whose
work is his story. The sensational suc-
cess. of this twenty-four-year-old artist in
Europe and America is the result of
sheer ability. + His career has been the
Lytell in Brothers ;
William Boyd in His First
drama”
¥
3,
for
“Leonora” No.
in B flat,
logical development—of -an extraordinary
ed
gift. >
“Born in Kieff on October 1, 1904, at
a_ well-to-do, artistically-inclined Rus-
Vladimir Horowitz entered.
the Conservatory of his native city at an
early age, — studying under-—-Professor
Felix Blumenfeld, and graduating at the
age of seventeen with the highest hon.
ors. He made his first public appearance
at Kharoff at a concert arranged by’ his
uncle, a famous music critic of that city.
Subsequently the young pianist gave con-
certs the principal Russian cities,
playing on twenty-three occasions in
Petrograd, and each time to a house
that was crowded to capacity.
in
Europe; beginning~ i ip Berlin, and con;
quering in rapid succession Germany,
Holland, Italy, France, Spain, Belgium,
and London. His _orchestra-appearantes
performances -with — Furt-
waengler in Berlin and» Leipzig, with
Carl Muck in Hamburg, with Molinari
in Rome, Gaubert and Pierne in Paris,
Monteux in Amsterdam, Schneevoigt in
|dent Council.
in B flat |:
>
News from Other Colleges
~
An Open Question
“America’s youth-“goes to. college for
reasons other than those for which the
college was intended, particularly to gain
social prestige,” said Dr. )
land Angell, president of Yale Univer-
sity, at the annual dinner of the Colgate
James Row-
Alumni.
“Our colleges suffer from an excess of
social prestige,” he declared, “which con-
stitutes a very complex problem.”
Dr. Angell claimed that hundreds of
students have been drawn into college
who have no rightful place there, and
who have come only for the social pres-
tige which is acknowledged as a flagrant
enticement. The time has come to face
this: fact and to consider it.
He pointed out that the universities
and colleges are directly responsible for
the failure of sgraduates who would’ have
done better had they not gone to col-
Jege,-as well as for achievements of those
who: have -been more. fit to attend, and
who have succeeded.
“Do the colleges of today create dis-
cipliged characters, are they disciplin-
ing intelligence and cultivating taste?”
asked Dr. Angell. He answered .by
claiming that “if they do, they are worth
still more than they cost.. We can af-
ford anything for a purpose that we
feel is fundamentally worth while.” But
the problem remains to be solved—and
to be solved openly.—Hunter Bulletin.
Pupils in Manners Campaign
At Princeton High School
Special to The New York Times.
Princeton, N. J., Feb. 15.—A -“good
marners campaign” is to open at Prince-
ton High School on Monday, according
to an arinouncement today from the Stu-
have as its aim the development of a
spirit of courtesy in the school.
More--than—onehundred=posters with
appropriate slogans are-to be hung about
the school. Assembly talks, home-room
discussions and other features have been
planned.—New. York Times.
Clemens Kraus in Frankfort and Bruno
Walter in Berlin.
“The European critics who pronounced
him ‘the. greatest pianist of the rising
generation’ were corroborated in their
estimate of Horowitz by the ecomiums of
the American music critics, following the
young man’s arrival in this country.
He made his debut on January 12, 1928,
with the New York Philharmonic Or-
chestra, in Carnegie Hall, and received
a whirlwind of ovation. During his first
American season Horowitz made thirty-
six. appearances in eighty-eight days, in-
cluding nineteen performances with or-
‘|chestras in New. York, Philadelphia, St. |
Louis, CiseHinNts, Chicago and Boston.”
| COTTAGE TEA teri oot
| Montgomery Ave. Bryn Mawr
Luncheon Tea . Dinner
Special Parties by Arrangement
Guest Rooms © a me Mawr 362
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Edythe’s Beauty Salon
' EDYTHE £E. RIGGINS
Permanent Waving, / Facial, Marcel . Waving
Shampooing, Finger Waving, Manicuring
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SAMUEL LEIFF
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Bryn Mawr
Main Line’s Only Furrier
Storing, Remodélling, Repairing
i
MRS. JOHN KENDRICK BANGS
DRESSES
566 MoNnTCOMERY AVENUE
BRYN: MAWR, PAL™
| 4 Pleasant Walk from the Col-
“In 1924 Horowitz started a tour of|
lege with an Object in View
John J: McDevitt"
Phone. Bryn Mawr 675
‘ Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets
Letter | Heads
Booklets, etc.
Printing
Announcements
1145 Lancaster. Ave., Lonel i
Se ee
= : ohh
: WT
_[Saereeeer Sacuereaiasall Soe i
a area
The campaign will be en-|
tirely directed by the students, and will |”
Fifteen Years Ago This Week
: 8
Amusing Reminiscenes of :
Alumnae
Flunkers, Take Hope.
“48 in Major “Ec. and now she’s
Head Inspectress of Garbage Cans in
New York City.” ... “Daddy Warren
gave me 33 in Post-major Bi” (from a
now eminent scientist). Many such
remarks were heard at dinner in Pem-
broke the day after Alumnae meeting.
The inipression given seemed to be
thdt not only those of the Upper Ten
‘|but strugglers for merits.as well suc-
ceeded in holding down she after Col-
lege.
*
‘Sacred Precincts Invaded
Men Come to Class Plays.
The motion that men come to class
| Plays and operas when introduced by
|a student, alumna, faculty, or wife of a
faculty ‘member, was limited by the
clause that they must sit on the ground
floor of the gymnasium, and that stu-
dents do not hang their feet over the
gallery on such occasions.
* ok
ESCONDIDO
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Rockies, Motoring in the
Indian Country. Six
Weeks’ Trip for College
Girls.
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New York City
TOUR ST
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Tourist Third Cabin. .. fairly *
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«
—" THE COLLEGE NEWS
ee ~
-. FRESHMAN SHOW
Continued from Page One
were not to reappear. “At the Bot-
tom”: followed as a specialty sung by
~ the leader of the pinafores in a pleas-
‘ing manner.
_ tritenesses,
slim: and girlish in appearance, trilled-
« bells and tripped about merrily.
The skit of, “The Soap
Box Saint” was only one part new
and two parts old; although it had
possibiilties in its situation in heaven,
it fell back with a dull thud upon the
eternal “gay -nineties.” An interval of
solo tap-dancing was light and pretty.
The, rambling extension of “The Old
South” through minutes devoted to the
intricacies of Southern accent and hos-
pitality was only enlivened by the sing-
ing darkies which the plot contrived,
with some difficulty, to introduce. The
next specialty was an interlude of
partner dancing that was delightfully
graceful. The one skit that was espe-
cially Srigttiat in its humor and se
entation was “It was so alcohol, o
fleas in the Ritz” (with apologies
Gertrude Stein); its point indeed was
in its. poirtléssness;. it smacked of
the “The New Yorker” in its ludi-
crous take-off of the Lettres of. today,
and ‘the implications of its meaning-
less lines.
The auction of the “palpitating
posters” served ‘as intermission and the
spontaneous wit of the auctioneers was
an entertaining contrast to the studied
wit of the skits. “Street Scene” re-
opened the show; the two-storied wall
of familiar: gray stones, with the actors
behind its. windows, gave a new at-
mosphere to the reiteration of local
and «the bicycle chorus,
“But
we haven’t the funds” explains itself
to all those. skit-minded, but it might
be mentioned that the geology episode
was an extraordinary bit of realism.
Mme. Potash-Carbona, arrayed to suit
-her_.name, supplied the interval _be- |
tween skits with music ground from. a.
mystifying » pipe-organ. ‘The .Spa-
ghetti Festival” provided a good means
- for .conglomerating the juggling -of
@.
: centered about its class animal,
quietly,
. very
plates by waiters, the chorus fork-
wisting of spaghetti, enthusiastic
talian diction, the tango, and a calorie
chorus (we had previously thought cal-
ories an American invention).
Finally. the..animal,.-secreted.. this
long while, was allotted its little act.
33. feeling. perhaps that ‘they should
make up for their discrepancies, ¢ham-
pioned evolutionary doctrines and pro-
duced their “man.” It might seem a
mistake that. this° show had not been
after
all... The truly modern climax was
supplanted by the unexpected anti-
climax: *32, in an unusual fit of Soph-
omoric activity, sallied from their seats
to proclaim in parody their discovery
of The Animal.
Sheriff’s ‘Journey’s End’ Is
Warmly Received by Cadets
«Fourtiey's End,” ‘the ‘sowertil war
play that has been playing. more than a
year to crowded houses in New York
was presented by the New York com-
pany the other day for the. cadets’ at
West Point. It is reported that the
performers ‘scored the hit of their
careers; nowhere have they heard such
whole-hearted applause as greeted them
in the United States Military Academe, 1.0
And _ though: at first one is encouraged
by the spectacle of young men about to|
be soldiers applauding, the picture of
the ugliness. and futility of modern war-
fare, One° pauses for ~a second thought
and wonders: if that was what they really
were applauding after all.
Those-who lived through the last“ war
saw in..Mr.. Sherriff’s. play. meaningless
sacrifice, unrewarded heroism, _ futile
courage under fire. Men played the
game, decently, uncomplainingly,
although they did-not know what
it. was all about. But these youngsters
at .West Point, to whom the war which
ended twelve years ago is a faint, boy-
ish memory, watched Captain Stanhope
go out from his dugout into the sure
death ‘that was splintering around his
head and thought—what?
any chance, thiiik, as young soldiers from
time immemorial have thought, how glo-
rious, how sweet it is to die thus strongly
and bravely ?-\We-who-know- better—say
that it is neither glorious nor sweet. But
they. might make the same answer that
a ‘yourtg man of twenty-one. made not
long ago to one of thirty -five: “It’s all
well for you to talk,’ he’ said.
“You'ye had your war. And we'll have
ours, too. See if we don't.” Those who
love peace. must find an answer to this |
before they achieve their desire. The
_ Nation, s
.. Did they, by |-
CURTIS PROGRAM
* Continued from Page One
to comprehend. The Andante was full
of chastened, lyrical beauty; the Vivace
was quick and light, and characterized by
marked accents and bold rhythms. Inthe
latter, violin, ‘cello, and orchestra swung
through vigorous ‘airs and rounded melo-
dies to a fine climax with the drums.
Here indeed the musicians came _ into
their
sympathy.
own - and played with complete
The Strauss Symphonic Tone Poem,
Don
movement’ of the brass and cymbals, a
e
Juan; opened with a_ tremendous
splendid prelude to a vivid, programmis-
tic number. The restless strivings of Don
Juan’s nature were ‘shown in many-col-
ored passages depicting his alternating
moods of fulfilment and _ bitterness.
Tumultuous scenes, made emphatic by
the percussion ‘and brass, shifted to
movements of lyrical contentment, where
the harps and strings predominated. The
final climax of the full orchestra’ gave
place to the last muted ‘whisperings: of
the instruments in the death of Don
Juan. In sympathy, of interpretation and
mastery of mood the Don Juan was
outstanding.
The program ended with Fredrich
Smetana’s Overture to “The Bartered
Bride,” a number rather wanting in color
and feeling tone, but full of interesting
and pleasant phrases—-an excellent con-
clusion to a. program which in selection,
arrangement, and’ execution was above
criticism. The enthusiasm of the audi-
ence was indicative of great admiration
for the accomplished’ young musicians,
and of sitcerest thanks to Mrs. Bok;
who made this concert possible.
The program follows:
Ludwig van Beethoven,
' Overture” to “Egmont”
Johannes Brahms,
Double Concerto. in we minor |.
For Violin and Violoncello with
Orchestra
Allegro
Andante
. Vivace non troppo
Judith Poska—Violin
Tibor de Machula—Violoncello
Richard Strauss, |
Symphonic .Tone-Poem—“Don Juan”
Cesar. Franck.......... Symphonic Variations
For Piano and Orchestra
Tatiana de Sanzewitch—Piano
Friedrich- Smetana,
Overture to “The Bartered Bride”
Then and Now
How times. have changed! In 1734
the following regulations were made at
Mount Holyoke: “No young lady shall
be a member of the. Mount Holyoke
Seminary who can not kindle a fire, wash
potatoes, repeat “the multiplication tables,
and at least two-thirds of the shorter
catechism. Every member of: the school
walks at least a mile a day, unless a
freshet, earthquake, or other calamity
prevents. No young lady shall. devote
more than an hour a day to miscella-
neous reading. No young’ lady is ex-
pected to have any gentlemen acquaint-
ances .unless they are returned mission-
aries, or agents of benevolent societies.”
-—The -Johnsonian.
Open Susdins
CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE
835 Morton Road
[elephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 25
a as t
College Inn and
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Caters especially for you, 1 ta
7.80 week days and Sundays, 4 to 7 >
Saturday Open at 12 Ay Early Luncheon
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Haverford Pharmacy
HENRY W. PRESS, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS
2 “Phone: Ardmore 122
PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE
Haverford, Pa.
Co-Eds Shun Marriage
University co-eds consider marriage a
mere sideline to their real, profession, it
was proved by vocational statistics gath-
ered from women of organized houses
at the University of Oklahoma. Of the
four hundred from whom reports were
obtained, only eleven listed marriage’ as
their aim in life.
Everything from aviation to house-
wife was lists which
wer® presented to the girls asking them
to number their choice of ten possible
included oy the
| vocations and ‘to add to the list any
profession not already noted.
Conte what will, the idea of being a
school teacher still holds its own in the!)
minds of co-eds who look forward to
future livelihood. Seventy-eight women
placed some phase of public school teach-
ing as first choice.
preferred high school positions.
Fifteen. girls aspire to jobs as for-
eign buyer for merchandise dealers.
Eight would be experts in women’s fash-
ions. All types of art work ranked high,
with interior decorating and designing
each listed by thirteen. Six women
would be doctors and six surgeons.
Any phase of writing also / appeals
to the feminine ‘idea of work, ‘according
to the figures, Thirteen would be fea-
ture playwrights, thirteen dramatic. crit-
ics, and’ twelve feature writers for news-
papers and magazines.
That women are still broadening their
field of occupation is shown -in the sug-
gested work not on the list. Oil geol-
ogists, archeologists, secret service
women, and lease brokers will evidently
come from the group of women at the
univtrsity.—McGill Daily.
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Bryn Mawr Confectionery -
(Next to. Seville Theater Bldg.)
“The Rendezvous of the College Girls
Tasts Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes,
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on the stage it's
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one sure way to be right about a cigarette: taste it.
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cy
Page 4
THE COLLEGE NEWS
seein
nme eet
Te
, TUITION RISE
- Continued from Page One
——_—
which make education at Bryn Mawr
expensive are the very factors which
we value most and wauld not want
to give up. ‘
Certainly we can not go beyond a
certain point in asking outsiders to
bridge the gap of the deficiency in the
budget. So the Directors decided that
from now on it would be better for the
students to bear.a larger portion of the
expense ghan heretofore. Of course
this might mean that we would come
to be regarded as a “rich girl’s col-
lege.” This danger the Board of Di-
rectors has met by providing for the
appointment of a new officer to visit
schools to explain the policy of the
college to them and to assure them
that scholarships or adjustments in the
scale of fees will be available for those
students whom we wish to have here
but who‘are not able to meet the in-
creased cost. Future increases in_tui-
tion will take place very gradually and
may not even affect the students now
“in college. Studies are to be made
before it is decided how high the tui-
tion fee must eventually be placed.
This increase in fees will only mean
that the total cost for students in in-
expensive rooms will be about on a
level with that at Vassar, Smith and
Mt. Holyoke. The importance of this
new policy is that it makes. it possible
to look ahead and plan for improve-
ments which will allow the college to
take part in the progressive educational
movements of our era. Women’s col-
leges must keep pace with the heav-
ily gifted and highly endowed men’s
colleges .... “And it is only by put-
ting our financial policy on a sounder
footing than inthe past,’’ concluded
Mrs. Manning, “that Bryn Mawr can/|
hope to keep its place in the educa-
_tional world.” ;
i Marriage Is Mere
Sideline for Co-Eds
University co-eds consider marriage a
mere sideline to their real profession, it.}
was proved by _ vocational statistics
gathered from women of organized houses
at the University of Oklahoma. Of the
400 from whom reports were obtained,
only 11 listed marriage as their aim in
life.
Everything from aviation to housewife
was included on the lists ‘which were
presented to the girls asking them to
number their choice of ten possible voca-
tions and to add to the list any profes-
sion not already noted.
Come what will, the idea of being a
school teacher still holds its own inthe
minds of co-eds who look forward to
future livelihood. Seventy-eight women
placed some phase of public school teach-
ing as first choice. Of these, 45 preferred
high school positions. . —
Fifteen girls aspire to jobs as foreign
buyer for merchandise dealers. Eight
would be experts in women’s fashions.
All types of art work ranked high, with
interior decorating and designing each
listed by 13. Six women would be doc-
tors and six;surgeons. — o
Any phase of writing also appeals to
the feminine idea of work, according to
the figures. Thirteen would be featiiré
playwrights, 13 dramatic critics, and 12
feature writers for newspapers and maga-
zines. ,
That women are still broadening their
. field of occupation is skewn in the sug-
gestéd work not on the list. Oil geolo-
gists, archeolegists,-secret service women,
and lease brokers will evidently come‘
from .the group .of- women at the uni-
yersity.—McGill Daily.
To Sift Student Failures
At Rutgers University
Special to The New York Times.
‘New Brunswick, N. J., Feb. 14—A
special committee was appointed today
y Dr. Walter T. Marvin, Dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences at Rut-
gers University, to study the cause_of
the unusual number of failures in the
recent. mid-terms, ~ particularly in the
freshman class. The faculty approved
the Via st ot
The survey was asked by the student
council, “not in any .attempt to lower the
scholastic standard” in the college, but
to_determine whether the faculty had
not been too severe in. marking the ex-
amination papers. Most of the- failures
were in mathematics, physics and for-
- eign languages, but the faculty members
maintained ‘that the courses are no more |
difficult now than they were last year.—
_ Entrants Immature
_ Students entering €ollege today-are “as
immature morally.zand as crude socially
as they are undeveloped intellectually,”
Dean Herbert E. Hawkes, of Columbia
College, declared recently in a lecture at
the McMillin Academic Theatre. The
lecture, on the subject of college ad-
ministration, was one of a. series ar-
ranged in connection with the one hun-
dred and*seventy-fifth anniversary of the
university.
“If this is true,” the dean continued,
“it is a.condition, not a theory, that con-
fronts us. If the college is ative to its
duty it must recognize the human condi-
tions that. actually face it and deal with
them. Discipline should be approached
today from the angle of moral education
of the individual rather than of his pun-
ishment.”
Dean Hawkes, criticizing antiquated
ideas of discipline, said that many col-
leges had not been “penetrated” by an
educational idea for twenty-five years.
Dean Hawkes devoted much of his
lecture to discussion of the trends™of
college athletics: today. The “athletic
hysteria,” as he termed it, will die out
slowly but surely, he ‘maintained and will
take a westward course, finally “passing
out into the Pacific Ocean.”
In stipport of this prediction Dean.
Hawkes said that in many of the Eastern
colleges undergraduate interest in ath-
letics had become “distinctly dampened.”
Twenty-five years ago, he said, under-
graduate interest was the. chief suppért
of intercollegiate sport. With this inter-
est eliminated they become popular spec-
tacles and gradually lose their identity
with the college, he declared.
In place of the present system Dean
Hawkes predicted a _faculty-controlled
| policy which will make of athletics and
physical-education—-an—integral--part~of
the. educational_function—of the college
and accept responsibility for the physi-
cal, just as the college now does for the
intellectual, development of its students.
—New York Times.
who
‘HERNANI’
ice
Continued from Page One ss
embodied within it and the ideas sub-
versive to the classical theories hitherto
predominant, ‘the play became famous as
the battleground of the Romantic and
Schools of literature in
‘The battle, which before the
play had confined itself to ‘attacks in the
various pamphlets of the time and to
parodies of as» many of the main scenes
as could be discovered (for the rehear-
sals were conducted in secret), reach~
a climax on the night of the perform-
ance. Classics and Romantics unable to
contain themselves, excited by the in-
flammatory. pamphlets of the preceding
months, found Some satisfaction in the
imprecations. hurled from one. side to
the other on the night of the play and
even more in the physical combats that
ensued.- The battle which started from
the very first line -of’the play over the
words of Dona Josefa in the daring over-
flow,
the Classic
France.
' Cest bien a lescalier-
Dérobé.
which broke all’ the hide-bound rules
of the classical Alexandrin meter, con-
tinued with increasing vigor, in hisses
on the side of the Classics and in ap-
plause on the side of the Romantics until
the Classics.were w6n. over by the lyric
beauty of ‘the play.
The reproduction, which Bryn .Mawr
is to present will include not only as
faithful an interpretation of the play as
is possible, but also a reyival of the ac-
tual battle as described by some of the
contemporaries who took part in jit, such
as Theophile Gautier, . in documents.
which have been handed down to us. So
far as can be ‘ascertained, the revival
of the historic event is unique in Ameri-
can literary circles, and as such should
-
be regarded’with great interest by those :
in. international. relations’ at - Princeton
University under the direction of H.
ment, was brought to a successiul close
with the ending of the present academic
term. The object of the course was to
foster student initiative and, at the same
time, was a step forward in. the. four-
course upper-class plan of study at
. Princeton. :
Professor Smith placed the burden of
the work on the students, who had to
rely on their own examination of au-
thoritative material to cover the work.
No: textbooks were ‘ised.
The course is given in the polities: de-'
partment, open to members: of the senioy”
class. About forty enrolled, . In work-
ing out the new plan Professor Smith
Lformed eight committees and appointed
a member of each committee as chairman
of his ‘group. The chairman acted as
points of contact among the committees
and Professor Smith.
The work was done ‘co-operatively,
each of the eight committees having spe-
cial problems to report on. All the com-
mittees met each week, two at a meet-
ing, when a group member would read
his report, which was then discussed.
With the Completion of the individual
reports, each committee then met and
drafted resolutions concerning. the com-
mittee problem which represented the
opinions of the students as arrived at
from three anda half months’ study.
The resolutions adopted. by the commit-
tees were then read to the members of
the course meeting as a whole and com-
mented on. Professor Smith judged the
merit of the work submitted—New York
Times. :
THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL
DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
A Professional School for
concern _ themselves
world.
Initiative Fostered
Princeton, N. J., Jan. 25.—Conducted
in the nature of an experiment, a course
with “literary! _
history. not..onlyof..France,-but—of the |
__.._-College Graduates
The Academic Year for 1929-30 Opens
Monday, October-7,1929
| Henry ATHERTON FROST, Director
58 Church St., Cambridge, Mass.
at Harvard Square
Alexander Smith, of the politics depart- |
University President...
Urges Higher Salaries
The greatest need of American educa-
‘ion, according td the youth-ul president
of Chicago University, Robert ‘Maynard
Hutchins, is more money for faculty
members to “make education respectable
and to enable colleges and universities to
compete with business for the nation’s
best minds. :
“In the past twenty-five years,” he
says, “the best minds of America have
been drawn. into — business. Hence, -
American. education faces a new prob-
lem in competition—competition with big
business for the best men. If you spread
$t00,000,000 over all the worthy colleges
in the land you might increase each pro-
fessor’s salary as much as $1.34. You
might as well throw the money in the '
lake. But spend it on the key uniyersi-
ties and you will develop peacemakers
that will revitalize American education.”
r
ELIZABETH
ARDEN
Announces
that ber exquistle
" VENETIAN
TOILET PREPARATIONS
for preserving and
enhancing the wag §
’ of the skin, may al-
ways be had-at
Powers and Reynolds
837 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
New York Times.
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|| ‘TULTROUBLE YOU TOUSE A DIFFERENT-TORE,
1 TLL TROUBLE YOU TOUNE A DIFEEREAT TONE
1} AubreyAuschincloss, “CRIED GERALDIRE |
ubreyAuschincloss, y 5
(i
“So? And what’s wrong with my tone, my haughty
beauty ?”’ barked Sir Mortimer.
“Everything possible,’ she answered him unflinchingly.
“Your voice is that of a man gargling in an elevator
shaft. Change to OLD ' GOLDS... they protect the throat.
No man shall call me honey who does not smoke this
honey-smooth cigarette . .. not a cough in a carload.’’ : N
—_ : seam alaey GRBN © P. Lorillard co. | 5 Se ell
| FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTE IN HISTORY. ..NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD
a a
College news, February 19, 1930
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1930-02-19
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 16, No. 13
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-vol16-no13