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College news, December 7, 1932
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1932-12-07
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 19, No. 07
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-no7
ge
The College News
VOL. XIX, No. 7
BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1932
PRICE 10 CENTS
M. Paul Hazard Speaks :
on Voltaire’s Talent
Voltaize acd -Mme. Chatelet
Were Disciples of Newton
and Empiricism’ ©
WAS PROLIFIC. WRITER
Avec Voltaire il y a 200 ans was,
the topic chosen by M, Paul Hazard
for his lecture in the Music Room of
Goodhart last Saturday evening. Hav-
ing devoted most of his time to po-
etry, when, as the Flexner lecturer,
M. Hazard visited Bryn Mawr two
y
to turn to prose. Moreover, although
Voltaire—is universally-*+known;~he~is
always worth further study; however
lucid and precise he may be, the mul-
tiplicity of his facts makes analysis
very difficult. One can but study his
various aspects separately in an at-
. tempt to see him as he really was.
Voltaire, it appears, was seriously
in love with Mme. du Chatelet. For
him, she had a genius worthy of Hor-
ace and Newton. Together, at Cirey,
‘they sought solitude, a rather social
one, to be sure; simplicity had not
yet come into style.. Voltaire’s room,
for example, was highly decorated,
with a rug of crimson velvet, silver
dishes, Indian wallpaper, and no com-
fort. Voltaire quite“frankly admit-
ted to a dislike for the spontaneous
and the primitive: ~The society to
which he belonged lived pleasurably;
for them, nature was not yet king.
Voltaire was “un enfant gate.” Of-
ten he became cross and sulked: “Je
ne descendra pas pour diner.” He
,, had frequent quarrels with Mme. du
Chatelet at the dinner-table—in Eng-
lish, so that the servants would not
understand. Indeed, the lovers saw
each other exactly as they were. Was
not Voltaire the apostle of season?
Still, he found he was not always
true to his faith: _Mme du Chatelet
had a child, which he deplored as a
“faute de gout;” Mme. du Chatelet
saw too much of St. Lambert, and
Voltaire was jealous; finally, Mme. du
Chatelet died, and Voltaire made a
terrific scene and blamed St. Lam-
bert. Voltaire tried to impose rea-
-son on natural forces. and failed.
As a writer, Voltaire was a man of
miraculous ability. He produced play
after play, retreating before nothing
except the three’ unities. He even
planned an epic. But with age, his
hardiness seems ‘to have left him. Such
works as Mahomet, with its monoto-
“nous verse and countless abstractions,
sound almost desperate.
It is true that a good part of his
work has aged. In his “petites
pieces,” however, in which he has re-
produced the thought and spirit of his
time, one will never cease to delight
in the natural vocabulary, the facile
phrasing, the “delicieuses mechance-
tes,” Rare and aristocratic, his re-
production of a graceful, supple, ele-
gant society, gives us that sense of
satisfaction which comes from the
contemplation of.perfection.. It may
be a madrigal, such as ‘the compli-
ment to Mme. du Chatelet as she was
learning algebra; it may be a very
naughty epigram, such as the famous
“T’autre jour, au fond d’un vallon;”
it may be a sheer tour de force of
virtuosity like “Au roi de Prusse,” but
whenever he contents himself with
“petite musique,” Voltaire is supreme-
ly successful.
__..With-regard to-his- prose, one-can
find nothing better than a letter of
Voltaire. Light, but delicious, he ex-
ploits a sensation to the point of
rendering it almost immaterial. He
is wit incarnate.
Mme. du Chatelet was a scholar. She
(Continued on Page Three)
»
Hockey
At the hockey dinner on Mon-
day night, Josephine Rothermel,
’34, Was elected Varsity captain
and Elizabeth Kent, ’35, mana-
ger.
Christmas Carol Service
The Carol Service this year
will be held in the Auditorium
and not the Music Room/’and
the time will be 7.45 P, M. ‘
The Choir will be assisted by
’ the Belov String Quartet. Miss
Mary Earp, of Bryn Mawr, will
be the soloist.
The -Program will be as fol-
lows:
Hush, my dear, lie still and
slumber”
ee
“O thou that tellest good tid-
ings to Zion” (From the Mes-
SIGN) Getic Handel
Miss Mary Earp _
followed by Chorus..The Choir
Carols:
“The Wassail 1 Song” uy
~“A~babe” in” Bethlehem’s
-manger”
“King Herod and the Cock”
“On Christmas night all
Christians sing”
“Hallelujah, Amen” (from
Judas Maccabaeus) . Handel
“Today is born Emmanuel,”
Praetorious
“ Carols for Congregation:
“O Come all ye faithful”
“Hark the Herald Angels
sing’
“While Shepherds watched
their flock by night’
'. “God rest you merry gentle-
men”
“The First Noel”
The speaker will the Rev.
Joseph Fort Newton, D.D., of
St. James Episcopal Church,
Philadelphia, and the Choir will
-be.under. the. direction..of..Ern-.
est Willoughby.-
International Club for
Bryn Mawr is Suggested
At Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, Con-
necticut, and Mt. Holyoke there exist
so-called International or Cosmopoli-
tan Clubs which discuss current
events, send délegates to the Model
League of Nations Assembly, and
welcome foreign students when they
first arrive. Bryn Mawr has never
had any formal organization of this
sort, but there seems to be a consid-
in foreign affairs
among the students.
erable interest
A meeting will
be held after Dr. Fenwick’s lecture
next Tuesday evening, December 12,
to discover whether this interest
warrants the formation of an Inter-
national Club at Bryn Mawr.
Although to many students it may
seem that enough demands on their
time and energy are made by organi-
zations already existing, a foreign re-
lations club could perform many val-
uable functions which are now ne-
glected. Dr. Fenwick has by ‘his
weekly lectures kept the student body
well informed about current events,
but he necessarily covers a number of
topics each evening, and can never
discuss any single one fully. If all
those who would like to hear more
about the events he mentions were
organized in a club, it would be pos-
sible to secure outside speakers on
special .topics who otherwise would
never be heard. There is no occa-
sion for the college authorities to in-
vite such speakers, but if some spe-
cial group existed, assuring a small,
interested audience, a number of men
with an intimate knowledge of foreign
affairs might easily be induced to
speak in the Common Room. The for-
eign students who come to study at
Bryn Mawr might be introduced at
International Club teas. The gradu-
ate fellows, in particular, never be-
come more than mere . glamorous
names to the majority.of undergradu-
ates, who hear their appointments an-
nounced in chapel.. The formation of
some kind of club interested in cur-
rent events would also make Bryn
Mawr eligible for the Carnegie pub-
lications, which Dr. Fenwick would
be delighted to have at the college.
Furthermore, the existence of such
(Continued on Page -Three)
©
1 Dr. Leuba...
| University, is takin
American. Philosophi-
cal Society Meets ston
Bryn Mawr Campus Selected as |
Location for Society’s |
Yearly Convention |
DR. WEISS. READS PAPER.
The Eastern Division of the Amer-|
ican Philosophical Association is hold- |
ing its thirty-second annual meeting |
at Bryn Mawr during the Christmas |
holidays, on December 28th, 29th, and,
30th. This association gathers yearly |
at one of the large colleges or uni-|
versities along the Atjantic sea coast, |
—Princeton, Amherst, Swarthmore, '
and the University of Virginia being |
among those that have been chosen!|~
in the past as places of mééting. The’
honor goes to Bryn, Mawr this year, |
and it is of especial interest in view |
of the fact that until now no learned ,
association has ever convened on our)
campus. The local committee charg- |
ed with conducting the proceedings |
has Dr. Grace De Laguna for its
chairman, and consists further of ;
Dean Manning, Dean Schenck, and |
Pembroke Hall is to be;
used. for rooms and meals, and the|
Common Room, as a lounge and smok- |
ing room throughout the meetings. !
Several people connected with the col- |
lege are figuring on the program. Dr. |
Paul Weiss is reading a paper on|
“The Individual.”~ Helen H. Park-|
hurst,| who is now a professor at Bar- |
nard College, .but- who received her |
A.B. degree and also her Ph.D. from |
Bryn Mawr, is discussing “Relational |
Absolutes.” Katherine Gilbert, who
was; according to Miss Thomas, the
first’:““academic warden” at college,
and who is now a ppofessor at Duke |
p “The Rela-
tion of the Moral to the Aesthetic
Standard in Plato.” Below is the com-
plete program of the activities of the
society for the three days of their!
stay here: |
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28th.
8.00°P. M., *Informal Smoker,
Goodhart Hall, Common Room;
|
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29th
9.80 A. M..Goodhart Hall, Auditorium
TERCENTENARY SESSION ON LOCKE
AND SPINOZA
Welcome by
PRESIDENT MARION E. PARK
John Locke,
FREDERICK J. E. WoopsrIDcE
Spinoza’s Doctrine of Intellectual
Intuition ..BENJAMIN GINZBURG
Non-being RAPHAEL DEMOS
2.30 P.. M., Goodhart Hall, Auditorium
Are There Particulars?
BRAND BLANSHARD
What Are Propositions?
‘ Morris R. CoHEN
The Problem of General Proposi-
tions ANDREW P. USHENKO
Are Particulars Constituents of
Propositions? ....LUCIUS GARVIN |
“we (Introduced by C. J. Ducasse)
4.30 P. M., Tea,
‘Goddhart Hall, Common Room
(At the Invitation of President Park)
Se A yl a ee
5.30 P. M., Meeting of Executive
Committee ....... Goodhart Hall
7.30 P.«M., *Annual Association
Dinner Pembroke Hall
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS:
Freedom, Necessity, and Mind,
EDWARD GLEASON SPAULDING
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30th
CONCURRENT DISCUSSIONS
9.30 A. M., Division I,
Taylor Hall, Room F
The Operational Test of Meafing-
_. Jessness~ 20 7RAY« H:-DoTTerery-
What Is Analysis?
ALBERT E. BLUMBERG
The Individual PAUL WEISS
Logical Positivism and Psychology,
JoHN A. IRVING
9.30 A. M., Division II,
Taylor Hall, Room E
(Continued*on Page Four)
eee wees
Election
Bryn Mawr League takes
~ pleasure in announcing the elec-
tion of Sally Park as represen-
tative of the Class of 1936.
| United States.
CALENDAR
Wednesday, December 7 —
William Butler Yeats will speak
on the Irish Renaissance. Good-
hart, 8.20 P. M.
Friday, December 9—Varsity
Dramatics and Haverford Cap
and Bells Club present The
Royal Family. Goodhart, 8.20
PEM,
Saturday, December 10—Var-
sity Dramatics and Haverford
Cap and Bells Club present The
Royal Family. Goodhart, 8.20
P. M. Bryn Mawr College dance,
Gymnasium, 10.30 P. M: to 2.00
A. M.
Sunday, December 11 —
Christmas Musical Service, Ad-
dress by the Reverend Joseph
Fort-Newton, D.D. At 7.45 P.
~M., in Goodhart. Auditorium.
Monday, December 12 — Mr.
John Avery Lomax. will speak
on Negro Folk Songs and Spir-
ituals (not yet published).
“Goodhart, 8.20 P. M.
Tuesday, December 13—
Christmas Carol Singing un-
der auspices of Bryn Mawr:
League. ot
Wednesday, December 14—
Maids’ Party. 7.00 in the gym.
Thursday, December 15—
Christmas Play, 7.00 in front
of the Library.
'M. Canu Describes His
‘Impressions of America
Spent First Vacation Here Tour-
ing U.-S.;-Found--All
Section ‘Alike’ ~
| RELATES —~ADVENTURES
(Especially Contributed by
E. Margaret Tyler)
At the meeting of the French club
(in Merion showcase last Tuesday af-
ternoon, Moliere’s Le Bourgeois Gen-
'tilhomme was chosen as the produc-,
tion for this year.
M. Canu gave a talk on his first
He began
very modestly by saying that we prob-
impressions of America:-
| ably knew very much more about
America than he ever would. To get
the right atmosphere for this story,
he said that we must go back to the
time when he was a free man, a stu-
dent coming to America on a scholar-
ship.
as his course was simple.and he could
study or not_as he chose, being pro-
vided with unlimited cuts.
When the summer vacation came,
two friends and he decided to hire an
automobile and take a trip around the
At first they consid-
ered trains, but someone said: they
It was a free and easy time,
| were kept very hot over here and on
coming out of them into the air, one
was liable to catch all sorts of dis-
eases. Next they thought of bicy-
cling, but people told them that it
was “mal vu” in America. Not. one
of them was Jean Jacques Rousseau
with his love of nature, or they would
have walked, so they bought an an-
cient car, tents and cooking utensils,
and sét about getting their drivers’
licenses. People warned them that
New York was a very hard place to
learn and that the examination was
difficult, and they were advised to go
+n Washington. “Donec nous voila a
| Washington!” chcaat Sores
One of his friends was a celebrated
economist and was itnmediately en-
trusted with the funds and named
“Ministre des Finances.” The other
was a good cook and was “Ministre
de l’Interieur,” while he, who spoke
the best English in the party (“jugez
les autres”) was nominated “Ministre
des Affaires Etrangeres” and charg-
ed with getting letters of introduction
and doing the speaking for all three.
They started off through New Eng-
land» and on to Canada; where they
had been told they would feel at. home,
as everyone spoke French. * They
: (Continued on Page Four) .
ia
Royal Family to be
Acted in Goodhart
Varsity DieaKatics and Cap and
Bells Are Directed by
Mrs. Flexner
STAGING IS. AMBITIOUS
On Friday and Saturday evenings:
in Goodhart, Varsity Dramatics is
presenting perhaps its most difficult
undertaking since the days of the
Constant Nymph, that is, the Royal
Famliy, a three-act comedy by George
Kaufman and Edna Ferber. The set
in. particular was a really monstrous
project, for the script requires that
it represent the two-story living room
of a New York duplex apartment, bal-
cony, upper hall, stairs and all; Every
possible inch of stage space is being
used to make a set big enough for ali
the people who must appear onh-it at
the same time, and the mere fact that
men fence and ladies faint on the
stairway is a good enough clue to the
type of construction that is demand-
ed. The properties for the three'acts
fill four or five pages in a script, not
the least amongst them being a live
parrot, and two champion Great
Danes, which are being loaned by Mr.
E. S. Choate, of Wayne. The cos-
tumes of the women are being loaned
by Nan Duskin, of Philadelphia, while
Bonwit Teller and Blum’s are provid-
ing shoes, riding habits, and negligees.
Other acknowledgements would fill a
column} it suffices to say that there
is enough glamour about the. proper-
ties, costumes and accessories to make
the evening worth-while on that
ground alone.
The cast includes both newly-dis-
covered talents and some of the most
seasoned actors that both Bryn Mawr
and Haverford -have produced. The
Haverford cast is headed by Philip
Truex, president of the Cap and Bells
Club and the Haverford English Club.
He has appeared in numerous produc-
tions-of both these organizations; on
the Bryn Mawr stage twice—in Berk-
eley Square and in The Devil’s Disci-
ple; and has just directed the Eng-
lish Club’s production of Twelfth
Night. He takes the part of Tony,
Cavendish, temperamental scion of
the royal house of Cavendish.
Herbert Dean, brother of Fanny
Cavendish and uncle of Tony and
Julie, is played by James Stoddard.
This is his first year in dramatics at
Haverford and he has already given a
very creditable performance of Mal-
volio in Twelfth Night.
Perry Stewart, Gwen Cavendish’s
fiance, is played by Russell Richie,
who had a small part in Berkeley
Square, and who has just played Sir
Andrew Aguecheek. Wolff, the long-
suffering manager, is done by Sidney
Hollander, whose first appearance this
is. Gil Marshall, the South Ameri-
can emerald king, who comes back
after twenty years to marry Julie,
will be portrayed by Henry Vaux.
Mr. Vaux is an experienced actor and
not new to the Bryn Mawr stage, for ‘
besides his performances in the Cap
and Bells productions of the Queen’s
Husband, Tons of Méney, and the
English’s Club’s Twelfth Night, he
appeared here last year as the Am-
bassador in Berkeley Square. Bruce
Jones, new.to our stage, but*known
in the Cap and Bells for his work in
Twelfth Night and Tons of Money,
will play. Jo, the butler, and John
Pugliese, a freshman, will play Mac-
Dermott, the pugilist-trainer.
The three women of the royal fam-
ily, Fanny, Julie, and Gwen, will be
played by Del MacMaster, Janet Mar-
shall, and Betty Lord, respectively.
With the exception of Miss Lord,
whose only other Bryn Mawr appear-
ance was as the heroine of the Fresh-
man Show of the Class of 1935, this .
(Continued on Page Five)
Resignation
__. The ann News regrets to
annOunce the resignation of
Peggy Little, °’35, from the
Business Board. :
1