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“Archaic Ivory Trade
The College
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VOL. XXII, No. 18 %
BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1936
Copyright BRYN MAWR
COLLEGE NEWS, 1936
PRICE 10 CENTS
Is Traced by Wace
Prehistoric and Historic Eras
In Hellenic Art Connected
By Commerce
SYRIA BASE OF TRADE
The Deanery, March 22.—“The
archaic ivory trade bridges the gulf
between prehistoric and _ historic
Greece and explains the Oriental in-
fluence in Greek art,’ said Dr. Alan
J. B. Wace, Fellow of Pembroke Col-
lege, Cambridge, Professor of Arch-
aeology at Cambridge and former
Director of the British School of
Archaeology. at Athens, in his lecture
on The Ancient Ivory Trade. Ivory
plaques and statuettes bearing Ori-
ental influence have been found in the
Eastern Mediterranean dating from
1400 B. C. in the Cretan and Myce-
naean eras to 600 B. C. in historic
Greek times.
The ancient ivory trade Was active
from before the fifteenth to the .sev-
enth century B. C. Where the center)
of this trade was raises an important
question. The archaic world presum-|
ably got its ivory from two sources, |
Africa and Asia, both habitats of the | i
elephant. In Crete small ivory ob-!
jects dating from the Bronze Age have '
been found which bear Egyptian de- |
signs. These are declared by Sir!
Bryn Mawr Faculty Men
Rout Haverford Profs
Gymnasium, March 20.—In a wild
and exciting basketball fray the Bryn
Mawr faculty overcame a lead held
by the Haverford faculty for three-|
quarters of the.game to down them
to the merry tune of 22-16. The
game started at a very moderate speed
and was characterized throughout by
exceedingly odd passwork, especially
on the part of the Bryn Mawr fac-
ulty. Our professors, however, were
hitting a mighty pace by the time the
final whistle blew,-leaving them well
on the long end of the score.
When the teams lined up (not very
promptly at the appointed hour) Dr.
Nahm drew out a large and eclipsing
pair of glasses guards with which he
covered up most of his face as well
as his glasses. The play at first was
rather slow and exceedingly messy.
Dr. Nahm’s fair philosophy students
seemed to expect great things from
him and wild shouts echoed from the
rafters every time he nabbed the ball.
Nor. did he disappoint his supporters,
for with accustomed lightning-like
speed he snatched the ball, raced
down the field and passed to Dr.
Blanchard, who was ready and wait-
ing. In the wink of an eye Dr.
Blanchard returned it to Dr. Nahm,
who sank Bryn Mawvr’s first basket.
After this neat work on the part of
the biology and philosophy depart-
Arthur Evans, who excavated the} ments, the play resumed its wild char-
Palace of Cnossos in Crete, to be!acter. The \Bryn Mawr faculty de-
Egyptian ivories. Very little ivory veloped an odd habit of standing at
has been found in Cretan tombs until one end of the field and hurling the
before the second period of the Late ball with all their strength to the
Minoan age, about 1400 B. C., but after other end, where the poor forwards
this date the tombs are full of it. At| were seldom able to pick up the un-
Mycenae on the mainland of Greece, controlled passes.
the same phenomenon occurs. There All during the first half the score
is a theory that Cretan and Myce- mounted slowly and fairly evenly, but
naean ivories came from Egypt, since always Haverford maintained her
there were fairly strong trade connec-|lead. Dr. Nahm raised another series
tions between Egypt, Crete and’ Myce-jof cheers by sinking a basket from
nae, during the reign of Akhenaten; near the centre of the floor, and then
in the first half of the fourteenth cers | the whistle for half-time blew, with
turn.~ This does not, however, account! Bryn Mawr’s.score standing at 7 and
for the large amounts of ivory found | Haverford’s at 10.
in the tombs which date after the fall; After a much-needed rest the teams
of Tell-el-Amarna, Akhenaten’s capi-| Set to once more with renewed vigor.
tal.
The discovery at Mycenae, Cyprus,
Rhodes and Northern Syria of ivory
Continued on Page Five
Bryn Mawr-Bound Oxen
Suffer Dire Calamities'
It was Haverford this time who de-
veloped the odd tricks, for it seemed
to be their idea to have four of the
team madly rushing around the floor
yelling “Bill!” while Mr. Cadbury
calmly held the ball and contemplated
where he would pass it. It usually
‘ended up by going to none of them,
Continued on Page Five
The four white oxen that were orig-
inally coming to May Day have sev-
erally gone the way of all flesh. Miss,
Kitselman went to Maryland to take | All to Boost May Day
a picture and found that one of the:
prize pair had “perishing hip” and | Goodhart, March 25.—At a mass-
“nerishing shoulder” (whatever that' meeting of the Undergraduate Asso-
may be). The second pair dropped ciation, Eleanor Fabyan and Edith
out of the running when one of them, ; Rose exhorted the undergraduates not
engrossed in dragging a heavy. log,|to let their enthusiasm for May Day
slipped on the ice and hurt his leg. | Janquish.
A third pair, that was obtained (long! Miss Fabyan, who called the meet-
distance) as alternates to the second ing to order, said that in the past two
yoke, proved to be marked with black. | or three weeks twenty or thirty loyal
And, since you cannot satisfactorily | and conscientious people have been
separate a yoke, these calamities force | spending twenty or thirty of their pre-
us to set out anew in our search. ' cious hours in constructing paper
The quest for white oxen is there-| flowers. If, on the other hand, four
fore turning into a serious survey hundre of us had merely given .up
of the sources of white oxen in Serf hours of our time, the
ica. Any statements we make about's amount of woyk would have been
white oxen are subject to correction, | done with little or no inconvenience
but we understand that there is no) 'to anyone concerned. It is purely
regular breed of white oxen in this’ selfish of us not to be ready to do a
part of the world, and that Maryland ' small share of the work that neces-
and Virginia white oxen such as have | ' sarily crops up in connection with
‘Mass Meeting Urges
‘ or Burma for the “real thing”).
_fanciers, and is advertising in all farm
that she can arrange to get them here
been obtained for May Day are albinos. |
The search has, consequently, been ex- |
tended as far south as Louisiana éndi
as far north as Nova Scotia (with
well wishers advising us to go to Italy
Mrs. Collins has received the help
of the Pennsylvania State Agricul-
tural College and also time on the |
National Farm and Home radio hour |
(which you may have heard daily,!
around noon) to reach far away oxen
journals of the East.
If you know of any white oxen any-
where, if you have seen any white
oxen recently, or if you see any white
oxen during Spring Vacation, get in
touch with the May Day Director so
for May Day.
‘May Day.
At present no promises can be made
as to whether or not students can
take weekends after spring vacation.
It will depend entirely on whether
or not the plays and dances are going
well. In the last analysis the suc-
cess of May Day is of more importance
than Princeton house parties!
Miss Rose,-as president of Players’
Club, spoke next, telling us that
numerous’ rehearsals “have been
spoiled by people who cut or come
late. If the people concerned would
only realize how much more important
is the success of May Day than are
the various functions for which they
may cut rehearsals, they would make
the necessary sacrifices "to do their bit,
which is all-important for the success
of the whole.
College Calendar _
Wednesday, March 25.—Dr.
Wolfgang Kohler, of Swarth-
more College, will speak on New
Aspects of ‘Memory. Music
Room, 8.15 p. m.
Friday, March 27.—Spring
‘Vacation begins, 12.45 p. m.
Monday, April.6.—Spring Va.
cation ends at 9 a. m.
Bryn Mawr Organizes
New Home Fire Post
Bonus Movement, Seek Free
Trips Abroad
SPONSOR CONGRESS BILL
A branch, chapter of the Home Fire
Division of the Veterans of Future
Wars, burlesque bonus and _ peace
movement recently originated — at
Princeton, has been formed at Bryn
Mawr. In the first four hours of its
existence here Post Commander Hileen
Sigler, ’37, was swamped with de-
mands for membership certificates and
buttons in the new
which proposes a bonus of $1000 to be
paid now to eVery male citizen be-
tween the ages of 18 and 36, a trip
to Europe to view the future battle-
fields of their present and future chil- |
dren for future mothers of future
war veterans, and for future wives a
pension of fifty dollars a month for
life. These proposals ‘are to be em-
bodied in a bill for Congress, which
Representative Maury Maverick of
Texas promised to sponsor.
The movement has grown so rapidly
that national offices had to be opened
in Princeton to take care of the thirty
existing posts and the hundreds of re-
quests for new posts which have come
from campuses all over the country.
The women’s branch of the organiza-
tion was originally called the Future
Gold Star Mothers, but the real Gold
Star Mothers protested that this vio-
lated sacred feelings. The name of
the Women’s Auxiliary was then
adopted
A recent. editorial in the Herald-
Tribune supported the bonus and pen-
sion movement because “in the first
place it would put that much more
money into circulation, thus at least
doubling the stimulus to trade claimed
for the prepayment of-the bonus to
World War veterans. Secondly, it
would educate our youth in the spend-
ing of money against the day when
as pensioners under the Townsend
Plan they must get rid of it on sched-
ule. Thirdly, it would permit them
the enjoyment of the Government’s
cash while they are still young, be-
fore, for example, they were killed
in action or badly wounded, or, as in
the vast majority of cases, suffered
the tedium of a training camp.”
Dr. Fenwick announced in his Cur-
rent Events talk that two weeks ago
in Washington the idea of a future
war widows’ organization had _ oc-
curred to him, but that he felt that
in the interests of united and mass
action to force Congress to vote this
bonus for future veterans and pen-
sions for future war widows, any
group here should collaborate closely
with the national group. He pointed
out the’fallacy of giving bonuses to
the dead who can never spend them
and urged that the same agreement
be reached as the classification of fu-
ture wives, widows and mothers. Post
Commander Sigler announced that no
stipulation of a proposal or marriage
contract had yet been made for mem-
bership in the Home Fire Division.
Inquiries should be made to the Post
Commander in Rockefeller 52, where
applications should be filed, buttons
received and the salute learned. The
latter consists of right hand out-
stretched palm up and fingers pressed
together in the “Gimme” attitude.
"Stuff and Stamp”
All of the flowers have been
finished and almost all of the
streamers have been made. A °
“stuffing and stamping” tea will
be held on Thursday, March 26,
from 2 to 6 in the Common
Room.
organization, ;"""" :
|ist internally as traits of the constant
Philosophers Discuss
‘Paper on Individual
Common Room, March 19:—The
Philosophy Club held its second meet-
ing this afternoon for the purpose of
discussing Marjorie Goldwasser’s pa-
per on’ “Individual and Internal Re-
lations,”
In reading this paper, Miss Gold-
wasser proved that relations could not
be purely external, since whether real
or unreal, they would then involve the
problem of the middle man. . If, on
the other hand, relations were consid-
'ered as internal-but unreal, then the
Wives of Future Soldiers Join: terms to’be related would necessarily
be unreal. As the reality.of the terms
at least must be maintained, a fourth
possibility was suggested to the effect
that relations were both internal and
real. This theory bears investigation
better
falls down in the end. For this means
that if relations are changed, the in-
dividual is changed. The constancy
and unity of the individual, however,
is a vital belief not lightly-to be swept
away. Consequently, the only solu-
tion for the dilemma is the theory that
relations are indeed real and likewise
both internal and external. They ex-
individual; they are seen externally
as they are brought into focus with
another individual. In their inner
aspect they cannot change; in their
outer aspect, the alteration
obviously does occur is allowed,
the dilemma. disappears. :
In spite of Miss Goldwasser’s log-
ical demonstrations, her statements
were not accepted by the club without
question. Yet the arguments so in-
duced soon advanced to more general
problems, such as’ what constitutes an
individual, when and how an individ-
ual can cease to exist or come to be,
and finally the eternal puzzle of the
immortality of the soul.
and
Bryn Mawr Club Lowers
Price on New Bedroom
The New York Bryn Mawr Club
at the Park Lane, 299 Park avenue,
New York City, has converted the
club dressing room into a bedroom.
It may be rented, with bath, at $2.00
a night for one person and $3.00 for
two, with exclusive use of the room
from 8 p. m. to 10 a. m, and all day
on Sunday. Rental has been fixed at
a low rate because it is necescsary
to use the room as a club dressing
room during the: day.
The Park Lane provides hotel rooms
and meals at regular prices. How-
ever, there is a list of tearooms in
the neighborhood where less expen-
sive meals may be procured posted on
the bulletin board. The Bryn Mawr
Club is on the approved list of hotels
at which’ undegraduates may stay un-
Conee on Page Two
than the others, yet it, too,,
that |
Miss Buchanan Gains
European Fellowship
Sixteen Resident Appointments,
Undergraduate Cum Laude
List Announced
SENIORS’ AVERAGE HIGH
Goodhart, March 20.—Dorothy Anne
Buchanan, A. B. Smith College 1930,
M. A. Bryn Mawr College 1931, was
announced by Miss Park in Chapel as
the holder for next year of the Mary
Elizabeth Garrett European Fellow-
ship. Although ordinarily the college
can award three scholarships for
study abroad at this time, the Fanny
Bullock Workman and the Ottendorfer
fellowships have to be suspended this
year for financial reasons. Other col-
leges and associations, howéver, have
been generous in their awards to Bryn
Mawr graduate students, and seven
of these awards were announced in
addition.to a special scholarship of-
fered for study in Athens. Sixteen
resident fellowships have been award-
ed for next year. In-closing Miss
Park read the list of those on the
undergraduate honor roll.
The announcement of the European
and Bryn Mawr resident fellows is
one of the. great academic occasions
of the college year. The awards are a
recognition of ability, industry and
‘maturity. The whole college owes a
great debt to the graduate school; the
faculty, the Library and the methods
of working, have a certain fine color
because of it, a color recognized and
found satisfactory by most under-
| graduates. The advanced under-
\graduate students begin to _ look
through the keyhole at graduate work,
to see the pleasures of independence
and also the stiffer work, the fewer
holidays, the professional responsibili-
ties which the professional student
has.
This year we are particularly aware
of the place a woman can take in the
great field of scholarship. Although
perhaps it is unlikely that out of the
Bryn Mawr awards of any one year
another Emmy Noether will come,
yet the chances for such a student
grow as study among women becomes
more common. Lists of previous hold-
ers of Bryn Mawr graduate fellow-
ships show that they are a useful
group. There are fourteen members of
the Bryn Mawr faculty who were
earlier holders of Bryn Mawr gradu-
ate fellowships, eight on the Smith
faculty, seven at Mount Holyoke, six
;at Vassar, three at Wellesley, two at
Barnard and one at Sweet Briar and
Connecticut.
The Mary Elizabeth Garrett Euro-
pean Fellowship, which must be
awarded to a present member of the
graduate school, is the oldest of the
| Continued on Page Four
Vociferous Gallery Sees Haverford Win
By 30-22 Score
Despite Women’s Rules
Gymnasium, March 23.—Haverford
College Varsity downed the Bryn
Mawr team, 30-22, in an hilarious bas-
ketball game’in which girls’ rules
were more or less adhered to through-
out. The packed gallery of enthusi-
astic Haverford and Bryn Mawr root-
ers lent as much zest to the game as
did the players themselves.
May Day is so thoroughly instilled
in our minds nowadays that it can-|
not even be left out of a basketball
game. The Haverfordians appreciated |
this fact and very thoughtfully catered |
to our whims by appearing on the}
basketball floor gracefully (?) attired
in Elizabethan costumes. Realizing,
‘however, the great ability of the op-
ponents against whom they were about
to be pitted, they were afraid to sub- |
ject themselves to the disadvantages
of playing in such garb. Accordingly
they retired, only to return in a few
moments all dressed in the conven-
tional basketball costume with the ex-
ception of two brave (or cold- blooded)
fellows, whose manly legs were graced
by long woolen underdrawers.
With endless laughing and cheer-
ing and endless substituting and re-
substituting by Haverford, the merry
game progressed until at the end of
the half the score stood at 4-26 in
favor of the men. We felt that if
Marion Bridgman had possessed a pair
of those stilts that reside outside of
| Merion, she would have been materi-
ally aided in the job of guarding
Sturgis Poorman, her long and lanky
| opponent.
| In the second half, however, Char-
| totte Peirce brought joy to the hearts
of the Bryn Mawrters by sinking bas-
| ket after basket and rolling Varsity’s
score up to 15, while in the meantime
‘only a single tally had been netted
for Haverford..«At this juncture the
men’s team began to sit up and take
notice and a few shouts from the raft-
ers demanded boys’ rules. Henceforth
the score mounted fairly evenly until
Bryn Mawr had amassed 22 points as
against Haverford’s final count of 30.
Line-up:
Haverford . Bryn Mawr
Bae 6. 4k vf. ae Peirce
TOUTE. occ ccces Le hs ie Wilder
Poorman......: eer Jackson
Tiemman....<.. GB secive Jennings
PUNVER. . oo ccs ee . Hasse
Wengert ..... i. g. .... Bridgman:
Substitutions—Haverford, Duff for
Wengert; Bryn Mawr, M. Meigs for
Jackson, Stone for Jennings.
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
—
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(Founded in 1914)
Published weekly during the College Year (excepting during Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest ot
Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in
it may be reprinted either wholly or in part witheut written permission of the
Editor-in-Chief.
Editor-in-Chief
“BARBARA CARY, ’36
News Editor
‘Copy Editor
HELEN FISHER, ’37
ANNE Marsury, '37
Editors
CAROLINE C. BROWN, ’36
Mary H. HUTCHINGS, ’87.
JANE SIMPSON, ’37
ELIZABETH LYLE, ’87 ° —
JANET THOM, ’38 ©
SUZANNE WILLIAMS; ’38
Sports Editor
‘ SyLvia H. Evans, '37
Business Manager Subscription. Manager
DOREEN CANADAY, ’36 ALICE COHEN, '36
Assistants
LOUISE STENGEL, ’37 ETHEL HENKELMAN, ’38
AGNES ALLINSON, ’37 MARGARET Howson, ’38
“ DEWILDA NARAMORE, ’38
CORDELIA STONE, ’37
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 . MAILING PRICE, $3.00
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
de
7m‘
2 Extra! Extra!
We recently read in the papers that Harvard University undergraduates
conduct their own school of journalism through the agency of their three
campus publications. We began to have.a fellow feeling with our northern)
neighbors until we discovered that the writer of the article not only con-
sidered this a very unique system of training, but also felt that it was of
unusual merit, in-that it needed no theoretical course to supplement it.
With all due respect for Harvard we wish to remark that from our
own experiences we — the merit is not so unusual; there is room for
betterment, at least ss“far as Bryn Mawr is concerned. For many: years
‘our publications have been carried on entirely by the students themselves.
We heartily approve of the independence which is accorded us and we
regard the principle of a self-perpetuating board as absolutely essential to
the efficiency of our editorial efforts. There is one matter, however, which
we think is open to improvement and that is.the preparation for newspaper
and literary work which we receive.
Each year a new group of students has to be trained to take over the|
positions of responsibility on the News and Lantern. They can learn the|
intricacies of journalistic writing only by gleaning information from those
who have gone before and by witnessing their own successes and failures.
But although experience is undoubtedly the most versatile of teachers, its
instruction is sometimes slow and expensive. A course in the elements of
journalism would be a most welcome addition to the curriculum from every
point of view. Not only would it train those who are interested, in this
kind of writing, but would be of great value to anyone who desires to know
how to write clearly, concisely and accurately. The technique of journal-
istic writing is completely different from ordinary literary or~critical-com~
position and requires a special training. Modern American writing is tend-|
ing more and more to be influenced by the style of writing used by leading
newspapers and weekly magazines and many of the most prominent authors
are former newspapermen. Bryn Mawr needs a course in journalism both
to complete the group of writing courses which are now available to stu-
dents, and to provide their very foundation. i
‘ Watch Your Steps!
The tradition that Taylor tower steps are used only by the members
of the two upper classes is one of the few older and more informal customs
which have weathered the changing ranks of undergraduates, and it is
with great sorrow that we see it disappearing under the hasty tread of
sophomores and freshmen. Undoubtedly rain and anxiety to see the May
Day bulletin board make the longer route to Library or Pembroke seem
an unnecessary delay, but the tradition had @ practical origin as a traffic
device to turn aside half of the onrushing crpwd and thus to make that
corridor in Taylor passable. There was nevet“a time when that hallawy
needed such trafic regulations more than in a busy May Day year. But
of far greater importance is the fact that using the tower steps is to many
juniors and seniors a sign that they have successfully served two years’
apprenticeship and have at last come to the dignity of upperclassmen. Haz-
ing is unknown here and distinctions have never been strictly drawn between
classes, but pleasant traditions are rare. The freshmen and sophomores are
only destroying their own thrill in future years and that of the upperclass-
men today by carelessly rushing up and down the tower steps.
Petrified Forest, Road to Rome and
Reunion in Vienna) is the, author.
Moreover, Lynn Fontanne and Alfred
Lunt play the main roles-in a manner
which is rumored to be their most
frisky.
News of the
New York Theatres
S. R. Behrman has bden described
as the wittiest Ameri playwright
and his latest comedy now running in
New York continues the tradition. It
is called End of Summer and the stars
are Ina Claire and Osgood Perkins.
Doris Dudley, a young actress who
plays Miss Claire’s daughter, is mak-
ing her debut in a succesful play, al-
though she has played in one or two
flops. It is our opinion (re-inforced
‘by that of one or two real critics)
that Miss Dudley will come to some-
- thing important in the theatre.
Idiot’s Delight is another excellent
can Tragedy theme. cite eae z
For those who are interested in the
new drama, there is a more or less
successful theatrical experiment being
presented by the Group Theatre called
Case of Clyde Griffiths. Erwin Pisca-
tor, the playwright, is a Communist
who has been experimenting in the
Russian theatre where drama is really
new, and planned as well. The suc-
cessful aspect of the play is its half-
realistic, half-symbolic presentation
which must be seen to be appreciated;
while the less satisfactory, aspect is
the far-fetched economic interpreta-
tion of Theodore: Dreiser’s old Ameri-
.
an
*
. | ne of the greatest men his Race had
| the New York stage are Love on the
Dole, an English importation with the |
“elfin” Wendy Hiller, Russet Mantle,
| with John Beal as youth on the
|rampage, and Call.It.a.Day, with
/Gladys Cooper and Philip. Meri-
‘vale. Of course it is impossible to
forget Saint Joan done in the Cornell
| style.
‘For the benefit of those who are
‘staying at college for the next week,
{we note that Sailor Beware, Three
| Men On a Horse and Winterset will
remain in Philadelphia until this Sat-
urday night, while Tobacco Road re-
turns for another two weeks.
_ For the benefit of those who are
| planning to hunt in the (figuratively)
| greener theatrical fields of New York
City, the Néws travels (also, alas, fig-
uratively) to that city for the latest
news of the stage.
| In Philadelphia ‘
|
Campus Note
Professor Alwyne will give a piano-
forte recital at Rollins College, Wint-
er Park, Florida, on Tuesday next,
March 31. This will be his third re-
cital at Rollins.- The program will
include. works. of. Bach, Couperin,
| Haydn, Brahms, Liszt and eeentanbe
noft.
THE CAREER GIRL |
Mary Marjorie Addapearl
Happened to be an only girl,
So the Addapearl’s claim to fame and)
glory
Was vested entirely in little asians
Though never bright, from the day |
of her birth
She’ was always known for her ster-!
ling worth.
What Marjorie began she’d be sure to}
* finach; |
Her favourite foods were prunes and,
spinach; |
She loved her parents and native|
land;
She could chin herself with either
hand;
But, weep for Marjorie, one affliction
Stood in the way of her life’s am-
bition.
She never completely mastered the
art
Of telling her right and her left
apart.
One couldn’t really hold it against her |
And at first it just inconvenienc®d her, |
But at last, 1930 and 6 was the year, |
It put an end to her whole career. |
At a woman’s college, Bryn Mawr,
Pa., :
They celebrate the coming May |
With plays and masques, but mostly
with dance
And she was attending Bryn Mawr
by chance.
Bi-weekly at eight for a half an hour
She danced with her utmost zeal and
power, :
But her progress, if anything, was
slight
As she couldn’t tell her left from her
right
And had no possible way of deciding
Which arm for arming or side for
siding.
Frantic, unhappy, hot, shamed, and
red,
She tried to do what the others said,
But in vain. At last came the fatal
day.
She was asked not to dance on the
first of May.
When he heard of the blot on his
name, overnight
Mr. Addapearl’s hair turned white.
His wife, who was practical, heaved
a sigh
And cancelled the rooms they had
booked nearby.
They’ve retired since to the south of
France
To drown their sorrow in strong ab-
sinthes-
And as for Marjorie? She now graces
The sports department of R. H.
Macy’s.
The Personal Peregrinations
of Algernon Swinburne
Stapleton-Smith
or
Lost in a London Fog
b
CHAPTER THE FIRST—
In the little, sleepy, old village of
Scuffle-on-the-Bustle, Pants, Hants,
Bucks, England, was born a lad of
gentle blood ‘who was destined to be
| News Elections
The College News announces
the following eléctions: Editor-
'| in-Chief, Helen Fisher, ’373_
-Gopy Editor, Anne Marbury,
| ae ’87; Editors: Eleanor Bailenson, -
39, Margery Hartman, 38,
Margaret Howson, ’38, Abbie
Ingalls, ’88, Jean Morrill, ’39,
and Margaret Otis, ’39.
colonial, descended from a good fam-
ily of ancient lineage; and his father
| was a member of the Illustrious Bucks
| family Smith who had married into
the Campbells of Argyle. They. had
met in London on the embankment
one foggy night and had fallen in
Hove at first sight. At that time, his
mother was a young maiden going
through a stage of intense intellectual-
ism, but all the fervor of her ardent
and intense nature was soon trans-
' ferred into a deep and lasting affec-
‘tion for her future husband, Leften-
{ant the Honorable Jeffrey Leslie
Rampant Smith, D. S. O.
| They had not been married long
|when Leftenant the Honorable J. L.
| Smith was called back to India to his
| regiment, the 42 Bengal Lancers (Go
| it, J. L.!). Because Mrs. Smith had
only just got over a malignant at-
|taque of Cholera, it. was thought ad-
| visable to leave her in England for a
WIT’sS re D | while. Shortly after Leftenant Smith
reached his post at the treacherous
|Mahama Rahka Pass, he received the
| following cable from army headquar-
ters:
“The Brave Little Mother has
just received a Precious Little Bundle.
| Weight % stone.”
Thus was his father’ made aware of
the advent of Algernon Swinburne
Stapleton-Smith.
(To be continued next week)
To thumb through college calendars
Was formerly a source of woe
I could not bear to read about
Those courses that I must forego.
For there are only four short years
That one can go to Bryn Mawr col-
lege;
And only sixteen courses here
Must constitute our college knowledge.
What joy! What bliss! is now my
lot:
I am a student monitor
And gather pearls of ‘wisdom now
' As I proceed from door to door.
[_ know a_bit-of_calculus,
Have picked up Greek and ‘history,
too—
I’ll reach the peak of scholarship
Before my college course is through!
Cheerio,
THE MAD HATTER.
Current Events
(Gleaned:. from Dr. Fenwick)
Common Room, March 23.—“There’s
not much to be done constitutionally
about the floods,” sadly announced Dr.
Fenwick, “yet something must be
done.” The only way to prevent fu-
ture inundations along such rivers as
the Ohio that rise far in the moun-
tains where the frozen ground cannot
absorb quick thaws and rains is to
build a series of dams all the way up
the stream. Since the Ohio flows
through several states, however, it is
difficult for any united action to be
taken, unless the Federal Government
assumes the task. Yet such a task
may be declared unconstitutional by
the Supreme Court; undoubtedly it
will be, if corporations are taxed to
support it as they were taxed to sup-
port the AAA. The only way is to
go quietly ahead and build the dams,
then tax without saying why—just
levy taxes. Thus the disapproval of
the Supreme Court may be avoided
and the floods certainly stopped.
Although taxes ‘are a sore subject
to American business men right now,
the Government is elated because the
returns’frem the income tax filed on
March 15 were much higher than
had been anticipated. This fortunate
event occurred because of the gen-
eral increase of incomes this year
while the tax rate remained the same
as last year. As a result, some of
the heavy appropriations may be cut,
‘and the proposed corporation tax may
be affected. Directors indeed will be
relieved therefore,-:ot the stockhold-
ers who await the distribution of divi-
‘dends to avoid the tax will be disap-
‘pointed. If they can thus increase
‘their wealth, however, they will have
bs
‘as the Chamber of Deputies.
to pay larger taxes to the Gevern-
ment, and so the end will be the same:
the Government will have the money.
Corporations in Americ: , cven when
taxed, are well off when compared to
those in Italy. For Mus.uvlini, *cele-
brating today the seventeenth birth-
day of Fascism, has abunshed the
large industries of his country, as well
Pre-
viously, this Chamber has been a mere
sounding-board for him, but at least.
it has been a semblance of democracy.
Instead he has now established a
Council of Guilds representing twenty-
two business and professional bodies.
A Guild in Italy consists in a anion
of both employers and employes.
Thus the economical affairs of Italy
will be politically controlled. Since
the country is faced with a war for
its future, a war brought on by fate,.
as Mussolini innocently points out, it
is necessary that large industries vital
to the nation and to the carrying on
of war should be subjected to the
nation. Only medium and small busi-
nesses can be left intact.
In Germany..another dictator has
recently taken a drastic step. Now
Hitler, having sent his troops into the
Rhineland and.. broken. the. Locarno.
Treaty, is holding an, election on Sun-
day to seek justification from the peo-
‘ple. The Nazis have been ordered to
get out a solid 100 per cent vote, and
they will very nearly accomplish their
mark. All but the sick and dying will
be brought to the poles and presented
ler. If another name is written in,
the ballot becomes void. The vote is
either for Hitler or for no one. Under
these conditions, Hitler will doubtless
receive a tremendous endorsement.
Hitler stands in need of an endorse-
ment from his people, since the rep-
resentative he sent to London to meet.
the Council of the League of Nations,
has not been so favorably received.
This representative, Von Ribbentrop,
presented the argument that since
France has already broken the Lo-
carno Treaty by the Franco-Soviet
Pact, Hitler has committed no viola-
tion by his pact. With a vote of
eleven to nothing it was decided that
Hitler had violated the Treaty.
Whether or not the Franco-Soviet Pact
had likewise trespassed on the Locar-
no Treaty, was a question which the
council offered to submit to the World
Court. Since this Treaty and the Pact
were drawn up within the provisions
of the League, it is already evident
that France has not broken the Treaty
and that Germany therefore most un-
deniably has.
Nevertheless, in an effort to evade
war, the League has proposed a con-
ference of the Locarno Powers to draw
up a peace plan. In the purposes set
down for this conference it is at last
recognized that the League must be
more than an instrument for maintain-
ing the status quo in Europe; it must
be an instrument of justice. The
peace plan to be drawn up must pro-
vide for a “re-establishment of eco-
nomic relations on a healthy basis.”
The mal-distribution of raw materials
and markets must be adjusted, and
the economic barriers between coun-
tries must be relaxed. By revising the
boundary lines on a map no harmoni-
ous condition can ever be established.
The boundaries must be made to mean
less, they must be made to signify
no more than the line between New
York and Connecticut. Then there
will be as little thought of fighting
about the limit as New York thinks
af fighting its New England neighbor.
This is the only possible basis for
peace.
Bryn Mawr Club Lowers
Price on- New Bedroom
Continued from Page One
chaperoned.
All Bryn Mawr students and gradu-
ates are welcome to drop in at the club
whenever they are in New York. Guest
cards may be obtained from the sec-
retary in attendance, who will be glad
to show visitors around the rooms,
answer questions and explain the rou-
tine of obtaining guest cards for
friends.
Dues for undergraduate members
are $5.00 annually. Non-resident
graduate dues are $10.00. Graduate
resident dues for those out of ‘college
less than three years are $10.00. Non-
resident and undergraduate members
may have all club privileges except
those of voting and holding office. Ap-
plication-for membership may be made
‘by writing tothe club. sss
veh fh
with a ballot bearing one name—Hit- .
G
+
ie
&
ro Se Vea eT
>
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
DIRECTOR’S PAGE
MAY. DAY ANNOUNCEMENTS
Finery for May Day
In Active Preparation
New Costumes to be Designed,
Old Ones to be Remodelled
-For Revellers
SOLICIT CONTRIBUTIONS
No one will be able ‘to say, on May
-8 and 9, that she has “nothing to
wear.” The May Day Room is
jammed with silks, velvets, satins,
furs, jewels, feathers, lace and armor.
New costumes are being made for the
three new plays, for about one-third
of the characters in the other five
plays, for the entire court and for
many of the revellers on the Green.
Many of the costumes. are being re-
modelled with contrasting sleeve lin-
ings and new accessories; dozens of
them are being washed and cleaned
and dyed and mended. Everything
is being pressed.
The work will continue straight
through Spring Vacation, as will all
of the May Day work except that to
do with ‘the: plays, with Mrs. von
Erffa supervising the cleaning, press-
ing, dyeing and sewing of the cos-
tumes in the May Day Room and the
Gymnasium. Miss Grayson, mean-
while, will be working in New York,
supervising the designing and sewing
of the new costumes for Queen Eliza-
beth’s courtiers and _ladies-in-waiting,
which are being especially made in
her own workshop in -New York.
Approximately three hundred stu-
dents have been measured for their
costumes, and if still more students
can be measured before Spring Vaca-
tion, the seamstresses can proceed im-
mediately with their work and definite
arrangements can be made for as-
sembling the characters on the Green.
The costumers at the moment are
searching mainly for suitable and
decorative materials. They especially
need fur (from old evening coats or
wraps of any kind) and velvets. They
hope to have contributions along these
lines, but they are getting their mar
May Day Calendar
Wednesday, March 25.—Gen-
eral dancing, 7.380-8 p. m,;
Sword dancing, 8.30-9.15 p. m.;
dancers, chimney sweeps, 4 p.
m.; gypsies, 5 p. m.; St. George
' rehearsal, stage, 4.30-6.30; Robin
Hood rehearsal, stage, 7.30-9.30
p. m.; General dancing, 12, 7.30
and 8 p. m.; Sword dahcing,
8.30-9.15 p. m.; Special dancing,
9.15 p. m.; Old Wives’ Tale re-
hearsal, stage, 9.30-10.30 p. m.
terials—for new costumes or for re-
touching old ones—from all sorts of
places. Some come from theatrical
supply shops, to be sure, but others
are the results of protracted trips
through the Ghetto, and some have
been obtained from out-of the way
places in most romantic ways. King
Richard, for example, is getting an
entirely new suit of armor, made of
flexible and glittering milliner’s stuff
that one of Miss Grayson’s New York
assistants remembered having seen in
a milliner’s shop several years ago.
A return trip to the shop proved that
the material was still shelved away
there, and it was thankfully and joy-
fully obtained for May Day armor.
All new costumes will be necessary
for the new plays. Gammer Gurton’s
Needle is to be done in rough country
style, with browns and blues domi-
nant. Dame Chat and Gammer Gur-
ton will be costumed according to a
picture on the back of a sixteenth
century playing card. The Creation
and The Deluge, with the especially
difficult costume problems they offer,
are particularly interesting. Adam
and Eve in Tite Creation are to be
garbed like lay figures from an old
fresco on wood. Stiff cloth; painted
to look like wood will be used, and
both characters will appear to be
jointed, like dolls. The only differ-
ence between them will be between
Eve’s long yellow hair and Adam’s
black hair and long black beard. ‘The
Serpent will be costumed as a woman
(not because this is a Bryn Mawr pro-
duction, but because that was the cus-
in early England), with her
hands coming up out of a long gown.
tom
The Creator will wear tarnished gold
cloth, while Deus (in The Deluge)
will be treated more realistically, and
will be a magnified’ version of Noah
himself.
The 1936 Masque of Flowers will be |
much more authentic (as to, costume)
than the 19382 version. Several stu-
dents are studying Inigo Jones’ plans
for costumes and sets, used in the
production of court masques in Eliza-
bethan times. The dancers’ costumes
will be. made of sufficiently light
weight material so that the dancers
can move easily and freely, but the
dresses will have some definite form.
The chimney sweeps will wear bright
colors of shiny material, imitating the
apparel of the well-to-do, instead of
the gray and black of their trade.
All the maskers will, of. course, dance
barefoot, but in all probability they
will have shoes. to wear during the
procession.
Midsummer Nighj’s Dream will be
done this year in Elizabethan cos-
tumes instead of Greek, but all of
the costumes have not been definitely
designed and -assembled. . Tentative
costuming plans for the Old Wives’
Tale provide that all of the costumes
shall-_be rich in-color, that-Eumenides
shall have a renovated suit of armor,
and that the Ghost of Jack, Sacra-
pant and the Furies shall be newly
habited.
Robin Hood will have its share of
new costumes, all planned to contrast
with the Lincoln green of the Mer-
rymen’s suits. Maid Marian is to
have a new dress, made along the
same lines as her old one, but fresher
and richer looking. Fair Ellen is also
to’be given a new wedding garment.
King Edward is to wear his colors,
scarlet and enamel blue, instead of
scarlet and black, over his new suit
of armor, and he may wear a tabard,
as he did in 1932, unless the costumers’
research proves that tabards were not
worn as early as the sixteenth cen-
tury in England. The new-fashioned
metallic cloth will give Prince John
a new underpiece for his habit, and
Costumes for Minor Roles
Elizabethan types and person-
ages, who will replace the form-
er townsfolk as far as new cos-
tumes are correrned, will be
chosen chiefly from - among
zraduate students.’. Eight stand-
ard bearers and six whifflers,
who will learn from Miss Brady
how to throw small swords into
the air and catch them again,
will be selected from under-
graduates not yet cast.
dark olive green velvet. and blue lin-
ing give promise of a striking new
costume for Alan-a-Dale.
The Dragon in Saint George may be
provided with sparklers wherewith to
frighten his audience, Little Jack is
being fitted out against a bright May
Day, and St. George’s colors are red
on gray, instead of red on white, so
he is getting a new cloak. _
No new costumes for the green are
being made, except where costumes
are lacking. The tumblers and the
horn dancers will have completely new
costumes, while the country folk’s cos-
tumes are being dyed brighter and
fresher colors. In cases where cos-
tumes for general characters on the
green are lacking, the costumers are
making every effort to provide espe-
cially new and startling and interest-
ing costumes,
The whifflers are among these, in
very gay dress. So are the bell-ring-
ers, costumed as gentlemen, as they
were in Merrie England, and the
worthies, who will be put in colors,
instead of black. Besides these, there
will be gypsies in high pointed hats
and jagged shirts, a special fool with
mn ET
feathers swirling on his doublet, -a
monk, a special sword dancer in a
costume copied from the picture of a
famous rope dancer named Jacob- Hall,
a wild man (well known to ancient
May Day revellers) with leaves and
acorns in his hair and a pine. cone
torch to brandish, a witch with herbs
in her belt, stilt walkers with plumed
hats to keep atop their heads, a sailor,
a kennelman, an egg woman, an al-
chemist with bellows and pineer to lift
his hot vessels from the fire and a
bespectacled doctor.
The pageant will be as gay as it
is possible to make it; black is being
avoided at any cost, and the costumer
wishes to assure the revellers that
even black tights are being avoided,
since black against the green grass
does not have the desirable effect of
minimizing legs, but accentuates their
girth.
Soft shoes are being made for most
people, gloves are being made for
archers, men of estate who ride in the
pageant, and the gentlemen of the
court (who would have been lost with-
out their glows in Elizabethan times).
Some of the tights may be replaced
by cloth hose, since hose were not
knitted until the middle of Queen
Elizabeth’s reign.
A-tremendous. amount of informa-
tion is acquired in the process of try-
ing to make each reveller conform to
the styles of Elizabeth’s reign. The
miscellany of historical infofmation
which is incidentally being gathered
to dress up campus and characters is
being collected this year for future
May Days. Pauline Schwable, 36,
is the chief archivist, and she is cata-
loguing and veceramg the data in peb-
manent form.
———e
SS RLS NAAM, AOR
=)
BRYN MAWR GIRLS!
WHOLESALE DISCOUNT ON ALL: SPORTING GOODS
Racket Restringing retails from......
Ro SN eee $2.50 to $9.00
YOUR PRICE, Racket Restringing—Wholesale from...... $1.25 to $5.75
TENNIS RACKETS—Retails from. .
$2.50 to $18.50
YOUR PRICE, TENNIS RACKETS—WHOLESALE from $1.60 to $11.75
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39 E. Lancaster Ave., Ardmore, Pa.
Phone—Ardmore 607
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The blending of tobaccos to secure a given taste—uniformly, season
after season and year after year—is both an art and a science.
Every fresh blending of Lucky Strike tobacco contains more than
100 different types produced on thousands of different farms—not
only in Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Maryland and other States, but tobacco-lands in Mace-
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where the finest Turkish tobacco is grown.
LABORATORIES AND RESEARCH GROUPS Od
CT Pa oe one eee
“ a
Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS
Queens and Robbers Miss Buchanan Gains | American School of Classical Studies| dents is greatest in the seRior class.| Mawr branch of the American Student
: a: . European Fellowshi in Athens. In the class of 1936 seventeen per} Union, four undergraduates, Sylvia
Live Again in Movies P P Melba Phillips, Helen © Schaeffer] cent of the class was on this list in| Wright, ’38, Naomi Coplin, 88,
Sarah Bernhardt Immortalized
_ As Death Leap on Pillows
Proves Fatal
FAUST IS DANDY DEVIL
Goodhart, March. 12.—At the sec-
orf sshowing of the early films _col-
lected by the Museum of Modern
Art. Film Library, the evening be-
gan with a bang. History, fantasy,
robbery and devils filled the audience
with horror and amusement. Good-
hart re-echoed with the horrified gasps
of the audience when the royal head
of Mary, Queen of Scotland, rolled in
the sawdust. This picture was over
almost as soon as it began, but we
shudder to think of the effects it must
have had on susceptible people of 1894
who had not been hardened, as we
have, by long acquaintance with the
Frankenstein monsters and the tech-
nical tricks of the modern movies.
The development of narrative films
continued with a brief bit, entitled
Wash Day Troubles, the so-called
prototype of slapstick comedy. The
costumes of 1895 were startling to say
the least, particularly the dangling
legs of the — sh-h — undergarments.
These first two films were the first
tottering steps of the art, the blos-
soming of the discovery that the “mov-
ing picture really moved.” A world
of illusion was created by George
Méliés, who produced a number of
films between 1896 and 1914. One
of them,’ A’ Trip to the Moon, was
worthy of a Gilbert and Sullivan per-
formance (with its silently eloquent
chorus of sceptical savants). The
settings for this film were extremely
clever and many of the scenes were
amazingly modern. The humor of the
acrobatic antics of the people in the
Moon and the behavior of the daring
scientists was more subtle than that of
the usual films of the period. A
delightful touch was the disappear-
ance of each “native” in a cloud of
smoke when he was_ slain by the
mighty umbrella of the mortal.
The Great Train Robbery, the ear-
liest example of film editing, created
a sensation when it came out in 1903.
It foreshadows many features. which
the modern movie never forgets—the
rushing (!) train, the closeup and the
heroine of tender age. Best of all
was the gay country dancing, which
was peculiarly appropriate for a Bryn
Mawr showing.
It is difficult to tell whether the
film of Faust was meant to be comedy
or tragedy. It was a most hilarious
spectacle with the devil, a typical
“sneak,” disappearing in bursts of
flame. He was portrayed as a most
appealing shaggy dog, while Mar-
guerite fulfilled our worst expecta-|.
tions. Her “vision” of her meeting
with the dandy, Faust, was the best
part of the picture.
A sharp coritrast was offered by the
famous film of Queen Elizabeth which
starred Sarah Bernhardt, who said
of it: “This is my one chance for im-
mortality.” The film was remark-
able in that the acting was done as
on the legitimate stage, with the fig-
ures walking on and off, and the
change of setting accomplished by
scene-shifting. The star rose from
the pile of cushions forming her death-
bed and bowed with a magnificent
gesture to, the supposedly applauding
audience. The film was interesting
primarily
ed the “divine Sarah,” as well A Lou
Tellegen, reputed to be the handsom-
est man of his time. Despite the
marked difference between this film
and those of today, the drama was
strong, and there were some very ex-
cellent scenes, such as the visit of
Elizabeth to the crypt where lay the
body of Essex.
Keep Off The Grass !
LIVE in FRENCH
Residential Summer School
gg merger el in the heart
French Canada. Old
French staff. Only
. French spoken. Blechentary,
Intermediate, Advanced. Cer
“+ tificate or College Credit.
French eptasteinesdnts, sight-
ting: Pe os rd and Tuition.
June 26-July 31. Write for an-
nouncement to Residential
School.
_ French Tissciar
; RUIN ERSITY
for the fact that it present-|.
Continued from Page One
fellowships for study abroad at the
disposal of the college. The winner
this year, Dorothy Anne Buchanan,
was a scholar in English, Bryn Mawr,
College, 1930-31; instructor in Eng-
lish, Bryn Mawr College, 1931-32;
teacher at the Buckingham School,
Cambridge, -Massachusetts, » 1932-33;
instructor in English, Vassar College,
1933-34; Fellow in English, Bryn
Mawr College, 1934-35; warden of
Windham and_ graduate _ student,
Bryn Mawr College, 1935-36. Miss
Buchanan completes this year her
course work for the Ph. D. degree
and is re to prepare her thesis,
begun in a seminary given four years
ago at Bryn Mawr by Professor
Charles G. Osgood, of Princeton, on
the Tradition of the Love Complaint
as employed by Spenser in the Faerie
Queen. She proposes to work at the
University of London with Sir Ed-
mund Chambers and R. W. Chambers,
and to. study manuscripts at the Brit-
ish Museum and the Bodleian Library.
She will also study under W. L. Ren:
wick, of the University of Durham.
Miss Buchanan is declared by her
department to have clear-sighted, crit-
ical judgment, great powers of organi-
zation and_presentation, “the industry
that every graduate student must pos-
sess,” and, as noted by each of her
instructors, real proof of gréwth and
development, a fruitful mind.
The Mary Elizabeth Garrett Euro-
pean Fellowship has already been
awarded forty-two times: six times
in English, five in history, two in Ro-
mance Languages and four in French,
four in Latin, four in mathematics,
three in biology, three in Greek, and
twice or once in economics, philo-
sophy, Biblical literature, chemistry,
physics, archaeology, Semitic Lan-
guages and social economy.
The college received from an anony-
mous donor the sum of $1250 to be
awarded as a special fellowship for
study at the American School of Clas-
sical Study at Athens to Emily Ran-
dolph Grace, A. B. Bryn Mawr Gol-
lege, 1933, and M. A. in the next year;
Graduate Scholar in Greek, 1933-34;
and Fellow in Greek, 1934-35, and now
a graduate student at New York Uni-
versity.
Although Bryn Mawr is restricted
in the number of fellowships it can
offer this year, other colleges and as-
sociations have come to the rescue and
made many awards to members of the
graduate school. These awards are
as follows:
Dorothy Anne Buchanan, Mary
Piizabeth Garrett Fellow, has also
been awarded one of the Marjorie
Nicholson scholarships for graduate
work by Smith College.
Marion Monaco, graduate student
in Romance Languages and holder of
the Voorhees Fellowship from the New
Jersey College for Women, has again
been awarded the Voorhees Fellowship
for 1936-37. Miss Monaco will use
the fellowship for study at Bryn
Mawr.
Dorothy Schierer, Fellow in Clas-
sical Archaeology, has been awarded
a Joseph A. Skinner Fellowship and
a grant from the Frances Mary Hazen
and the Justine Carrington Coe Fel-
lowships from Mount Holyoke College.
This will enable Miss Schierer to con-
tinue her research in the field of clas-
sical archaeology and Greek at the
Phone, Bryn Mawr 829
MOSSEAU
OPTICIANS
610 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PA.
- Meet your friends at the
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
(Next to Seville Theater Bldg.)
The Rendezvous of the College Girls
Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes
Superior Soda Service
Music—Dancing for girls only
Huff. Memorial Research Fellow in
Physics, has been awarded the Mar-
garet E. Maltby Fellowship of $1500
by the A. A. U: W. for research on
problems of the: applicatien- of -quan~
tum mechanics to nuclear physics.
Jane M. Oppenheimer, A. B. 1932,
now Research Fellow in Zoology at
Yale University, has been awarded the
Sarah Berliner Fellowship of $1200
by the A.A. U. W. for research in
development of the fish embryo.
Isabel Stearns, holder of the Mary
Elizabeth Garrett European Fellow-
ship for the current year, studying at
Oxford, has been appointed instructor
in philosophy at Smith College for
1936-37.
The resident fellows-elect of the
college must have completed at least
one year of graduate work and are
nominated by the various departments
directly to the Board of Directors of
the college. They “represent a pretty
sure gamble on the part of the fac-
ulty; for their own part they carry a
heavy responsibility among the lighter
train of mere scholars and graduate
students in Radnor and in the semi-
nars,”
The resident fellows of 1936-87 are
listed by departments as follows:
Biology: E. Frances Stilwell, A. B. Smith
College 1922; M. A. 1924; Chemistry: Dorothy
Pearle Dyott, A. B. Washington University
1933; M. S. Cornell University 1935; Classical
Archaeology: Frances Follin Jones, A. B.
Bryn Mawr 1934; Candidate for M. A. 1936,
(Note: Since the announcement was made
Miss Jones has accepted a position elsewhere
and the resident fellow will therefore be
Dorothy Traquair, A. B. University of Cin-
cinnati, 1935; Candidate for M. A. 1936.)
English; Louise G. Lewis, A. B. Barnard Col-
lege 1924; M. A. Columbia University «1926;
German: Grace Patricia Comans, A. B. Mount
Holyoke College 1933; M. A. Bryn Mawr
1934; Greck: Jessie W. Alston, B. A. Uni-
versity of British Columbia 1934; M. A. 1935;
History: Catherine Strateman, A. B. Barnard
College 1934; History of Art: Jane M. Mar-
tin, A. B. Barnard College 1934; M. A. Mills
College 1935; Latin: Jane I. M. Tait, B. A.
University of Toronto 1934;. M. A. 1935;
Mathematics: Anna M. C. Grant, A. B. Dal-
housie University 1925; Philosophy: Elizabeth
Eleanor Clawson, A. B. University: of Toronto
1935; Physics; Pauline Rolf, A. B. University
of Cincinnati 1934; Candidate for M. A. Bryn
Mawr 1936; Romance Languages: Katharine
Townsend, A. B. Wells College 1931; M. A.
University of North Carolina 1932;. Elizabeth
Polk, A.B. Smith College 1935; candidate
for M. A. Columbia University 1936; Social
Economy, Carola Woerishoffer Fellowships:
Ruth Ardell Inglis, A. B. Stanford Univer-
sity 1935; M. A, to be conferred 1936. Rob-
ert Valentine Fellowship: Isabel Janet Blain,
M. A. Glasgow University 1932.
In conclusion Miss Park read the
undergraduate honor list. The stu-
dents on it have done sound and, in
some cases, praiseworthy work. They
vary in their accomplishments and in
their improvement. “Some are ma-
ture and independent, some hard work-
ers, and some, I suspect, occasionally
vary hard work by a fortunate flair.”
Each year the number of these stu-
Dou fi look
yout ae
“Mma
SHETLAND
SWEATER.
SET
They come in 14 colours, and
are perfect for active sports or
spectator wear, with a skirt of the
handwoven Tweeds. for which
Triminghams’ are famous. You
| will find these Standen sweaters
only at Brooks Brothers in New
York, and only here in Bermuda. °
“When You ‘e conte to Berm uda:
TRIMINGHAMS’ |
Aight Opposite the Ship
BRYN MAWR
‘TEA ROOM
Luncheon 40c - 50 - 75c
MEALS
Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386 ee
ie Sn |
Meals a la carte and table d’hote
Daily and Sunday 8.30 A. M. to 7.30 P. M. |
ernoon Teas ‘ ||
BRIDGE, DINNER PARTIES AND TEAS MAY BE ARRANGED
VED ON THE TERRACE WHEN WEATHER PERMITS
THE PUBLIC IS INVITED
COLLEGE INN
Dinner 85c - $1.25 1
‘Miss Sarah Davie, Manager
Rn og 4 es Por
oF ead ee
pie oh
4
their freshman year, twenty-three per
cent the next Year, thirty-one per cent
their junior year, and forty- “seven per
cent this year.
The list of undergraduates who have
maintained a cum laude average is as
follows:
In the class of 1936, forty-seven per cent:
Edith Anderson, Marcia isc, Esther
Bassog, Frederica Bellamy, Betty Bock, Marion
Bridgman, Caroline Brown, Madelyn Brown,
Doreen Canaday, Barbara Cary, Marian Chap-
man, Rose. Davis, Kathryn Docker, Eleanor
Fabyan, Edith Fairchild, Marjorie Goldwasser,
Jean MHolzworth, Margaret Honour, Janet
Horsburgh, Sophie Lee Hunt, Barbara’ Mer-
chant, Esther Morley, Helen Ott, Frances
Porcher, Anne Reese, Lillie Rice, Virginia Sale,
Euretta Simons, Elizabeth Smedley, Alicia
Stewart, Ellen Stone, Anne Frances Whiting,
Hope Wickersham, Jeanne Winternitz and
Elizabeth Wyckoff,
' In the class of 1937, twenty-nine per cent:
Rose Baldwin, Jr., Elizabeth Bingay, Letitia
Brown, Louise Dickey, Mary-Louise Eddy,
Sylvia Evans, Jr., Lucille Fawcett, Helen
Fisher, Mary Flanders, Esther v Hardenbergh,
Elizabeth Holzworth, Mary Hinékley Hutch-
ings, Kathryn Jacoby, Mary Beirne Jones,
Margaret Lacy, Jean Lamson, Ruth Levi, Mar-
garet Lippincott, Elizabeth Lyle, Lucille Rit-
ter, Edith Rose, Winifred Safford, Leigh Stein-
hardt, Eleanore Tobin, Henrietta Varbalow and
Cornelia Ann Wyckoff,
In. the class of 1938, twenty-six per cent:
Mildred Bakewell, Alice Chase, Gretchen Col-
lie, Josephine. Devigne, Frances Fox, Doris
Frank, Bertha Goldstein, Anne Goodman,
Helen Hartman, Virginia Hessing, Joan How-
son, Abbie Ingalls, Gertrude Leighton, Flora
Lewis, Hermine Mayer, Mary' Mesier, Dewilda
Naramore, Ellen Newton, Jeanne Quistgaard,
Alison Raymond, Dorothy Rothschild, ‘Mary
Sands, Dorothea Seelye, Elizabeth Simeon,
Mary Staples, Suzette Watson and Suzanne
Williams.
In the class of 1939, sixteen per cent:
Eleanor Bailenson,: Jane Braucher, Anne Janet
Clark, Caroline deLancey Cowl, Ethel Dana,
Emily Doak, Grace Dolowitz, Catherine Eide,
Elizabeth Gehman, Gordon Grosvenor, Louise
Herron, Delia Marshall, Jean Morrill, Mar-
garet Otis, Dorothea Peck, Virginia Pfeil,
Carolyn Shine, Agnes Spencer and Martha
Van Hoesen.
Six Students Attend
Hearing on Youth Act
Under the auspices of the Bryn
Nancy Angell, ’88, Helen Hamilton,
389, and Mary Dimock, ’89, and two
graduate representatives, Marion
Greenbaum and Anne Tuller, attended
the Saturday session of the Senate In-
vestigations into the proposed Ameri-
can Youth Act.
The bill, sponsored by Senator Ben:
son of Minnesota, provides for: the
extension and permanent establish-
ment of the N. Y. A. and seeks to re-
lieve the condition of unemployed
youth and to give financial aid to col-
lege students. The hearing, conducted
by Senator \Walsh of Massachusetts,
was originally
‘room of the Senate Building, but be-
to be held in an ante-.
cause of the large numbers present to .
endorse the bill. it was found neces-
sary to move the investigators and two
hundred-odd student delegates into the
Caucus Room, the largest in the build-
ing.
The Bryn Mawr representatives did
not have a chance to speak, but sub-
mitted a written report to the com-
mittee. Constance Dimock, Vassar,
38, sister of Mary Dimock, Bryn
Mawr, ’39, testified on behalf of the
delegation from Vassar.
uence
‘GREEN HILL FARMS
City Line and Lancaster Ave.
Overbrook-Philadelphia
A reminder that we would like to
take care of your parents and
friends, whenever they come to
visit you.
L. ELLSWORTH METCALF,
Manager.
Pa ati ati atin atti titi atti atten ttn atin atin alan atl
Sete rnmc
—E—Kzzzi—=*K&=—=—={—EC@E$_____
~
Prof: Why was Ben Hur sentenced to the galleys?
Soph: Because Valerius Gratus didn’t have a chariot
with a “Turret Top”
°
LOA
; ODD ODD CDP OBL, ODD, OBI RBS» SBD: OBI OBL) ODD) ABI ODD ABD) RBIY OBL) SBD ABP) PB) SBP) ABELL OBL ABD DBL) DBD DBPL BBL BPG SIL NBL PBL, NBL 2 ALL) RIP K AIL ABP BBD OILY OBL OB) AL CBP OBL) RBDY RRL ABD NBD ABD OLDS AILS NBty AG, ABS OBA AY ALY BDL
Cana
/ GENERAL
olid steel over your head certainly makes
modern automobiles safer, and this improve-
ment like many others has resulted from
the pioneering work and vast resources of
General Motors. Few people realize the
initial cost of developing the ‘“Turret Top,”’
and it is only the fact that it is used on mil-
lions of GM cars which enables the average
person to afford its benefits.
GENERAL Motors
| A Public-Minded Institution
o a) wat
+ BUICK - LASALLE + CADILLAC
@
_ these centres of civilization.
od
THE. COLLEGE NEWS
Archaic Ivory Trade
Is Traced by Wace
Continued from tage One
objects, all displaying an Oriental in-
fluence and strong similarities in
motif, has led to the belief that a
trade route was established between
Excava-
tions at.°Ras-Shamra in Syria have
revealed, in addition to ivories, a large
number of elephants’ teeth, proving
fairly conclusively that there were
elephants in that region during: the
period of archaic Greek art. This
proof is further strengthened by rec-
ords showing that Tiglath-Pileser I
of Assyria hunted. elephants there in
the twelfth century. Syria, therefore,
was a third source of ivory and its
ivory exportations reached Greece by
way of a trade route through Cyprus,
Rhodes, Melos and other islands of
the Aegean.
The trade route flourished until the
seventh century B. C. Ivory statuet-
tes have been found at the Dipylon
Cemetery in Athens which date from
the Geometric Period of the eighth
and ninth centuries. The figures are
stiff and show Egyptian influence. At
Sparta ivory animals, figures and
plaques, dating from the. Geometric
Age to the seventh century and show-
ing a strong Orientalization in design
and subject, have been unearthed in
enormous quantities. Similar ivories
have been found at Ephesus.
French archaeologists have brought
to light at Arslén-Tash in Assyria a
great deal of ivory dating from the
time of Ahab, King of Israel, in the
|
Please Report Schedules
Will those students scheduling
any events such as club meet-
ings or athletic events, kindly
report them to the May Day
Director or to Eleanor Fabyan,
so that they will not conflict
with any possible May Day
work. Please report them im-
mediately.
ninth century. Ivories have also been
found at Nimrud in Syria on the site
of a fortress of Ahab. The Book of |
Kings mentions Ahab’s ivory house
in the description of the death of Ahab
at. the battle of Ramoth-Gilead,
Ivories from both of these sites show
striking similarities to the Sparta fig-
ures and the Mycenaean _ plaques.
Cows, calves and bulls, common motifs
in Mycenaean and archaic Greek art,
appear in the Arslén-Tash ivories, as
well as the sphinxes and deer found
in the later Orientalized péttery of
Greece.
The archaic ivory trade extended
as far west as Etruria, as ivories
found in the Etruscan tombs of the
seventh century prove. The excava-
tions in the Barberini Tomb have pro-
duced many. statuettes bearing strik- |
ing resemblances to the: Ephesus
ivories.
The ivory trade was at the height
of its activity during the ninth, eighth
and seventh centuries, the period in
which Assyria dominated western
Asia. After.the seventh century there
was a sudden drop in the trade and
ivory, the link between historic and; =
——E=—
| source of:ivory for the archaic world.
7 -—
prehistoric Greek civilizations, became | denly changing to the role of a for- Haverford
searce in Greece. This abrupt ending
of a profitable and extensive business
was doubtless. due to one *of two}
things: the fall of Ninevah in 612
B. C. and the rise of Persia, which
was hostile to Greece, or the extinc-
tion of the Syrian elephant,. the chief
Bryn Mawr Faculty Men
Rout Haverford Profs
Continued from Page One
but merely to the air in general, At
the end of the third quarter, however,
Haverford still held the lead.
At this point Dr. Nahm took mat-
ters in hand and evened the score at
14-14 by sinking a counter from a re-
markable , distance. Dr. Cadbury
proniptly used the same trick to shove
Haverford into the lead once more.
Then, receiving a beautiful pass from
Captain Blanchard, Dr. Nahm tallied
again, 16-16! The excitement and
the noise were intense. Now Dr.
Broughton completely surprised him-
self by following Dr. Nahm’s example
and sinking one from the middle of the
floor. At this point it was only Dr.
Hedlund’s excellent guarding that kept
Haverford from tying the score. Sud-
: fl
Flannel Suits ........ $16.95
‘Tweed Goae 66 iss. $15.95
ae $2.95
FRANCES O’CONNELL |
ward, he chalked up two more points
for his team. Just as the final whistle
was blowing the ball sailed out of Dr.
Broughton’s hands for one last tally |.
and the Bryn Mawr faculty marched
off the floor, exhausted but victorious.
Line-up:
——<>
ey
1896 -° 1936
BACK LOG CAMP
(A CAMP FOR ADULTS @& FAMILIES)
SABAEL, P. O., NEW YORK
& ‘
On Indian Lake, in .the Adirondack Mountatne~/ ¢
Page Five
Bryn Mawr
SUCGOR ys oy ei vcs r. f...Blanchard (C.)
Cadbury, <0 cdhi-fies eax Anderson
WVUUIRYG.. ob elec, Pe ee Broughten
WEG cece sees Bi Bis cee Nahm
SRIOy os ue) FR Hedlund
Substitutions — Haverford, Fetter .
for Wills, Wills for Sutton.
Back Log Camp offers none of the usual “attractions” of a summer
resort, such as golf, motor boating, arranged programs, dancing, and
visiting celebrities. It is a large tent camp, inaccessible to automobiles,
but easy to get to, situated far from all other camps in a very wild
part of the Adirondack Preserve.
A fleet of fine ggnoes and rowboats |
always at the service of the guests without extra charge, and innu-
merable trails, many of our own making, enable Back Loggers to pene-
trate to isolated parts of~the woods seldom visited by the usual run of
summer visitors.
That’s what Back Log does: it runs the woods.
What strikes most newcomers is the personal, friendly atmosphere
of the Camp.
It is owned and run by a large family of brothers and
sisters and their children, college graduates (Harvard, Haverford, Hei-
delberg, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley, etc.), and Philadelphia Quakers.
Four
of the managing family are Bryn Mawr alumnae, and one is now at
the college.
The Camp has just_published
a folder with thirty pictures, all
taken last summer, showing the many activities of Back Log, empha-
sizing especially the trips that go out into all parts
Here you see, in striking poses, such
wilderness.
f the surrounding
ell -known under-
graduates as Barbara Cary, Maryallis Morgan, andyCaroline C. Brown,
the family representative at the college, not to me
Copies of this folder will gfadly be furnished to
some young men.
ion numerous hand-
interested inquirers by C. C. Brown in Denbigh Hall.
— —
‘‘CAMELS ARE A FAVORITE with us here,” says
Mr. Joe Moss, who presides over New York’s
Hollywood Restaurant (above), where diners flock
to enjoy fine food! “As I look over the crowd, I see
off, by stimt--
lating and promoting
digestion. Camels are
mild, smooth. They’set
you right. And never
get on your nerves.
TUNE IN!...CAMEL CARAVAN
with WALTER/O’KEEFE
DEANE JANIS, TED HUSING
GLEN GRAY and the
CASA LOMA ORCHESTRA
Tuesday and Thursday—9 p.m.
E.S.T., 8 p.m. C.S.T., 9:30 p.m.
M.S.T., 8:30 p.m. P.S.T. — over
WABC-Columbia Network
Copyright, 1936, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C,
For Digestion’s Sake smoke Camels
Smoking Camels found to have
a positive beneficial effect upon Digestion...
Our modern “‘eat-and-run” way of
living is hard on digestion. Experi-
ences..with indigestion are all too
comimoéf! Hence unusual interest
attaches to the following fact: that
smoking Camels has been found to
have a marked beneficial effect in
Camels milder too, more delicate
in flavor, packed with the rich en-
joyment of choice tobaccos.
Turn to Camels for your diges-
tion’s sake... for the greater pleas-
ure to be found in smoking Camel’s
costlier tobaccos.
Camels on lots of tables. We’ve found that success
comes through giving people the best. The fact that
Camél uses costlier tobaccos and people prefer
Camels shows that they appreciate the best.”
COST
Camels are made from finer,
aiding digestive action. You'll find
ge) - 7 Voloe}
A SENSATION!
Henry Taft Snowdon,
34, intercollegiate
wrestling champion.
Snowdon says: ‘““Smok-
ing Camels after meals
and between meals
aids digestion.”
OTIS BARTON,
scientist-inventor,
who dives in the
“bathysphere,” says:
“Camels make my
food taste betterand
help it to digest.”
LIER
MORE
EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS — Turkish and
Domestic «than any other popular brand.
Camels set you right!
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
— ncn ttt yen
Collegiate Examination
Schedule Announced
%
The collegiate examination sched-
ule for the second semester of this
year is published below so that any
conflicts may be discovered at. once.
All conflicts should be .reported to
the office of the Dean -immediately.
The schedule has been rearranged
this year so that the fewest possible
number of «students, particularly |
seniors, will have four examinations |
on four successive days.
Saturday, May 23
Learn French First-hand
Miss Schenck recently re-
ceived many suggestions for
ways in which students desir-
ing to improve their conyersa-
tional French or to prepare for
the oral may spend their sum-
mer profitably in France. Any
students who are interested are
asked to inquire at Dean
Schenck’s office in the Library.
HOUR
ELEMENTARY
Greek, Homer 9-11
FIRST ¥EAR
Latin, Div. III 9-12
Philosophy, Div. II 9-12
Politics 9-12
SECOND YEAR &
Politics 9-12
Hist.. of Art; Mediaeval Art 9-12
Mathematics, Alg. and Geometry 9-11
ADVANCED
Chemistry, Organic 9-12
History, Europe since 1870 9-12
ELECTIVE
English, Criticism 9-11
Hist., Civ. of Anc. World 9-12
Soc. Ec., Intro. to Sociology 9-12
P. M,
Hist. of Art, German Art 2-4
Monday, May 25 .
HOUR
HONOURS WORK
Tuesday, May 26
pene HOUR
FIRST YEAR
Chemistry 9-12
French, Div..-I 9-12
Div, II 9-12
Geology 9-12
Greek, Euripides 9-12
History, Div. I 9-12
Mathematics, Div. I. 9-12
Philosophy, Div. I 9-12
SECOND YEAR
Economics, Money and Banking 9-12
Hist. of ‘Art, Ptg. since the Ren, 9-12
Mathematics, , Calculus 9-12
ADVANCED
French, Mediaeval Literature 9-12
German, Composition 9-11
History, Read. in American Hist. 9-12
Psychology, Personality 9-12
ELECTIVE
English, Fiction 9-11
2nd Year Music : 9-12
Wednesday, May 27
HOUR
FIRST YEAR
Economics 9-12
English Literature 9-12
Latin, Div. TI 9-12
Div. IT 9-12
SECOND YEAR
Cl. Arch: Aegean Archaeology 9-12
Geology 9-12
History, American a 9-12
Italian, V.iterature 9-12
Latin, Dev. of Literature 9.12
Philosonhy, German Idealism 9-12
Psychology, Mental Tests 9-12
ADVANCED
German, ‘‘Novelle”’ 9-12
Politigs 9-12
ELECTIVE °
Ed., Principles of Education 9-12
Thursday, May 28
HOUR
SECOND YEAR
Latin, Prose Style 9-11
ADVANCED
Economics, Equilibrium 9-12
ELECTIVE
English, Contemporary Verse 9-11
Greek, Lit. for nonclassical students 9-11
Music, Elem, Counterpoint 9-11
P..... Mi
English, Experimental Writing
Div. 2-4
Div. II 2-4
Music, Advanced Harmony 2-4
Friday, May 29
HOUR
REQUIRED
English Composition 9-12
SECOND YEAR
Biology 9-12
Cl, Arch: Ancient Rome 9-11
Economics, Theory and Problems 9-12
History, England since 1485 9-12
Philosophy, Logic 9-11
Psychology, Social Psych. 9-12
Spanish, Literature 9-12
ADVANCED
Mathematics, Complex Variable 9-12
ELECTIVE
Literary History of Bible 9-11
English, Adv. Writing 9-11
Education, Child Psychology 9-12
Special Work in Modern Prose 9-12
Music, Elem. Harmony , 9-11
Physics, Structure of Matter 9-11
Saturday, May 30
HOUR
FIRST YEAR
PhYsics 9-12
SFCOND YEAR
Fnglish, Lit. of Romantic Period 9-12
French, Titerature 9-12
Cerman, Literature 9.12
History, Mediaeval Civilization 9-12
ADVANCED
Cl. Arch: Ancient Architecture 9.12
Geology: General Geology 9.12
Mathematics, Geometry 9-12
Philosophy, Aesthetics 9-12
ELECTIVE
let Year Music 9.12
Soc. Ec., Social Tnvesticvation 0.11
Tohour Movements 9-12
Monday, June 1
HOUR
ELEMENTARY
Greek 9-12
FTRST YEAR
Hictorv, Niv. IT g.19
TWietnry at: Ast 0.12
Mothemsrtics NDiv,-TT O42
Philasanhyv. Div. TIT Q.12
Psvchology 9:12
| SECOND YEAR
| Chemistry # 9-12
: ADVANCED
English, Prose from Dryden to
Coleridge 9-12
German, Literature 9-12
Hist. of Art, Ren, and Baroque
Architecture 9-12
Juesday, June 2. ,
* HOUR
FIRST YEAR
Biology 9-12
Classical Archaeology 9-12
Spanish 9-12
SECOND YEAR
English, Lit. of Middle Ages 9-12
French, Language 9-11
Greek, Aristophanes 9-12
German, Read. and Comp. 9-11
History, British Imperialism 9-12
Italian, Composition 9-11
Philosophy, Problems 9-11
ADVANCED
Biology, Biochemistry 9-12
Latin, Vergil’s Aeneid 9-12
é ELECTIVE
‘Third Year Music 9-11
Soc. Ec., Soai nthropology 9-12
Wednesday, June 3 .
HOUR
FIRST YEAR
German 9-12
Italian 9-12
SECOND YEAR
Latin, *Mediaeval- Literature . 9-11
ADVANCED 4
Biology, Theories of Heredity 9-12
English, Elizabethan Drama 9-12
French, Lit. since 1850 9-12
ELECTIVE
Politics, Elements of Law 9-11
Hist. of Art, Art of Far East 9-T1
Philosophy, Philos. of Nature 9-11
Soc. Ec., Modern Social Welfare 9-11
Thursday, June 4
» HOUR
ELEMENTARY
German 9-12
German Reading 9-11
Whifflers Will Whiffle
The latest additions to the May Day
pageant are whifflers, who carry white
staves and brandish short .swords,
F A :
which they throw up in the air every
now and then to amuse and discipline
| the audience. Whifflers are super-po-
licemen—a cross between heralds and
"ushers—and they wander about the
,campus to keep crowds in order.
| Their intriguing name was derived
(from “whiffle,” and meant a piper
or whistler, who led the way in Eliza-
bethan pageants. The whifflers,
usually six in number, most frequently
headed the procession to clear the way,
although sometimes they were attend-
ants instead of herald-ushers. Bryn
Mawr whifflers, in spite of their velvet
coats, will not be merely ornamental,
but will see that ways are kept clear
and that the crowd can move freely.
Selj-Goy Elections
The Self-Government Associa-
tion of - Bryne Mawr “College
takes pleasure in announcing
the election of Barbara Col-
bron, ’87, as’ president for the
coming year.
Fellow Honored
‘Miss Dorothy Anye Buchanan, win-
ner of the Mary E. Garrett Graduate
European Fellowship, was honored at
the Fellowship Dinner given Friday, :
March 20, at Radnor Hall.
Miss Mary Sweeney acted as toast-
mistress and the speaker of the eve-
ning was Dr. Paul Weiss. Guests at the
' speaker’s table with Miss Buchanan,
Miss Sweenéy and Dr. and Mrs. Weiss,
included President Marion E. Park,
Dean Eunice Schenck and several oth-
ers. Short speeches were made by
Dr. Melba Phillips; Miss Pacquerette
Nasse, Miss Ann Hoskins and Miss
' Hedda Nordenskiold, alf.of whom are
holders of or have recently held simi-
lar fellowships for foreign study.
e.
|{| JEANNETTE’S
| Bryn Mawr Flower Shop
823 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr 570
OG gr rr ay"
the ay st
fa mily
Bargain rates are in effect on
both Station to Station and
Person to Person calls every,
night after SEVEN and ANY
TIME on Sunday.
re
{LmMme .
nions 4
for
'
u
SAVE AFTER SEVEN
—=_
—— SSS
WEDNESDAY SATURDAY
ROSA NINO
PONSELLE MARTINI
KOSTELANETZ ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS
“OP. M. (E. s. T.) —COLUMBIA NETWORK ©
e
© 1936, Liccerr & Myers Tosacco Co.
...it’s as much a part of
Chesterfield as the taste
F... with
just like getting
from fruit.
that pleasing aroma .:
Did you ever —
notice the difference
in the aroma of
Chesterfield tobacco?
Every person who knows about
tobacco will understand this...
for to get a pleasing aroma 1s
a pleasing taste
Mild ripe tobaccos, home-
grown, and welded with the
right kind of tobaccofrom far-off
Greece and Turkey (Samsoun,
Smyrna, Xanthiand Cavalla)...
... that’s why Chesterfield
has a more pleasing aroma.
v
College news, March 25, 1936
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1936-03-25
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 22, No. 18
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-vol22-no18