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,
—
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Z-615
VOL. XXVIII, No. 23
BRYN MAWR and WAYNE, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1942
Copyright,
Bryn Mawr
Trustees of
College, 1942
PRICE 10 CENTS
B. M. to be Scene
Of Nursing School
For College Grads
Government Will Sponsor
School. With Private
Institutions
Bryn Mawr College has been
chosen by government agencies
and several nursing schools as the
site of a Summer School of Nurs-
ing for college graduates. The ses-
sion will run from June 15 to Sep-
tember 13. In cooperation with
the United States Public Health
Service program, Training for
Nurses National Defense, |
the school will act as a preliminary
step toward increasing the supply
of registered nurses to meet the
present critical shortage.
The choice of Bryn Mawr result-
ed from recognition of the work
done by the Red Cross Nurses’
Training Gamp which was held
here last summer. The institu-
tions taking part are The College
of Physicians and Surgeons, Co-
lumbia University, New York;
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti-
more; Lincoln Hospital, New York;
Russel Sage College, Troy, N. Y.;
and the University of Rochester.
Students at the Summer School
will complete the preclinical work
necessary for the supervised prac-
tice of nursing care in the various
cooperating institutions. By add-
ing to the number of well-qualified
candidates, these schools will be
able to release graduate nurses for
war work. Another advantage of
the summer plan is in the centrali-
zation of teaching which it would
provide.
Continued on Page Three
Motor Mechanics
The Bryn Mawr Defense
group wishes to clarify the
status of those who have
passed the motor mechanics
course and: have received the
Keystone Automobile Club
diploma. These certificates
are equivalent to the Red
Cross Course, with the ex-
ception of 20 hours of driv-
ing training. Any one who
holds the Keystone diploma
may go to her local Red
Cross chapter, complete the
driving hours, and will be
qualified for Red Cross work.
| found in the abdication of the elec-
;give unthinking support to the
Congress Now Lacks
Support From Voter
Miss Stapleton Says
Common Room, April 28—Miss
Stapleton, speaking for the. Alli-
ance, placed the responsibility for
the failure of the present Congress
on the indifference of the electorate.
Our government is presumably a| §
representative one, composed of the
best and most advanced elements in
the country. Congressional opposi-
tion to the President should be a
constructive influence in forming
his policy, not merely a hindrance
to necessary work. The present
Congress hardly answers this de-
scription, and the reason is to be
torate through inertia. A _ situa-
tion has arisen which is possible
only because large sections of the
voters are indifferent. Congress
cannot be representative when it is
made up of men whom the voters
do not know because of inadequate
information and discussion.
There is danger that this year’s
elections will send to Washington
a Congress hostile to the Adminis-
tration. Miss Stapleton emphasized
the fact that Congress should not
President, but a co-operation that
is now absolutely essential.
future peace must not be made by
men whose policy has been con-
sistently isolationist, and whose
records and public announcements
do not promise a real change in
viewpoint.
Continued on Page Three
Radnor Holds Dinner
In Honor of Schenck
The}
Specially contributed by- Ethel Davis
Radnor, April 23.—Miss Taylor’s
interesting and _reminiscent__ac-
count of her associations with Miss
delighted the dinner given by the
Graduate Club in Miss Schenck’s
honor. Many of the changes in
the graduate school which were
instituted during the time of Miss
Schenck’s administration were
noted by Miss Taylor.
As an expression of their appre-
ciation of Miss Schenck’s service
to and interest in the graduate
school and students, the members
| of, ‘the Graduate Club presented
Miss Schenck with a silver plate.
A special exhibit of photographs,
borrowed for the occasion from the
Continued on Yage Iwo
Knighthood Has Very Peculiar F lowering
In Remarkably Interpreted French Orals
By Mary Virginia More, °43
“There was a knight when
knighthood was in flower,” but he
-eouldn’t compare with one on the
French Oral.
For instance, did you know that
“the noble was a perfect chevalier
only when he had chosen a woman
of his opinions?” Or that he was
“no longer a perfect cavalier the
minute he had chosen the women
of his dreams?” We'll let you
think about that one a minute.
Or some of us seemed to feel
~ that™“a ‘noble was only a perfect
knight when he loved a unique and
pure Woman,” but our very per-
sonal opinion is that this is mak-
ing things unduly tough for the
male sex. As for the B. M. C.
puritan element—it expressed it-
self in no uncertain terms: “the
nobleman was not a perfect gentle-
man if he had not chosen the lady
of his thoughts.” |, ‘3
On further examining the rela-
: tions. of a knight toward his lady,
we find that it is for her that he
“jolted” in the tournament (cut-
ting a graceful figure no doubt).
With raised eyebrows we learn
that “it is for her that he occupies
sinful places,” and for her that
“he busied, his lance poised, the
defiled.”
What’s more, it has come to our
attention (we hope it didn’t to his
lady’s) that “he was always offer- ||
ing his hand as a souvenir.” We ||
also found, thrown in some place,
that he “ran on his hands and
knees when conquered!” °°"
A few notions about women
were brought to light: “the prog-
ress of woman’s role is marked by
the continual development of the
Virgin Culture; on the earth as
well as in the sky she climbs.” The
Romans had definite ideas about
her: “the daughter, she was in the
command of her father married in-
to the rule (hand) of her hus-
band.” — You never know, is what
Schenck and the graduate school, |#" i¢
Hinchman Split Between Browne, McLeskey;
Browne Wins Brooke Hall Memorial Award
w ~~
DOROTHY BROWNE
Dry Damsels Crowd
New Bar, Clamoring
For Mild Milk Shakes
By Anne Heyniger, ’44
In its bright new blue and red
paint, its newly set-up bar and
tables and highly decorative soda-
jerkeresses, the soda _ fountain
made its successful debut last Mon-
day night.
Most popular request proved to
be for chocolate milk shakes, the
secret of which the managers
learned first hand from a veteran
Baltimore soda jerker. The three
day supply ef chocolate syrup was
exhausted in half an hour.
Reports are varied as to the pur-
pose of the ten cent opening night
cover charge: a new mixer, initial
expenses, and a scholarship for the
collector were all suggested.
The actual mechanics of getting
cream lump on to an ice
Continued on Page Two
News’ Poll Shows 30%
Holding Summer Jobs
Almost 30 per cent of the 312
undergraduates polled have landed
jobs for the summer. Twenty-six
are Seniors, and many of these in-
dicate that their work is. perma-!.
nent. The
were asked:
What do you plan to do this
summer? Check answer.
1. War Work?
a.) Volunteer (specify type)
b.) Remunerative
1. factory (specify if possi-
ble)
Continued on Page Five
_ Calendar
Friday, May -1
Geology Field Trip.
Chamber Music group, '
Music Room, 8:00.
Saturday, May 2
German Oral,
9:00.
Sunday, May 3
James Cushman, The Pres-
ent Dey Claims of the
Earl of Owford to the Au-
thorship of Shakespeare’s
Plays, Deanery, 5:00."
Monday, May 4
Marian Anderson Recital,
Goodhart, 8:30.
Tuesday, May 5
Current Events, Common
Room, 7:30.
Wednesday, May 6
Tennent Lecture, Dr. Her-
mann “Weyl, Symmetry,
Dalton, 8:15.
following questions
Taylor,
all this goes to prove.
|
|
|
MILDRED McLESKEY
McLeskeyWillWork |
In Post-War Period;
Browne in Two Fields
i lish.
by the West Orange High School.
This year the Charles S. Hinch-
man Memorial Scholarship was di-
vided between Dorothy Browne
and Mildred McLeskey, recom-|
mended respectively by the Mathe-
matics Department and the His-
tory Department. Dorothy
Browne, with an average of 89.83,
was. also awarded the Maria L.
Eastman Brooke Hall Scholarship,
which is given automatically to the
member of the Junior class with
the highest average. Her case is
particularly noteworthy since she
came to the College only last year, |
and has completed two years’ work
in one. Before coming. to this
country, she studied at the Chel-,
tenham Ladies’ College in Eng-
land.
Miss Browne has already com-
pleted two advanced courses in
mathematics, which places her con-
siderably in advance of the ordi-
nary student as far as preparation
Continued on Page Two
caida ne Park Reads List
Of Annual Scholarship
Awards
Goodhart, May 1. — Miss Park
announced the awarding of the an-
nual scholarships at the May Day
Assembly. The Charles S. Hinch-
man Memorial Scholarship, given
each year to the student who shows
the greatest ability in her major
field, was divided between Dorothy
Browne, of Riverdale, New York,
whose major is mathematics, and
Mildred McLeskey, of Columbus,
Ohio, majoring in history. Miss
McLeskey was prepared by the Co-
lumbus School for Girls.
Dorothy Browne also won the
Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall
Memorial Scholarship, awarded to
the member of the Junior Class
with the highest average, as well
as one-half of the Mary Anna
| Longstreth Memorial Scholarship.
_Miss Browne was prepared in Chel- ©
tenham, England.
The Sheelah Kilroy Memorial
Scholarship in English went to
Barbara Herman, for the best work
in Second Year or Advanced Eng-
Miss Herman was prepared
The award for the Required Eng-
lish Composition Course was given
to Jean Potter, of Birmingham,
Michigan, as well as the James E.
| Rhoads Memorial Sophomore Schol-
arship.
Mary Barbara Kauffman, pre-
pared by Rosemary Hall in Green-
wich, Connecticut, was awarded
the Elizabeth S. Shippen Scholar-
ship-in Foreign Languages, for ex=
cellence of work in a foreign lan-
guage; the Elizabeth S. Shippen
Scholarship in Science was won by
Miriam Gollub, prepared by the
Simon Gratz High School in Phila-
delphia.
The Elizabeth Gillespie Scholar-
ship in American History went to
Nancy Evarts, of Cambridge, Mass.
Miss Evarts was prepared by Buck-
ingham School in Cambridge.
Mary Gumbart, ’42, received the
Jeanne Quistgaard Memorial
Award in Economics.
Continued on Page Four
Wild Excitement Accompanies Rehearsals
While Blithe Voices Practice for ‘Patience’
By Elizabeth Watkins, ’44 |
There is a mass of moving legs |
crossing back and forth in every |
direction, clashing into one anoth-
er, twining around some foreign |
object. There are shouts, screams, |
curses! Mr. Alwyne raps sharply |
on his music desk, Mr. Willoughby |
bangs chord after chord. Finally |
there is quiet. The Haverford|
“dragoons” return to their places |
to attempt another simple about- |
face. Perhaps a little martial at-
mosphere would do the trick. Ah, |
that’s it! Strong masculine hands}
suddenly grasp flashing swords}
and twist with mighty fervor, the |
hockey sticks and “billys.” Enter}
the Major’ brandishing a heavy
warlike tool . : *: °a-green parasol.
Blithe voices are heard in the di-
rection of~the switch-board and
soon twenty doleful maidens tread
a heavy. measure down three ele-
vated planks. The object of their
attention is the young man ‘in the
light blue shirt and suspenders.
They cast “love-sick” glances on
him, as they hastily gulp down the
last scrap of ice cream from the
Dixie cups. With Mr. Alwyne as}
chaperon, conversation hesitantly
\
|
starts. It progresses slowly be-
cause the speaker is undecided
whether “a’s’” should have a Kan-
sas or Cockney accent.
Time passes and at last the girls
are tenderly tlutched “by the “dra-
goons.”
“Don’t tell me I have-to teach
Haverford this, too!” Mr. Alwyne
mutters as he glances at the ten
foot space between embracer and
embracee. The space is narrowed
—"‘Relax!’”’ Mr. Alwyne_ shouts,
then hastily regrets it.
The knots are tangled and un-
‘tangled as the action sweeps on to
the grand finale. Then the Chorus
comes galloping on the stage with
kicking heels and swishing skirts.
Led by Bunthorne they break into”
a mad whirl, with a pseudo can-
can and the Grapevine twist plus
a touch of the Rhumba and Ring-
around-the-Rosy. The gallant duke,
colonel, major and solicitor join
the merry group in a minuet with
do-ci-do’s as the curtain closes over
the panting figures with red faces
and bruised hips. It is not yet
over. For some inexplicable rea-
son Bunthorne resides outside the
Continued on Page Six
aka
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
NANCY EvartTs, ’43, Editor-in-Chief
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(Founded in 1914)
Published weekly during the College Year (excepting during Thanks-
giving, Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during mination weeks)
in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Magujfe 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 without written
permission of the Editor-in-Chief.
Editorial Board
ALICE ISEMAN, ’43, Copy SALLY JACOB, ’43,
Mary BARBARA KAUFFMAN, ’43, News ANNE DENNY, '43
BARBARA HULL, '44, News LENORE O’BOYLE, ’43 \
Editorial Staff
SALLY MATTESON, 43
RutTH ALICE DAVIS, 744
ANN COULSON, 744
ELIZABETH BOUDREAU, ’45
ALLISON. MERRILL, ’45
‘ “ALICE WEIL, ’43
ANNE HEYNIGER, 744
ELIZABETH WATKINS, 744
JESSIE STONE, ’44
MARY VIRGINIA MORE, ’45
Music
Posy KENT, ’45
Cartoons
KATHRYN ANN
EDWARDS, ’45
Sports
JACQUIE BALLARD, ’43
KEO ENGLAND, ’45
Business Board
LOUISE Horwoop, ’44, Manager
DIANA Lucas, ’44, Advertising
ANN FITZGIBBONS, °45 ELIZABETH ANN MERCER, ’45
» NINA MONTGOMERY, ’45
Subscription Board
GRACE WEIGLE, ’43, Manager AUDREY SIMS, 744
CONSTANCE BRISTOL, ’43 NANCY SCRIBNER, ’44
RONNY RAviTcH, ’44
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
Reading Period
It has finally been decided that plans for a reading period,
involving a revision of the examination schedule so that there
would be a comprehensive examination for the entire year in
June, and a spacing of papers throughout the year, are no longer
practical. They would obviously eliminate -the possibility of ac-
celeration, and their suspension for a year or two seems imperative.
But when the future of. such an idea was promising, it re-
ceived the support of a majority of the students. A reading period
would prove valuable to all but science majors, for whom plans
could be made to do individual work during the period.
The plan provides an opportunity for independent work—
work which is of inestimable value to almost every student. An
education which does not require original and individual work is
hardly more than the imposing of second-hand ideas upon the
undergraduate. There is nothing about it which could be called
advanced; it continues a system used in high school for the train-
ing of immature minds. Surely to a student who has reached
college experimentation with her own ideas, development of inde-
pendent thinking and interests, are equally important. Contrary
to the prevalent belief is ours that few undergraduates at Bryn
Mawr would not benefit ¥tom opportunities for such work.
A comprehensive examination for the whole year in each
course is an intelligent method of preparing students gradually for
the examinations in the major subject which, as the system now
is, face the senior with appalling suddenness and newness in the
spring of her last year. Comprehensive examinations are also
indicative of the student’s grasp of the subject. Work would be
reviewed in more general terms than is now customary. Super-
fluous-details would be overlooked; the broad significance of the
subject would be considered.
The plan to require papers to be due at three or four specified
dates throughout the year may not be the solution to all evils
attendant upon long papers, but it would simplify the problem of
allotting time. Under such a system no one would be confronted
with four papers to be finished in one week. Individual papers
would also benefit from receiving undivided attention and care.
Although there are obvious disadvantages to the proposed
plan; although many may think—and rightly—that all the prob-
lems attending papers and examinations are not solved, the advan-
tages of a reading period, of an opportunity for individual de-
velopment, should compensate for the drawbacks of the plan. In
spite of its temporary submergence, its advantages must not be
forgotten. In the not-too-distant future we may well be able to
realize it.
Service Witha - - -
The Inn is unsatisfactory. The sefvice is slow and discour-
teous. The food has never been good enough to warrant the un-
reasonably high prices. The coffee, usually .just-warm ‘and weak,
is certainly not worth ten cents. For thirty cents we should have
a gallon of orange juice instead of three ounces. :
We would like to know why we are. paying such dispropor-
“tionate prices. Where does the money go? Now that the atmos-
phere has been partially improved by the redecoration job, we are
interested in how much it cost. aa ye
Waiting an hour for a lemonade, which finally arrives amidst
frowns and no apologies, seems slightly unfair. What happens in
the kitchen when well-done hamburgs are ordered and raw ones
appear? And why can’t we ask for ketchup without getting dis-
paraging looks and still poorer service when we reorder? ~gjnd
what’s wrong with second requests? Isn’t our patronage appreci-
}
CiTyY LIGHTS =
By Jessie Stone, ’44
President . Roosevelt’s Executive |
Order 8802, barring “discrimina-
tion in the employment of workers
in defense industries” because of
“race, creed, color or national ori-
gin,” has taken effect in one of
the most important war plants in
the Philadelphia area. :
The Sun Shipbuilding and Dry-
dock Company announced that
Negro workers, formerly given
only menial jobs, would be offered
skilled mechaniestraining. Last
week the company’s 17,500 workers
read this notice on their bulletin
boards:
“At the request of our employees
the management has decided to
give our colored employees an op-
portunity for training in all of the
crafts.
“Upon the completion of this
training our colored employees thus
trained will be placed in the Num-
ber 4 yard which is now under con-
struction and will be completed by
July 1, 1942.
“After
have had an opportunity, addi-
tional colored workers will be
drawn in from Delaware County,
Philadelphia County and the Wil-
mington districts.”
“ To the 2,200 Negro workers of
Sun Ship this signified a great step
forward against the Jim Crow sys-
tem which kept 95 per cent of them
lon unskilled jobs and permitted
only 5 per cent to handle some
semi-skilled: work.
Evidently, traces of discrimina-
tion will continue, for the notice
clearly announces that the future
policy will be one of segregating
the Negro workers from the whites.
However, this is a problem which
can ‘be solved only by request of
the workers, who, incidentally, are
now being organized by the Union
of Marine and _ Shipbuilding
Workers. Fortunately the ill ef-
fects__of segregation, which are
confined mainly to morale, will not
hit war production as the complete
refusal to accept..Negroes--would..
The problem of an adequate labor
supply to man the machines of war
24 hours a day is one of the prin-
cipal questions facing the country
and it is heartening to know that
plants are beginning to comply
with the President’s order.
Radnor Holds Dinner
In Honor of Schenck
Continued from Fage One
archives of the class of 1907, form-
ed a small art gallery in the up-
stairs smoking-room of Radnor.
Against this background the “Rad-
nor Quartet,’ making their third
public appearance, carried their
listeners back to the days of ’07 as
they sang selections from-“Songs
of the Class of 1907.”
tet finished their program with
Miss Schenck’s special request, Dr.
Herben’s “Radnor Song.”
Blood Donors
_ The following is a list of
Blood Donors from Bryn
Mawr who gave their blood
for the Armed Forces at the
Philadelphia Skating Club at
Ardmore, April 6th:
Beatrice Biberman, ’43.
Mabel Lang. :
Kate Wheat Thomas, 743.
Anne E. Williams, ’43. .
our present employees!
The Quar- |
Faced With. War Twenty-five Years Ago
College Showed More Will and Ambition
By Ann Coulson, ’44
| It is humiliating to note that the
energy and ambition shown by the
college in 1917 is scarcely sur-
passed by us today. According to
the College News, no one doubted
for a moment that they were quite
capable of winning the war single-
handed. Their first step we en-
dorse; we even follow their ex-
ample. Then, as now, “an over-
whelming majority of the under-
graduates voted to take up pre-
paredness training in addition to
the work they were already carry-
ing.” ¢
“Why not raise potatoes (or
onions) all over the campus if
necessary?” asks the starring edi-
torial of the 1917.News. It would
| It is disappointing but not amaz-
jing to read the statement that the
| ¢
patriotic “expériment in agricul-
ture did not yield a good crop.”
; May Day, in those days, was con-
sidered “incompatible with gritted
teeth” and, with no escapist shirk-
ing of the horrid fact, was dubbed
‘non-productive.” Humor about
the Food Administrator and the
legendary Bryn Mawr appetite pro-
vided the college with a less ethe-
real form of entertainment.
It is to be noted with regret that
even this sacrifice did not solve all
problems. The News announced
gloomily that “there has appeared
nothing astonishingly trained about
the minds of the college women
start a precedent by which eventu-
ally all colleges would be self-sup-|
porting, it would tend to lower the!
general price of potatoes, it would,
afford excellent opportunities for,
the students to get some practical |
training in farming. “Is anyone:
inspired to feed us and stop infla-
tion all at once?” People still eat
potatoes and onions—but even the
class of 1917 didn’t offer to peel
them.
who have registered for war work
at Bryn Mawr. The registrars
guide them at every step, but still
they underscore where they should
make circles.”
All hope of relief and relaxation
after these trying revelations was
lost when it became impossible to
drink muggle, and another time-
honored institution passed away in
the great social upheaval. brought
about by the war.
Curriculum Committee
New Members of the Cur-
ricilum Committee:
Chairman:
Rosalind Wright, ’43, Politics
Secretary:
Selma Rossmassler, ’438; Phy-
sics
Nina Garsoian, ’44 Arche-
ology.
Marian Logan, ’44, Music.
Celia Moskovitz, ’43, Psy-
chology.
Jaqueline Simon,
- Spanish.
Ruth Alice
Chemistry. °
Harriett Case, ’43, Philos-
ophy.
Caro Shugg, ’44, German.
Mildred McLeskey, ’43,
History.
Frances Morfoot,
Mathematics.
Ann Ratner, ’43, Sociology.
Nancy Evarts, ’438, NEWS.
Helen LEichelberger, ’43,
History of Art.
Marie Leyendecker, ’44,
Geology.
Teresita Sparre, ’43, Eng-
lish.
Mary Barbara Kauffman,
’43, Classics.
*44,
Davis, '44,
*43,
McLeskey Will work
In Post-War Period
Continued from Page One
is concerned. Next year she can
do honors work in either mathe-
matics or physics, and she will def-
initely _ do advanced work in both
fields, ‘
Mildred McLeskey, with an ever-
jage of 89.74, was recommended by
the Department of History. She
comes from Columbus, Ohio, and
was prepared by the Columbus
School for Girls. As a Freshman,
she was awarded the Sheelah Kil-
roy Memorial Award for the best
work in Required English Compo-
sition.
Next year, Miss McLeskey will
do honors work in the modern field
under Mrs. Cameron. As part of
honors, she will take a new gradu-
hate seminar planned for next year
in Anglo-French relations, with
particular emphasis on the impor-
tance of the press and public opin-
ion. :
ated? It is regarded as an imposition to order two desserts, and
second sandwiches are: hardly tolerated. ' i ;
_ Boycotts have been suggested, and,.if wishes came true, a
dozen rival diners would line up opposite the Inn, with five-cent
hamburgs, cheerful waitresses and strong coffee. We have a
suspicious feeling that we are, being exploited for the privilege of
wearing blue jeans and shorts. The Inn should be conditioned to
the time and the money ,of--tHe average student.
WIT’S END...
Now that May Day has come, we
are going to give you a big and
undoubtedly welcome surprise, and
write a Wit’s End about it. Happy?
What with the world crumbling
around us, and Hitler fiddling
strictly Aryan melodies in Berch-
tesgaden, the more intelligent of
Bryn Mawr’s intellectual elite feel
that the time has come for a re-
valuation of our position. How
does the thought:of May Day strike
you? Are you drunk with the
beauties of nature and spring? Be-
cause if you are, as far as we’re
concerned you can dance around
the May Pole till your arches drop.
The, best thing for you to do still
is to wrap yourself around a boa
constrictor under the delusion that
he’s a tree trunk, or just lock your-
self up in the iron maiden we left
on the gym roof,
On the other hand, if your head
throbs, but not with the nostalgia
of other more beautiful springs,
have an aspirin with us. If you
are just drunk, we envy you. In
any case, if you don’t feel too
sharp now, wait till someone shoves
a lousy doughnut at you next Fri-
day morning at six A. M. Secondly,
do you really want to be kissed?
If not, either apply to Nancy Nor-
ton in Pem East for the loan of a
basketball helmet, or concentrate
on making yourself as physically
repulsive as possible in every hor-
rible detail. It is. possible that
your Sophomore will not notice the
difference, but in that case you’re
safe anyway. ;
Where will it get you, we keep
asking.
Dry Damsels Crowd
For Mild Milk Shakes
Continued from Page One
cream cone were most intriguing
and many begged to try their hand
at it. Those behind the bar ad-
mitted afterwards being secretly
floored at one flat request for seven
vanilla ice cream cones, but, un-
daunted, turned them out with
practiced finesse.
Greatest needs at the moment
are a broom, a grill, a small stove
and a new name. Several have
been suggested: The Pub, The
Roman’s (get it?), The Jerk Joint,
and The Palace Athena with the
No. 1 specialty a Parthenon sundae.
The suggestor of the winning name
is to receive a free sundae.
The sole male patron pronounced
it vastly superior to the Haverford
Coop., adding “it’s the feminine
homey touch that does it.”
a)
4
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
L
Anderson to Present
Varied Song Program
For Scholarship Fund
Marion Anderson, the celebrated
contralto, will give a recital on
May 4 at 8.30 P. M. in Goodhart
Hall for the benefit of the Bryn
Mawr Scholarship Fund. Tickets
may be obtained at the Publicity
Office.
Miss Anderson 1s on her seventh
annual tour after a summer’s re-
tirement on her recently purchased
farm in Connecticut. During this
period she increased her repertory,
already large. The program which
she will present here will include
some of the new selections.
‘Miss Anderson has recently re-
ceived the Bok Award of $10,000,
which is presented periodically to:
the Philadelphian who has contrib-
uted most to'the honor of the city.
She was also .the recipient of an
Honorary Doctorate of Music from
Temple University.
The program to be given here is
as follows:
I
Begriissung
George Frederick Handel
‘So wie die Taube
George Frederick Handel
Agnus Del.....c0. Georges Bizet
II
Fragment aus dem Aeschylus
Franz Schubert
Der Tod und das Madchen
Franz Schubert
Auf dem Wasser zu singen
Franz Schubert
Ave Moaria....:.; Franz Schubert
VU as
Pleurez mes yeux—Aria
from “Le Cid’”...Jules Massenet
Intermission
Songs My Mother Taught Me
Anton Dvorak
The Christ is Risen
Serge Rachmaninoff
O Mistress Mine....Roger Quilter
Blow, Blow, Thou Winter
Wa ec as Roger Quilter
IV
Go Down Moses
arranged by Burleigh
Let Us Break Bread Together
arranged by Lawrence
Tramping ...arranged by Boatner
Honor, Honor
arranged by Johnson
Spring College Dance
Will Follow ‘Patience’
The Spring College Dance will
follow the second night of Patience.
_Jack Frost’s Varsity Club orches-
tra, which proved successful at
Christmas, will play from eleven
till two with emphasis on waltzes.
The Main Line Singers, who
made their first appearance at the
Maids’ and Porters’ entertainment,
will sing in the intermission.
Lewis and Carl, already familiar
to the college, are members of this
2 B. M. and Haverford
Successfully Present
Coward’s ‘Hay Fever’
By Barbara Kauffman, °43
Noel Coward himself has warned
amateurs-against Hay Fever.
‘*F rom the professional stand-
point,” he adds, “Hay Fever is far
and away the most difficult play to
perform that I have ever encount-
ered.’ Assuredly, the play is a
challenge: but the Bryn Mawr
Players’ and the Haverford. Cap
and Bells Clubs in their presenta-
| tion of the play last Friday night
more than met this challenge.
The difficult scenes, particularly
the quarrels, were carried off with-
out a flaw. The second act, which
can easily become monotonous be-
cause it repeats a situation of the
first, by careful directing and act-
jing, successfully made each inci-
| dent funnier than the last.
| Laurels go to David Mallery who
played the role of Simon with tal-
ented ease and conviction. Ann
Updegraff as the retired actress,
Judith Bliss, was the best of the
women. She played with under-
standing and charm, made her song
in the second act dne of the high
points of the play.
Edgar Emery, as David Bliss the
novelist, showed both insight and
poise. Although somewhat uncer-
tain at the start of the love scene
in the second act, he fell into pace
Continuea on Page Six
‘Bryn Mawr Advocates
A Rose at the Door
For Defense Effort
This letter was received by the
Undergraduate Association. A
three cent stamp was enclosed, and
“Immediate Reply Requested” was
on the envelope.
Lafayette Student Defense Council
Information Division
President of the Student Council
Bryn Mawr College
Next Friday, the twenty-fourth,
Lafayette is having their big spring
weekend. The Defense Council has
asked each student not to buy his
date a corsage. Instead he is to
buy a single rose at the door; this
would cost two dollars and the pro-
|ceeds would go to the Emergency
War Relief Fund.
We are having difficulty in
arousing the campus to devote even
a little of the thousands of dollars
which will be spent. on the week-
end towards the war effort. One
of the foremost objections to our
plan is that the girls would not
favor such an idea.
Therefore, we are asking you for.
a short fifty word statement giv-
ing the opinion of girls at your
school as to whether you think col-
lege students ought to make sacri-
fices for the war and whether you
think girls would object to the idea
of dropping corsages in
iew of
the cause for which the money will
| be spent.
Please address your reply to Ted
|Cohn, editor of the Lafayette, Box
75, Lafayette College, Easton,
Penna. Unless you enclose your
statement in the mail Wednesday
afternoon we will be unable to
| print it in the Lafayette. Thank
you very much. s
RICHARD W. RICHARD
Student Director
Information Division
The following reply was sent:
\
'
group. The program will not start, Gentlemen:
till everyone has arrived.
The May ninth week-end will be
gayer than usual with the Rhoads
“open house” tea dance in the af-
ternoon, the operetta and the
Spring Dance as a fitting climax.
Dance Club Elections
The Dance. Club_ takes
great pleasure in announcing
the elections of Frances
Lynd, ’43, President, and
° ‘Graham Hobson, ’44, Secre-
- tary-Treasurer.
In response to your urgent ap-
peal for. feminine support, we re-
ply, hoping that in so doing, we do
not deviate too far from average
| American opinion, that a rose is a
.rose any day.
What-sort of girls do you men
have anyhow? Do you fancy that
they have so little confidence in
their charms that they need orchids
to hide behind?
Unadornedly yours,
DorotHy Dix,
Bryn Mawr Branch
P. S.—Thanks for return post-
age.
r
ml
ON A MERRY MORN IN
Faculty Defeats Owls;
Faris Holds Student
Team to 32-14 Score
Hockey Field, April 26. — Mr.
Faris literally had something on
the ball Sunday afternoon as he
held the students’ baseball team to
a measly thirteen hits in a five
inning game. It was largely
through his dazzling pitching,
aided by his teammates’ potent
bats, that the faculty triumphed
by the score of 32-14 in the first
inter-intellectual baseball contest of
the season.
A ray of hope flickered in the
hearts of the Owls at the end of
the first inning when the score was'
deadlocked at six all. But. the
happy thought of a possible victory
was quickly blasted by a rally that
netted the faculty ten runs in the
second frame. Mr. Faris effectively
used his sinker and change of pace
to shut out the students in the
second, third and fourth innings.
A breathless “ninth inning rally”
in the Owls’ last time at bat sent
seven runners across the plate and
made the score somewhat more
respectable.
Lucy Mott starred afield backing
up for two hard hit flies, and Joce
Fleming played third with consum-
mate ease. Mr. Gates in clean-up
spot in the faculty line-up belted
two home runs toward the center-
Continued_on.Page Four
B. M. to be Scene
-Of Nursing School
Continued from Page One.
An executive committee will be
responsible for the administration
of the school. Under the chair-
manship of Mrs. Thomas Raeburn
White, this committee consists of |
the directresses of each nursing
school and Mrs. Chadwick-Collins,
representing Bryn Mawr. To en-
roll, a candidate must apply at any
one of the cooperating schools. In-
formation concerning the require-
ments of each may be received at
Bryn Mawr. Any graduate of a
college or university approved by
the Association of American Uni-
versities may apply, the only pre-
requisite being one year of labor-
atory science. The Bryn Mawr
School is unique in admitting qual-
ified negro college graduates.
The courses will include anato-
my and physiology, chemistry, mi-
crobiology, and introduction to
nursing. Completing this course,
the student will receive three
months’ credit at nursing school
and her college degree may allow
her to shorten the training period.
Most of the faculty appointments
have not yet been made, but a
teaching staff for recreation and} .
extra-curricular activities as well
as academic requirements; is plari-
ned.
Elections”
._ The International
tions Club Elections:
President: Nancy Chase, 43.
Vice-President - Treasurer:
Betty Szold, ’44.
Secretary: Mary Cox, ’43.
Rela-
Cushman to Discuss
Oxford’s Authorship
Of Shakespeare Plays
Present Day Claims of the Earl
of Oxford to the Authorship of
Shakespeare’s Plays, will be the
subject of a lecture delivered by
James G. Cushman, on Monday,
May 4, at five o’clock in the Dean-
ery.
Mr. Cushman, highly trained
specialist in research, will give his
reasons for believing that the
works which we today attribute to
Shakespeare were actually written
by the Earl of Oxford, and will
thereby rekindle the flames of an
old controversy.
One of the world’s leading au-
thorities on “Shakespeare,” Mr.
Cushman is former Shakespeare
Fellowship lecturer in London. He
has spoken at Princeton, Rutgers
and the University of Michigan.
Tea will be served at 4.30.
Congress Now Lacks
Support From Voter
Continued from Page One
Actual work can be done in this
year’s elections. The most effective
method now would probably be—to
work with the party organization,
although non-partisan activity
| waar 10/60
The New York Public Library
wants summer workers. No library
| training is necessary. For in-
‘formation, apply to Miriam Fol-
som, Circulation Department. Sal-
ary: $80 and up.
Columbia Broadcasting. System
is asking for apprentice techni-
cians in the engineering depart-
ment. Mathematics and . Physics
preferred, but not required. Sal-
ary: $25 a week.
Waitresses are wanted by The
Aberdeen, in Longport, N. J. Ap-
ply to Mr. George S., Hendricks,
6705 N. 12th street, Philadelphia.
| Jobs will be available between June
|20 and July 1, and between the day
after Labor Day and September
10 or 15. Average savings for the
period in excess of $100.
The position of Personnel As-
sistant is open in the National
Union Radio Corporation, Newark.
Salary: $85 a month beginning.
Wanted:'. Alumnae who have
Aviation ‘Pilots’ Licenses and who
are willing to take research jobs.
For further information apply at
the Bureau of Recommendations.
A 12 weeks apprentice training
course in personnel administration
for a government department wili
be given by the government. Be-
ginning Salary: $1620 a year. Ap:
ply at the Bureau of Recommenda-
tions.
Alumnae: Engineers of all kinds
are in great demand.
The Witmer School and Psycho-
logical Center in Devon, Pa., wants
three or four people for next year,
at a salary of $50-$75 a month.
An Economist is wanted by the
Hercules Powder Company. For
information, apply at the Bureau
of Recommendations. Beginning
salary: $100 a month.
The Cambridge School in Ken-
dall Green, Mass., wants an Ap-
prentice in Dramatics. Living ex-
penses paid.
The Haverford Community Cen-
ter would like volunteers for this
summer, to help in Music, Games,
uc, 4
Buy War Savings Bonds
might be possible.
PEP SPP SPP PP PPP PPPS Pee oe STS
Something New
| Has Been Added —
COLOR
comes togBryn Mawr
P)
scription lists
completed, so
- in the 1942 Veusbaake Sub-
are now being
sign up with
Betsy Kerr, Pembroke West.
~
n-
ann nt ee ec ee de de de de de de
Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS : ee ‘
ee —————— os — . : ee ‘
° Prepared by the West Orange High: School. ed : : : Facult De eat Onls \
Scholarships Awarded j Vienne! by the Wot Orange Viet exaz|Faris Defines Types Cinderellian Hint os 7 gpl
'e : Y SCHOLARSHIP ; hen Cinderella dances at - oO
By Miss Park on May I Caroyl Tietz of Bloomfield, N. J. aia Of Morale Necessary — can hh ,
pared by the Bloomfield High School. * A ORS : : :
Continued team Page-One “Alumnae Regional Scholar 1939-42; Anna Fine Prince Charming is Continued from Page Three
Other students considered for amet Reape pina es dovell Asbury Park, N. J., April 25.— there to show her how to. field fence (the tennis court :
= the Charles S. Hinchman Memorial. Lucille Mott. of Greentown, Pa. Pre- The three types of populgr - But what she needs more and screen).
Scholarship were: pared by the Atlantic City, N. J., High dence essential to military morale decmia bast of alt The most amusing play of the
- ary - stevens “4 4 i «hs e . . ; . i
Barbara Herman, English. ee a Se es: **-)in war-time were discussed by. Mr./} J, 4 fine charming audience || afternoon was staged in the third i
EDWIN GOUL . ND¢ I - rence of tae : :
Virginia Fulton, Psychology. SCHOLARSHIP ae Faris at the annual confere * ta how te. inning when two Owls consistently
Francenia Fox, French. Florence Kelton of Los Angeles, Cn the Eastern Sociological Socie y.| (n. b. For those who require ||clung to second base a ld pre-
eer > , y y s gz : “ o | Pi .
Scholarships to be Held in the Stock, Weskington, D.C and by St.| He pointed out that the ‘aibemdeked more than a hint, here is an pennant Dodgers. One finally con-
Senior Yéar | Scholastica College, Philippine Islands. Ed-| of success”. are the result of an advertisement: Come to the- ceded to the other and started for
MARIA L. EASTMAN BROOKE HALL |™in Gould Foundation Scholar 1939-42. equilibrium of interwoven lines of Gym on May 16th!) third but got tagged in the run-up.
. “: ctptege nto . } ta NY IT . ae > ‘ j 4 :
MEMORIAL SC HOLARSHIP © EV ELYN Hl a eS ne confidence which become ... gen- as bined thee ies. old iden ‘ball, teil ene
Awarded to the member of the Junior Berbara Stuart of Bronxville, N.Y. Pr : ‘n individual tinda.”” :
Class with the highest average, and pared by the Bronxville High School. eralized in individual minds. pulled at third base on an unwary
eo Pes iC NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE ; :
adnate v4 STAL SOROE A yg eae SCHOLARSHIP and The eG, i eee — months before the fall of France,| faculty baserunner.
> ) 2 SC at JC wwe Ls. . é ° ; . : : *
inet ie es student whose record |: FIRST ALICE FERREE -HAYT othe ae a rset hinge headlined, ‘MORALE AT FRONT FACULTY ‘
\ shows the greatest ability in her | nase Fgoe gerne tae Ray Se sco . a feeling t a rf e 3 d bil. KEPT UP BY FRENCH.’ A Arnison, ene 5 i 4 0 Hk
i subje dit Annin oO ichmond, Mass. ‘ . red abil- 2
oe seme, ae naan Pore = Bs wae a oer Geechee and officials ‘ae bh a ean, | Major of Zouaves is quoted as fol- Sax, Minis 2 8. eS >
STRETH MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP | Mass. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1939-42. | ity.to direct t e activity, ram tows, ‘We were in action recently Te ea OO ES
eT Soin Coden” ol re he ors > vor reat ib ee ae heal os and we were very proud to lead| Berry, lb ........6 6 5 6 0 ’
Prepared by Cheltenham dies’ College, Ann Ratner of New York. repared by hose actions must co-ordinate , NSE
Cheltenham, — England. Special Trustees’ the FieldstonSchool,. New. York. George is hj iI] 1 aetorm ade such soldiers, several of whom won Gates, OW ick OO OO Be
Scholar 1940-41; James E. Rhoads Hace Bates Hopkins Memorial Scholar 1940-41; with his will also p fid . | the Croix de Guerre. But we were Dryden, ss ........6/4:° 4°11 0 >
os . > Sc 42. Av e isses Ki 5 Z -42. ” nc in : j y
oo Scholar 1941-4 verag sci geet Pah ae ae quately, “a ri confidence equally proud: of the billets you Miller, _
ONE-HALF CHARLES S. a aia Header Beatty of Mawburg, No ¥- Pre proper “ae ination. —- have just seen. They are rough Broughton, lf 68.0 Y
aera at Coemeau|e t uargs wae Soto ook] | As fot oe inorder Fara] at mabesbit, but che are clean |Patleton of -(°-- 9 9 80 8
Tua MCLE C3 > . > s 9 ‘a : 3 : :
Prepared by the Columbus School for Girls. ss sea SH AND ALUMNAE oF vnded "Th a RE ar warm, and in their y cheery. Gates, cf. 40.20. - : ; : :
. f re n Ms . S a 9 " : NE wy stil ALU MINE e pr ' : ‘i : ‘< 2 Cece
pose ory Memorial. Scholar 1940-41 REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP conclude : ies aan Ra Yet everything nal bs impro- Guiton, rf
ON“PENNSYLVANIA STATE sheng hy one id cura ee =, hie —— See meee ovematnas Tee without interfering unduly — ee 7
” “SCCHC ; e At chool, Boston. | j n Loh : ; ‘
item dah senate. Re Honai’ Sohclar 1939-42; Holder nigh siebhcnap ete leg “é with the moral life of the inhabi-| Totals .........47 82 31 10
, Eleanor Edwards of Latrobe, Pa, Pre. | +! ea. ; Ade fat kena | CON which has as its purpose mo- ° : STUDENTS
i by the Latrobe High School. Penn-|0f the Alice Ferree Hayt Memorial Awar : : i te wethes tants of the village. ‘
se a State Scholar 1939-42. 1940-42. rale stimulation, but it is rather a “Phe yeporter added, ‘It is ¥eal- ab r h po a
CHINESE SCHOLARSHIP WASHINGTON ALUMNAE REGIONAL) condition of health, efficiency,| | 3 tot in this ee Fe ec eth itad ta 8
Virginia Deung of Shanghai, China. Pre- SCHOLARSHIP eeu demaiantin oh Ge ante ize a g -Sostdgn a e
pared by Peking American School, Peiping. Kate Wheat Thomas of Alexandria, Va, , : : . morale of the troops may depend on ent, ern rane
Chinese Scholar 1939-42. Prepared. by the Holton-Arms School,| organization for action.” He con- the number of footballs available| Fleming, 3b-p .... 4 2 2°2.0 y
TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP Washington, D. C. Alumnae _ Regional tinued: : ‘ . Sencan i —
Florence Newman of Philadelphia. Pre-| Scholar 1939-42. prado th atten’ Paes for distribution’ as -much as on ag ’ se eeeee . i A
pared by, the Villager hia, igh Behan! for EASTERN FENNSYLVANLS bilo Nc Mite beaded. wholesome food and esprit de|Shipway, Ib ...... 4.24
Girls. Trustees’ NN ee ecuOOL, ALUMNAE REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP | tionaries agree on the aims, trust corpe.’ Turner, 2b ......- ‘1.658 05
LOWER MERIO?D 5 5 Marjorie Kirk of Ardmore, Pa. -Pre- . . heir = : : :
SCHOLARSHIP : pared by the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr. one another, and co ordinate t we “Tt is doubtful that history will Saripner, © .....%; S t-§ 6:3
Frances Lynd of yp age os ree ree Alumnae Regional Scholar 1939-42. actions well, the collective senti- sacuunt for dhe Gelkat of France Ms Mec BE 2 0
by Lower Merion High School, Ardmore. 1 °NG . ALUMNAE ; erges from : ; ' ‘
Lower Merion High School Scholar 1939-42. Se dnl. eetune caliey 7 that in a ails case,| however, by noting an insufficient] Walker, p-3b ..... 2 1 : ; :
AMELIA RICHARDS SX a. Sabrena Greenwood of Wollaston, Mass. t oer ws i number of footballs.” Sax; CC
ean gas Susamaa * speinhiact Schola: pg ea Alum- handling the morale problem might pared by Western High School, Washing- Totale—. ....6...00 14 18 10 2 F)
- ae ; ie ial Soph- | 24€ egional Scholar -42. ie he direct! ton, DEG, 2 ; - i
a ne wot aed fone °P:.| CHICAGO ALUMNAE REGIONAL |be to ee een oF ; EDWIN GOULD FOUNDATION Strikeouts: by Faris, 5; Walker,
Rhoads ‘Memorial Junior Scholar 1941-42. SCHOLARSHIP morale-building program and let : SCHOLARSHIP 3; Fleming, 2. Home runs: Berry,
ONE-HALF ANNA MARGARET AND Rosalind Wright of, Chicago. Prepared the high morale emerge from the Kate Rand of Minneapolis, Minn. Pre- Gates, 2. Errors, better left un-
MARY SLOAN SCHOLARSHIP by the University of Chicago High School. p ficiently |P2ted by, Westover School, Middlebury, | 7 :
Virginia Fulton “of. Ruxton, Md. Pre |-Alumpag Regional Scholar 1940-42, successful actions of an efficiently) (o4. Edwin Gould Foundation Scholar| said. Time of game, 1:48.
pared by the Bryn Mawr School of Balti- Scholarships to be Held in the organized nation, 1941-42, ene cscs eae.
mofeiray Mae. School Scholar 109 Junior “Yeat “tf there are persons who are|WASHINGTON ALUMNAE REGIONAL] p, yg Oo
; ari as s 4 2 ‘4 ry s 4 ss ~ . = ,
red bie fee ee reoeier JAMES E. paeeape bc ta apg impatient with attempts to study, Mary Jean Hayes of Silver Syria, bath e - IS ; , . ~
1; Mary E, Stevens EN SCHOLAR JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIP and _ : : «| Peepaced by ‘Western High School,- Wash: S Vj A
ee SHIP IN SCIENCE. NEW JERSEY ALUMNAE REGIONAL Genes, aa menier _torale, ba ington, D. C. Alumnae Regional Scholar By trong isitors
Awarded for excellence ‘of work in a SCHOLARSHIP | lieving it to be a trivial - matter, | 1941-42, :
canae and Jeannette Lepska of Oak Ridge, N. J. they might derive a trace of illumi- TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP
TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP Prepared by the Passaic Collegiate School. : : h| Betty, Dallam of Lansdowne, Pa. Pre-l Anni) 94. — Ursinus took Bryn
Miri Cull of Philadelphia Prepared | Alumnae Regional Scholar 1940-42; Maria} nation from a newspaper dispatc pared by the Lansdewne High School. . Pages
by aa We Gratz High School, Philadel | Hopper Sophomore Scholar 1941-42, of December, 1939, less than six Frances Marion Simpson Scholar 1941-42,| Mawr out to the ball game in i e
phia. Trustees’ Scholar 1939-42. So a. TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP Owls’ first clash of the year. With
ELIZABETH §. SHIPPEN. SCHOLAR.|. FRANCES MARION SIMPSON Katharine Lutz of Lansdowne, Pa. Pre-| =. Oe 49-10, the visitors out-
SHIP IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES _ SCHOLARSHIP mouth, | School. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1940-|pared| by, the Upper Darby, Pa, High 0, ef
Awarded for excellence of work in Bath Aee Baye ea eee | 42s Book Shap Seholar 1941-42, School. Trustees’ Scholar 1941-42. batted and out-fielded the jean-cla
& jovcign lengtage, one School fo roils a. Pe Se, TRUSTEES’ SCHOLARSHIP ore ce Wan aie ., | Bryn Mawr team with exceptional
NEW ENGLAND REGIONAL School for Girls, Baltimore. Frances Mar-| 71 yi5ones of Lansdowne, Pa. Pre-| Rebecca Cooper Wood of Moorestown, oe
SCHOLARSHIP and _ wets, one eee > pared by the Lansdowne High School. N, J. Prepared by Moorestown Friends’| speed. The Varsity put up : sad
FHOMAS— POWERS MEMORIAL SUES Seen Trustees’ Scholar 1940-42. School, Foundation Scholar 19s) <¢... | bast fight in the firet four innings,
SCHOLARSHIP Jessie Stone of Philadephia, Prepared ONE-HALF TRUSTEES’ MARIA HOPPER SCHOLARSHIIL atball fall
Mary-Barbara Kauffman of Sehasco Es-|by the Simon Gratz High School. Trus-| “SCHOLARSHIP Jean Franklin of Oreland, Pa. Prepared when the game was softball, fall-
tates, Me. Prepared by Rosemary Hall, )'*c# NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE Dorothy Berry of Philadelphia. Pre-|by Cheltenham Township High School, - ing down in the hardball game of
Greenwich, Conn, Alumnae Regional Scholat aes a ee ARSHIP pared by the Germantown High Bevel... aon ta Pa. Alumnae Regional Scholar she-eanonit hall,
-42; 5 ; -42, cstadecne cILA OUGHTELING MEMORIS “Fae : - oe
MALE ARMA MARGARET: AND|~-Reslyn-Shulman_of Mattapan, Mass. Pre- cod ae oe canes LILA M. WRIGHT MEMORIAL Up to the sixth inning, Bryn
MARY SLOAN SCHOLARSHIP and parse oF mer uo ote ent Senay: Gruham Hobson of State Farm, Va. Pre- -SCHOLARSELE Tat .,.| Mawr could be proud of its stand
BOOK SHOP SCHOLARSHIP ens oe. nares SKINS pared by St. Catherine’s School, Richmond, Amanda Eggert of Evansvil e, ind. Pre: : :
Y & é > GEORGE BATES HOPKINS , : e 940-41:| pared by the Central High School, Evans- against Ursinus, famous for turn-
Therese Exton of New York. Prepared MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Va. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1949-41; F
by the Lycée Moliére, Paris. Sheelah. Kil- Katherine T. oe f N or N. J. Pre- Leila Houghteling Memorial Scholar 1941- ville, Ind. 2 IMNAE REGIONAL ing out good baseball. But the
roy Memorial Scholar and Maria Hopper abnering sappen_o “Hill ¢ ee NEW YORK ALUMN¢ ONAL fateful sixth inning brought. run
Sophomore Scholar 1941-42. = gered a ne J IST RICT IV. ALUMNAE: REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP ul atefu g
ELIZABETH WILSON WHITE [Schott ves SCHOLARSHIP ee. a rn ee Sona Beles: after run for the opponents and it
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP _ FOUNDA ' Bavhevs Cor of Wuaker Halghis,. Olio. | Prev! ar Wills L, dn ks aa
Dorothy Davenport of Cincinnati, Ohio.| Katharine Franck of New Hope, Pa. Pre- Prepared by the Shaker Heights, High|Troy. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1941-42. was all Bryn Mawr could g'
Prepared by the Hughes High School, Cin- — v4 be ig fos) Pie mala School. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1949- GEORGE BATES HOPKINS the visitors out in the field after
cinnati, Louise Hyman Pollak Scholar |Cm™ UTED EN HUIDEKOPER 42. ee i. ot Giee Mias, Pa., eh encrese inning, - ‘The firetcol-
1939-40; Maria Hopper Sophomore Scholar SCHOLARSHIP ANNA HALLOWELL MEMORIAL - Genevieve inston 0 ryn wal a. Gunnuek 6 Senn Wave
1940-41; Elizabeth Wilson White Memorial . ¢ Alle + SCHOLARSHIP Transferred from Sarah Lawrence College.
Scholar 1941-42, rags hegg - = Bi st deal gos Frances Parrish of Vandalia, Mo. Pre- E WESTERN pe faa eeeurp
ONS-EALY FRANCES Maus hed P ee Silppen Hel ko - Scholar pared by the Vandalia High School. Amy a M vhall P: Pre-| pared by Westtown School, Westtown, Pa.
SIMPSON SCHOLARSHIP rer P eh PP I Sussinan’ Steinhart Scholar 1940-41, Britta Ericson . ger vet S : - Mluieus Balianal Goualay (oenad.
Ane Meta 2s pee ee, Pe ie EDWIN GOULD FOUNDATION SUSAN SHOBER CAREY AWARD | pared et ont Seiect ot Sitmiarys. NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE
Transferred from Wilson College. “ “ SCHOLARSHIP “ - Frances Brown of Gambier, Ohio. vee | ee ine pies . urgh. REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP
-NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE ~ Elisabeth S eNew-York:-> Pre, | bared by New Trier Township High School, ; !umnae IS TEES? SCHOLARSHIP Charlotte Zimmerman of Malden, Mass.
: REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIF and a “gh an eke! New York. | Evanston, Ill. aeereg Pa. Pre.|Prepared by the Malden High School.
ABBY SLADE BRAYTON DURFEE. |Pared by the Chapin a dete 42, ANNA POWERS MEMORIAL Marie Louise Field of Wayne, Pa. Pre | oo Regional Scholar. 1941-42.
SCHOLARSHIP and Edwin Could ee sing SCHOLARSHIP pared by Radnor Township High School, | SWmnae Heeroma se ONAE REGIONAL
SECOND ALICE FERREE HAYT | NEW bsadd Peso ete sIONZ Ellen Nicholson of West Pittston, Pa. Wayne. Baas Scholar and Cresson : scROL sais aap
MEMORIAL AW nage — Nina Garsovan-of- New-York, « Prepared Prepared by Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, MARY McLEAN AND ELLEN A. Margaret Bloomfield of Elkhart, Lake,
Sally Maisie a) \stpeone: ete Cte earley School, N York. Alum-| Pa. IRTE : p| Wis. Prepared by Milwaukee University
pared by the Buckingham School, Cam- | by the Brearley School, New ‘ork. COLONIAL DAMES OF AMERICA |MURTER MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP | qe alumnae Regional-Scholar 1941-42.
bridge. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1939- | "4¢ Regional Scholar 1940-42. _ ss SCHOLARSHIP and Judith Barker of Birmingham, Ala, Pre- |“ 5 ae
42; Abby Slade Brayton Durfee Scholar ONE-HALF TRUSTEES GEORGIE W. YEATMAN AWARD pared by Ramsay High School, Birming- i
1940-42. pid aber ed M P Anne Heyniger of New Lebanon, N. Y. ham. Alumnae Regional | Scholar 1941-42. ECONOMY CORNER
ONE-HALF FRANCES MARION Florence Lopes eee ey ti Ata. | Preparad by. Westover School, Middiebury, | DISTRICT TV ALUMNAE REGIONAL
SIMPSON SCHOLARSHIP pared. by Mees "Schola t040 rey 0% “FE"} Conn. Colonial Dames of America Scholar ; SCHOLARSHIP :
Barbara Herman of East Orange, N. ‘J. | ™MOF®: pL nd SCHOI ARSHIP 1940-42; Merion E. S. Heyniger Scholar _ Marguerite Van Nest of Los Angeles, to lighten
; Prepared by the West Orange High School. _ TRUSTE eeatauiemel : Jand Alice Day Jackson Scholar 1940-41;| Calif. Prepared by the Central High School the week's work
NEW YORK ALUMNAE REGIONAL ven aan = haath ela ro George Bates Hopkins Menifrial Scholar of Parkersburg, W. Va. Alumnae Regional —
SCHOLARSHIP by the gg oe age sour School for Girls. 1941-42. Scholar 1941-42. : ‘caleslie
{ Chadds’ Ford; Pa. | Trustees’ Scholar 1200-52. NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE to brighten :
Ente Ranier 6 | ised Guha CONSTANCE LEWIS MEMORIAL Scholarships to be Held in the REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP a, inalonal’s whirl
Trey; N Y. Alumnae Regional Scholar SCHOLARSHIP «Sophomore Year Louise Walker of Concord, Mass. Pre- ae .
1939-42, Berbare Hull of Waverly, Fa. Prepared). pRUSTEES' SCHOLARSHIP pared by the Concord High School. Alum-|] DRESSES FROM $5.95-29.95
a EVELYN HUNT SCHOLARSHIP [by the Grier School, Birmingham, Pa.) — jean Hoopes of Philadelphia... Prepared |nae Regional Scholar 1941-42, .
; B ( Dew, York, Prepared | Hee eee ee eAT watt by the Philadelphia High School for Girls.| NEW YORK ALUMNAE REGIONA ‘ —
i be es Meecane Mts Sckool, New York. EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA Feunseey Scholar 1941-42. - SCHOLARSHIP Mrs. Franklin Shops, Inc.
DISTRICT VI AL{JMNAE REGIONAL MNEeS Sone JAMES E, RHOADS MEMORIAL Mary Virginia More of New York. Pre- Bs Baad
SCHOLARSHIP — SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIP and |pared by the Chapin School, New York. 29 Station Road
i Phyllis White of St. Louis, Mo. Pre-| Marion Kirk of Swarthmore, Pa. Pre) ‘SiipELAH» KILROY MEMORIAL ¢ | Alumnae Regional Scholar 1941-42.
pared by the John Burroughs School, St.|pared by. the Swarthmore High School. SCHOLARSHIP IN ENGLISH EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA ALUMNAE HAVERFORD. PA.
Louis. Alumnae Regional Scholar 1939-42. | Alumnae Regional Scholar ]040-42. For excellence of work in Required REGIONAL SCHOLARSHIP * ’
ANNA M. POWERS MEMORIAL ALE MAEY ANNA LONG- English Composition Elizabeth Updegraf of Oxford, Pa. Pre-
: : SCHOLARSHIP STRETH MEMORIAL stor tapag aston Jean Potter of Birmingham, Mich. Pre- 4
i ? Matilde Boal of Mexico City, Mexico.| Priscilla Stern of new -~ oer pared by the Kingswood School, Bloomfield SUBURBAN FEY Soba |
i Prepared by the Elmwogd School, Ottawa, by the Brearley ee ey 3 SO Hills, Mich-Louise Hyman-Pollak Scholar “NEW” ITEM '
Canada, and Escuela Franco-Inglés, Mexico BALTIMORE, ot ees 1941-42. : LT Seanaaan she’ ake te leona
City. "Amy Sussman Steinhart Scholar] Pees of. Baltimore, Pre}, MARIA HOPPER SCHOLARSHIP Mer eweae 1h THe UAT!
‘ co ? s A. i, atricia - “s Tone m7 . ton, was : : i
1938-39; Mary McLeait and Ellen A. Mur acoder the. Hecyn MEAG. School OF Wane: Lilias Swift of Princeton a re The Stocktons are. back 7 Faseuan aie aaadenuapaehectithdel-<: J
ter Memorial Scholar 1939-40; Book Shop iP Regional “Scholay” 1940-42 pared by the Princeton High School, | ~— ; “LOUISIANA PURCHASE”
Scholar 1940-41. Oe A ee ee FRANCES MARION SIMPSON in Bryn Mawr and have re-|P}}- =
JEANNE CRAWFORD HISLOP NEW ENGLAND ALUMNAE SCHOLARSHIP : i‘ eee
: MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Di ee oe Helena Hersey of*Indian Head, Md. ’ Pre- opened their shop on e SEVILLE THEATAS
i Frances Matthai of Garrison, Md. “Pre- tana Lucas ; , . : “ : I ie hes
pared by the Garrison Forest School, Gar-|pared by Ss. in ve s ncn? yaad eTHR MAND ro Pike. Incidentally, Thure.: “BLOSSOMS In the DUST”
rison, Md. Alumnae Regional "Scholar | Alumnae, Regional Scholar 190042; act] a MANNA BAR been entirely r riday and Saturday:
1939-41; Anna Powers Memorial Scholar NEW YORK ALUMN, . : : : : pt 2 Ty ih astter'g vinQIMiAN’”
1940-41; Jeanne Crawford Hislop Memorial ee ee ee ai Where the Elite Meet to Dine and has some interesting Son and Mon: "¥he WOLF MAN”
é ean Brunn o » N.Y. Pre- : : ee ° f '
SO MEELAH KILROY MEMORIAL [pared by the Richmond Hill, H- Y., High and Wine gifts from Tahiti and the Tuesday and Wednesday: ‘tial
i Awane sce ou —, ee bg eT gion 23 East Lancaster Avenue South Sea Islands. Thursday and Friday: acs
P egret English Elizabeth Watkins of Bethesda, Md. Pre- Ardmore = “The GIRL From LENIN
Borbara Herman of East Orange, N. J.|pared by the Bethesda-Chevy Chase High
; =
@
. Jean.-.Hoopes, -
‘lin, Colleen Grimm, Jane Hall,
Mary Jean Hayes, Helena Hersey, |.
Marian: © Knight, |:
I: Come down to the Inn |
Patricia |;
meeting of the American So-
ciety of International Law
held in Washington on April
25th, two members of the
Bryn Mawr faculty were
chosen for high office. Mr.-
Charles G. Fenwick was
elected an Honorary Vice-
President and Miss Helen
Dwight Reid was elected one
of the four members of the
National Executive Council,
to serve for a_ three-year
term. :
Announcement. Made
Of Cum Laude List
The following students have
maintained a cum laude average:
Class of 1942, 44 Per Cent
Louisa Alexander, Louise Allen, |
Judith Bregman, Henrietta Butler,
Elizabeth Ann Campbell, Claudie-
Olga Cleja, Margaret Copeland,
Hester Ann Corner, Alice Crowd-
er, Patricia Delaney, Alice Der-
shimer, Alice Dickinson, Janet
Dowling, Mira Eitingon, Anne El-
licott, Jocelyn Fleming, Vera
‘French, Sheila Gamble, Margaret
Gilman, Elizabeth Anne Gregg,
Janet Groff, Joan Gross, Mary
Gumbart, Eleanor Harz, Anne
Heffenger, Evelyn Hodes, Margar-
et Hughes, Betty Rose Kramer,
Norma Landwehr, Joanne Loewe,
Katharine MacAusland, Margaret
MacVeagh, Margaret Magrath,
Jane Anna Maier, Catharine Mc-
Clellan, Nancy Norton, Ethel
Pope, Helen Resor, Anne May
Schapiro, Marianne Schweitzer,
Lilli Schwenk, Edna Sculley, Jean
Ann Shaffer, Mary Sizer, Toni
Stern, Ellen Stone, Maude Thomas,
Helen Wade, Barbara Walton, Dol-
etha Watt, Prudence Wellman
Christine Williams.
Class of 1943, 33 Per Cent
Sarah Alexander, Barbara Baer,
Constance Bristol, Dorothy
Browne, Harriet Case, Louisa
Clement, Carol Coan, Dorothy
Davenport, Anne Dean, Jeanne
Dulebohn, Virginia Dzung, Elea-
nor Edwards, Nancy Evarts, Ther-
ese Exton, Virginia Fulton, Fran-
cenia Fox, Miriam Gollub, Barbara
Hermann, Alice Iseman, Mary Ja-
cob, Mary-Barbara Kauffman, Ann
Knight, Frances Lynd, Sally Mat-
teson, Frances Matthai, Anita Mc-
Carter, Patricia McKnew, Mildred
McLeskey, Frances Morfoot, Celia
Moskovitz, Florence Newman,
Elizabeth Nicrosi, Lenore O’Boyle,
Marilyn O’Boyle, Selma Rossmasgs-
ler, Natalie Saltsman, Jacquelin
Simon, Carlotta Taylor, Phyllis
White, Jacquelin Wilson.
Class of 1944, 27 Per Cent
Gregor Armstrong, Dora Bene-
dict, Mary Blakely, Marnette Ches-
nutt, Ann Coulson, Ruth Davis,
Mary Anne Donnally, Marian Es-
ioe
More specific training in fields
where there are shortages of per-
sonnel is urged by the American
Council on Education in its bulle-
tin on higher education in relation
to national defense. The college
graduate is in demand in many
fields of defense varying
from the assembly-line to special-
ized professions.
. The Government and private in-
dustry recommend more. special-
ized training earlier in the college
course. This want is already be-
‘ing met by the acceleration of
courses, and need not interfere
with liberal arts training. A lib-
work,
round out the preparation for any
job.
Trained minds are one of the
Continued on Page Six
eral arts course is recommended-to |
Continued from Page One
2. government (specify if
possible)
3. other war work.
c.) Is the job already landed? |
2. Non-defense work (specify if |
possible.) Is the job already land- |
ed?
8. School — Where? |
. Play (specify if possible). |
. Get married — remarks:
. Undecided. |
- Do you think it is your duty |
to get a summer job? Why?
8. Remarks:
Forty-five percent, of 140. stu- |
dents, thought it their duty to get
a summer job. The main reasons |
were to earn money, gain experi- |
ence and to help win the war. |
Nao of
takes pleasure in announcing
the following elections:
Chairman of Maids’ Com-
mittee, Diana Lueas, ’44.
Chairman of Blind School,
Mimi Taleisnik, ’44,
Leader of Maids’ and Por-
ters’ carolling, Anne Hey-
niger, ’44,
Chairman .- of Industrial
Group, Jessie Stone, ’44,
Head of the Maids’ Bur-
eau, Jean Brunn, ’44,
Chairman of Haverford
Community Center, Anne
Denny, ’°43. ;
Chairman of the “Y,” Pat
Johnson, ’45.
Chairman of Refugee Com-
mittee, Marion Kirk, '44.
!
'took’ the negative and said that
Many expressed the sentiment that 3 ; :
“it’s no time to be useless.” Thir- | '8°" Raymond’s service
ty-six percent of 108 indicated jn- | distinct advantage and
difference, and 21 per cent (64) |™ore widely publicized.
A Rock Sophomore
Plans to} of classes.
‘they did not believe it their duty | Spend her summer “writing short}the two highest
B.
to get a summer
thought school
job.
M. is Out-Batted
By Strong Visitors
more - important, | 178: : \
and others ‘planned to be “with | merely relieve me of the responsi-
Some | Stories, studying music and paint-
» 99
“A job,” she says, “would
Continued from Page Four
lege game known to the present
Bryn Mawr team ended in a tre-
mendous defeat—maybe the home
team froze in the unexpected cold
snap on the day of the game.
Batting Order for Softball
BRYN MAWR URSINUS
Scribner, p Harrington, 2b
Kent, sf Kirlin, cf
Fleming (C.), 3b Brooks, rf
Mason, 1b Mathieu, ss
Brunn, 2b Bricker (C.), 1b
Ballard, ss Halbruegge, lf
Mott, cf Hogeland, p
Imbrie, rf Landis, ¢
Sax, lf Dougherty, sf
Dethier, ¢ Bright, 3b
Batting Order for Hardball
Scribner, c
Kent, p Kirlin, ef
Fleming, 3b Brooks, rf
Mason, 1b Mathieu, ss
Brunn, 2b Bricker, 1b
Ballard, ss
Mott, cf Hogeland, p
Imbrie, rf Landis, ¢
Dethier, If Bright, 3b
Sugar Rationing
Students over 18 are to
register for their sugar ra-
tioning cards May 4th and
“5th. Definite arrangements
will be announced later.
These cards will be used, not
at Bryn Mawr which re-
ceives its rationing as an in-
stitution, but in the students’
own communities,
‘laboratory technicians; bank, de-
Harrington, 2b! partment store, or insurance
| clerks.
|
| decided as to summer projects, but
| only seven checked
Halbruegge, If these, two hail from Denbigh, two
| from Merion, and one apiece from
the family.”
Rock boasts four of the 12
ages, and most undergraduates
‘specified a desire to get their man
‘if they could catch him.
| Eighteen percent, or 56 students
are registered at summer. school,
| with Harvard the favorite. Fac-
|tory jobs claim 20; the assembly
line ranks above office work. Thir-
ty-four students aspire to govern-
ment work, and nurses’ aid at-
| tracts five per cent. Five Rhoads
'Freshmen and two Rockites have
| joined the Volunteer Land Corps
| for farm work in Vermont. Others
declared that they had already ob-
tained jobs as camp counselors; |
“Bee
waste of time.
estes of managing my own time.
(But I’d like one sometime!) An-
jachieved or contemplated marri- | Other student Wrove happily “My
father can still support me and he
loves doing it.”
Several anonymous individuals,
of the class of ’48 who major in
“Masculine
Psychology,” plan to do volunteer
work at Fort Nix, have dates with
Adolph Hitler on the side, and re-
fuse to check “play” for fear of
blackmail.
Said two undergrads, “I think
these polls are useless and a silly
They annoy me.”
“Not in favor of this type of poll
because I feel it’s prying into peo-
ple’s private affairs without ac-
'complishing anything.”
Culture” and
Sixteen percent, (49) were un-!
“play. Of
the Non-Reses, Pems East and
Summer Camp
Everyone interested in be-
ing a councillor at the sum-
mer camp please sign imme-
diately on the lists in the
halls. The lists‘ will be taken
down this week:
THE COLLEGE NEWS ¢. Page Frve
————___ —- ——— ——— —- — -_- ae = — ~- ———— _ — — - — = & ,
| Pg : :
; e e e e e ’ F
Faculty: Mowored Specialized Training | |‘News?. Poll Shows 30% | Lids Bridge Tournament
At the thirty-sixth annual - Asked for Students) /4°/4ing Summer Jobs| — the Bryn Mawr League {| To Fill Last Weeks
|
The last two weeks of classes
will be enlivened, for those. who
‘feel unoccupied, by a bridge tour-
{nament which will start on Mon-
day, May 4th. The winner of these
| tournaments will receive such an
‘elegant prize that it is an incen-
: tive for all to enter.
| The tournament should be enter-
‘ed singly and the fee will be 50
jcents. Matches may be played off
iin the halls at any time during. the
| week which will make it easy for
jeveryone to find time to. play.
Three rubbers will be played off at
| each table with a different combi-
‘nation of partners for each one.
| The players with the two highest
|numerical scores will progress to
S were a/the next round.
should be |
The tournament will reach its
| grand finale during the last week
The finalists will be
scorers from
| Rhoads North and South, Pem
'East and West, Denbigh, Rock,
and Merion, and the highest scor-
ers from Wyndam and the German
House.
Bookshop
Because of difficulties in
the collection of outstanding
accounts at the end of the
college year, the Taylor Hall
Bookshop and branch hall
shops will all go on a “cash
only” basis on May first.
Please do not ask to charge
after that date.
PLAY SHOES
For Summer Wear
Headquarters for
KEDS @& KEDETTES
Philip Harrison Store
Next to the Movies
Bryn Mawr
West. Others thought a good rest
‘important, and plan to combine
i work and play by working for one
or two months. “My health comes
first,” stated one, “so that I won’t
start school next fall the same to-
tal wreck that I am now.”
| Denbigh, with 44 percent, boasts
the highest percentage of jobs al-
|ready assured. Merion is next,
| with 39 per cent. Rhoads follows
| with 29 percent, the majority of
Whom are Freshmen.
One student stated that Miss Al-
E. FOSTER
HAMMONDS
’ for
THE LATEST
tabrook, Catherine Fowler, Katha-
rine Frank, Beth Garrison, Nina
Garsoian, Helen Goldman, Barbara
Hull, Marion Kirk, Florence Labo- |
witz, Constance Lazo, Jeanette!
Lepska, Lois Mason, Sylvia May-
nard, Patricia Murnaghan, Niles
Rumely, Florence Senger, Edith
Schmid, Caro Shugg, Rosalyn
Shulman, Mary Katharine Shutts, '
Priscilla Stern, Jessie Stone, Ann
Strauss, Elizabeth Sumner, Miri-
am Taleisnik, Katherine Tappan.
Class of 1945, 23 Per Cent
Jean Andrews, Virginia Arm-.
strong, Helen Burch, Betty Dal-
lam, Amanda Eggert, Jean Frank-
Katharine Lutz, Alice MacDonald,
Harsimran Malik, Barbara May-
nard, Virginia Nixon,
Pla Francoise ‘Pleven aan Pot
ter, Kate Rand, Gloria Robinson,
Mary Sax, Josephine Schmidt,
Penelope Smith, Harriet Shapiro,
Renata Sommernitz, Lilas Swift,
Emily Tuck, Chloe Walker, Rebec-
ca Wood.
in
RADIOS RECORDS
VICTROLAS
| |
| . Here’s your May-Day ||
|
| With flowers from —
|| JEANNETT?*S |
|
{
|
|
|
“A tisket, a tasket,
basket
Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr |
|
—_—
PREPARE NOW FOR A SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS CAREER!
ALL COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS...Active Placement Department.
Co-Educational ... 54 Years Same Management... Send for
Free Catalog C ...No Solicitors Employed.
Sherman C. Estey, Laurence W. Estey, Directors
MERCHANTS & BANKERS
BUSINESS AND SECRETARIAL SCHOOL
‘Daily News Building, 220 East 42nd Street, New York City —
Telephone: MUrray Hill 2-0986
A
» refreshment... delicious
a)
my thirst
you can’t beat
Coca-Cola...
Refreshment, ‘complete
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BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
7
THE coLisce NEWS
B. M. and Haverford
Present ‘Hay Fever’
Continued from Page Three
after the first few moments, while
his performance in the first and
last acts was especially successful.
Edith Rhoads was delightful as
the quick-tempered daughter Sorel.
Tense at the start, she soon.relaxed
and performed convincingly during
the rest of the play. Betty Dallam
as Myra Arundel was a spendid
flirt and John Marsh as Richard
Greatham played the tactful diplo-
mat with poise and knowledge of
his part.
Albert Turner, as Sandy Tyrell,
was at times stiffer than his part
demanded, while Alice McDonald,
in the role of the timid Jackie Cory-
ton, was decidedly too timid. Clara,
the maid, played by Kate Rand was
also sadly unconvincing in’a diffi-
cult though small part.
Aside from these minor flaws,
however, the smoothness and speed
of the action seemed almost pro-|
The combined dramatic
organizations gave a delightful
performance. They have proved
that, in spite of Mr. Coward’s
doubts, at least one amateur com-
pany could handle this play with
almost complete success.
fessional.
elivet- THR 6 fee beets Edith Rhoads, ’44
ine ee Seas David Mallery, °45
ONONS fc icp ee vie ceca bes Kate Rand, ’45
Judith Bites ia Ann Updegraff, ’42
DAC Pee. i eis Edgar Emery, °42
Sandy Tyrell ...:.....Albert, Turner, ’43
Mate APUG i es Betty Dallam, ’45
Richard Greatham ....... John Marsh, °43
Jackie Coryton ,..........Alice McDonald
Buy War Savings Bonds
Weyl of Beluoston ‘Drama tS be Explored
To Talk on Symmetry) By Playwriting Class
Hermann Weyl, Professor in The Playwriting class is plan-
the School of Mathematics a the | ning a series of plays on an expe-
Institute for Advanced Stdidy peat
Princeton, will deliver.thé Fifth in | ecnaniae pave.
'ple staging and few rehearsals.
the series of David Hilt Tennent |
Memorial Lectures in Dalton Hall| Members of the Players Club
on Wednesday, May 6, at 8:15 P.|are assisting in acting and direct-
M. His subject“is to be Symmetry. ling these plays. Three plays and
Myr. Weyl, who taught in several | three monologues are to be offered.
iniversities in Germany, came to
Prirceton in 1934 with a widely
developed knowledge, and with sig-
nificant achievements in
fields of mathematics. He is inter- ; ory, 42 of Haverford
ested-in the problem of presenting Wen of the parts ee not yet
ideas and his lecture promises to | san ‘ikea Anyone who thinks
be intelligible to the ‘non-expert. In | she has dramati¢ leanings or wants
an effort to bridge the gap between Lea further the cause of the Thea-
the sciences, Professor Weyl states | jn should come to the Playwrit-
that ‘real mathematics is in- | 4 : class, Tuesday afternoon at
volved,” in his subject of Symmet- | 5.99 :
ry, as well as the “common concep- | ee
tion of mathematics, physics, biol-
ogy, and’art.” The lecture is un-
der the auspices of the Committee
for Co-ordination of Teaching of
the Natural Sciences.
There will be sim-
|The monologues will be presented
|by the authors themselves. The
¥i |plays are by+ Sylvia Maynard, ’44,
any ‘Isabel Martin, ’42 ,and Edgar Em-
The plays will be given the
weekend of May 15th in the Thea-
tre Workshop.
Elections
At the Basketball Dinner
on April 24th, the following
elections were announced:
Pat Murnaghan, ’44, Captain
Jean Brunn, 44 .. Manager
Wild Excitement at |
‘Patience’ Rehearsals |
Continued from Page Une
curtain, clutching at an imagina-
tive lily, prone, but unruffled by
the activity that has gone before.
DON'T BE AN OSTRICH!
No need to bury your head
in a trivial temporary job. A
worth-while career is yours
through Gibbs secretarial |
training. Current enrollment
includes 648 college women.
Send for booklet, ‘GiBBs
Girts aT WorRK.”
KATHARINE GIBBS scnooxr
90 MARLBOROUGH STREET 230 Park AVENUE
Boston New Yor«
EXCELLENT FOOD
REFRESHMENTS
LUNCHES—35c and 40c
DINNERS—60c and 70c
Tasty Grilled Sandwiches
THE GREEK’S
“Always at Your Service”
y
History of Art
A beautifully colored post-
ecard of Trainers Line Up
155s On Torrey Pines Bluff,
Camp Callan, San Diego,
California, arrived at the
college some time ago. It
was addressed to the History
of Art Majors:
“Date and locate (as close-
ly as possible) giving specific
reasons for your decision
based on style and content.
Wish you were all here with
your little notebooks, writing
feverishly. Best regards of
the season.
A. T. SOPER.”’
Get
CHAIRS.
BOOKCASES
NOVELTIES
at
HOBSON and OWENS
1015 Lancaster Ave.
LAMPS
FOR YOUR FAMILY
FOR YOUR GUESTS
THE DEANERY
Entertain Your Friends
at
Lunch, Tea, or Dinner
Asked for Students
Continued from Page Five
| Specialized Training
|
gravest shortages in any field, ac-
cording to the Council on Educa-
|tign. College graduates who have
not had specialized training are
advised to begin at the bottom in
industry, on the assembly-line.
This. is a necessary prerequisite to
any administrative post.
| .Civil service jobs are also excel-
lent opportunities for women. But
‘students are asked to direct their
attention to shortages in any field.
cma
i
|
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safely
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1. Does not rot dresses or men’s
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4. A pure, white, greaseless,
stainless vanishing cream.
5. Arrid has been awarded the
Approval Seal ofthe American
Institute of Laundering for
being harmless to fabrics.
Arrid is the LARGEST SELLING
DEODORANT. Try a jar today!
ARRID
At allstores selling toilet goode
39¢ ole (also in 10¢ and 59¢ jars)
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CIGARETTE OF
°° “COS YLh
B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
The smoke of slowér-burning
Camels contains
“98% LESS NICOTINE
than the average of the 4 other
largest-selling brands tested—
less than any of them—accord-
ing to independent scientific »
tests of the smoke itself!
o
33 ACESS. =p
College news, May 1, 1942
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1942-05-01
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 28, No. 23
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-vol28-no23