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THE COLLEGE NEWS
Z-615
BRYN MAWR and WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1941
Sees!
Bryn
ht,. Trustees of
awr College, 1940
VOL. XXVII, No. 18
_President Park
Gives Talk On
Educational Aim)
Education Must Prepare
Women for Problems
Of Today
Academy of Music, March 17.—
In an address at the presentation
of the Philadelphia Award to
Marian Anderson, Miss Park dis-
cussed one of the fundamental pur-
poses of education for women.
“Education should prepare the
young human being for civilized,
living,” and one way to do this, said
Miss Park, is by an eight year
period of formal learning.
The increased complexity of mod-
‘ern society necessitates something
more than the hit or miss educa-
tion given to girls a hundred years
ago. In 1941 we find that we are
unable “to answer successfully the
major routine problems of civilized
living,” and it is for this that the
younger generation must be train-
ed. Girls, as well as men, will be
faced with baffling problems in the
years to come. High school and
college education must give them
reliable preparation.
A girl must learn “a certain set
of facts and a certain set of tech-
niques because she is going to be
her children’s mother,” and she
must also learn a set of facts and
Continued on Page Five
The New Schedule
Friday afternoon classes
have been adopted for next
year because:
Cooperation with Haver-
ford and Swarthmore make it
necessary for our classes to
meet every other day, follow-
ing their system.
' Gaturday classes, which are
alternative to Friday after-
noons, were discussed, and
finally rejected by the fac-
ulty.
The Curriculum bulletin
board in Taylor, presents de-
tails.
Curriculum Board »
yuggests A Revision
In Schedule of Work
Common Room, March 13.—At
the open forum on curriculum held
by the student Curriculum Com-
mittee, both faculty and students
discussed ,the problems of Thanks-
giving, long papers, mid-years, and
quizzes. To help solve the last
three problems, the committee pre-
sented a new schedule for the year.
| . Feeling that mid-years make an
unnatural break in the year, that
they invariably occur at the time
lof the: most illness, and that -the
' two-week period of mid-years
‘might better be devoted to inde-
| pendent work, the committee has +
ilaid out a plan whereby mid-years
are replaced by a two-week read-
ing period at the end of February.
Under this plan there would be a
week of quizzes before each vaca-
tion, and three hour finals in June.
The reading period would be a time
when students could write papers,
upperclassmen could do extra work
in their major fields, and there
would be more conferences and
seminars with the faculty.
One of the chief objections to
this plan, that a first semester
course would have no final exami-
nation, Mrs. Manning thought
could be settled by having one year
courses the norm, and one semester
courses followed in the next term
by another similar’one. The prob-
lem that the final examination
would be too comprehensive could
be resolved by having the student
responsible for only general knowl-
edge of the first half year’s work.
Other objections made were that,
unchecked, the reading period
might become a “glorified vaca-
tion,” and that if, as the commit-
tee proposed, faculty checked up
onthe students during that time,
the conferences might become too
much like oral examinations.
About Thanksgiving the commit-
tee, expressing what is generally
felt to be the undergraduates’ opin-
ion, proposed that either it should
be made a vacation, or all students
should stay at college. The fran-
tic coming and going was thought
to be more demoralizing than a
Continued on Page Three
| Hedgerow Repertory Theatre is Organized
~ As Leading Co-Operative Actors’ Community
The Hedgerow Theatre was
started in 1923, when Jasper
Deeter rebelled against Broadway
methods and gave up a promising |
career to start what has since be-
come the foremost repertory thea-
tre in America. The last Gighteen
years at the theatre have been the
story of a dictator overthrowing
himself.
The theatre began in the old
community center in Media. The
first summer, Mr. Deeter brought
friends down froni New York on
week-ends to give plays with the
valley people. Gradually he es-
tablished.a permanent;company of
resident actors, but all the man-
aging and directing was in his
hands, During the last five years
Mr. Deeter has worked just as
hard giving authority to other
members of the company as he
worked in the beginning directing
them. -
A.board of twelve now chooses
Hedgerow at least five years. They
operate in much the same way as
a Brook Farm, with box office re-
turns being used first for stage
equipment, royalties and costumes,
then for food—“sometimes we’re
reduced to eating turnip greens,
one member of the cast said.” The
personal needs and pleasure of the
players are paid for if there is
any money left. If one of the
company wants to go to New York
for a week-end, he looks in the
treasury; if there’s enough money,
he goes, if there isn’t he thinks of
a cheaper amusement.
Because the theatre does. not. be-
lieve in the star system, the actor
who plays Hamlet one night, may
be moving scenery the next, and
playing a comedy bit part the next.
Maurice Minnick, who plays Bill
Walker in Major Barbara, once
heard, as he walked onto the stage
in. the first act, a voice from. the
first_row whisper loudly, There! Ss
the plays, and takes turns directing
and casting them. There are now
twenty-seven resident members
who are all supported wholly by
the box office returns. They live
in a large house near the theatre
and do all the house work as well
as the more menial stage tasks.
Most of them have been at the
the man who parked our car.”
_ The repertory includes 144 plays
of which about twenty-five to thirty
are played a year. These plays are
by ninety-four different authors
and thirty-three have had their
world premiers and eleven others
their American premiers at the
Continued on Page Six
)
Calendar
March 20.— _.
Mabel Williams, Oppor-
tunities for Women in Li-
brary Work, Common
Room; 4:80°P:-M:
Foruni on Housing, Coim-
mon Room, 8.30 P. M.
March 21 and 22.—
Mercury Theatre Produc-
tion, Julius Caesar, Cloth-
ier Memorial Hall, Swarth-
more College, 7.30 P. M.
March 22.—
Aquacade, Gym, 8.15. P.M.
March ,23.—
Music Service,
Hall, 8 P. M.
Dr. Winifred Cullis, E’ng-
land Organized for War,
Deanery, 4.30.
March 25.—
Current Events, Miss Reid,
Common Room, 7.30 P. M.
March 26.—
Phyllis Bentley, In Eng-
land Now, Roberts Hall,
Haverford College, 8.15
?. ©
New Official Reveals
Turmoil of Past Life,
and Wandering Major
Goodhart
Alice Crowder, the. new Vice-
President of the Under-Graduate
Association, comes from Winnetka,
Hlinois. —Shewent to-a progressive
school there, and learned all about
the cow who started the Chicago
fire.
Seemingly so well ‘prepared for
modern life, Al came to Bryn Mawr
and emptied a vase of water out
her window while Miss Woodworth
was passing below. Freshman year
she worried about water and Wood-
worth and windows; the rest of the
time she has been worrying about
her major. . Politics is wonderful
and history is wonderful and Eng-
lish is wonderful and biology is
wonderful.
Al finally decided on_ history.
But, “I long for the dogfish and the
cat. Especially the cat,” says
Alice.
After almost being a_ biology
major, Al hurt Miss Gardiner’s
feelings by spelling “planaria” in-
correctly in a News writeup.. She
wrote Miss Gardiner to apologize
Continued on Page Six
Dr. Cullis to Talk on
Organization of War
Sunday afternoon, March 23,
President: Park will give a tea in
the Deanery for Dr. Winifred
Cullis who is to speak on “England
” | Organized for War.”
Contact was made with Miss
Cullis, who has been in the Far
East on a mission for the British
government, through Major Cum-
mins of the British Library of New
York. Miss Cullis is on her way
back to England, but, on the invi-
tation of the American Association
of University Women, she will re-
main in the , United States until
May 6, when she will speak in Cin-
cinnati at the biennial meeting of
the Association., She was past
president of the International Fed-
eration of University Women as
well of the British Federation of
University Women. Miss Cullis is
professor of physiology at the Uni-
versity of London and lecturer at
Classes Choose New Nominees;
Elections To Be Held Next Week
|Entertainment, Undergrad
And. Self-Gov_ Offices
Described
Elections will be held next week
for the secretary and treasurer of
the Association,
secretary and treasurer of the Self-
Government. Association, and head
Undergraduate
of the Entertainment Committee.
The duties of these various offices
are as follows:
Chairman of the Entertainment
Committee
The chairman of the Entertain-
ment Committee works with a
group of hall representatives. The
committee is in charge of schedul-
ing entertainment events and next
year may start a Speakers’ Bureau
to co-ordinate lectures. It will de-
cide whether or not there will be
an entertainment _ series. The
utilization of the week-end in con-
junction with the full five day
academic schedule will next year
double the present activities of the
committee.
Secretary of the Undergraduate
Association
The secretary of the Undergrad-
uate Association keeps the minutes
and the records of that organiza-
tion. She takes care of all corre-
spondence, is chairman of the un-
dergraduate Point Committee, and
Continued on Page Four
Propaganda Methods
And Trade Relations
Stressed by Lozada
Common Room, March 16.—In
December and January, Senor En-
rique de Lozada, professor of Po-
litical Sciénce at Williams College,
returned to South America for the
first time in two and a half years.
“The most important changes I no-
ticed,” he said were a tremendous
rise in Anti-Semitic feeling, which
had been practically non-existent
before, and an increasing self-con-
sciousness of their economic prob-
lems in relation to the large powers
of the world.
The anti-semitic attitude, Senor
de Lozada explained, was most
prevalent in Bolivia because the
biggest influx of Jews is concen-
trated there. Because they have
had no previous agricultural train-
ing they congregate in the cities
setting up small businesses. This
not only creates serious problems
of housing and increases compe-
tition, but it overb&lances the eco-
nomic structure which is dependent
on exports because these shop-
keepers consume but create noth-
ing exportable.
Three years ago only the oblig-
archial families whose position de-
pended on the concept of blood su-
periority were interested in Nazi-
ism; all other leaders were vio-
.lently opposed. Today through the
anti-semitic temper of the middle
class merchants all groups are
drifting toward fascist concepts.
“By this method of hatred, Nazi-
ism is penetrating to the masses.
Continued on Page Six
Beau Geste
In addition tothe pins and
lapel buttons now on sale in _
n-
~}the London Schoot-of Medicine for}
Women. Besides being chairman
of the Educational Committee of
the English-Speaking Union and
of the Education Panel of the
British Film Institute, Dr. Cullis
was for five years chairman of the
Adult Education Committee of the
British Broadcasting Company.
: ; t
Experience of Candidates
In Previous Offices.
Reviewed
The nomination of candidates for
five college offices was completed,on
Monday, March 17. As candidates
for chairman of the Entertain-
ment. Committee, 1942, nominated ~
Margot Dethier, Sheila Gamble,
Agnes Mason and Mary Brooks
Hollis.
The sophomores put up Caroline
Culp, Barbara Sage, Betty Wells
and Selma Rossmassler for secre-
tary of the Undergraduate Associa-
tion and Teresita Sparre, Mildred
McLeskey, Florence Kelton and
Frances Matthai for secretary of
the Self-Government Association.
As candidates for teasurer of the
Undergraduate Association, the
class of 1944 nominated Louise
Horwood, Dora Benedict, Mary
Ellis arid Ann Heyniger; for
treasurer of the Self-Government
Association, Jean Brunn, Diana
Lucas, Mary Stewart Blakely and
Lois’ Mason.
Margot Dethier
Margot Dethier was. on the enter-
tainment committee this year and
was also second Junior member of
the Undergraduate Association: As
such she was chairman of the
Dance Committee. She is also on
the Freshman Guide Committee.
For three years she has been in the
choir, and she has had leads in the
Gondoliers, Iolanthe, and this year
will have one in the Pirates of
Penzance. She was song mistress
for her class Freshman and Jun-
ior years. She has been on the
basketball squad three years and
is this year on the varsity team, as
well as being manager of the
squad.
Sheila Gamble
Shelia Gamble was one of the
group which arranged the founding
of the Entertainment Committee
last spring. She has been on the
swimming team Freshman and
Sophomore years and the _ sec-
ond semester of this year. She
spent the first semester of her
Junior year at Radcliff College.
Continued on Page Four
Wyncie King’s Work
Highlights Exhibition
An exhibit of contemporary car-
toons. was. presented..at...the-Art
Club tea on Sunday, March 16.
General opinion acclaimed Garrett
Price’s domestic scene from the
New Yorker (“Hannah, you give
Mr” Jorgeson right back to
Helen!’’), and the familiarly styled
drawings of Wyncie King. In ad-
dition to light cartoons, subjects
such as the spider web meshes of a
ticker tape vary Mr. King’s con-
tributions.
The exhibit of original drawings...
was obtained froma group~of car-
toonists in New York City, headed:
by Milt Groth.
Fred Balk’s two-handle saw (one
forester to another: “‘Am I keeping
you. awake?”), is typical device-
humor, while Baron Davis’ “Did
anyone ever tell you, Mr. Mul-
vaney, that you look just like Lin-
coln” is more than a cartoon. With
PRICE 10 CENTS .
A
the Bookshop for the Greek ~
War Relief, a doll, donated
by Elaine Pulakos, will be
raffled off on May Day. It
is a handsome man doll, a
Greek soldier. Come and try
your luck.
‘its effective handling of contrast,
its atmosphere is Lincolnesque
down to the eyes of the bloodhound.
Milton Caniff’s popular Terry
of the Pirates gets his innings in,
too, as do the pudgy characters of
Dr. Seuss, and the. Thurberish
beings of Colin Allen.
- education, With the details of courses checked in two-hour quizzes,
_“Little New Deal.”
formed”; the administration of factory inspection was “reorgan-
a0 wag ia oe the nlace
~ the Public Utilities
THE COLLEGE NEWS
THE COLLEGE NEWS
_(Founded in 1914)
Published weekly during the College Year (excepting during Thanks-
ving, Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks)
n the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne,
Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The College News is full rotected by copyright. Nothing that
appears in it may be reprinted either wholly ‘or in part without written
permission of the Editor-in-Chief.
‘int
. Editorial Board
Joan Gross, ’42, Editor-in-Chief
SALLY Jacos, ’438, News
ALICE CROWDER, 42, Copy
BARBARA COOLEY, ’42
LENORE O’BOYLE, ’43
Editorial Staff
ANN: ELLIoTT,.’42
AGNES MASON, ’42
BARBARA BECHTOLD, ’42°°>°°°"~
NANCY. EvartTs,.’43
ANNE DENNY, 743
MILDRED MCLESKEY, ’43
FRANCES LYND, 743
REBECCA ROBBINS, 742
SALLY MATTESON, 743
BARBARA HERMAN, 743
Musie
PorTIA MILLER,
Sports
CHRISTINE WAPLES, ’42-. "43
: Photo
LILLI SCHWENK, ’42
Business Board
ELIZABETH GREGG, ’42, Manager
CeLia Moskovirz, 43, Advertising
Betty MARIE JONES, ’42, Promotion
MARTHA GANS, ’42
ELIZABETH NICROSI, ’43
~FSABE- MARTIN, 242——— 4b
Subscription Board
GRACE WEIGLE, ’43, Manager FLORENCE KELTON, "43
CONSTANCE BRISTOL, ’43 WATSON PRINCE, ’43
CAROLINE WACHENHEIMER, 743
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
MAILING PRICE, $3.00
: Concerning Curriculum
The open forum, held by the Curriculum Committee, plunged
bravely into the pro’s and con’s of a revised schedule. The new
schedule proposed would eliminate mid-years, and would provide
for two quiz periods, one preceding Christmas and one preceding
spring vacation, The two week period now allotted to mid-years
would constitute a reading period, during which freshmen would
write long papers and other students would be assigned individual
research. Conferences at the end of this reading period would pre-
vent a ski-train exodus from college. At the end of the year, three
hour-examinations would be held in each course.
The discussion following this proposal-either tacitly assumed,
or somehow neglected the objectives of learning. For the new
plan involves more than a change in schedule. It allows a more flex-
ible approach to the problems implied in any course; it provides an
opportunity for constructive learning,
If one professor’s statement : “Some of my best students never
do a bit of work until the day before the quiz” holds true, something
is wrong somewhere. Constant emphasis on quizzes, to the detri-
ment of responsible class discussion is the mark of mechanical
the importance of any course could be brought out in the final
exam. Review for this need not-be cramming, for such an exam
could not concern unrelated facts. Rather, it would afford the
student an opportunity for a considered intelligent review in which
she could see the year’s course as a proportionate whole. People
might stop storming professors with “are we responsible for—?”
Professors and students might stop playing a game of catch with
some_well-worn set of notes.
Too much of our learning is passive; too much of it is tradi-
tional, inherited by each Bryn Mawr generation without question.
That undergraduates can think—that they can do creative thinking
—has been demonstrated by the success of Swarthmore’s seminar
system. In the two-week readirig period, the student would be re-
sponsible for bringing the tools of analysis, which she has acquired,
to bear on some pertinent problem in the course. But why limit the
fruits of this work to individual conferences as suggested by the
committee _._Why not pool the acquired knowledge? Students
could prepare for seminars which might transcend departmental
lines. The seminar classes could be scheduled as often during the
two-week period as is found practicable. Individual conferences
could add to the plan, but ought not constitute a basis for marking.
If exam terror were dispersed, if a semester’s mark were no
longer locked within a blue book’s pages, such independent work,
such important group discussion, would receive a great and needed
impetus.
o-. Phe- Keystone State +
“#» The’ Pennsylvania legislature is. now in session.. The first
James legislature, which met two years ago, was not what anyone
would call liberal. James, working through a Republican majority,
carried through the program he had promised; he gutted Earle’s
®
Two years ago the Workmen’s Compensation Act was “re-
’ 0 h of flood. control. The budget of
Zeek
‘alarm at comprehensives. Because' no new territory to be had for the
THEATRE
The Little Theatre Club of
Swarthmore will present the
Mercury. Theatre’s * produc-
tion of ‘Julius Caesar, on
March 21 and 22, at 8.15 in
Clothier Memorial Hall. This
is the first time an amateur
group has given the Orson
Welles, modern dress version
| Opinion
New Plan’s Long Exams Help
For Comprehensive Study
M. Meigs Holds
To the Editor of the COLLEGE
NEWS: of the play . Admission is
_ During the vigorous but incon-|} free, and a bus will leave
clusive meeting on the curriculum|| / Pem arch at .7.30 for one of
last Thursday, an argument against the performances.
midyears occurred to me, obvious,
but as it happened, unsuggested.
Mrs. Manning, Miss Woodworth,
and Miss Linn all spoke of the aim
of learning, the knowledge of the
particular versus the general, and
|
|
|
|
of any responsibility is fully real-
ized, A” generation ago, women
were created inte such a minority;
during the last 20 years, as your
reporter puts it, they “have now
the inevitable victory of the gen-| been merged with men on a coop-
eral in the case of the average stu-| erative basis.” Two prominent
dent, who for four successive years | minority groups of today are youth
absorbs concentrated particulars. | and labor, both of which are fre-
The average student wants an cxtt quently accused of much that is
amination to be something more! unjust. The rebelliousness and dis-
than a long quiz; the ideal quiz! jllusionment of many young peo-
specifies, the ideal examination cor-| ple today is due to the fact that
relates. The average student, | they have been brought up in the
though unlikely to delight in drop| American tradition of personal ef-
quizzes, like Mr. Crenshaw’s “good” | fort and independence, and are now
student, looks philosophically at} unable to follow it; there are not
quizzes and examinations, but with! enough jobs for them and there is
| her work has been parcelled off in
semesters, she is never forced to
see it as a whole until her senior
year, when studying for compre-
hensives entails a kind of long
range, bird’s-eye review that she
is quite unused to.
If -midyears were abolished the
finals would become automatically
more comprehensive. This was
generally recognized at the meet-
ing but considered rather as a dis-
advantage than as an advantage. I
think it would be excellent train-
ing for the senior comprehensives
and a far surer way of remember-
ing what has been learned. If the
average student accepted the com-
prehensive system from the very
beginning, she would be better
trained and less scared by her
senior year. Obviously, the quiz
would remain as a necessary insti-
tution, but the quiz and the exam-
ination together would serve better
their ideal, separate functions.
Mary R. MEIGs.
Necessity fér High Synergy
_As Shown by Dr. Benedict
¥: Is Stressed
To the Editor of the COLLEGE
NEWS:
I read with much interest your
account of Dr. Ruth Benedict’s lec-
ture of March 10, published in your
last issue. I-hope you will allow
me to clarify one or two points
which seemed to me to be a little
obscure.. In connection with min-
ority groups, Dr. Benedict makes
the point that one part of the popu-
lation is often singled out for un-
favorable treatment or criticism,
as a scapegoat for the difficulties
faced by the society as a whole.
By attributing all or most of the
blame to them, the rest of the so-
ciety (and notably the real of-
fenders) escapes responsibility.
This situation may occur when no
one at all is to blame; during a
drought or a famine, for instance,
it is well-known that people lose
fai in their old leaders and
choose new ones, even in civil-
ized countries where the absence
| seeking.
| Qn the other hand, as you point
Teese equally artificial divisions are
created on a basis of special priv-
‘ilege, depending on such attributes
as wealth, family, or even many
characteristics that strike us as
trivial.
Dr. Benedict was emphatic in
stat'ng that the nature of these
groups was culturally determined—
and that the existence of a min-
ority group was evidence of con-
flict within the society; in: societies
with high synergy and few sources
of disagreement, they do not occur.
But although they are not inevit-
able, the existence of these groups
and these conflicts is dangerous to
our society ‘and to democracy. We
| have therefore the task of recon-
ciling our differences, and increas-
ing the “areas of mutual advan-
tage” within which the whole so-
ciety has common interests, so that
the need for a scapegoat no longer
remains.
I would not take up space in re-
peating an ‘argument much of
which has already been adequately
stated, if I did not think that Dr.
Benedict’s lecture was‘ important
in helping us to understand the
problems we are now facing. The
direction of public dissatisfaction
towards groups who are only par-
tially or’ not at all active in the
situations for which they are held
responsible, makes true compre-
hension of the position more diffi-
cult, and delays introduction of the
necessary reforms, as well as con-
stituting an unjust attack upon in-
nocent persons.
Yours sincerely,
JUDITH STEPHEN.
The Rising of the Moon
Deemed Complete Success
To the Editor of the COLLEGE
NEWS:
This is opinion. The Rising of
the Moon, as recently presented
here, was entirely successful both
as a play and as a production. It
had atmosphere and guts.
Pp. C., *41.
legislature is dangerous. A bill to set up a “Little Dies Committee”
has been introduced; a bill to take the Communist Party off the
ballot has been ititroduced. * The legislature. is.talking about, revision
of the Teachers’ Tenure Act.-~A cut:in the school budget is pro-
posed. The State Teachers’ Colleges should be taken over to train
vocational workers for defense, says one legislatoz.«
It is-true, of course, that-every legislature has. its..perennial |
crank bills; there is always a representative, federal or state, wh
thinks the fascist concept of bound order and tight-blocked control
is a beautiful and satisfying concept. But this year there is much
| Sn Fin
Kings’ Masque by Evan John
Gives Superficial Survey
Of 18th Century —
Kings’ Masque, by Evan John,
is a skillful but superficial history
of the late 18th century. In a
novel of moderate length, the au-
thor has managed to touch upon
all the great names in this period .
‘anid to make a Tapid-survey of the--"
prominent European cities, with a
brief glance at America. The story
is told ‘in a Series of short epi-
sodes+.which highlight the most
important events from 1781 to
1792.
The monarchs of France and
Sweden receive the main emphasis,
while Count Axel Fersen, Marie
Antoinette’s lover and a Swed-
ish subject, provides the link be-
tween the two countries. The pres-
entation of Louis XVI and his
Queen is on the whole disappoint-
ing. They are the conventional
well-intentioned but ill-fated pair;
the author offers no new or addi-
tional interpretatoin.
In contrast, Gustavus III, “the
king of the coup d’etat,” is bril-
liantly drawn. The supreme irony
of the book lies in the ultimate fate
of these two monarchs: Louis, the
plaything of the nobles, is executed
by his people while Gustavus, the
people’s king, is assassinated by
jealous aristocrats.
This period in Swedish history
has been somewhat neglected by
the historical novelist. In Kings’
Masque, however, the Swedish epi-
sodes seem less factual, more in-
tense and full of import than the
French scenes. Of course, the au-
thor is at a disadvantage in his
presentation of the French Revolu-
tion, for the plan of his novel does
not permit more than a hasty view
of the most vital events, which are
already familiar to the average
reader.
Mr, John’s exposition is not with-
out value, however. His accurate
detail forms a rich and varied back-
ground; his minor characters, such
as the king’s brothers, become flesh
and blood beings, not historical
mannequins. Although the author
continually refers to the Revolu-
tion as “the Great Beast ready to
spring,” and omits none of the
more terrible sequences of its de-
velopment, he fails to create any
powerful sense of horror or bru-
tality. A bright haze pervades the
scene: a sense of looking at the
past and not living in it, colors
his whole picture.
Business Board Tryouts
_ Tryouts for the Business
Board of the News will be
held immediately after vaca-
tion.e
MOVIES
ALDINE: “Fantasia.”
ARCADIA: “Virginia,” Made-
leine Carroll and Fred MacMurray.
STANLEY: “Andy Hardy’s Pri-
vate Secretary,” Kathryn Grayson,
Mickey Rooney, and Lewis Stone.
FOX: “Strawberry Blonde,”
James Cagney and Olivia de Havil-
lands! swine 1a!
BOYD:
Boyer and Margaret Sullavan.
EARLE: “Blonde Inspiration,”
Virginia Grey and John Shelton.
Beginning Friday: “You're the
One,” Orrin Tucker and Orchestra.
STANTON: “The Great Dicta- «_
-tor,” Charles Chaplin and Paulette ~~
Commission, which is paid for by the utilities
it regulates, was slashed. And Earle’s Civil Rights Board was not
even granted the euphemism of reorganization, or revised appro-
priation. It was simply abolished. sr
_ These were negative actions; they were short-sighted, but not
more than the usual crop in the Pennsylvania General Assembly.
And the newspapers are fanning the hysteria. secioRs oh
_ Liberty and emergency action are not incompatible. The dan-
ger now is not Harold Rugg or a minority Communist Party.
Reaction in 1939 was short-sighted; hysteria in 1941 is actively
JUS
-| Stewart,
Goddard.
KEITHS: “Mr. and Mrs. Smith,”
Robert Montgomery and Carole
KARLTON: “Come Live with
Me,” Hedy Lamarr and James
“Back Street, Charles
i
a
- merging of private desires with
_.tion. The problem of “making de-
;
xe
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Benedict Discusses
Morale As Analagous
With High Synergy
Goodhart Hall, Monday, March
17.—Dr. Ruth Benedict brought to
a close the series of Anna Howard
Shaw lectures by applying the
comparative study of societies to
the basis of morale.
Morale, she said, is the product
of the individual or internal atti-
Audes..and..theexternal.-social. fac:
tors. If individual participation is
sustained and reinforced, the mor-
ale of the society will be good.
Participation .may be enforced by
“naked force” or by consent of the
governed.
Good social synergy is the term |
applied when private activities co-
incide with the public interest. The |
public gain became a “laissez-
faire” slogan, but it produces good
morale if the public gain reaches |
all participants in the enterprise.
Working for a public undertaking
does not mean self-sacrifie. In-
stead, sharing of abilities is the
condition of good synergy; but syn-
ergy need not mean an elimination
of prestige and economic differ-
ences.
There are specific conditions for
good and bad morale. Wherever
individual humiliation is found,
morale is damaged. Not poverty
but its humiliation produces moral
reprobates. The avoidance of hu-
miliating institutions, or the pro-
viding*of a counter-action for these
institutions, will avert poor: syn-
ergy and provide a road to high
morale.
The counter-action should be
within the reach of all; in this
way, the humiliating situation can
provide an incentive to increased
participation. A man who is un-
employed should be motivated to
action by the shame of his position,
but if, as in our society, there is
no way out he will be in a state of
dangerous helplessness.
The democratic way out of hu-
miliation is the guarantee of lib-
erty. Liberty does not mean ab-
sence of government; it-means free
opportunities for talents and con-
victions. Such counter-actions: as
labor unions and other active, or-
ganized uses of the Bill of Rights,
make for good synergy.
® In reference to the present con-
flict, Dr. Benedict stressed the in-
_ ternational importance of discus-
sions of morale. War in primitive
tribes is not necessarily an upset
of prevailing conditions, either be-
cause the tribes are self-sufficient,
or because they make arrangements
for commerce in spite of the war.
When, as in the present war,
belligerent nations interrupt im-
portant economic. relations, they
are, said Dr. Benedict, “cutting off
their nose to spite their face.”
War is a result of group devo-
mocracy work” is the problem of
directing group devotion toward
peace-time synergy.
Housing Forum
The wt Club of the
Main Line Y. M. C. A. will
present a panel discussion of
current housing problems on
Thursday, March 20, at 9.30,
in the Common Room. . Stu-
dents of Haverford College
and residents of the Main
Line will consider various as-
"pects of this” question, “All”
students are ‘invited to par-
ticipate.
4 Shr, o¥or Dp
Barbizon Slips| |
SUSIE INGALLS
‘Model League Group
Will Attempt to Suggest
Future World Order
Specially Contributed
By Georgia Trainer, ’41
The Fifteenth Annual Session of
the Middle Atlantic Model League
Assembly, meeting at Lehigh,
March 28-29, will attempt to make
concrete suggestions for the con-
struction of a new world order to
be.established at the close of the
present World War. The assump-
tion of the agenda is that in March,
1941, a total victory will not have
been won by either side in ‘the
present, conflict.
The agenda is approached from
the point of view of regionalism—
the trend in the ‘Preparatory
Peace Conference” held last year.
Thus the conference will divide up
into four commissions; three of
which are limited «geographic re-
gions — the Inter-American, the
European (which includes Africa
and the Near East), the Far East-
ern.. The fourth is the Global com-
mission, containing one representa-
tive from each country repre-
sented; it will discuss problems
common to all states and regions.
Bryn Mawr is representing the
“United States” and thus will have
delegates on all the commissions
except the European. Delegates
were chosen from the International
Relations Club on the basis of
knowledge, interest and experience.
Georgia Trainer, chairman, ‘41;
Jane Maier, ’42, Rosalind Wright,
44, Mary E. Brown, °42, Edith
Annin, ’43, Constance Murphy, ’42,.
Rosalind Wright will be secre-
tary to the Inter-American Com-
mission. Nancy Chase, ’42, and
Rosalind Shulman, ’44, are going
along as observers.
Preparation for the Assembly
has been.under the guidance of Miss
Helen Reid and Mr. Heilperin.
Brilliant Second Team
Wins Over Rosemont |}
Gymnasium, March 15, — The
Bryn Mawr Second Team played) %
a magnificent game of basketball
to win over Rosemont, 36-26. The
Bryn Mawr sextet held their lead
throughout the game because they
maintained a steady pace. Spec-
tacular pivoted shots by Finger,
’42, dependable short ones by Nor-
ton, 42 and Kirk, ’44, combined
with sure passing by the guards
were responsible for the well-earn-
ed victory.
BRYN MAWR Il So tag os tll My
Norton, f. 12 Cabrey, f.
Belg pdetccrnidBamen nsdn Harpeth, £ 2
wees . Barrett, f.
Keple .. MeVay. g LANCASTER PIKE
Jacob, g. Bickford, ¢.
Chester, g. King, g.
?
a a ga at cima
_ Silk Blouses
at the
PHILIP HARRISON STORE
826-828 Lancaster Avenue
Next to Movies
Bryn Mawr
Distinguished Editors
of the News Depart.
in Their Distinction
ne
City Desk
Her first years on the News, ex-
editor Susie was distinguished for
her industry, silence, and tan Fox-
croft skirt. Her silence can be ex-
plained by the serious warning of
an upperclassman who told Susie
that. any. Freshman who. spoke at
~~ ymieetings was immediately asked to} ie
resign. The silence didn’t last
long, and the Foxcroft skirt, which
people got awfully tired of looking
at, was replaced by bluejeans when
she became News editor. As editor-
in-chief she made herself very pop-
ular by sharing her food with any-
one around who looked even re-
motely hungry. She took up smok-
ing, and in the early hours of the
morning, to the consternation of
her friends, the process of Susie’s
slow strangulation would begin.
Though she herself never had time
to read them, she brought eco-
nomics books with her regularly,
and other News members have
gained a firm, if somewhat dis-
gathered from reading the first
chapter of each book at dull mo-
ments.
At home she hunts and shoots
and has been known to ride through
a barbed wire fence. Last week-
end she went home to recuperate
from an evening at MclIntyre’s
where she went with Virginia Sher-
wood to recuperate from three
years on the News.
The Man in the Slot
Few people remember Ginny
Sherwood in the hey day before
she became copy editor, before her
characteristic gesture became that
of grabbing things away from peo-
ple to rewrite them. That there
was such.a time can only be sur-
mised from her enthusiastic state-
ment concerning her first days on
the News: “Oh, I was divine. I
was a typical freshman. That was
the time those people came and
said, ‘Don’t you want to be a typ-
ical freshman?’ So I said, “Yes.”
So I appeared all over the Evening
Bulletin with my mouth wide open.”
She was so careful of the first
NEwS for which she was copy edi-
tor that she didn’t go to bed until
morning. Standards, after that,
dropped rapidly to the 10.30 level.
Of her non-executive activities the
writing of Wit’s End with Vir-
ginia Nichols was most prominent.
Perhaps the formula by which it
was written can serve as explana-
tion for the fact that it is under-
stood by the select few. ‘We write
just what everyone would expect,”
the carefree authors once remarked.
“But we write it backwards and
then a write it copeeaneeta so that
Pr ADAMS |
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ARDMORE
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MAISON ADOLPHE
In Spring a Young Girl’s Faney
b=
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Co
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Lightly Turns to Thoughts of Food
BRYN MAWR. COLLEGE INN
\
torted concept of economic trends!
ee :
VIRGINIA SHERWOOD
Curriculum Committee
Suggests New Schedule
Continued from Page One
full vacations Miss Ward, how-
ever, said that this year there
seems to have _been less post-
Thanksgiving illness than form-
erly. It was suggested that. the
root of the trouble lay in the double
celebration; a girl would go.home
anyway on the day official in her
state. ,
Considering the next problem,
Long Paper-itis, the committee
suggested that there be three
“paper handing-in” periods, be-
fore mid-years and Christmas and
~Z
it isn’t what anyone expects.”
Last ‘year it-was-written_on_Mon-
day because there was always Tues-
day. This year it was written on
Tuesday because there always
might not be enough room. But
they always wrote it—very seldom.
Vocational Lecture
Miss Mabel Williams, Sup-
erintendent of School Work
of the New York Public Li-
brary, will speak on Oppor-
tunities for Women in Li-
brary Work in the Common
Room, Goodhart Hall, Thurs-
day, March 20, at 4.30.
spring vacations, which might les-
sen the pressure of the present
system. Faculty and_ students
--seemed..to.agreethat. four -papers—
per semester. necessitated unsatis-
factory postponement, although it
was suggested that it is perhaps
mature to have.to plan your work,
even if it may mean finishing one
paper a week or so before it is due.
The forum ended with a discus-
sion of quizzes. Here the faculty
was split, some thinking them un-
necessary and. rather insulting to
students, and others feeling them
to be the only way to keep even
the best students up in their work.
_The suggestions of the meeting,
as Martha Kent, chairman of the
committee;-explained;—are—to—be—
worked over with the Faculty Com-
mittee, and when a definite set of
alternatives develops from these
discussions, they will be brought
up ath the college.
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write Pinehurst, Inc., 5236
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OVERNIGHT via Seaboard R.R.
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ARDMORE 4850
ARDMORE © TRINITY 4740
1941 News of
it will “double” for
wear. Beige, Sandringham, red, gray, grape, - :
navy, brown, or black. Sizes 12.to 20.
Our ‘Famous
“SILVER BUTTON. SUIT!
ORE than ever it-looks-like—a ‘little
$ca.$Pseason, and this silver button
‘classic of ours is headed for new fashion
heights. It’s so nicely tailored (see the =|
smooth-fitting jacket, the crisp skirt-pleats)
town and campus
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Previous Experience
Of Candidates Reviewed
Continued from Page One
Agnes Mason
Agnes Mason has been on the
Entertainment Committee this
year. She is on the badminton
squad. She was on the News edi-
torial staff Freshman year and on
the News editorial board this year.
Mary Brooks Hollis
Mary Brooks Hollis is this year
‘president! of the Glee Club; Fresh-
“an year she was” in the Gondo=
liers; -Sophomore year she was
Glee Club manager. She has been
in choir three years. She has béen
on the college Dance Committee
two years and is this year vice-
president-treasurer of the Art
Club, to which she has belonged for
three years. Freshman year she
was elected to the Players Club.
She has worked on scenery for
their productions, and had a small
part in Our Town. Sophomore
year she was co-chairman of the
Publicity Committee for the Bryn
Mawr League.
- Ondergrad Secretary ~
Selma Rossmassler in 1940 was
the Freshman representative to the
Self-Government Association legis-
lature and hall representative to
the Freshman Show. She is her
Sophomore hall representative and
is in the girls’ chorus and in The
Pirates of Penzance and last year
in Jolanthe. Carolyn Culp was
president of her class in her Fresh-
man year and this year is the rep-
resentative to the Undergraduate
Association. She is also on the
tennis squad. Betty Wells has
been hall representative both years
and took part in the Freshman
Show. She is manager of the
swimming team this year and
‘works at the Haverford .Com-
munity Center. Barbara Sage is
vice-president and treasurer of the
Sophomore class, and belongs to the
Industrial Group. She was hall
representative for the activities
drive both years, and in her Fresh-
man year was a member of the
Self-Government Association legis-
lature and belonged to the Art
Club.
Secretary of Self-Gov
The class of 1943 also nominated
four people for secretary of the
Self-Government Association. Ter-
esita Sparre this year is secretary
of her class, secretary-treasurer of
the Peace Council, and hall repre-
sentative for the Activities Drive.
In her Freshman year she was
hall representative, sang in the
choir, and was hall representative
to the Peace Council. Mildred Mc-
Leskey won the Freshman English
prize and was in the French Club.
This year she is on the News edi-
torial staff. Florence Kelton was
property manager of the Freshman
Show, and a member of the Stage
Guild. -This-year she is secretary-
treasurer Of the Stage Guild, the
non-varsity swimming manager, a
member of the swimming team, and
has been a member of the Athletic
Association Board since her Fresh-
SUBURBAN
____ARDMORE
Now Playing Thru Monday
JACK BENNY
FRED ALLEN
“LOVE THY NEIGHBOR”
SEVILLE
BRYN MAWR
Wednesday - Thursday
“NORTHWEST MOUNTED
POLICE”
Friday - Saturda day
JOHN RRY MORE
“THE wo
r
Red Cross
The Red Cross work room
‘is open in the afternoons, —
Monday to Saturday inclu-
sive, and on Tuesday,.Wed-
nesday and Thursday nights.
On Thursday night there is
reading aloud and _ refresh-
ments are served. Under-
graduates are especially in-
vited that evening.
man year. Frances Matthai has
been in the choir and the Glee
urer for the Self-Government As-
sociation. She. has done lighting
for the Freshman Shows, Porgy
and Bess, Our Town, The Rising
of the Moon, and is doing it for
‘the Midsummer Night’s Dream.
She is the Activities Drive repre-
sentative and is on the varsity
teams for hockey, basketball, bad-
minton, and tennis.
Treasurer of Self-Gov
The class of 1944 has.put up
candidates for treasurer of the
Self-Government, Association. Jean
+Brunn—was—property—manager for
the Freshman Show, and is on the
basketball squad. Diana Lucas is
the Pembroke West Freshman rep-
resentative and is a member of the
choir, Glee Club, and the Spanish
Club. Mary Stewart Blakely is
the Rockefeller Freshman repre-
sentative, and is in the choir, Glee
Club, and French Club. Lois Ma-
son is the Freshman member of the
Undergraduate Association, and is
the Freshman hall representative
of Pembroke East. She was the
first Freshman Chairman last fall,
and managed the stage work of the
show. She is a member of the
varsity basketball squad and of the
Glee Club.
Treasurer of Undergrad
The following members of the
Freshman class were nominated for
treasurer of the Undergraduate
Association. Louise Horwood was
business manager of the Freshman
Show and is now the prompter for
the Pirates of Penzance. Dora
Benedict, who is vice-president and
treasurer of her class this year, is
also head of British War Relief on
campus. __Mary Ellis was the
Freshman representative on Self-
Government this year, and had a
lead in the Freshman Show; she
was also in The Rising of the
Moon and is in choir. Ann
Heyniger, who was the head of the
Freshman Show, is the Merion
representative for her class and is
in choir and Glee Club.
Club both years and is the treas-
arranges for the sale of -caps and
New Officers’ Duties *
Briefly Described
Continued from Page One
manager of the Activities Drive;
she handles all announcements, and
is responsible for seeing that éach
officer of the Association has a-ist
of her duties and of the recommen-
dations of her predecessors.
Treasurer of the Undergraduate
Association
* The treasurer of the Under-
praduate’ Association handiesthe
finances and accounts of the or-
ganization, takes charge of audit-
ing the accounts of classes, publica-
tions, and clubs, assists the treas-
urer of the Activities Drive, and
gowns to the Freshmen in the fall.
Secretary and Treasurer of
Self-Government
The secretary of the Self-Gov-
ernment Association is the first of
the three Junior members of the
board. She writes necessary let-
ters, and keeps the notes of the
meetings:_-The-treasurer— isthe
first of the two Sophomore mem-
bers of: the board, and handles.the
funds of the organization.
Rosemont Smothers
Bryn Mawr Varsity
Saturday, March 15.—Rosemont
completely smothered the Bryn
Mawr Varsity in a one-sided con-
test ending at 46-21. The visitors
had command of their plays, and
made it impossible for their op-
ponents to free themselves from
close guarding. The fast Rose-
monters easily intercepted the un-
organized Bryn Mawr passes.
The Varsity was undone by the
opposing forwards who successfully
cut under the basket, making most
of their goals on this play. The
Bryn Mawr forwards consistently
missed opportunities for shooting
and their passing could not pene-
trate to the basket. In the second
half the game evened up slightly,
Bryn Mawr extricating itself to
shoot more often. Hardenbergh,
43, topped the scoring for Bryn
Mawr with fourteen points. But
Bryn Mawr’s inadaptability to
close guarding prevented any real
scoring for the home team.
or incerwai APPEAL
BRYN MAWR ROSEMONT
VYMDIOG oaks co et, Toca Reilly
Hardenbergh ..:L f..:..... Giltiman
DAMON 660s ces Ol tins an benes Ortlieb
ROMON nce ces EE EPS RRDeE Baxter
L GTN 01 2 Db), CGPRIPRR REE | AE - Jae EEA Bachofer |
POUND oi vine ks OG. Bigs ciscss i. Baig
Energetic Badminton
Team Defeats Drexel,
But Ties With Faculty
The Badminton Team has recent-
ly engaged in heated bird-batting
activity.
They played the energetic Fac-
ulty to a 2-2 tie. Lattimore tops
the galaxy of stars, but Matthai,
’43, gave him many anxious mo-
ments. Sloan and Cameron, noted
for their tricky shots, lost an ex-
Boal, ’42.. Faris shone for the Fac-
ulty, his well-rounded game con-
tributing decidedly to a faculty vi¢-
tory. But Resor, ’42 and Thomp-
son, ’41, gave strong opposition,
extending the match to three sets.
Schweitzer, 42 and Fleet, ’43, de-
feated Broughton and Berry 18-15;
15-5.
Bryn Mawr defeated Drexel In-
stitute, 8-2. The matches were
close, with Matthai, ’43, Boal, ’42
and Foote, ’43, in particularly good
form. The team also played mixed
doubles at Haverford. ~-
Strong Penn Team
Defeats Bryn Mawr
Bryn. Mawr, March 14. — Al-
though boasting A. A. U. cham-
pion free-styler Evans, and sup-
ported by a strong team, the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania swimming
team did not defeat Bryn Mawr by
any great margin. The final score
stood 49-34 in favor of Pennsyl-
vania, where a change of one first
place, or eight points, would have
put Bryn Mawr ahead.
High points: Bryn Mawr barely
missed firsts in the Freestyle and
Medley Relays.. Hedge,.’44, show-
ed skill in her diving. Bryn Mawr
was outstanding in the Form
events.
citing match to Perkins, 742;"and
ne
P. Bentley to Discuss
Influence of the War
On Wednesday evening, March
26, Phyllis Bentley, British novel-
ist and critic, will discuss the in-
fluence of the present war on
English literature. Her lecture,
called In England Now, will be
given in Roberts Hall, Haverford
College.
Miss Bentley recently arrived in
the United States after a crossing
enlivened by submarine pursuit...
She is now conducting cher fourth.
series of lectures in this country.
When her tour is completed, Miss
Bentley plans to return to her
Yorkshire home for further serv-~
ice; she has been working as an
yambulanece—driver—in_the_Air Raid
Patrol.
A regular contributor to the
Yorkshire ‘ Post, Miss Bentley is
the author of Inheritance; A Mod-
ern Tragedy; The Power and the
Glory. Her latest novel, Manhold,
which MacMillan. will publish this
spring, was written during her
service as an ambulance driver.
22:6; (1) Evans, (2) Turner, (3) Ram-
bo, °48. Backstroke—Time 28:4; (1)
Hicks, (2) Gamble, °42; (3) Turner.
Breaststroke, 40-Yard—Time 29:8; (1)
Evans, (2) Lipp, (3) Boal, ’42. Medley
Relay, 60 Yards—Penn. Freestyle Re-
lay—Penn. Diving—(1) Boehm, 112
points; (2) eaeae "44, 92.6; (3) Ja-
cobs, °41, 891. Breaststroke Form—
(1) MeClellan, *42; (2) FP. Jones, °48;
(3) McEwan. Crawl Form—(1) Ja-
cobs, ’41; (2) Davis, °44; (3) Dager.
Sidestroke Form—(1) Darvin; (2) Ja-
cobs, 41; (3) Burns; (4) Schmud, ’44,
‘
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ARDMORE, PA.
iat
WED. - THURS. - FRI.
“Son of Monte Cristo” _
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
Miss Park Discusses
Purpose of Education
Continued from Page One }
techniques “because she is to be)
a member of a community.” As the
mother of another generation she
should have a knowledge of biology,
psychology and philosophy. As .a
member of a community she shoyld
be able to draw upon the facts of
“history, government, economics
and politics, with sapeces social psy-
chology thrown in.” Her _tech-
niques should be those which will
prepare her to work “in combina-
tion with other people whom she
may know or not know, like or
dislike, but with whom she must
cooperate toward an end which can
only be accomplished by the group.”
Her formal education can give her
the facts and it can give her the
experience of progressing toward
a right decision “‘by the friction of
honest difference in discussion or
in criticism.” Above all, her edu-
cation should teach a girl to have
an open mind, and to be eager to
add-to-her~-storehouse~ of informa=
tion.
In addition to facts and tech-
—
RICHARD. STOCKTON
BOOKS GIFTS
STATIONERY
Cowsblned Choruses
Will Sing on Sunday
The combined chorus of Bryn
Mawr and Haverford Colleges will
give a program of sacred music on
Sunday in Goodhart Hall. The pro-
gram will be: “HowLovely is Thy
Dwelling Place,” by Brahms;
“Turn Back, O Man,” by Holst;
“Bless the Lord,” by Bach; “Sicut
Cervus” and “Adoramus Te,” by
Palestrina, and the 150th Psalm
by Franck.
~Frrraddition-to-the~choral works;
the “Adagio” from Bach’s. Bran-
denburg Concerto Number Five
will be played by Miss Helen Rice,
violin; Athleen Jacobs, flute and
Harriet Case, piano.
niques, the high School and college
can help form character by the ex-
‘ample of its faculty. An atmos-
phere of intelligence. and courage}
will go far toward creating this|
type of attitude in the student. |
If a girl “sees her principal and
faculty good citizens outside school
hours, the-state-and-city will have,
a much better chance to find her a
good citizen herself when she is an
adult.” The woman of the nine-
teen-forties will meet hard de-
mands “She cannot be ungener-|
ous, or spaemodis, or easily tired of
meeting them.” Her success or
failure will be the test of these edu-
cational institutions.
|
HUNGRY?
try
THE GREEK’S
| other
€ ei _
Miss Reid
Common Room, March 18.—One
of the fundamental objectives of
the Lease-Lend Bill, said Miss
Reid, is, of course, the immediate
transfer of supplies to the value of
one billion, three hundred million
dollars to Great Britain and other
belligerent countries. Some of
these supplies, although we do not
know what they are, have already
-been™ snipped: ~‘Phere™ ts; however, |
an-—-unlimited—— possibility in _ the
Lease-Lend Bill of ‘additional aid
to belligerents, providing Congress
makes the appropriations. A ‘bill
for an appropriation of: seven bil-
lion dollars is now before the
House.
The reaction abroad to the
passage of the Lease-Lend Bill,
Miss Reid said, has been as antici-!
pated. The most important effect
‘will probably be the stiffening at-
titudes of Turkey, Jugoslavia and
uncertain countries. The
President’s recent speech, which
committed us unreservedly ‘to com-
plete support of Great Britain,
looms more important than the Bill,
and for a country still maintaining
{diplomatic relations with Germany,
it was remarkable.
Among the problems arising with
the National Defense Program. is
that of strikes. There hae been
many serious. strikes recently,
which may precipitate government
intervention.
Turning to the British campaign
in Africa, Miss Reid said that it
was becoming serious for the Axis,
which had counted on using bases |
in the Italian colonies in Africa
for an offensive against Great,
Britain. With the success of this
recent campaign, the attitude of
the British has begun to shift from
defensive to offensive. mae
Our foreign trade this year, said
Miss Reid, is almost all with Great
Britain and her dominions. Trade
with South America has decreased;
we have none with Germany and
most of the Continent. In the post-
war reconstruction period, this
shift of trade will be an important
consideration, . for “the change
caused by the release of the pres-
sure of the war will create a dis-
turbance.
In Latin America the Nazi
propaganda has been to a great ex-
tent neutralized by discovery.
Some countries have taken meas-
ures against it. But in many’
South American countries, the
major Nazi activities are now*car-
ried on through the Spaniards, so
that there is a need for constant
vigilance,
é
Spring coats, suits,
F
‘All day Thursday,
March 20
BONWIT TELLER SHOWING
at
THE COLLEGE INN
Slacks, skirts, jackets, and accessories.
Classics and clothes for glamour build-up.
dresses, sportswear.
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU
EXTRA MILPNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR
LESS
NICOTINE)
than the average of the 4 other largest-selling
cigarettes tested—less than any of them—according
to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself.
THE SMOKE’S THE THING! —
Es, when you smoke the slower-burning cigarette .. . Camel...
i you have the pleasing assurance of modern laboratory science
that you’re getting less nicotine in the smoke. .
Not only extra freedom from nicotine—but other i ineportaiae extras
~ as well—extra mildness, extra coolness, and extra flavor, too, for Camel’s
slower way of burning means freedom from flavor-dulling excess heat
and the irritating qualities of too-fast burning.
There’s economy in Camels, too—extra smoking per pack (see below).
And by the carton, Camels are even more economical.
on,
BY, POTBNING. 35% SLOWER
than the average of the 4 other
" largest-selling brands tested—
slower than any of them—Camels
also give you a smoking plus
equal, on the average, to
EXTRA SMOKES
PER PACK!
LIGHTS... MIKES...
“AMERICA’S MOST
TELEVISED GIRL”!
Camels
: oF don’t
reall ‘oe are so much cooler and
CA.
‘CAMERAS... . ALL SET FOR
Beauty, voice, dramatic ability—it
takes more than one talent to click
in television. And it takes more
than mildness to click with televi-
sion actress Sue Read in a cigarette.
“T smoke Camels,” she says. “They
combine a grand extra flavor and
~~ extra coolness with the extra mild-
ness that is so essential to me.”
SUCH A
GRAND -TASTING
CIGARETTE —~ CAMELS.
AND THEIR
EXTRA MILDNESS
IS VERY IMPORTANT
TOME! —
THERE ARE NO “RETAKES” in television.
Every night is first night. “That’s the thrill of it,”
says Miss Read.:“And the thrilling thing about
a is that they always taste so good. -
milder.”
E.
. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Wineien- ‘Salem, North Carolina
eMivieleiel
appreciate the freedom from the irritating quali-
ties of excess heat...
extra: coolness of Camel’s slower-burning cost-
lier tobaccos.-And-you’ll enjoy Camel’s full, rich
t tired of smoking Cameis- Bhd van. ¥ > PRavor all the more, knowing — by the word of
independent tests—that you’re getting less nico-
he more you smoke Camels, the more youll tine in the smoke (see above, left).
the extra mildness and
THE
SLOWER-BURNING
CIGARETTE
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Actors Enjoy Living
In Co-Op Community
Continued from Page One
Hedgerow. The Spewacks of Boy
Meets Girl fame had two of their
earlier plays produced when they
were part of the Hedgerow com-
pany. Plays are scheduled eight-
een months in advance to give
plenty of time for rehearsals, which
have to be staggered between per-
formances of the plays being given
at the time. :
Mr. Minnick voiced the opinion
of the whole company when he said,
“We are doing what we want to do,
because we want to do it more than
we want to make money.” Some
plays are chosen because they have
\. box office appeal and others are
\chosen because the company wants
to do them. Audiences average
about 110 a performance, but one
night this winter in the midst of
a terrific storm the Hedgerow
players performed Macbeth before
an audience of two Haverford
boys.
Miss Hansen Exposes
A buse of Civil Rights
Wednesday, March 12. — /Miss
Alice Hansen, editor of a publica-
tion of the United Textile Workers
of Philadelphia and former instruc-
‘tor of the Bryn Mawr Summer
School, spoke to the Industrial
Group on Civil Liberties. She
warned against the present tend-
ency to violate individual rights in
the restriction of labor. “As far
as production is concerned, we are
in the war now,” she said. “Action
against labor is assuming the place
in public opinion which it held
during the last war.”
In the last war labor was merely
restricted by an agreement between
labor leaders and the government,
that strikes would, as far as pos-
sible, be prevented. Today, labor
is much more highly organized.
Public opinion is forcing the intro-
duction of legislation such as the
proposed bills to restrict strikes in
defense industries, acts against
the Communist Party, and the
Alien Registration Act which, in
letter or spirit, interfere with the,
rights of the individual as set forth
in the federal constitution. An at-
tack on civil liberties is tolerated
in war time or time of national de-
fense when it would not be toler-
ated in peace time. Since the legal
protection’. against governmental
infringements of rights is more cer-
tain than that against infringe-
ments by ‘self constituted groups
such as the American Legion, ac-
tion should be taken against the
former; particularly at this time.
New — Vice-President
Knows ‘About Planaria
Continued from Page One
and misspelled Gardiner in the
note. She has heard nothing since.
Her sophomore year, Al was co-
chairman with Vivi French of the
publicity branch of the Activities
Drive, so the new President and
Vice-President of Undergrad un-
derstand each other’s« clockwork.
That year they made the thermom-
eters. Al did the coloring and Vivi
the mathematics.
“Planaria? Oh, Planaria is a
kind of worm,” says Alice.
The ~editor welcomes letters of}.
constructive criticism.
For Spring Vacation
Plaid Suits
Tweed Reefers
Print Dresses_
Play Suits
Cotton Dresses
KITTY McLEAN
BRYN MAWR >
| German methods of
Lozada Shows German
Influence in S. America
Sontinued. fron: Page One
Senor de Lozada described the
invasion in
South America as. a “planting of
high type yo&ng men in small busi-
nesses all over the continent.”
They concentrate on fostering na-
tive quarrels such as the boundary
dispute between Equador and Peru
as a possible basis for a flare up
should it become necessary to. di-
vert the attention of the United
States from the European war.
Because the Germans have -been
in South America so long, they are
the best representatives the large
American corporations can employ.
In Bolivia, thesnumber one Nazi is
a General Motors representative;
much of the Nazi propaganda is
paid for by American funds. In
Equador the papers are controlled
by Nazi policies so that .one out-
standing writer who is very pro-
United States, can get no articles
published of a political character.
In the past, the United States
has had two policies toward the
South American countries: offer-
ing loans, which Senor Lozada call-
ed bribery and supplying arms.
Since 1930, these countries have be-
come interested in their national
economics, realizing that the influx
of foreign capital creates artificial
booms which undermine their weak
economic structures and cause de-
pression.
Senor de Lozada believes the only
policy which would be advantage-
ous to the United States would be
to develope trade relations which
icans would be permanent. These
countries realize that for the next
hundred years they will be de-
pendent on trade with some foreign
power. They do not care which one
it is. They have none of our fear
of the disaster inherent in a Ger-
man victory, for they have always
found-the Germans the least predi-
tory of their masters.
“The United States must assume
its logical leadership and respon-
sibility by solving the problems of
this hemisphere which are compara-
tively simple as compared to those
‘
~
Pos
\
The saving is plenty big—in
yourself—go Greyhound.
TRAVEL BUREAU
14 E. LANCASTER AVE.
ARDMORE, PA. - Tel.
af
ae A
memnat YM *
it could assure the South Amer-!
Meh bind 1s tolhbeg gon...
G VACATION Tryp.
COST LESs
4
WS SD 46
: ~
N
Ny? S
You can’t fool a little feathered
friend about spring migrations !The
smart bird knows that Greyhound
is the easiest way to flit home to the
family nest and back to college
again when vacation time’s over.
time and money — and the trip’s
more fun in. a Super-Coach full of
friends. There’s an extra saving, as
usual, on round-trip tickets. So be
kind to your pocketbook—and to
Red Arrow Lines, agents for Greyhound a
Ard. 5840
moa L/S Pe
Alumnae Association
To Meet in Baltimore
The Council of the Bryn Mawr
Alumnae Association will hold its
annual meeting next week-end in
Baltimore.
tives from the college, including
Several representa-
members of the faculty, the gradu-
ate and the undergraduate schools,
are planning to attend. Besides
holding business sessions, the Coun-
cil will discuss various phases of
the college with speakers repre-
senting different points of view.
The meeting will open Friday
morning with a business session at
which Nancy J. Offutt, 1920, chair-
man of the Baltimore Committee
for the Council, will welcome the
members. In the afternoon dele-
gates from Bryn Mawr will speak
on different phases of the college.
Representing Bryn Mawr are Mrs.
Chadwick-Collins, Miss- Northrop
from the faculty, Karin Judith
Stephen, representing the graduate
school, Marion Gill, ’40, and Helen
McIntosh, ’41, who will speak from
the undergraduate point of view.
Another business session will be
held Saturday, and in the evening
Aquabelles Will Swim
*Mid Lighted Candles
Billy Rose has nothing on Bryn
Mawr. At 8.15 on Saturday night
Miss Yeager, several of the swim-
ming classes, and some of the Var-
sity squad are going to put on an
Aquacade to rival the World’s Fair
version. Form swimmers will
swim in formation while the band
plays gay Strauss ‘waltzes: Un-
dines undulating to dreamy
rhythms. Stunt groups will swim
in-unbelievably-complicated..ways.
There will be color, variety, ac-
tion. There will be lighting effects.
And costumes.
The finale: a dark pool. At the
end there are only the long, long
candles, swimming bravely’ in
clenched hands:
The score, or the choreography,
or whatever the technical term is,
contains no premeditated humor.
But anything may happen; in the
rehearsals everyone drowned at
least once.
Art Alliance Lecture
Eric Knight, author of
The Flying Yorkshireman,
will speak at the Art Alli-
there will be a dinner in honor of |
Miss Park. The Council will close |
Sunday with a luncheon at the,
Garrison Forest School in Garri-
son, Maryland.
of the world,” asserted Senor de
Lozada. He believes that we should
not only cement trade relations, but
adopt the German methods—of
propaganda by sending down young
Americans to live in these South-
ern countries. “A thousand young
men and women sent down to carve
out careers for themselves perhaps
in partnership with natives in
South America would do more for
our national defense than five bat-
tleships,” he added.
Until we show that we can handle
the problems of this hemisphere,
we have no right to take part in
solving the very much more diffi-
cult .world problems, Senor de
Lozada_ said... i
Sle
ASS QA
Ss
= a
e
) aso
tC @ | /. =
f £
Sample
Round-Trip Fares
Cleveland ....$12.60
Boston _..........-7.20
both New. York.... 2.45
Detroit) =... | 16.75
Chicago ..... 21.15
St. Louis...... 20.75
Baltimore .... 2.45
Washington ..-3.55
~ Richmond...» 6:70
Miami ....... 26.50
—
ance Wednesday, April 2, at
8.30 P. M., on Our Changing
Literary Standards. His new
book, This Above All, will
appear in April.
ASK THE MAN WHO
HAS a Gibbs secretary
. 8088 .calls from
employers last year
+ »« » your cue, Miss
1941! Catalog tells all
—send for one.
dhidinc, Cb:
230 Park Avenue, New York City
90 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass.
THE
NEW: CURIOSITY SHOP
for the latest in
COSTUME JEWELRY
ROOM DECORATIONS
and
STUDENT LAMPS
369 Lancaster Avenue
Haverford, Pa.
(opposite Haverford College)
Tel. Ardmore 6777
Fragrance and Gaiety
, for your room
during Exams
JEANNETT’S
composer of over 50
college hit songs—in
“Pleasure Time”
MON., TUES., WED.,
THURS., FRI.
at 7 P.M.
N..B. C. Stations
ore
WARING
FOR BRYN MAWR
MILLER
-~-America’s No. 1
Dance Band Leader in
“Moonlight Serenade” _.
FOR BRYN MAWR
TUES., WED., THURS.
atioP.M. |
CB. S. Stations
W/Z Af 400 hy C y ved,
a
College news, March 19, 1941
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1941-03-19
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 27, 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-vol27-no18