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wor
t
_ NOL. XXIII, No. 16 °
BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, _PA,, TUESDAY, MARCH 2, Z _1937
Copyright TRUSTEES OF |
RYN MAWR._COLLEGE, 1937
PRICE 10 CENTS .
BRYN. MAWR BEGINS" -FOUR- POINT EXPANSION ~
A
DISTRIBUTION OF THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY FUN} |,
February,’ 1937
Science Building
“ Library
Wyndham
Faculty Salaries ........:.¢, ere ree
* Departmental Gitte: 6665. 6b
Fellowships, Scholarships and Grants
Archaeological . Dig
Books and Lectures
Goodhart Hall (alterations and reduction of debt)............
ee
Ce
t
Miscellaneous (Deanery, May Day, Bryn Mawr Camp, Drive
Expenses, the President’s Fund, Tiffany or Sa oe
Endowments..and Bequests:
Carnegie Corporation Fund.......
Sophie—Boucher—Fund.......... a
Harriet Randolph Fund...........
' Madge Miller Fund............. =
Jane Brownell Fund.....°.. 0.0.
Susan M. Kingsbury Research Institute Assist-
antship
eee me were eee eee eens
Master School of Music Fund.......
*
Ella Riegel paneer Fund of December,
1935
CBO CCH oO ZO Ree eee eee
eee ewe eee ewes
ee $344,327.67
reer iy. iis TUT Ones
er ee ea, 8,250.00
dee. roi
ae oe reeiiats 41,265.00
pee Ne ge ee 64,413.21
Ser eee: 8,050.00
ee ae ee 10,927.22
: 5,082.34
‘33,900.00
Pi etens $150,000.00 :
cetaceans ae 18,002.91
ras 5,000+00
Aen ae 25,000.00
et 8,000.00
ieviiieins eee
Mare ane 25,090.72
oe 17,000.00.
274,788.63
CWA Ca $1,032,895.73,
‘Construction to Begin
me In June, Says Mr. Stokes
Mr. Francis J. Stokes, elected last
autumn to:head the Buildings and
Grounds Committee of the Board of
Directors. and greatly responsible for |
the present project, has kindly sent
the News the following statement _of
his personal views:
“The final design of the two-science
building is still under consideration |:
and revision. While it may be that
the exterior will be of gray brick, that
is not definitely determined. It would
be my expectation that if we are not
-disappointed in the estimates of_cost,
work, would commence in June, and
that would doubtless mean that it
would be completed early in the sum-
mer. of 1938. -
“It is my hope that construction of:
the new library wing can be com-
menced during this summer. Plans
call for a stone Tudor style of archi-
tecture similar to the present Library
building.
“The matter of. increased lighting
facilities is under consideration.
--Whether it will be-met by the install-.|}.~
ment of additional facilities or by the
purchase of current from the Public
’ Service has not yet been determined. |.
The present inadequacy is so pressing
that a solution must be found as soon
as a satisfactory conclusion is arrived
at, as well.as the necessary finances.
“Concerning cooperation, I can only
say that this has been so generous
from President Park throughout the
college that it has put those of us off
the campus on our mettle to — ex-
pectations.”
r
Yet to be Done—_
The construction program of
the Board of Directors and
Trustees is ready to move ahead.
But there is much yet to be done
to build the Bryn. Mawr. of. the
future. The following is an in-
+—-eomplete—summary of —units~in
the project for which funds must
“yet be found:
(1) The other $100,000 for.
the top two foors for Library .
Wing.
(2) Thetwo wings for biology
and physics-mathematics. Rough
estimate: $500,000.
(3)Additional academic ap-
pointments for the sciences, for -
art and’ archaeology, and in-—
structors for the new 100 stu-
dents.
(4) Wyndham debt: $277,000.
(5) Books for all depart-
ments, particularly for art and‘
archaeology.
The above are necessary, In
addition, the college should like
the new program to include the
“following, for which there are
no funds ‘at present:
(6) New lighting for the col-
lege.
(7) Workshop for art courses
- and for stagecraft.
(8) Squash courts.
(9) Extension of the college
‘courses,
(10) Almost infinite provision
for research work for the fac-
ulty, and for graduates and
undergraduates. -
“
Ee,
Horse Cars, Leaks Discombobulate Lives.
-
Of 1903 Pioneers in Newly-Built: Hall
“(Uditor’s Note: Students and sub-
freshmen beware! Lest you think dn
easy road lies ahead, read. of..your}...
early sisters’ trials and tribulations.
O pioneers!
Contributed in News tryouts.)
All three buildings of the last great
project were begun in the summer of
1903, but it soon became apparent
that Rockefeller,’ at least, was not
going to be fit for habitation by. Oé-
tober. The problem of providing a
home for the-incdffiing students soon
became acute. It was met by taking
over the whole Pennsylvania Railroad
Hotel in the village of Bryn Mawr.
This structure, Summit Grove, since
torn down, then stood in a park be-
tween Summit Grove Avenue and
Railroad Avenue. It had, in its day,
been a country resort for the Phila-
delphians. In 1903, it was aged,
ramshackle and a fire-trap. Mrs.
_ Marion Paris Smith, present Profes-
‘sor of Economics, who was then the|
warden, lived in constant fear of con-
flagration. ~
to be that of transportation. A bus,
drawn by two horses and hung with
black oil-cloth curtains to insure
privacy, left Taylor Hall’at ten min-
utes. past each hour, and departed
1from Summit Grove at ten minutes
before. Students living in Summit
Grove were. given passes; other un-
dergraduates had to pay five. cents
apiece. Even with this convenience,
there were minor tragedies when stu-
dents failed to catch the bus. |
By the end of the spring vacation,
Rockefeller Hall was declared_ to be
ready ‘for occupancy. The whole hall
had been finished in cypress-wood of
an exquisite creamy-tan, especially
eut in one of Mr. Rockefeller’s
‘swamps. ..A. few details had not been
completed—the plumbing bad not been
tested, the walls had not been papered,
and shades for the windows ‘had ”
.. The worst problem, “however, ‘proved mee
Aliieaning Bathiisiasny
Gives Student New
Feeling for College
Contact With Campus Through
Deanéry; Report on Finals
Are Emphisized
MISS PARK’S SPEECH
_CLIMAX OF COUNCIL
“(Especially contributed by Lucy
Huxley, President of the Class of 1937
the Alumnae Council.)
The realization of the feeling of the
Alumnae toward the college and the
recognition of the amount: of work
they accomplish in a year was a rev-
elation to.an undergraduate attending
‘the Alumnaé Council in-- Washington
last Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Their enthusiasm and interest in all
the activities on the campus far sur-
passes any similar exhibition among
the graduate and undergraduate stu-
dents. Their one idea as members of
the Alumnae Association is to keep
Bryn Mawr at the top of the ladder,
and they are willing to do-any amount
of work to help the college maintain
its position. It is hard for most of
us who are still undergraduates to
realize just how much the college
means to the alumnae, but if any stu-
dent had seen the effect made upon
them .by the announcements in Miss
Park’s speech and Mrs. Slade’s re-
yport~-on the —Fiftieth” Anniversary
Fund, she would have understood why
they are willing to devote so much
‘time and energy to the various col-
lege projects... Everyone was dis-
tressed that Miss Park could not be
‘there herself to deliver the very im-
portant announcements in her speech
Friday night, but a severe case of
the flu_prevented her from attending.
Meeting Opens Informally
The meeting was opened formally
"Thurdday afternoon by Ida Lauer
Darrow, 1921, the new president of
the Alumnae Association. Sherry
Matteson, ’36, also representing the
“Undergraduate Point of View,” made
an excellent appeal for a closer asso-
ciation between the alumnae and the
undergraduates and explained how
the activities at the ‘Deanery are doing
much. to bind these two groups closer
together. Mary S. Sweeney, speaking
for the graduate school, described the
growing feeling among the graduate
students that they are a class and not
individuals. The incorporation of
ate students has done much to cement
this feeling.
Dean: Manning Tells of Change
Dean Manning, 1915, representing
the faculty of the college, spoke of
the many changes in the college cur-
riculum. The expansion of the col-
lege in its history of fifty-one years
has presented very definite problems,
as has the expansion in the number
of fields of study and in the came
tion of education. The need has arisén
for connecting the class work with the
world ‘outside. She traced. the aca-
EXPRESSES
S’ APPROVAL
MR. RHOA
DIRECT
It is peculiarly appropriate that as
Bryn Mawr starts its second fifty
years, the President: of the Board of
Trustees should be the son of the col-
lege’s first president. Mr. Charles
Rhoads has sent The News the fol-
lowing statement:
“The directors are exceedingly glad
that at last the college has been able
to make a start on a program that
cannot carry out all our dreams at
this moment, we expéct to be able to
make a beginning this spring and we
the approval of those who are inter-
ested in the collége will help us carry
through the program to its comple-
fetcieabaet ‘Continued | = Page: Two ir
ition.” _____._ CHARLES J. RHOADS. _
and Undergraduate Representative at
Radnor into’ a hall solely for gradu-
has been so long delayed. While we-
bélieve that, the beginning once made, |
Site of New
Stakes on Hockey Field Mark
Science. Building
Ditecue ‘Approve Increase
in Faculty. Salaries,
Pensions: :
. Calls for Addition of 100 Students; Provisions Made
For New Wing of Library
MRS. COLLINS APPOINTED ‘A DIRECTOR. AT- LARGE
Goodhart, March
2.—As dciieiination of three years of intensive
and diffieult planning by the Board of Directors, and generous giving
by all connected with or interested in Bryn Mawr,
Miss Park ‘made the
definite announcement to the students and faeulty in chapel this morn-
ing of the first great Gonstruction
“ : . we
and expansion program which the
college has undertaken in over-thirty years.
The gift of 1,000,000 dollars made to the college by the
Alumnde
Association has at last made it possible not only to answer ‘the needs
which have pressed hardest upon the college in the last few years, but
also to extend and strengtheneits interests a nd resources.
Definite plans’for’the erection of the scienge building and provi-_
sions for the Library wing
mittee, and approved at a special
Four-Point Program
The four major points of the
new construction and expansion
program voted by the Board of
Trustees and Directors are:
I—The erection, commencing
immediately, of. a two-story sci-
‘ence building to house geology
and chemistry.
II—The erection of a wing to
_ the Library to.house—art—and
archaeology. At least two floors +
and/a basement to be begun as
soon as possible.
I1I—The acquisition from col-
lege funds as an investment for
anew dormitory to house 100
new students and an ultimate
increase of the charge for tui-
tion to 600 dollars (the Vassar
figure), thus providing an ex-
tra_income of. 60,000 dollars—a
year for faculty »salaries and
pensions.
~TV—The appointment of a
new officer of the administra-
tion to represent the college in
attempts to make its ° work
known and to interest its old
and potential friends in_ its
plans and needs.
X
Dean Favors Increase
In Quota of Students
Feels Average of Four Students
In Each Major Too Low
Mrs. -Manning, in discussing ..the
tion program,
statements:
~ ™ ad 2
“As far as*more studentsare .con-
made the ‘following
cerned I am in’favor of the new pro-
gram because the number of students
and the numberof dopartyiients at the
present time are entirely out of -pro-
portion. We have added three depart-
ments since we last increased , the
number of students.
The — for
---eagh~-major--department..is.four_stu-.;.
dents, Which is-entirely too low. With
present facilities, the interest in, arts
and music, and the social economy ma-
jor under discussion there should be
more students to -strike the best
average. Uneconomicai as it is now,
our present equipment.could take care
of 500 students with a few more in-
structors for the freshmen.
We will probably have to make
enough appointments of younger men
so that elder members can be released
more for their major. students.
Contimued on Page Three ~
Don’t F orget! |
AN DRES_ SEGOVIA.
Gait: Tonight at. 8.30
See This ' Week's New Yorker
academic aspects of the new construc-.
g, drawn up by a spee ‘ial investigation com-
meeting of the Board of Trustees
and Directors, are now ready tod _
into execution. _ 2
Two
made by the committee were also ap-
additional regommendations
proved-by the directors; one designed
to effect the long-desired ‘increase in
faculty salaries and pensions; and
one to explain and further the .inter-
ests of the college in the broad field of -
its present and potential contacts.
The former will call for the addition
of one hundred students ‘and the con+
struction—of-a-new halt-of-residence,
the income from, which will be turned
to this purposes whereas the latter
recommendation has already been put
into effect by the appointment of Caro-
line Chadwick-Collins as a Director at
Large.
Measurements for the science build-
ing, which will contain two sciences,
and provide for the later addition of
wings to house biology, physics and
mathematics, have already been
staked out on its site on the upper
hockey field, and it is hoped. that the
building will be ready for occupancy
in the fall of 19388. Definite plans
have been made for the construction
of at least the basement and first two
floors of the Library, wing, the third
and fourth floors to be added when
sufficient funds are available.
Miss Park’s speech follows:
Put “together,
Alumnae: Drive form an astonishing
total of new interests made possible
and old interests stréngthened. Today
I cannot present to you all the widely
varied additibns to our resources, but
I ‘shall make known the immediate
program of the college for those spe-
cific needs incessantly before us in
the last few years: increased faculty
salaries and pensions, new quarters
for the Departments of the History of
Art and Archaeology, more stack room
in the Library... The. directors’ are
ready to state suth a program, and ©
no student.can fail to be interested in
its bare Outline. Details, additions,
subtractions, must later change and
amplify the first statement.
‘|The Background of Our Decisions
..The.directors...of the. college: saw...
that in years when the supporters “e
most Causes, not only ‘educational but
scientific and social as well, had given
themselves over at worst to despair,
Continued on Page Six
TYPE SPECIMEN BOOKS: +.
PRESENTED TO LIBRARY
Lovers of fine printing and all who
are interested’in typography will™be
glad to know that through the gen-
erosity of Mr. Wilfred Bancroft and
Mr. T. Frank Morgan, of the Lanston
Monotype Company, the Library has
‘been presented with the type specimen
books of that organization. -These —
|contain examples of hundreds of vari-
ous faces, including some fifteen de-
Goudy, usually acknowledged -as the
the results of the ‘
f
‘Il signed for the Monotype Company by
-greatest and most versatile artist in
the history of typé-design.
ag
Page Two
;
us
brighter with the knowledge that Mrs. Collins will make new oontadte
Board of Directors, particularly to its new president, Mr. Rhoads,
_of space to. achievement, -we must watch to keep our attach as. sharp, |
_ our penetration as deep as ‘it has ever been. Lest the traditional com-|
- THE COLLEGE NEWS
.
}-it-may be reprinted either whoHy-or-in part without: written permission of -the-—-
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(Founded in 1914)
c .
Published weekly during the College Year taxpentine during Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest
‘of Bryn Mawr College ya the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn
Mawr College. :
The College News is fully protected by eaeuks. Nothing that appears in
= Chief.
Z aver
Editor-in-Chief ae
HELEN FISHER,.’37 N ;
News Editor — Cop itor >
‘E. JANE SIMPSON, ?37 JANET THOM, ’38''
iw Editors
ELEANOR BAILENSON, ’3949 Mary R. Mets, ’39
MARGERY C. HARTMAN,’ ’38 : JEAN MORRILL, ’39
MARGARET Howson, ’38 x MARGARET OTIS, 739
Mary H. HUTCHINGS, ’37 LUCILLE SAUDER, ’39
ABBIE INGALLS, ’38 SUZANNE ciety 3
Business Manager —
AGNES ALLINSON, ’37 , MARY Wut
Assistants .
ETHEL HENKLEMAN, 38 LOUISE STENGEL, ’37
Subscription Manager ASsistant
DEWILDA NARAMORE, ’38 Mary T. RITCHIE, ’39
Graduate _ ii arabe VESTA SONNE
‘SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50
MAILING PRICE, $3. 00
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY GIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
those hopes, and asserts that Bryn Mawr is advancing on every front.
ahead,
. resources to the campus‘énd in turn carry away additional service.
_.well as. definite promise .and hopeful dreams._The recipient.of a gift}
“There Are More Things—”
A year and a nahin at Bryn Mawr’s Fiftieth Anniversary, the
ideals and the traditions ofthe college were the theme’ of a, great chap-
ter in education. Yet no one who listened to the prajses of the past
that morning could fail to feel the pulse of the future running high.
The alumnae were working on a million- dollar drive, plans and specula-
tions were in the air, but no one dared say when they would be
accomplished. Since then rumors of that drive, awakened interests and
new final examinations have indicated that the college 1 is quivering with
a sense of transformation.
This morning a four-fold project for immediate execution fulfills
The range of the plans is as wide as its details are complex and inter-
woven. Three additional buildings will release the heavy pressures on
the college. Enlarged facilities for science and fine arts, space for books
and for every department to expand, increased salaries forthe faculty
—these fundamentals had ‘to be met.
same time is a. triumph- of womanly. thrift and foresight.
ae Miss “Park ‘we must look for the courage to take this bold step
frodm limited means, for the caution to wait until the whole could be
faced at once instead of allowing isolated units to upset the equilibrium
of the structure, for the foresight to leave all hands free to move,
From’ our thousand separate demands, she has taken the best and
justly effected compromises for the sake of the total project. The
“broad vision and the strength of the detached, idealistic, pemuee
mind” have reached confidently into. the future.
Today the plan is still incomplete. Money must-yet be found for
some basie units of the project. But details and rearrangements can
come. without serious readjustment. There are advantages in this.
Wisely the college has not tied itself with any debts or loss of needed
income—it is free to follow as they open up whatever paths lie unknown
Already from the Drive have come a course in stagetraft; a new
research institute, néw music: facilities, new faculty: members. This
spring efforts for.a stagecraft workshop may be begun. Yet these are
only inklings of what may be hoped for. Integral_to all of these exten-
sions, major ‘and minor, is the new ‘administrative: officer, who will
devote herself to making thei possible.
In this we honor today another great woman whose enthusiastic
devotion has been a motive force in the project. Mrs. Chadwick-Collins’
election as Director-at-large is-a suitable reward for her long service
to the college. Her new post which she alone can fill is proof again of
how much the college relies upon her. The promises of the future are
with friends and alumnae.
_ The universal faith of the e in their alma mater is‘shown in
the Drive figures—an accumulation of small gifts and comparatively
few large ones. Mrs. Slade’s organization and wide extension of the
Drive is a direct contributign to the success.which we celebrate. To the
belongs the credit for an enthusiastic backing of the undertaking. And
Mr.‘ Stokes, recently ‘elected to. the boards has advanced the -construc-
tion plans with such ability in the past few. months, that we are
assured of the attainment of his work.
~—Phe~visions-of-the- future are pleasant” to ‘eonjiré—a richer com-
munity of new ideas and long tradition. The Tarsus Dig is an impli-
cation of the extensive prospects which Bryn Mawr can carry on out-
side the college. The proposed chair of Linguistics and the lectures on
Man have this year opened fields for cooperation among departments. |
Eventually, perhaps, Psychology and education might with the social
sciences take over Dalton-to effect_another integrated expansion. “Out-
side” student interests, newly risen in strength and variety, have today,
in a stagecraft course, an extended “niusie department, a dozen’ sade
clubs a wealth of. prospects for advancement with one another and with
departments. As each of these expands, Bryn Mawr students may
reach further into the community than they do today, for each bring
But as we stand this morning looking ahead, there is challenge as
accepts a responsibility to fulfill: To preserve our present proportion
of the campus lite be sectionali constant interweaving must
sicale. , :
We Saturday, March 6.—Rockefel-
|
That they will be satisfied at’ the|}
Prat ‘pon
COLLEGE CALENDAR.
Tuesday, March 2.—Mr. Fen-.
wick’s talk on current events. °:
Common Room. 7.30 p; m.
Andres Segovia, guitarist, will
give a concert. Goodhart. 8.80
on, amides
Wednesday, March 8.— The
eighth and last lecture-on The
Nature of-Man. will be given by
' Mr. Weiss. Music Rooin. 7.30
p. m. -
Friday, eal. 5. ae ne
Deanery.. 8 p. m.
ler Hall Dance. 7.30 to 11.30.
Sunday, March 7.— Leonie
Adams-:will read selections from
her poetry. Deanery. 5 p.m.
The Sunday Evening Service
will be conducted by, Reverend
Thomas Guthrie Speers. Music
Room. 7.30 p. m.
Monday, March 8.—Dr. Wal-
ter Livingston Wright, Jr., will
- speak on American Campuses in
the Near East. I
Miss Lake will give a lecture
on Roman theaters. Room E,
Taylor. 7.30 p.m.
‘Tuesday, Mareh-9.— Deanery-
Bridge Party for the benefit of
the Alumnae Regional Scholar-
ships of Eastern Pennsylvania.
2 p.m. Admission, $4.00 a table.
» Dr. Fenwick will speak on-cur-
rent events. Common Room. 7
DM
Thursday, March 11.—Haniel
Long will talk on Creative
‘Writing. Deanery. 5 p.m. ~
Friday, March 12.—Varsity
Swimming Meet at Swarthmore.
3 p.m.
Sunday, March 14. ~- Musical
Seryjice. Music Room. 7.30
p. m,
Tuesday, March 16,—Drn.Fen-
wick will talk on current events.
Common. Room. _7.30 p. m.
Wednesday, March 17.—Dean
ery Bridge and Tea for the bene-
fit_of the: Virginia T. Stoddard
Memorial Fund. 27p.m. $5.00
a table.
Horse Cars, Leaks
Discombobulate Lives
Continued from Page One
to arrive—but these were considered
minor.
During their first week-end,. the
students were obliged to cloak their
windows ‘in. sheets and garments.
Fifty-three leaks appeared; and it be-
came apparent why cypress-wood will
never rival mahogany. A flick of
water or even a smudgy finger turned
it black; and new and stringent rules
had to be made against spilling. The
‘next week-end about one-third of the
students either went home or doubled
up with their neighbors, while .the
woodwork ‘was stained to look like
oak, and new paper“was hung on the
walls. At the same time, a new and
expensive device—the “humidiostat,”
or dampness-dispenser — was _ intro-
duced to counteract the baleful dry-
ness*-of the hot-air heating-system.
Workmen, «toiling .feverishly, com:
pleted the paper- nging in time, but
late on Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Smith,
happening to go into one of the
rooms, found that the humidiostats
had unfortunately been left working
full blast, and the new paper was
reurling off the walls in great drip-
ping sheets! The work* had to be
months after its:expected completion
that the first undergraduates took
sion of Rockefeller Hall.
All cca Books Cleaned —
/All the ks in the Reserve Room,
‘both for the first and second semester,
ave been cleaned of the miscellaneous
cribblings which made them almost
llegible. Ten high,school girls worked.
afternoons from January 5 to Febru-
ary, 9, a total of 721% hours. They
were paid at the rate of 30 cents per
hour, a total of 4 dollars. Ap-
proximately 5800 bdoks were done
during this period.
Work was begun on the books in
the Art Seminary, but it had to be
abandoned because of lack of funds.
All students are asked to assist in’ re-
porting marked books.
donevall over again. It was fully-nine.
| In Philadelphia
Th eaters
Chestnut: An Enemy of the On i
with Walter Hampden.
Forrest: On Your Toes, with ied
Bolger and Tamara Geva.
~Movies-
iis: Maid of sway with Clau-|
dette Colbert and Fred MacMurray.
Arcadia: Mind Your Own Business,
with Charles -Rugegles.
Boyd: Green Light,
Flynn.
Europa: Lucrezia Borgia.
Fox: John Meade’s Woman, with
Edward. Arnold:and Francine Larri-
more.
Karlton: Lloyds of por with
Freddie Bartholomew and Tyrone
Power.
Locus# Street: The Good Earth,
with Paul Muni and Luise Rainer.
Stanley: The Last of Mrs. Cheney,
with Joan Crawford, William Powell
and Robert Montgomery.
Stanton: .We Who Are About To
Die, with John Beal.
Local Movies
Ardmore: Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday, The Plainsman, with Gary
Cooper and Jean Arthur; Friday and
Saturday, That Girl from Paris, with
Lily Pons and Jack Oakie; Sunday. to
with Errol
Wednesday, Camille, with Gréta
Garbo.
Seville: Tuesday and Wednesday,
As You Like It, with Elizabeth Berg-
| ner; Thursday, Gay Desperado, with
Nino Martini; Friday and Sunday,
After the Thin Man, with William
Powell and Myrna Loy; Monday and
Tuesday, Charlie Chan at the Opera,
with Warner Oland.
'. Wayne: Tuesday, After the Thin
Man, with William Powell and Myrna.
Wednesday, Wanted: Jane
with Gloria Stuart.
Concert Program
Bach: Prelude in E major; Sibelius;
Symphony No. 2 in D major; DeFalla:
Nuits dans les Jardins ad’ Espagne;
Liszt; Les- Preludes.
Loy;
Turner,
LEAGUE TO SPONSOR™
INFORMAL MUSICALE
(Especially contributed by Letitia
Brown, ’37.)
On Friday evening:the Bryn Mawr
League will sponsor a musicale. Like
last year’s, it will be essentially an
informal occasion. The undergradu-
ates will have another opportunity to
hear.campus musicians in a program
which will be short but full of variety.
The plans for the concert are nearly
completed. * A group, which has been
practid@ing throughout the year, will
play a Mozart Clarinet Quintet in A.
The performers are Amelia. Forbes,
’87, clarinet; Louise Herron, ’89, first
violin; Helen Hamilton, ’89, second
violin; M. Haas, ’87, viola, and N.
Coplin, ’38, violoncello.
There will be no less than three ac-
complished pianists—Gordon Gros-
venor, ’39, has generously offered two
pieces: “Etude Heroique,’”’ by Letchet-
itsky, and the “Mephisto Waltz,” by
Lizst. Grace Dolowitz, ’39, who played
for the League last year, and Harriet
Hutchison, 40, have not yet sélected
their numbers.
Ten members of the German Club,
under the leadership of J. M. Beck,
’40, are preparing a song group. In
order thatthe musicale will be truly
orthodox, Helen Shepherd, ’88, has
promised at least one aria. from Gil-
bert and Sullivan.
The most unique feature of the “pro-
gram is still in embryo. -It is hoped
that Betty Wilson, ’40, will secure her
French: horn and Marion Gill, ’40, her
'trunipet in time to prepare a chorale.
The admission to the concert will
be twenty-five cents, and so the more
the merrier. The profits will go, first
of all, to meet some‘additonal running
expenses of the League. What is left
will be deposited to the account of |
the Summer Camp.
Notice
Senior and Graduate Students
Mrs. Crenshaw should like to see
now the students who would like a
position next rene and who have not
already registered with the ‘Bureau.
A schedule of appointments is posted
on the: bulletin board outside Dean
aacteses. ies office.
adieinisleatiown to-come will face more difficulties than they-do today.
| But with the surety that they will only be stimulated by the challenge,
we may in today’ 8 beginnings look confidently erat the Bais Mawr
of fhe future.
grow stronger as we range afield. -The-s the faculty, and_the
Attention, Tryouts!
The final date for’ the sub-
“mission of tryouts for the: Edi-
torial..Board -of The College
News has been set for Wednes-
day,. March 10, at 6.80 p. m.
-Théy may be given to H.
News office. Tryouts are re-
minded that their criticisms,
-- features and editorials need not
be long.
CAST FOR GLEE CLUB
~~ _MIKADO ANNOUNCED
ae
Glee Club takes pleasure in an-
nouncing the cast for their production.
of The Mikado on April 23 and 24:
The Mikado: :... Cornelia Kellogg, ’39
Nanki-Pooh...... Helen Hartman, ’38
TOMOr hei srk Ruth Stoddard, ’39
Pooh-Bah: oe... Huldah Cheek, ’38
UREN 6 ccc ta ncaa Undecided
5 tse 0 ees Helen Lee, ’40
Pitti-Sing...... Jeanne Macomber, ’37
Peep-Bo....... Barbara Longcope, ’38
Katisha Helen Shepherd, ’38
Understudies to these parts will be
announced later.
The.technical staff will be:
Meee ae Ann-Wyld,~’38.
Lighting: signs Hemphill, "37
Costumes *, Undecided
Ce ey
Elisabeth Bergner Star
Of Shakespeare Comedy
The Seville is the only ‘theatre* on
the Main Line which will give a per-
formance of Shakespeare’s “As You
Like It.” W. G. Carmichael of the
theatre staff held a special preview of
the movie on Saturday morning and
very kindly invited College News
representatives.
The cast of the movie version of
“As You Like It” includes that most
whimsical of German actresses Elisa-
beth Bergner. The very English.
Rosalind is not’ a woman of whimsy
nor does she have ‘a German accent.
Despite these, La Bergner gives an ac-
tive performance.__Laurence~-Olivier
as. Orlando plays the part of the
romantic lover chamingly, but often
in his scenes with Rosalind he seems
disconcerted by her habit of whack-
ing him with a stick. Jaques speaks
his “All the world’s a stage” lines
witk excellent emphasis, but the full
meaning of his part as a typical and
humorless melancholiac “is not built
up. Touchstone, though some of his
best lines are cut, is worth the whole
movie. In one scene he rests his el-
bows on a cow and with all the wis-
dom of a fool so teases the dung-
haired Audrey that she, giggling vio-
lently, plunges her head into the
cow’s flank.
The long exposition of the play is
wisely cut but not so some of Rosa-
lind’s trenchant quips (for instance, ,
her quick-witted description of what
time means to certain types of peo-
ple). But judging from the fact that
the movie ran only for an hour and
a half, the unity of the play is well-
preserved. The setting in the forest
created a. wild and delightful pas-
toral atmosphere. It’s leafy recesses
are amply exhibited by the camera
because. of Orlando’s passion for en-
graving .‘“Rosalind” on every. tree.
On the whole, the movie shows the
reseafgh and detail which went into
its. progkuction. But the success of
“As You Like It” depends in great
part.on Rosalind. Elisabeth Bergner
does not fit the part, not only as tra-
dition has created her, but as Shake-
speare meant her to be.
WIT’S END|
ress Pending
‘Here’s-a pretty mess
‘The News has gone-te:press_.
And here I find an article I quite for-
got to place.
Here’s a pretty day
A lovely, snowy day
| And I am going ‘to lab today—not.
ski-ing in the race.
Here’s an awful fix
My chemicals won’t_mix
But this time I won’t trip again and
throw it in my face.
Here’s a nas b ie
I found it in{the lib
I knew that she must have my. book,
she’s even marked her place.
Here’s a fine to-do
T put it up to you ©
What’s the good of | ol this work for
females of the
= Editor. s
?
S re iusseodsens
~~
}
H
+
~Fishér,-10-Rock,-or—left-in-the— |
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Man’s Needs Clarify
Human Personality
Frustration is Necéssary Factor
In Ordinary Psychological
Development
VARIOUS. ASPECTS CITED
Music Room, February 24.—The
‘study of human needs is the main
emphasis in the problem of human
personality, stated Mr. MacKinnon in
the sixth lecture’on the Nature of
Man. Personal traits are determined
and developed by the manner in which
the individual meets frustration of
the needs aroused in a given situation
or psychological field.
A need may be understood as a ten-
sion which excites activity directed
toward an end satisfaction, which,
when obtained, releases the terfsion.
Therefore, each need can be named
and classified by the end situation
which results in satisfaction. / There
_is, for example, the need for. nutri-
tion which manifests itself bya-desire
for food.
Each of these needs has a different
quantitative aspect; that is, they
vary in strength and for that reason
tend to arrange themselves in differ-
ent relationships. In a_ hierarchical
order, the strongest need holds a pre-)
dominating position and the less pow-
erful needs gather under it. Needs
may also fuse and become so related
that the same act will satisfy more,
than one desire of the individual who,
for instance, may gratify his. wish
for superiority and for object nurture
by forcing his ambition upon
child, Equilibration is the third in-
tegrating relationship in which har-
.mony,-diverse_needs.is established. A
‘member of the Nazi party may thus
establish himself as a superior indi-
vidual by thorough knowlédge . of
Fascist theoriese and yet satisfy his
need’ for submission by subordination
to par ty officials. ~
Perfect relationships do not always
exist, however, ard in disjunctivity
there is a lack of coordination be-
tween the psychological situation and
the end satisfaction. *As a result
there is merely an aggregation of
needs. without any harmonious con-
nection, The most familiar of ,the
disintegrating relationships of needs
is conflict. .The value of these last
lies in the light they throw on the dis-
tinction between the conscious person-
ality in which the individual is aware
of his needs and assumes responsi-
bility for them and the unconscious
personality which is just the opposite.
Moreover, in connection With this
distinction, conscious perception of the
environment and reaction to its must
also be considered. Therefore the psy-
his,
chologist “distinguishes between the!
situation, which, is the objective phy-
sical and social environment, and the
field, which is the situation as it ex-
ists for the individual in his percep-
tion.
These psychological fields have a
definite organization and are affected
by approaching the object of satisfac-
+ = ate ae —~—_l
in their structure by the person
needs. The individual reacts to a field
tion in the simplest way he can. If
something blocks or frustrates the |
course of gratification, this barrier
takes-on-a psychological-existence-and
the field is restructured to ¢ontain |
the restricting object. This is a
process of learning in which insight
plays. an essential. role.
In experiments_on the dynamics of
anger and other emotions, the psy-
chologist learned the influence of dis-
torted needs on the personality and |
the importance of a field obstructioh
for learning. For example, Pavlov in
order to bring about salivation in a
dog upon the sound of a bell, pre-
sented both the food and the bell. to
the dog when it was hungry. When
the need for nutfition was_ blocked,
the animal learned that the bell was
connected with food.
Restricting stimulus or “pinching”
is really necessary for psychological
development, because learning follows
upon ‘it.. Of. course, the .balance of
frustration and gratification experi- |
|
ence is important, but “great needs |
give rise to great images and throw
an added-light on the concept of psy-
chic unity.” From this point of view
the imagining of a god or gods may
be considered as the expression of a
need frustrated by the forces of man’s
environment.
You will find helpful hints in the
ads. Read them.
’3| Dean Favors Increase
_In Quota of Students
Continued from Page One
the reorganization of coming courses
so.-that...they . will _advance—more
smoothly. New fields will be made
possible for graduates. The plan for
coordination of. the sciences will be
more important at first for graduates
than undergraduates. We think of
the joint teachingsplan as beginning
with. the graduates, and the very ad-
vanced undergraduates, and then ‘later
for the other undergraduates.
Joint teaching is the direction . in
which education is generally moving.
It is more important in the researeh
sciences to have coordination than in
other fields. In the humanities
ordination is more purely a teaching
problem, and a realignment of the ma-
terial already at hand. In the sci-
ences it is vitally important that re-
co-
search move on a broader front. ~\
_This plan might eventually be truer
‘for social seiences than for the
humanities. As a matter of teaching
hand making” better—integration of. the |
| undergraduate course there is a move-
| ment everywhere to break down de-)
_| partmental divisions and to present
| wider khNowledge. It would be too bad
if the final examinations were too
closely limited. We should like to}
bring out the relations of fields to BAS
‘another. .
I am much in sympathy with the
workshop courses. Their eventual im-
portance depends, however, upon how
The science building will allow for }-
DELEGATES TO ATTEND |
MODEL LEAGUE FORUM
Common Room,
cepted an itvitation.to join the forum
of Model) League of Nations of college
on April 22, 23 and 24.. Each dele-
| gation will be assignéd’ to a .dgterent
country. Bryn Mawr has chosen Den-
mark. * A prize wifl be given to he
most convincing groups.
In conference, the discussions will
branch out from three definite topigs:
peaceful change in connection with the
League Covenant 19; improved trade
relations, and sanctions and collective
security under Article 15. The Bryn
Mawr delegates havé not yet been ap-
pointed.
~The Carnegie Endowment. for Inter-
national Peace has presented the In-
| ternational Relations Club with six
‘books. T hey are on the Club’s reserve
in the New Book Room.
“I believe that in a well-balanced
academic community, with proper ar-
rangements for social life among the
; students, the liberal element in educa-
tion is largely supplied indirectly.”
Harvard University’s President Con-
ant believes that special courses to
provide training for citizenship or to
;make liberal education available are
|unnecessary.— (ACP)
far art, archaeology and: music can
| work this types of courses into their -
'general plans.
|
Snakiie Camels,
you enjoy a sense of greater
ease while you’re eating, and afterwards too!
TEDIOUS STUDIES tend
to drag on the-nerves, often
penalizing digestion.
Camels help in two specific
ut
February 25 —The. :
International Relations Club has ‘ac-
students whie wwnr convene at Cornell:
*
“ ways: You geta “lift” in en-
ergy with a Camel. Again,
smoking ‘Camels with your
mealsand afterwards helpsdi-
gestion run along smoothly.
And Camels don’t get on
your nerves or tire your_
taste. Camels are mild!
WX THAT Fred McDaniel {below} says about Camels is
backed up 100% by baseball’s “Iron Man,” Lou Gehrig
—by Frank Buck, of “Bring ’Em Back Alive” fame— by
Eleanor Tennant, the outstanding woman tennis coach
of the U.S.—and by millions of other Camel smokers in
all walks.of life. Enjoy Camels at every meal. They speed
up the flow of digestive fluids. Increase alkalinity. Help
you enjoy food. Camels set you right! They’re the cigarette
for steady smoking. Light up a Camel and get a “lift.”
’
' BUSY SECRETARY. “I smoke
Camels—nothing else!” says Jose-
lyn Libby. “Camels put more fun
- into eating and smoking too. So
many girls feel the same way that
I do—so they smoke Camels.”
“AFTER RIDING HERD from sun-
up to sun-down,;*%he chuck-wagon
looks mighty good to me,” says Fred
McDaniel (above, also right}. “But I’m
sure I wouldn’t enjoy my ‘chuck’ half
as much without the pleasure I get
from smoking Camels with my meals
and afterwards. After a good meal
and Camels I feel plenty O.K. Camels
set me right! They’re thfoat-easy,
and they never get on. my nerves.”
Ids Tobacco C
* Copyright, 1937, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,, Winston-Salem, N.U. — Sivsessiinnnin nts aaa aaa aan Miron nae nnn eRe ates ea SS a ewe
COSTLIER
Lge) :7:Volole} i
MORE
RADIO’S
NEW SMASH HIT!
“Jack Oakie’s College”
Irrepressible Jack Oakie at his
best ... Also Benny Goodman’s
“Swing” Band, Hollywood come-
dians and singing stars—and special
college amateur talent! | Every
_ Tuesday —9:30 pm E. S. FP.
L---g:30 pm C: S.T.,-7:30 pm
M.S.T., 6:30 pm P. S,T.,
_WABC.- Columbia
cere are made: “front: finer,
Page Four '
THE, COLLEGE NEWS
CONTRIBUTIONS BY DISTRICTS OF ALUMNAE ASSN®
~ Quota Subscribed
District ¥ New England... ... .o0vyveevesu3++—--$75,000,00___. $81,118.30
ie ag en hr inne 800,000.00 780,164.69
~ Philadelphia District .
BuOtA a4 Kk 65. eee $300,000.00
abdieiean im) _ Subscribed sat =: 2. 7 2.2 9 hihedeihatetntel rm] $396,907.55. — sana ——
“New York District - .
QUA eres $500,000.00 :
mt iets cc eas s $383,257.14
I ie “SII eet rene PP Pree 15,000.00 17,082.73
*District IV, Moathannt see oe oss a vind os 5 ok 15,000.00 24,075.02
tDistriet V, Chieago and North Central....... 75,000.00. 78,821.96
ee Ae a eae 15,000:00- 9,488.30
Sipesteiet Vil; Far Wit... cece cece ccc cn eons 15,000.00 ~' 16,000.00 | .
agg ess is ek eh Eis iach 2,238.83
Reuning class gifts, special class gifts, miscel-
laneous gifts reported by the Treasurer
of the College...... ie ei 4 Vos 23,905.90 |.
$1,010,000.00 $1,032,895.73
.*Winner of the Prize of $1,000 awarded to the first district to complete its
quota.
+Winner of the Prize of $1,000 awarded to the second district to complete its
quota. ‘
{Winner of the Prize of $1, 000 awarded to the third district to complete its
quota.
FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY FUND MEMORIAL GIFTS
Marion Reilly Memorial Fund* for
Departments
(Raised by the class of 1901)
Quita Woodward Memorial Fund for the Library Wing
Amount Raised
Physics and Mathematics
Seas ees cc Owes Wikveees BeDO0000
106,098.85
ee)
(This fund includes the gift of $90,000 from Dr. and Mrs.
Woodward, an anonymous gift of $10,000, and all gifts
from the classes. of. 1932 and
designated.)
Betty Bigelow Memorial Gift for the
Library (in memory of Anna Powers)
Emily Noether- Memorial Fund
(This fund was raised by-a group
ee)
1934, unless otherwise
10,000.00
100.00
10,000.00
Library Wing.
ed
We
ee
headed by Dr. Florence
Sabin, of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
and sponsored by the most eminent mathematical sci-
entists in the country.)
Science Building:
Jane Brownell Room in Mathematic
Marjorie Jefferies Wagoner Memorial Fund for the Wagoner
Scientific Library
ee ee
(This fund includes all gifts ‘from the classes of 1918,
ee Be
s Department 10,000.00
ee
54,832.85
1925,- 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1980, 1931, 1933 and the
Undergraduate Quota, unless, otherwise designated.)
Elisabeth Hedges Blauvelt Memorial Room
(All gifts from the class of 1896,
nated, are included in this memorial.)
iene Strong Memorial Room
(All gifts from the class of 1898,
nated, are included in this memorial.)
Frances Bliss Tyson Memorial Room
* (All gifts from the class of 1922,
B06. 08s. OER 0.8.0 10 0-.0-0,-6-0--6
8,365.28
unless otherwise pn :
fy
ee |
8,056.00
unless otherwise desig- :
ee
6,758.00
unless other Wise desig- ° :
nated, are included in this -memorial.)
Dr. Alfred P. Hess Memorial Room
Myra Little Rosenau Memorial Fund for equipment or furniture
Adelaide Landon Memorial for research equipment
William Bashford Huff Memorial. :
Madge Miller Memorial
Ruth Emerson Fletcher Memorial
In memory of: ._
Gladys @handler
Marion Wetherill Abbot
Mary: Helen Ritchie........:.: ike
Charlotte Angus Scott.
Edith Van Kirk
ey
eee eee enee
ee |
eee eee eee eee eee
5,599.54
100.00
500.00
ee
¢
er ee or
20.00
1,817.00
ae
+ 04-8 64.4 .0:0' 6 00 0060 6 04 468 8 8
5.00
100.00
100.00
5.00
10.00
25.00
eee eee eee eee eee eee eee eeene
Ch ie ee ee eC ee ee ee rr er er Jee)
Ce |
a
ee
$247,753.58
LARGE GIFTS THROUGH FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY FUND
$100,000—Dr. and Mrs. George Woodward of. Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia,
$90,000 in memory of their
wm
daughter, Quita Woodward, a member
of the class of 1934, increased by ‘an anonymous gift of $10,000,
to be used for the wing of the library to be named in hey memory.
$ 50,000—Given by the late Ella Riegel of the class of 1889, in honor of the
‘late President Emeritus M.
1936, 1937, 1938 and 1939,
»
Carey Thomas.
$ 25,000—Raised by the class of 1901 in memory of the. late Mesias: Reilly,
a member of that class and former Dean of Bryn Mawr College.
$ 54,832—Raised by the class of 1918, the classes of 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928,
1929, 1930, 1931, 1933 and 1935 aad the undergraduate classes of
in memory of the late Dr. Marjorie
Jefferies Wagoner, former physician of the College.
“a $150, 000—From the Carnegie Corporation or éndowment.
v
the class of 1930.
$ 26,695—Given by Miss Fanny Travis
College of the class of 1902, to start an Institute of Social Re-
search, In honor of Professor Susan M. Kingsbury, retired 1936.
$ 10 ,000—Given by Dr. and Mrs. Henry B. Bigelow of Concord, Massachu-
setts, in memory of. their daughter, Betty Bigelow, a member of
ochran, graduate of Bryn Mawr
&
261.00 |
Whar, O Where?
A corner of the stacks in Taylor
with an assortment of pictures
belonging to the Art Department.
Incidentally this is the, abode of
those lost periodicals. Negi
Gifts Result of Inquiry
Into_Needs.of College
Slade _ Lists Enrichments
Affecting Entire College
Mrs.
(From the Alumnae Bulletin)
That the Fiftieth Anniversary Fund
passed the million dollar mark last
June was a cause for. real rejoicing.
Today the figure stands at $1,032,-
895.73 and we can now say exactly
how this is made up and for what
definite purposes it is to be used.
The wise provision of President
Park that all gifts made to the col-
lege should be included iin the Fifti-
eth Anniversary Fund, has been met
in kind by wise and generous giving.
The years of this Drive have been a
period of keen alumnae inquiry into
the specific needs of Bryn Mawr and
havé resulted in many.valuable gifts
| which have brought both unthought-of
and long-dreamed-of® benefits to the
College. What we lack of the $500,000
‘which we had hoped to raise for the
Science Building is more than made
up for by these gifts that have en-
riched the entire life of the college.
Gifts. that maintain professors or
-_| bring new- ones, that—put—new— books
on the library shelves, that bring aid
to students, that make possible proj-
ects such as the archaeological dig,
make us all conscious of continuous
serious academic tradition.
Now that we are approaching the
actual building of the Science: Build-
ing and of the Library Wing, it .is
imperative that the money on out-
standing pledges be paid in. Notices
are being sent to all those whose pay-
ments “are due by March 1. If pay-
ment is impossible when due, it would
be of the greatest help if‘a notation
of’ the. date” when payment can_ be
made would be made on the notice
and returned to the 'Fiftieth Anniver-
sary Office.+ Payments have come. in
extraordinarily well, but there is still
outstanding $69,705.15,
$58,801.15 is due on the Science Build-
ing aftd_ $10,904.00. is due on the Li-
oraiy Wi,
CAROLINE MCCORMICK SLADE,
National Chairman.
Choir, Glee Club Make Recording
Choir and Glee Club had the gratify-
ing experience of hearing their gwn
voices through the medium of a Presto
portable recording machine operated
by: Mr. Robert Littler. The-machine
makes instantaneous recordings of ex-
recording disc.
ads. Read them.
-
MISS LEONIE ADAMS
TO READ. OWN POETRY
Miss Leonie. Adams, who will give
a reading of her poetry in the. Dean-
_ ery on March 7, was graduated from
Barnard in 1922. While an. under-
__gradute her poem, April. Mortality,
was printed in- The Now Republic.
_|she consented to prepare her volume
of lyrics entitled Those Not Elect.
Now a member of the Bennington
College faculty, Miss Adams formerly
taught English at Sarah Lawrence
College and New York University. In
1924 she was an editor of the Poetry
Magazine, The Measure, and in 1928
was awarded a Guggenheim Fellow-
ship which enabled her to. study
abroad. _ ,
abroad. Her most recent publication
GREEN HILL FARMS
City Ses and Lancaster Avenue
A reminder that we would like
/ take care of your parents
and friends, whenever they
L. ELLSWORTH METCALF
si i High Faloon (1980).
growth, charted in accordance with a
of which|
_ Music Room, February 25.—The |
cellent quality using a special acetate |
You will find helpful hints in the |
Two Previous Building
Through Large Gifts and Endowments
First. Drive Conducted in 1900;
Second, in.1925,. Provided .
forGoodhart Hall . ~
~ “As. we prepare to begin the new
building -program‘’dfia@ consider the
opportunities which it will make
available, it~perhaps seems the most
-|momeritous undertaking “which the
college: has ever planned, Actually,
it is the third building scheme which
the eollege has financed. through
gifts and endowments, and however
important it may appear, it is no
more significant than the two pro-
jects. which preceded it.
The first drive to finance construc-
tion came in 1900, when the college
consisted of four buildings, . Taylor,
Merion and a small red brick gym-
nasium (the original halls), and Den-
bigh, built in 1889-90. . More build-
ings were absolutely necessary, and
after the completion of Pembroke in
1902 the situation grew desperate.
All of the founder’s endowment except
385,000 dollars had been spent, and
a contrattighting and. heating plant,
another dormitory and a library were
imperative. ° The halls had separate
furnaces and supplied. nothing: but
oil lamps to read by, while the li-
brary accommodations in Taylor were
so poor that students read on every
step of the staircases from. the first
to the third floor;
At this time of need Mr. John D.
Rockefeller, Sr., gave to the college
through his son a power plant for
heat, and light, and Rockefeller Hall,
on the condition that the alumnae
raise 250,000 dollars for a library.
In 1904 the drive for the library was
cs S
ASSOCIATION OF DEANS
DISCUSSES THE N. Y. A.
From February 17 to 20 Mrs. Man-
ning attended in New Orleans a con-
vention of the National Association
of Deans of Women and a conference
of the National Vocational Guidance
Association, an affiliated society. The
N. V. G. A. is aided by the Carnegie
Institute in publishing and investi-
gating vocational ‘guidance and vari-
ous professions... The outstanding
work accomplished by this latter. or-
ganization was of particular interest
because of its emphasis on how much
and and what methods should be em-
tion aid in their vocations.
In the conference’s discussion of
the N.Y. A. the problem considered
was how much guidance should be
given in high schools and colleges to
help. students find their proper field.
Guidance is thought of in a larger
sense than merely obtaining jobs. The
purpose is to’ give boys and girls ac-
curate and full information at. each
step of their progress.
There is, however, the danger “Of
depriving the individual of his initia-
tive through too much decision on the
part of the. advisor.
FASH
ployed in giving the youth of the na-
Schemes Financed
completed and the new buildings be-
gun.
Equipped at last with much-needed
additions, the college saw no more
building -until 1906 “when ‘the late
Mary Elizabeth Garrett, whose un-
Mawr in its early days made possible
its- continued existence, rebuilt and
furnished the Deanery and created
the Deanery garden.
4+For a period of nearly 20 years
after construction was syspended, as
no immediate need was felt for further
additions to the college. In 1925, how-
ever, a large sum of money was pré-
sented by Mr. Walter Goodhart for a
new building in memory of his wife,
for which the alumnae were to raise
$457,000. In that year a second great
drive was launched under the direction
of Mrs. Caroline McCormick Slade.
Its result was Marjorie Walter Good-
hart Hall, which contained a suitable
auditorium to replace the’ inadequate
assembly-room in Taylor, and housed
the Music Department, which was
made: possible at this time’ by an
endowment,
Although not a drive for actual. con-
struction, probably the most important
campaign in the history of the college
was that in 1920 for the increase of
salaries for professors. In this drive,
which was headed by Mrs. Caroline
McCormick Slade, $2,221,784 was
raised.
CINEMA .TO SHOW
CAMPUSES OF EAST
Dr. Walter Livingston Wright, Jr.,
President of the Istanbul American
Colleges, will speak in the Deanery
on Monday, March 8, at 5p. m. His
subject, American Campuses in the
Near East, will be illustrated by sae
ored motion pictures.
Dr. Wright, who is the brother-in-
law of Mrs. George Wright, part-time
instructor in French at Bryn Mawr,
has long been associated with the Near
East and is an authority on Turkish
affairs. His motion pictures will in-
clude shots not only of the Istanbul
American Colleges, which comprehend
Robert College for Men and the Istan-
bul Women’s College, but also of Ath-
ens College, the American University
and the International College at Bei-
rut, Syria, and the American College
of Sophia in Bulgaria.
Maids? Vespers Volunteers
The Bryn. Mawr League
Maids’ Committee would like
volunteers to conduct Maids’
Vespers on Sunday afternoons.
See E. Taft, 7-9 Pembroke East.
THE COMMUNITY KITCHEN
864. Lancaster Avenue
’ Bryn Mawr
Phone: “Bryn Mawr 860
Afternoon Tea Daily
Buffet Suppers by Appointment
ts
oe
int Fie.
comes to youl
@
EARLY SPRING -
IONS
DAYTIME « EVENING : SPORTS
. MARCH 8th, 9th
Monday and Tuesday:
at the - :
I / COLLEGE INN’
failing and devoted support of Bryn’: «
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five _.
Drive Stimulates
Benefits for New
And Old -Projects
Playwriting, Production Courses
Are.Direct Results; “Dig” >.
Indirectly Aided
SOCIAL ECONOMY HAS
‘ RESEARCH INSTITUTE
President Park’s provision that all
gifts made to the college Since the be-
. ginning of the Drive be included, in
the Drive fund has resulted in a wide
_ variety of _donations...which--answer
specific needs for extension and open
up entirely new fields to the college.
In addition the interests so stimulated
by the Drive have brought other gifts
which have eontributed to the needs
of the colldge on every side.
Aside fro
the science b
the \primary aims of
wing,\ other \ direct \results of the
Drive \ already instituted are the
return of © playwritin and. Mr.
Wyckoff’s still newer course in’ play
production \ Both Ws are ventures
in an entirely new ‘field, giving stu-
dents a working knotledge of drama-
.. tie technique ih writing, and \in ‘pro-
_ seal of the wife of the-Hittite king
—
fessional production such as direct-
ing, stage-managing, lighting, -
tume and scenic design. The,
for . both. Mr. .
Latham have been provided by
part of the Drive set apart\
faculty salaries. \ .
Less directly tne Bryn Mawr Dig
has benefited. With the aid of $8050
from the Drive the group has already
sailed for-its third year of excavation
at Tarsus. Miss Goldstein is again
director, and Maynard Riggs, ’35,
will be secretary: of the expedition.
The plan is to excavate thoroughly
the region where evidence of a Myce-
nean level was uncovered last year,
and to clear lower levels on the site.
The Mycenaen level was dated by a
Hattusil III who as ruler signed the
treaty of the battle of Kadesh. This
year’s excavation ‘closes a. three-year
agreement with Harvard and tHe
Archeological Institute of America
when theexpedition was first sent out.
From the amount
ment received from the Drive, about
$30,000, a Susan M. Kingsbury Re-
search Institute is developing. The
‘Institute already has a research as-
sistant, an-advanced graduate student
who spends most of her time in re-
Search and who receives $1000 a year.
Some of the money is to be used for a
research fellowship; some for a re-
search scholarship, some for a publi-
cation fund and the remainder for
current expenses.
Moré records, books and provision
for -the reader’s salary are the uses
to which the income from the fund of
$25,090.72 given by the Master School
of Music is to be. put. The income
from this: sum is about equal. to: the
amount which. the college has been
receiving yearly from the School.
Continuation of the colleg® policy
is the reducing of the outstanding
nt
Tips for Bermuda-bound
ig, ra '
So you’re coming to Bermuda! We
feel sure it will be everything you |
anticipate . particularly if you
come armed with our “What to do
in Bermuda” booklet ...a handy
guide to the Bermuda "you should
know. This same booklet also has
news of us ... our fine| English
fabrics... . our suits and topcoats
- our delicious, de-lovely sweat-
‘ers. And, what’s very new, ‘our
WATER-PROOF SOCKS... which-
should, we think, be in every. cam-
pus-bound. trunk. The booklet is.
yours for the writing to Room 811,
1270 Sixth bade thas New York.
$ +
THE
- English Sports Shop
A ee BERMUDA
7 ia
ilding and the Library’
\The fund for Dr.
\\
~Why a Library Wing?
a
rrr ner
w
Miss Sivindler and her honor class try to studij Greek vases with the
aid of Caesar.
In addition to the crowded paraphernalia seen here
there are three filing cases topped by a three foot vase just out of
sight on the right.
The camera résts:on a chest containing much of
_ the Archaeology Department’s valuable collection.
college debts, $8,250 towards the
Wyndham and $5,082.34 towards the
Goodhart debts both from funds from
the Drive.
Gifts which went to paying for talks
and entertainments held in the Dean-
ery’ have provided much of interest
and. enriched college life generally.
Wace lecture on
¢ ¢
ancient ivories was another gift.
The departments of Art, Economics
and--Geology--also eived _ special
grants, including $17,000 for books
for -the Archaeology Department.
That given to the Geology Department
is to be wsed for field work for the
graduates and will be used this sum-
mer. The Drive also financed ' last
a
Potential Library Wing Increases Space ae
For Crammed Art, Archaeology Quarters
Fine Collections, Including New
Oriental Acquisition, Will be
: QOn-Exhibition———"~
In this éra of over-crowding, whose
end is almost in sight, the case of the
Departments of Art and Arehaeology
merits. most. immediate attention.
The high hopes for the future in the
new wing of the Library serve only
to emphasize present misfortunes and
discomfort. The grouping of the tgvo
departments in reference has its basis
in -fact,. where undergraduate arch-
aeologists must frequent the Aft
Seminary and the advanced art his-
torians occupy the Archaeology Semi+
nary for hours at a time. Two pro-
fessors share an office which would be
crowded for one alone; slides are
scattered throughout various~offices,
because of the minute proportions of
the closet for slides. Valuable and
interesting ‘coHeetions.. of .. both -de-
partments are inaccessible.
The new wing of the Library will
offer an. increase in space to corres-
pond with the growing interests and
year’s Messiah production and_ pro-
vides for .a special Emmy Noether
Memorial Fund for the Mathematics
Department.
.to boast of a real Bryn Mawr
-maiterials of the Deny of Art
and Archaeology. The “will be prop-
‘erly equipped lecture. rooms, with ade-_
quate lighting and modern’ tanterns.
Each professor will have a more spa-
cious office, leaving their old quarters"
departments’ expansion, |
for other
There will be space for exhibiting the
fine collections which are now stored -
on the campus, and we shall be. able
Mu-
seum. An. Oriental collection has
come. to..Bryn- Mawr inthe-past year, a
our possessions in the way of Gréek
vases. and terra-cottas.are remark-
ablé. With such a nucleus open to
general view and study, other collec-
tions will undoubtedly find their way
here. oe nia’ iM
The present difficulty of, over-crowd-
ing.in the stacks of the Library will
be partially solved, or at least allevi-
ated, by the fact that in the new wing
there ‘willbe place for stacks of the
books belonging to the Art and Arch-
aeology Departments.
Meet your friends at the
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
(Next to Seville Theater-Bldg.):
The Rendezvous of the College Girls
Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes
Superior Soda Service
Music—Dancing for girls only
_oneamenetnis
Te
_
A
U.S. Senator Reynolds —
“says: “Luckies are considerate
of my throat”
“Two Southern traditions are oratory
—and good tobacco. Lucky Strike
shows me how to indulge.in both. For
this light smoke not only pleases my
taste but leaves my throat in condition.
Last fall in North Carolina—when I
made over 100 speeches—I visited the
Lucky Strike factory. I believe I dis-
covered, in the Lucky Strike ‘Toasting’
process, the secret of what makes this
cigarette so considerate of my throat.
I have been more than ever an advo-
cate of a light smoke since seeing the
extra care and expense devoted to
making Luckies easy on the throat.’
she a recent independent survey, an ovet-
whelming majority of lawyers, doctors, lecturers, .
scientists, etc., who said they smoked cigarettes, ex-
pressed their personal preference for a light smoke.
. Senator Reynolds’ statement verifies the wis-
dom of this preference and so do leading artists of
radio, stage, screen and opera, whose voices are_
their fortunes, and who. choose Luckies, a light
smoke. You, too, can have the throat protection
of Luckies—a light smoke, free of certain harsh
irritants removed by the exclusive process “It’s
Toasted”. Luckies are gentle on your throat.
~*~
f
>
A Light
a
Smoke
Tes Toasted”—Your Throat Protection.
“AGAINST IRRITATION—AGAIN ST COUGH
HON. ROB’T R. REYNOLDS
U.S. SENATOR FROM NORTH CAROLINA
THE FINEST TOBACCOS—
“THE CREAM OF THE CROP”
a
Copyright 1937, The American Tobacco Compaiy.
ag Oe
aa
vara be "the errant
ward again bearing a great gift.
- no one could see on any horizon such a
* Jarge gift ftom an individual donor or
_- funds whatever.
way for biology and physics.
rs
p ra S " ‘ é of Le 0 RNR BP oe epiphgas
wea
ra
THE COLLEGE NEWS
some MITE,
>
; — Scigics Building
- Cite Is Marked Out
Continued from Pare One
at best to passive waiting, Bryn Mawr
arenas - _ cour asvously, persis-
But hey: saw
also the corollary to this extraordinary
feat: The Alumnae A$Ssociation could
not for an ‘appreciable time come -for-
And
from any one of the foundationsgwhich
have concerned themselves with educa-
tion; The Carnegie» Foundation had
given génerous help? the General Edu-.
cation Board had replied to our re-
quests that their funds were allocated
to other forms of assistance in educa-
tion. In short, then, the; directors
found a situation in which beyond the
gifts set down on the lists of $344,000
toward a science building ang of $167,-
000 toward a library building, the col-
lege must help itself. What were our
exact needs; what in this emergency
ouY proposals to meet them? |
Exact Statement of Needs |
I. Higher academic salaries ana bet-
ter pension arrangements. In order
to make even relatively small in-
creases up and down the line, to put
Bryn Mawr more nearly in the class
of institutions in which. we like to
think we belong meant that our pres- |!
eht: yearly budget item for academic
salaries, $300,000, must be raised" by
about $60,000. A. corresponding in-
crease of principal was a fantastic
dream, but there was/anot aif way to
meet roblem. The Conlmittee of
Aluninae and Directors on the Future
re the College had in 1930 suggested
: the increase of the undergraduate
cares by 100 and eventually a rise
in tuition for all students from $500
to $600. (the present Vassar figure).
The° President and Dean had studied
this plan and approved it with \the
understanding that in addition to the
necessary residerice hall and the neces-
_sary additional class-rooms, laboratory
~and library space, the first charges
against the increased income should
be the salaries of additional teachers
anda proportional 4 increase in-scholar-
ship funds. The first step toward ade-
quate salaries then was a residence
hall; For it, however, there were -no
The - second step,
elass-room—and_ laboratoryspace,—de-
pended on’ the two new building's.
Science Accommodation Plans
II. Quarters for the four Dalton
sciences and the Department of Mathe-
matics, which are associated in the
joint plan for the teaching of the sci-
ences. . These could be. provided by
one of two plans:
A. A single, entirely new building,
the cost of which by a rough guess
would be $800,000, and the mainten-
ance of which (light, heat, power, re-
-pairs) would be the income on per-
haps $150,000 more; or,
B (1). A new building for two sci-
ences—chemistry because its continu-
ance in Dalton Hall is difficult and,
—almost—dangerous,
and geology be-
cause its new quarters are less expen-
sive than those for physics or biology.
.The architect’s rough figure in the
spring of,1936 for such a building was
‘$335,000 and was covered .by the
..amount made available to the college
by the alumnae gift of the drive.
‘The maintenance for-such a building
was, howéver,-not provided for and
would be the income on perhaps $100,-
~ 000; and
(2) the rebuilding almost entirely
of the interior of Dalton Hall to pro-
vide as nearly as possible in a parallel
A
rough guess at this cost was $100,000,
toward which the $25,000 of the be-
quest of Sophie Boucher, of the Class
of 1903, had always -been assigned.
Whether the plan of A or of B
was adopted, something ike ‘$50,000
would be needed for new equipment
for the four sciences.
-JII. Additional stack room for
many more books to meet the extreme
overcrowding of the present Library
space.and to provide for a future when
‘book buying should, we hope, be even |
‘ "¢more extensive than in the past.
Art, Archaeology Facilities
IV. Space and modern facilities for
~ the Departments*>f the History of Art
__and Archaeology, to triclude if pos-
a room or rooms in which the
sible
treasures of. the college, present and
to come, r
Ss il - accomplishmerit of Tl
101-4
‘and exhibited.
primarily that of Dr. and Mrs. George
Woodward in memory of ae Wood-
ward of ‘the Class of 1932; ‘dn
of Dr. and Mrs. Henry. B, Bigelow
in memory of Betty Bigelow, of the
Class of josp-teat of Ella Riegel of
the Gleass.of 1889,-and that of Quita
Woodward’s own class.
estimate of the architect, however, on
his first plans stood at something like
$100,000 beyond the total of these. fig-
ures. r '
For its maintenance, the income on,
$75, 000; nothing was available.
I have now put before you the horns
of our dilemma: in the seven years
since the report of the Committee in
college have. steadily intensified; on
the other hand,, at the present mo-
ment, .the sources on which we have
previously drawn seem in large part
closed. Oe
The Program Today —
‘On this dilemma the last. two Diree-
tors’ meetings (December 17 and Feb-
ruary 19) have focused, and between
the two a special committee composed
of Mr. Rhoads, Mr. White, Mr. Fran-
cis Stokes, Mrs. Slade and the Presi-~
dent has. been at work. | Individuals,
especially Mr. Rhoads and Mr. Stokes,
have spent. many additional hours on
various aspects of the- nb aadag At
the special -meeting
Committee repoyted” its Si and
its recommerfAtions, and they were
voted on and passed unanimously by
the’ Directors present. Where these
recommendations could be acted upon
they have been put into effect. They
are as follows:
I. Residence Hall
The Finance “Committee was em-
powered to invest from the present
uninvested college funds an amount
sufficient to acquire a residence hall
for 100 students. Investigations made
separately by several. members of
the Committee showed that the
cost .of the most. recent. dormitories
for women which had a_ general
likeness to the type Bryn Mawr would
need to build was from $3000 to $4600
per student. It was pointed out by
the Committee that the process of in-
s.|creasing the income of the college
through additional students and finally |.
by an increase in the. tuition fee for
all students was necessarily a slow
one. A year must necessarily ~inter-
vene-before a-dormitory could be avail-
able_and-students could be added only
at the rate of approximately twenty-
five-a_year. It was suggested that: it
might be wise to make temporary ar-
rangements in the neighborhood and
to add -twenty-five students to the
class entering in September, 1937, in
order that, the change in faculty sala-
riés and pensions might be advanced
ag ‘ year.
I. , Science Building
quarters and adequate apparatus for
the four departments and, because of
|the project for the joint teaching of
the sciences, providing them in a
single building was at the moment out
of the question because of the expense.
Nevertheless. the directors as they
investigated other plans were more
and more determined to work toward
this asa goal. They decided to give
up the remodeling of Dalton Hall on
the principle of “new wine in old bot-
tles” and to erect a building for two
departments—Chemistry and Geology
—to which later wings for the Biology
ments could be. added. :
They studied again last spring’s
figures and after long discussion voted
to ask the architect to do a difficult
but what they believed a_ possible
thing, namely, to plan a_- building
which would technically be completely
satisfactory to the scientists who were
to use it, with a dignified and well-
proportioned exterior, the whole, of
which would cost about $250, 000, ex-
cluding equipment. ..
Site on Upper Hockey Field
The site of the building--came next
into discussion. It was agreed that a
‘building, however good in itself if, it
juxtaposition to them. In the secotid
place, the directors -thust place this
on a space where the wings for the
othér two departments could-be added.
| This was hardly possible on -the: site
on Merion Avenue opposite. Dalton.
Hall which earlier had been consid-
ered, The two-unit “building placed
there would necessitate the tearing
down of Cartref and Dolgelly (with a
1d that:
“The Yrough |. °
week the.
nts ideal plan providing modern.
‘alumnae
and the Physics-Mathematics depart-
differed radically in style frorh:’ Pem-.
broke and Dalton, could not stand in
building for two science departments |
Revision. in Curricula.
Departments Who Will. Share New Building}
Planned. by Five
Bio Physics Course Planned;
yy a Correlator
, Based-on the recognition that corre-
lation between the sciences is becom-
1/ing inereasingly vital, a revision in
curricula is being planned by the five
departments who are to share the new
science ‘building. While fundamental
training will be preserved in the par-
1930 the ‘fundamental needs of thei cular ‘subjects, courses will be of-
fered in mathematics and the natural
sciences which will integrate work bor-
dering on two or more fields.
Besides advancing partieulat” sub-
jects this training will be designed to
present science as one subject’and so,
to more efficiently communicate the.
advances made in one of its aspects to
science as a _ whole.’ . Accordingly,
courses such as statistics may be of-
fered b t departments; an ele-
mentary course may be ‘provided in
mathematics emphasizing aspects rela-
tive to the physical sciences.
In addition to renovating such
courses as bio-chemistry, physiology
and experimental gology, the biology
iccaeians. plans
to
course in bio-physics. The chemistiy
sections in advanced courses such as
geo-chemistry and photo-chemistry, so
useful that it is rumored even some
professors may turn students in them.
Crystallography, geo-chemistry, geo-
physies and seismology may be intro-
duced by the geology department,
which is at present the only adequate
one-in southern Pennsylvania and is
used. in part by Haverford arid the
University of Pennsylvania, in’ col-
Jaboration with its colleagues.
The size of the college is advantage-
ous for an experiment of this kind.
Not only can expenses be ‘kept at a.
minimum, ‘but the departments are’
intimately connected’ “As a result of
this project the college has received
a grant of 150 thousand dollars from
the Carnegie .Foundation. “While the
suf is insufficient for our needs it is
representative of the interest which
is being concentrated. on the experi-
ment by science at large.
‘It is hoped‘ that at least two aca:
demic appointments will be made in
the sciences, possibly in border- line
fields.
of $2600); a building for four depart-
ments. would mean the destruction of
the Infirmary and would stand so close
to the Inn that it would be hardly
habitable. Meantime the atchitect
had proposed a site unconsidered be-
pfore which the Special Committee ap-
proved, namely, the upper‘kockey field,
This offered space for the building for
the foursdepartments and was marked
off from the campus and especially
from Radnor Hall by the large trees
bordering, the. field. On. the other
hand, the site had two recognized dis-
advantages which were discussed in
detail. First, until. the two new
wings could be added ‘two sciences
would be separated from the other two
by a considerable distance. The an-
swer to this was the hope eternally
welling in our breasts-that so~incon-
venient an arrangement would be cor-
rected by a sympathetic giver. The
second is that space available for ath-
letics might be forever lost. The an-
swer to this is harder. to find, but I
believe is not insoluble.
Chairman Directed to Proceed © *
The directors directed the Chair-
man of the Buildings and Grounds
Committee to proceed at once with the
plans for the erection of a science |:
building for the Chemistry and
Geology Departments on this site so
that it could be opened and ready for
use in September, 1938. Measure-
ments for the building have already
been staked out.
The directors agreed that the dif-
ference between the cost of the build-
ing and the $344,000 raised by the
for the science building
should be used‘for new equipment.
-The directors akso-agreed that while
the interior of Dalton would not be
completely rebuilt, yet ‘a sufficient
amount from the Sophie Boucher Fund
should be used to make Dalton for the
time. being a good working place for
the Departments of Biology and
Physics.
III. The Library
The directors agreed.that as soon
as possible the chairman of the Build-
ings and Grounds Committee should
proceed to a further investigation of
a possible reduction in cost of a Li-
brary wing from the architect’s orig-
inal guess, $400,000, and. should re-
port his findings to the Board of Di-
rectors. It was suggested that with
the money now in hand the basement,
which includes the stack room, and
the first and second stories should be
erected, leaving a third and.a fourth
floor to be built when funds are avail-
able.
way, to build and the hope was ex-
pressed that a sum sufficient for ‘the
whole building might be available
when we started.
Use of Gift Summed ie...
To sum up the use of the gifts to,
the college -made;:in the Alumnae
Drive: the: gift of $344,000 made by
,
the alumnae for the'science building
will be used ‘to erect at once a two-
department science’ building _ And. to
provide part or all: of the “$50, 000
necessary for new equipment for thé
four sciences. ‘The gift of $167,000
for the library will be used to build
loss ‘of annual incomé to the college
at once ‘stack room and‘ two floors or,
we
This is in the end an expensive |:
-
if the necessary remainder can be ob-
tained, the whole building. The $150,-
000 received in the drive from the
Carnegie Corporation. for endowment
will be used as the endowment of the
plan for the joint teaching of the sci-
ences drawn up by Dr.
the heads of the othér science depart=
ments. This, I trust, can be begun in
the fall of 1938. The residence hall
will be used as an investment for col-
lege funds at the moment uninvested,
which after due provision for mainten-
ance will produce income for the col-
lege. Finally, at the special meeting
of the board at which these decisions
were voted; announcement was made
that the college as residubry legatee
of Miss ‘Ella Riegel was likely to ve-
ceive a very considerable sum to be
used for endowment. I intend to ask
the directors of the college .that this
may be used as a maintenance endow-
ment for the two buildings.
This brings us to the astonishing
conclusion that with the exception that
the Library building fund falls short
of the necessary total, the whole pro-
gram might be entered upon without
borrowing’ money or encroaching on
the present college budget. :
IV. New College Appointment
The fourth recommendation of the
coinmittee will be, I think, a new one
to the students and faculty, but it need
only be stated to have you understand
its close relation to all other plans
for Bryn Mawr’s future. A year ago,
before the close of the Alumnae Drive,
one of the Alumnae. Directors pro-
posed as a result of her experience in
the drive that the Board. of Direc-
tors make an official appointment of
someone to represent the college in at-
tempts to make its work known and
to interest its old and its potential
friends in its plans and: needs. Ap-
pointments similar to this have been
made in other colleges and universi-
ties and have proved their value. This
was again discussed as it affected
Bryn Mawr. To carry out her work
such a representative must have two
qualifications. First, she must be an
officer of the college, thus thoroughly
acquainted with its actual work and
the life on the campus, knewing at
first hand the needs of the college and
the new projects proposed. And sec-
ond, she must have a position of honor
and**fesponsibility in the eyes of
the community outside: Bryn Mawr
‘such as would be given by member-
ship in the Board of, Direptire of the
college.
Position is Defined = +
During the recent drivé it was ap-
parent that the Bryn Mawr of the mo-
ment would need always some specific
way to bring its work directly to the
attention- not only of those’ alumnae
|who could not revisit the changing
scene often enough to “know the new
order, but also to friends in the vast
community” which the college serves
directly or vicariouslv. Furthermore.
it was obvious that the President her-
self could not spare the time. to make
all of the yaluable personal contacts,
that she desires to make in behalf of,
the college. Wéith the expanding aca-
demie, social and financial. programs
implicit i in the — ~~ of the
.introduce a:
Tennent and |
| port to you.
college, Bryn Mawr has ‘urgent need
is a large one, the actual task will
be difficult, its .success cannot be
gauged for several years and the
fruits for the first years may be small.
for an’ official emissary. The ,vision-
The. task calls_not-only-upen-the-tact———-
and enthusiasm of the: appointee, but
on the active and enthusiastic sup-
port of each individual alumna.
Mrs. Collins Elected. .
It was voted by the Board of Di-
‘rectors ,at its special’ meeting that
Caroline Chadwick-Collins be elected
a director-at-large of the college. At
the President’s request she will con-
tinue to .supervise the work on the
publications of the college and to be
in charge of the speakers and enter-
tainment in Goodhart Hall, but begin-
ning ‘next fall she will be relieved of
all her other duties in order to serve
‘the college in this new official capacity.
ij a
Alumnae Confidence . ’
With: this fourth action of the di-
rectors.my report to you for the mo-
ment closes. You will remember my
warning that. this program for Bryn’
Mawr was somewhat difficult to pre-
sent. You see. now the~© interde-
pendence of its parts, the attempt. to
make them all move forward at once
and contribute to, not block,
other. You see the careful adjust-
ment of funds to each project, giving
it enough to live oh but not allowing
it to encroach on the allowance of the
rest or on the steady ‘annual financial
plans of the college. And. you see
where and how these two necessities
have brought. us to compromise,
néver I believe too disheartening.
Patticipation Notable
The part of the alumnae in this is
conspicuous. The plan itself is
frankly that present by the 1931 Joint
Committee,. of which Louise F. Mac-
lay was chairman and_= accepted by
the Alumnae Association.» Its ad-
justments are not differences and dis-
agreements from the earlier form,
each~
but a recognition of the conditions six
years later. The alumnae directors
and trustees, have taken part in all
discussions in the two general meet-
ings and on the Special Committee.
We alumnae on the Board are con-
vineed and united. ~ And finally, what
do we believe ourselves to be accom-
plishing for the Bryn Mawr of 1937
and beyond? Not all we hoped once,
nor all we could wish, but a great
deal.
Four Specific‘ Points
Let me set down four specific
points. (1) These plans carried out
give Bryn Mawr its great major needs
and break down in a single year its
most dangerous restrictions. It will
advance, not chained but free. (2)
They are, insofar as they can be made
so, elastic. They will be developed.
They can be changed as they move
forward in the coming years. At
certain points definite large sums will
advance them by a great step, but
small sums will always further-them.
1940 and 1945 will, have much to
teach us and the method of procedure
adopted now leaves us free to listen.
(3) They add nothing to the debt of
the college. They make no demands
on the current budget of each year,
that easy mark for all the casual
planners, whether president or di-
rector, faculty or aluminae. (4) They
set you and me free at once to think
of other assistances to the college.
The current is rolling-in the main
channel. ‘That assured, we can afford
to think -of other channels—to speak
spiritually, of added courses, research
funds, other projects like the. Tarsus
Dig; to speak materially, of Wynd-
ham, the art workshop, new lighting
for the halls.
Toward the Future
I have come, to the end of my re-_
At the close of the cele-
bration of the Fiftieth Anniversary
we looked affectionately and. grate-
fully to the past and then turned to
the next fifty years. They dawn
clearly I believe today, not uncon-
nected with the first fifty, built..on .”
them rather, possible only because of
our great gift of gratitude for them,
but possible, too, because. that gift
was also a gift of confidence in the
fifty years to come.
My final sentence I should Lik’ a
let the college speak itself, using the
words of Helen Chapin’s translation
from the Chinese:
“I rejoice in the’ birth of this DOW...
year;
I do not thank the sprinks of the past.
‘I know that the way of my heart- is.
toward the sutare”
Who would be a map of Seas
4
OTE
TY COLLAGE NEWS
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soaeerema met MT
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op
Page Seven
=
New Science Building
“Fills Need for Room
“To. Give Adequate Uibedioty
‘Space for Students, Faculty.
Experimentation
DALTON OVERCROWDED
Anyone who has taken any sctence
at Bryn -Mawr,
Dalton, realizes how inadequate this
old building is for the present néeds
of the four science . departments.
There is no room to use mueh equip-
ment alreddy available, no place to
put any’ new apparatus. The answer
_ to this need for more room is the new
science building to-be finished, the ad-
ministration hopes, in the fall of 1938.
This will house the Departments of
Chemistry and Geology, each “Wccupy-
ing one wing of a three-story building.
Although only’ these two departments
~ will immediately be moved to the new
building, the architect’s plans provide
for additional wings to be added later
for the Biology and Physics Depart-
ments.
The need for more space is to be
seen most strikingly in the Geology
Department, which now oceupies the
fourth floor of Dalton. Geology has
this year more students than any
other science except biology, and by
far the least space for them to work
in.
of which are adequate for their “pres-
ent use. The library is altogether too
small to hold all the i and: peri-
odicals used in the department. There
is no possible place to display the fine
rock and mineral collection, worth
more than $20,000, which the depart-
ment owns. Specimens have’ been
crammed into every possible shelf and
or done any work in
corner, but the limit of available space.
has finally been reached and new addi-
tions now occupy a place on thé floor
in one of the offices. °
‘The new building will give adequate
laboratory space and facilities for the
separate fields in the department. The
combined lecture réom and laboratory
for the first-year course will occupy
. the ground floor on the geology side.
-The mineralogy blow-pipe room and
analytical laboratory. will be located
on the next floor, and the third story
will be given over to paleantology and
stratigraphy, with a small room for
__ petrology and microscopic mineralogy.
In addition, each of the geology fac-
ulty will have a-small office and labor-
atory. As a member of the depart-
ment explained, the expansion will not
only open up new fields in the subject,
but will give fresh opportunity to stu-
dents who have carried on their work
in spite of the present bad conditions.
The Chemistry Department has suf-
fered as much as. geology from lack
of space, though their quarters at first
glance seem larger and more adequate.
The first and second year students now
use the same laboratory, but their
schedules must: be so arranged. that
they are not working at the same time,
for the continual vibrations caused by
the first year up ‘would ruin the
delicate experiments of the major stu-
‘dents. Students taking advanced
physical chemistry use...the same
laboratory as those doing organic
work and necessarily get in each
other’s' way. Sharing the laboratory
means that delicate electrical appara-
tus, which would be ruined by the acid
fumes from other experiments, has
to be taken down and put away each
night. .For the graduate students: in
physical chemistry the only available.
research room is Mr. Crenshaw’s own
laboratory; and it is expected that a
more complete course will be made
possible by the imcreased_ space.
The new building plan will remedy
these present evils. It provides sep-
arate laboratory ‘space for first art
. Second year students, allowing a much
flexible afternoon schedule.
Many small research rooms, suitable
.for two stvdents, will prevent crowd-
ing and will be in even closer’ rela-
tion ‘to geology, and the. additional
room. will make possible, their faculty
hopes, research into the field of geo-
chemistry. _
-“Moving chemistry and geology to
the new building will not only enable
them: to expand, but will help biology | |]
Although there
and physics as well.
is not as yet enough money to move
them, tliey will gain added space va-
~ cated by the othér two sciences. How
_ they divide it is not yet determined,
but in any case each will have about
twice as much room as at present,
It is contained in five rooms, none}
Site of Science Building’
a
The Vink Hockey Field today with the stakes and str Saad showing
the preliminary survey of the grounds.
eer’
“Nucleus” Has New Club Room
The ‘Nucleus Camera Club gave a
tea for ‘the members of the faculty
who were interested in photography,
on Monday, March 1, in their new
clubroom, in Taylor Hall basement.
This room, formerly used for Maids’
Vespers, was given to the club: in a
| dilapidated state, full of dust, cock-
roaches and spiders. In a short time,
the—-club members (i: e. the active
ones) working at top speed with mop,
broom and paint brushes, have trans-
formed it into a pleasant clubroom.
a cL
In the present situation the first
year students doing laboratory work
must be either so crowded together
that they find it hard to work effi-
ciently, or are scattered about the en-
tire first floor. The graduate physics
students do much of their. research
work in one small room. The moving
of the two departments will. relieve
this crowding, and the remaining de-
partments are in favor of the step,
even though, it means a. temporary
separation of the sciences.
Dalton, even’ when given over to
their sole use, will never be satisfac-
tor, Some equipment cannot be used
in the present building; the valuable
and irreplaceable Rowland grating
made by Professor Rowland himself
and in possession of ‘the Physics De-
partment, cannot be set up advantage-
ously except in a.sub-basement: room
especially designed for its use, such
as is planned “for, tHe future physics
‘wing. While they. will be thankful
for more room, the Departments of
Biology and Physics are not satisfied
and look forward to ‘the. time. when
they can also move into new quarters.
If results are satisfactory, interna-
tional broadeasts\of Harvard Univer-
sity’s classroonf ‘lectures, begun on
February 17, will continue during the
coming academic years.
RICHARD ST CKTON’S
BRYN MAWR«....
for
GIFTS and GADGETS
= - Abercrombre g Fitch fitter will — in attendance
TRANSFORMED MERION
GIVES FIRST DANCE
February 27.—With hazy smoking
rooms turned into airy sitting rooms,
and the showcase and front hall be-
decked with flowers, Merion Hall en-
tered the annals of social columns as
the hostess of a successful dance.
One-fifteen a. arrived all -:too
quickly, and with it (the pangs of ach-
m.
ing feet.
In the receiving line, which arrived
after the dance had begun, were Miss
M. E. Frothingham, Richard Foster,
Mr. and Mrs, Woodrow, Mr.-and Mrs.
Dryden, Mrs. Keator and Mrs. How-
son. The music was well supplied by
Walter Howson’s orchestra, and, al-
though rather blatant because of bad
acoustics, it seemed to *please ‘the
dancers. Ly
The crowning blow to the evening
was a sensational fainting spell in the
dizzy throes of White Heat. It was
the next to the last dance and seemed
an unfitting -end to the otherwise
hilarious evening.
In spite of the unexpected climax,
the hall hopes to have another dance
in the spring, if only to give the
smoking. room an airing.
Gliianthgs
“Vacations are a bad-thing.. They
make students forget most, of. what
they know.” Professor Warner
Brown, chairman of the Psychology
Department of the University of Cali-
fornia, contradicts the recent findings
of two Oregon’ State College psy-
chologists.— (ACP)
MEET base FRIENDS
The Bryn Mawr Callese Tea Room
for a
SOCIAL CHAT .AND RELAXATION
Hours of Service: 7.30 A..M.—7.30 P. M.
‘Breakfast © Lunch
For Special Parties, Call Bryn Mawr 386
|COUNCIL IS ENTHUSED}
Alumna jis ‘Surprised
By Financial Wizardry
Raising of Money for Wyndham
Felt by Many tobe Firs
Responsibility’ ~s
(Especially contributed by Eliza-
beth Smith Wilson, 1915, Councillor
from District IV)
The first great surprise and at
the same tinie the great disappoitit-
ment of the Alumnae Council in
Washington was the fact that Presi-
dent’ Park was unable to attend the
dinner held on February 26 at the
Sulgrave Club. However, the speech
which she had prepared. was read to
us by Mr€& Slade. No other alumna
could have done this more’ appropri-
ately or more eloquently.
In the second place the alumnae
were astounded, and this time happily,
at the financial wizardry with which
Miss Park, and the Trustees and Di-
rectors of the college had found a
way, apparently to get much more
than a million. dollars worth of build-
ings, equipment and endowment out
of the Million Dollar Maximum of
1,032,895.75 dollars. This wizardry,
it should be added, is of a’ sound,
Quaker character. :
Some of us are perculiarly inter-
ested in the science building, others
in the new wing of the library, while
still others delight in hearing of the
enlarged activities of the History of
Art Department... The thought of a
new dormitory is, however, in many
ways the most extraordinary prospect
to an alumna who contemplates the
picture of the Bryn Mawr that is to
be. We proudly take-for granted the
fact that the college is always de-
veloping in intangible ways. But that
Bryn Mawr should expand physically
to the extent of building a new dormi-
tory and adding one hundred under-
graduates’ changes, as it were, the
whole face of the college. The site of
this new building, its general plan
my
You will want to knit a sweater .
to match your tajlored skirt.
We have a full selection of
domestic and. imported yarns.
Our directions insure
satisfaction
ALICIA MARSHALL, INC.
42 E. Lancaster Avenue
Ardmore, Pa.
Tea
ABERCROMBIE & FITCH .CO. |
NEW YORK
Will Hold An Exhibit Of The:
_ At the shop of
30 BRYN MAWR rida
pie
v
retirement of that debt.
aa megemnnnplacieninananmaay 2
and appearance, its one hundred new
oie are matters of great in-
-erest to us all. >
When all ‘these new buildings eva:
been completed, to what further needs
| of the college will the alumnae—turn
Of course there will
still be two wings to add to the sci- .
to the
Library, not to mention that most
important: matter, the need for) ever
increasing endowment. ‘The alumnae
and friends of ;the college need not -
dread. the approach of ‘that moment
when Bryn -Mawr will cease to need
their support.
their attention?
ence building, two (') floors
At the moment, however, one of the
first- responsibilities’ of. the “alumnae
appears to be the raising of the ‘money
for the debt on Wyndham. In all
probability, for a number of years
hereafter, a certain, proportion of the
Alumnae Fund will go toward the
When it. is
paid-and the college is relieved of its
interest payments, we can then go on
to other “foolish and foolhardy” ex-
ploits, as Mrs. Slade once termed the
drive. for” the Millioi™ Dollar Mini-
mum.
Meanwhile we are more than de-
lighted to know of the appointment
by the college of Mrs. Caroline Chad-
wick-Collins as- Director-at-large.
Mrs. Collins’ years of devoted service
to the college will, we all know, be
equalled by her great usefulness in
what is-now to be a wider field. The
alumnae have pledged -her their
hearty cooperation in interpreting
Bryn Mawr College to the public and
in winning the college new friends...
SAILING FROM NEW
MAR. 6 - 13'- 20
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a MAR. 2 CRUISE
APR. 3-10-17
SHIP YOUR HOTEL THROUGHOUT
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Docking’ at St. Georges
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A
Wednesday and Thursday, March Oth, 10th ry uth
y
a
“After -
EOL IIT
Page Eight — mig es
wntroe yeasanat Wyatt
eibLiaain alge FOIT ED Ye om rerorwey 90
bhawlont EL Des are manaest
‘
RE Ck eee tS Qe sees
és
Alumnae Enthusiasm Gives
New Feeling to Students
Continued from Page One
demic work of ‘the college and ex-
plained jthe new final examinations.
Mrs. Manning’s speech. the
meeting broke up arid adjourned to the
-White—House,-where~Mrs; Roosevelt
entertained the members of the Coun-
cil and the ips, ie at
. tea.
rict Coun-
Each) dis-
Friday morning the Di
cillors gave their reports.
trict now has from one to eleven
Most of the |°;
scholars in Bryn Mawr.
reports were encouraging and showed
the enormous amount of work done
for the college in the line of raising
money and finding valuable students.
Reports on Scholarship Loans
Friday afternoon and ‘Saturday
morning we heard thé reports from
the chairman of the standing com-
mittees. Miss Mary Gardiner, 1918,
gave the report on the Scholarship and
Loan Fund Committee. | Miss Gar-
diner expressed the desire of the com-
mittee for a publicity booklet which |
should be more stimulating than the
College: Calendar. Mrs. Collins said
that such a booklet was now in prep-
aration.
Miss Gardiner said that of. the 400
odd students’ in the *undergraduate
school; 101 receive =financial aid in
addition to the nine recipients:of spe-
cial prizes. Although this is the same
number who received help last year,
the total amount received is four thou-
sand dollars less than last year.
individual scholarships derive their
means from the investment of endowed
funds, some of which paid more than
their quota and others less. Thé com-
mittee hopes to be able to guarantee
three five hundred dollar freshman
scholarships in the future without re-
ducing. the amount of any other
scholarship or altering the conditions
of any gift. .
Miss Gardiner reported that the
Loan Fund is in excellent condition
and is lending to eleven students at
present. The committee adopted a.
plan whereby no loans are made to
The:
freshmen and the amount loaned each
year is now limited to two hundred
dollars, so that no student can gradu-
ate from college with a debt of more
than six hundied dollars... The record
of repayment of these loans has been
remarkably good. The committee is
particularly proud. that “no really
good student has had to.leaye»Bryn-
Mawr because of financial need:”
Junior Year Discussed
Louise B. Dillingham, 1916, in her
report from the Academic Committee,
said that it is investigating the value
of undergraduates spending ‘their
junior year away from Bryn Mawr
in some college or university in this
country. In a discsusion on the for-
mation of an Alumnae College, which
would give alumnae a chance to do
serious work in various fields, bring
It was definitely voted to have the
moré social. Alumnae Weekend again
next fall, A -vote was taken on the
advisability of having’ an Alumnae
College next year, but most of the
members felt that the Alumnae Week-
end should be more firmly established
as an annual event before any further
gathering of alumnae was attempted.
The climax of the meeting came Fri-
day night at a banquet given at the
Sulgrave Club: by the members of the
Washington Bryn Mawr Club. After
two introductory speeches Mrs. Man-
ning announced that Miss Park could
not come to the dinner; but before
she could speak the twenty-five mem-
bers of the Alumnae Council and the
hundred and one. memberS of the
Washington Club rose’ to applaud
Mrs. Manning and to show their ap-
preciation of the work she has done
to keep the college alive and up to date
in an era of rapid changes in educa-
tion.
Miss Park’s Speech Read
As Mrs. Slade rose to read Miss
Park’s speech an expectant hush
fell upon the*entire room. _The en-
thusiasm with which the alumnae
greeted her news was shown on every
face. That salaries and pensions have
long been insufficient has been evident
to every Bryn Mawr alumna. That
All over the country, you hear more:
2 people mention the refreshing mild-
them in closer. touch with the college. t
Vatbity Dali Mount
- Second Team Game More Evenly: Matched !
Guicsdohin, February 27. ast ora
rather rough playing’ marked ~-Bryn
-Mawr’s defeat of-the-Mount St. Jos-
eph_ varsity with, a decisive score of
1-14, Two players. left.the. -game for-
excessive fouling. The Bryn Mawr
forwards produced some nicé passing
which bewildered their opponents, but
otherwise: the game was disappoint-
ing.
The second team game was more
even, Bryn Mawr coming out ahead by
the: close ‘score of. 14-12, but it was
equally messy. In the end of the last
quarter Mount St. Joseph _ rooters
cheered wildly as their team rallied for
a-moment, almost tying the score, but
forwards shot two baskets ‘in quick
succession, making their victory cer-
tain.
Bryn Maw: Mt..St. Joseph
WEIUNO?. sv ss f. ....Trachtenberg
moagiand......:. i re eee Reardon
1G, NOTTIS. «sve e's Doses McGinnis
y subsided again when Bryn Mawr
St. — 31-14;
Jackson........, Coe a Vices eed Coyne
MEOeRO «+; .:ee ao eta et - Quinn
BO if Becca «++» Cotter
Substitutions: Bryn Mawr: Wilder
for Hoagland: “Mt. St. Joseph: Dyer
for Trachtenberg, Regli for McGinnis,
Trachtenberg for Regli, Krummer for
Coyne. \
Goals: Bryn Mawr: Whitmer (4),
Hoagland (5), Norris (9). Mt. St.
Joseph: McGinnis (7), se
(2), Dyer (4).
Bryn Mawr II ‘Mt. St. Joseph tI
Bridgman ienes : ee ee rer Regli
Us ers ves ss Tea apes ke Mayer
Wilder. . bar MEV eae Marnel
T Merrer, is Coo Walkie
0 MATUNG 605% i Obie aes Krummer
S. Evans... OO a deuce Reynolds
Goals: brn Mawr Bridgman’ (1)}' on
Gill (4), Wildey (2). Mt. St. Jos-
eph: Regli 3), Mayer (3):
Referees: Brown and Tashjin.
Substitutions: Mt: St. Joseph: Car-
lin for Marnel.
ground will actually be broken in
June for the new science building was
‘the announcement for. which every
one has been waiting for many years.
With the news of the new Library
wing, the alumnae felt that at last
the ultimate goal of the Drive was in
sight. Miss Park’s fourth announce-
ment that Mrs. Chadwick Collirf$ has
been appointed Director-at-large of
the college met .with a rousing ap-
plause. As we rose at the end of the
banquet to sing Thou Gracious Inspi-
ration a picture of the college came to
our minds and we saw how much
greater would be the fruits of its la-
bors after the completion of the plans
formulated by President Park.
Report of Treasurer
Saturday morning, Margaret KE.
Brusster, 1903, gave her report as
Treasurer of the Alumnae Association.
The total income of the association
is derived from the dues of the mem-
bers’ advertisement in the Alumnae
Bulletin, interest on stocks and bonds,
____——
ness and the pleasing tasteand aroma
of Chesterfield cigarettes.
_ humming right along..
You hear somebody com-
pliment Chesterfields at a
party.
grocer tells you it’s a darn
good cigarette. Or you see.{
a group of men of a street
corner, most of ’em smok-
ing Chesterfields.
Another time, the
a eer they
have what smokers like,
Chesterfields are
and from the Alumnae Fund, supple-
mented by miscellaneous gifts. Vir-
ginia Atmore, 1928, Chairman of the
Finance Committee, gave her report,
but nothing definite was decided. In
speaking of the help and guidance
which Miss Park gives this commit-
tee, Miss Atmore expressed the feel-
ing of the entire Council when she
said, “After all, Miss Park is Bryn
Mawy.”
Mrs. Slade paid a moving tribute to
‘Mrs. Collins on the occasion of her
new appointment and. expressed the
gratitude of the college and the Alum-
nae Association for the work she has
done with such great success. In an-
swer, Mrs. Collins expressed her com-
bined feeling of ‘‘pride and terror’ at
SR cceceaimniciel et aaa al alee a
McINTYRE’S DINING
ROOM AND GRILL
23-27 E. Lancaster Ave., Ardmore
facing her new job. She said that she
realized there was a difficult task be-
to complete.
Expenses of the Drive
As-National Chairman of the Fif-
tieth Anniversary Fund, Caroline. Mc-
Cormick Slade, 1896, then gave her
gratifying=report.~
was satisfied with the plans of the
science buildings as they now stand.
In reporting on the expenses: of’ the
Drive, Mrs, Slade said that théy came’
to less than two per cent of the total
sum collected. Mrs. Wilson, the Dis-
trict Councillor “from ~ Cincinnati,
pointed out that it. was one of that
city’s proudest boasts that they ‘were
able to keep the expensés of their Com-
munity Chest Drives down to two per
cent of the sum collected. When one
stopped to consider that the Fiftieth
nniversary, Fund was collected all
over the couhtry and not within the
limits of one city, these low expenses
seem even mare remarkable. —
It was feeling of regret on
the part of every Council member that
with the end of “Mrs. Slade’s* report
the meeting came to a close. The past
few days have been among the most
exciting: in the history of Bryn Mawr
College.. Every Councillor looked to
the future.for the college’s growth
under the guidance-of the woman who
has made this possible. The Alumnae
Council has shown the large part
which the alumnae play in the life of
the college and how far-reaching are
the effects of every change on the
campus. ‘
NLT AOE
| ad
Tweed Suits
$12.50
All Pastel Colors
Kitty McLean”
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
‘
ae
thie itt S
fore her which would take many years °
She stated” that ~~
‘she believed that the science faculty
Teves ee
.
ra a i
ESOT ELTN ATE 8 RS NRT AEAPEY II MATRON:
College news, March 2, 1937
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1937-03-02
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 23, No. 16
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-vol23-no16