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—law-states-that-although two-may—be+
_ staff of six, in digging the first
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THE COLLEG E
aS
”
VOL... XXV, -No..6
\
‘BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA,, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1938
yt,
»
Copyright. TR
BRYN MAWR sedan 1938
USTEES OF PRICE 10 CENTS ;
College Council ’
Discusses Group
Insurance Plan
a
Audit of Undergraduate
Organizations’ Books
Proposed
METHODS OF RAISING
MONEY SUGGESTED
College Inn, November 9.—The sec-
ond College Council meeting of the
year was held last Wednesday at the
College Inn. The main topics under
discussion were: group insurance for
students, auditing of the books of un-
dergraduate ,
raising ‘and the college movie.
An insurance company has offered
a group policy to the. college at the
cost of 5 dollars per person, which
would cover accident or illness for a
organizations, money
year. whether the student is in college
or not. The plan has been effectively
used in the past by members of the
Delaware Group. -It _was suggested
that the insurance be optional and
that it be referred to parents rather
than to ‘the students themselves.
There was general agreement that the
idea of group insurance was gooa.
' The account books of campus or-
ganizations were formerly | officially
audited at the,end of each year.: If
such a system/were resumed, treasur-
ers could pasp on their books in an
organized anf tderstandable form.
Mr. Hurst cduld simplify it by in-
structing the treasurers in methods of
auditing. If organizations make
their budgets public, as the Bryn
Mawr League has done, it will be of
general interest. to the college.
Continued on Page Four
Mr. Fenwick to Broadcast
Mr. Fenwick will speak over
the radio program Town Hall on
the Air, on Thursday night, No-
vember 17.
On November 11, Mr. Fenwick
was one of four speakers at. the
Brearley School. Nine prepara-
tory schools-were-assembled and
the topic chosen was “Czechoslo- ,
vakia: Was there justificatio
for demanding her sderifices and
will they be a permanent con-
tribution to a just peace in
Europe?” Mr, Fenwick was
asked to prepare this subject
from the point. of view of a
“convinced believer in collective
securities.” _ The The fgur speakers
on the Panel were followed by
open discussion from the floor in
which the 400 or more girls pres-
ent in the audience were invited
to take part.
Saal
played
Salzburg Trapp Choir
Will Seog 3 in Goodhart
Program Will Include Classic,
Folk Music; Block-Flutes
To be Played =§=s yg,
% ®
On Monday, 28, the
Trapp family, known as the “Salz-
November
burg Trapp Choir”
Goodhart. This entertainment prom-
ises to be unique, for not only does
this talented family sing classic mu-
sic and folk songs, but gives the
only public performance of . music
on “Block-Flutes.” These
flutes provided the most popular house
and church music from the . fifteenth
through seventeenth centuries; they
are constructed on the same principle
as the organ, ‘and sound somewhat
like it when played.
The whole atmosphere created by|
the casualness, yet’ general excellence
of the choir’s music, resembles that
of musical salons of Bach’s time.
The Trapp Choir,’ composed solely -of
the members of one family, have
* earned the praises of the severest
critics in Europe. They are renowned
for the trueness of their pitch (it is
given them just once at the beginning
of each number), and their diction is
good in several languages, including
English.
The third part of the program con-
sists. of a selection of Austrian and
Bavarian folk-songs from. the .collec-
tion which the Trapps have been mak-
ing since 1900, and which includes sev-
eral types of yodeling. In addition
to enthusiastic outside reviews the
Trapp Choir is highly recommended
by Mr. Alwyne.
Mr. Fenwick Appointed
To Attend Conference
Cites Talk of Fellow-Delegate About
Fascist Menace i
Mr. Charles G. Fenwick, of the de-
partment of political economy, has
been asked again to be a delegate to
a conference of American states. He
will leave for Lima the~day after
Thanksgiving, not to return until
January. In 1936 he attended the In-
ter-American Conference for the
Maintenance of Peace, an “extraordi-
nary” meeting which took: place be-
tween these International Conferences
of American States, usually scheduled
regularly every five years.
The aim of these conferences is to
promote political, economic and_cul-
Continuea on Page Five
Conferences
Paul Green, who is lecturing
on the American. Theatre to-
night, will talk with under-
graduate conference groups in
the May Day Room in Goodhart
on Thursday and Friday at 4
p. m.
a a c3
aie:
Bryn
Mawr Archaeological “Dig” at Tarsus
Finds Traces of Culture of Bronze Age
To the. unarchaeological Bryn
Mawrter, the Tarsus “dig” is remote
and unconnected: with college life, but
to Bryn Mawr it is one of the most
important items on its list of mar-
ginal undertakings. Started in 1935
by Miss Hétty Goldman, ’03, it has
become ‘increasingly interesting as the
digging has proceeded through six
levels of culture to the Bronze Age of
the Hittites.
_ Miss--Goldman_ is “the only woman
member of the Princeton Institute of
»Advanced Study. She made a~-pre-
liminary reconnaissance of the land
around Tarsus in 1934, and chose two
mounds for excavation. A Turkish
reserved, only one may be excavated
at a time. Miss Goldman and her|
mound, found six levels: Turkish
graves, Islamic houses, Roman re-
mains, Greek remains, the Iron Age,
from about 3000 B. C.. md Gold-
‘sandstone molds for bronze chisels
man had also expected to find a
Mycenean stronghold, but the Hittites
were so strong that they had kept the
Myceneans out.
The object of the excavation was
to find this prehistoric Hittite. mound,
not. evidences. of Hellenistic culture,
which may be seen all over the ‘town.
The basins in the Turkish baths, for
instance, are*Hellenistic column capi-
tals, worm away by’ years of flowing
water. The most interesting Hittite
find was a crystal statuette’ ‘of a man,
now in the museum at Istanbyl. Others
are a pair of heavy, red-gold, pre-
Hittite earrings, a gold pendant
shaped in the form of twisted leaves,
and axes, and the tools themselves.
For the-mdst part, however, the dig- |.
ging produces broken pottery which is
carefully mended and put into the
room which is. used for a museum.
_ There are 100 workmen: Turks,
Arabs and Kurds, rough mountain
Continued on Page Six .
will perform gy .
+DD—through HH. For the college
at
THE SALZBURG TRAPP CHOIR
Squash, Badminton
Courts Are Planned
Donations Have Been Received
From Fathers; Large Gifts
Badly Needed
Anne J.
739, is now conferring with
Chadwick-Collins on plans for
A committee Headed by
Clark,
Mrs.
building squash and badminton courts.
They also hope to include a recrea-
tion and tea which. will be
planned, owned, and run by the stu-
dents. A. J. Clark emphasized par-
ticularly the fact that the whole pro-
ject is intended to provide under-
graduates with an amusement place of
It is not to be connected
room
their own.
with the department, of physical edu-
cation.
“Students would .then'-have a place
to entertain guests on weekends, play
squash and badminton, and have tea.”
The hockey, basketball, swimming and
tennis varsities also need a room -of
this type-in which to entertain visit-
‘ng teams and serve them lunch or tea
after the matches. :
A. J. Clark reported that during
the past few years. letters have been
sent_to_fathers—of every—-undergradu-
ate asking for’ small donations with
the hope that all‘or part of the squash
courts could be built in their name.
Two thousand dollars have been re-
ceived from them, to which the Ath-
letic. Association Nias added another
thousand. It is estimated that 17
thousand dollars more will be needed
which the committee hopes to receive
in several large gifts. They urge that
all students suggest the names of pos-
-+sible donors to a member of the com-
mittee, which consists of: A. J. Clark,
89; Barbara Auchincloss, 40; Con-
stance Ligon, ’89; Edith E. Lee, ’41;
Margaret Macgrath, 42. They are
‘dixious” to receive any suggestions on
plans or finances.
Kreisler to ‘Present.
Benefit Performance
On Thursday, December first, Fritz
Kreisler will give a violin recital in
Goodhart Hall. The recital will be
for the benefit of the Tarsus “dig,”
which needs :25 thousand dollars to
cover its expefises for the year. The
maximum profit made if all seats in
Goodhart are sold-out will: be 600
dollars. - Prices for. seats. have. -been
purpastly~ kept low so ‘thaw students |}
will be able to go.
' Prices start at three dollars and 8&
cents for rows A through Z, three
CC, and two dollars and 85 cents for
‘| litical problems.
| ierserceme >
dollars and 35 cents for AA through |.
College Money .Drive
Is Long Term Scheme
Five-Year:Plan of 1929 Covers
All Recent Developments
At Bryn Mawr
Money-raising at Bryn Mawr, far
from being done in a haphazard fash-
ion, is part of a long-term scheme
which was definitely organized in 1929.
At that time, a committee was formed
to draw up a plan for the ftture de-
velopment of the college under a five-
year program. The cominittee was
headed by Mrs. Alfred B. MacKay,
and included Mrs. F. Lois Slade, Mrs.
Thomas Streeter, Mrs. James Chad-
wick-Collins, Mrs. Rustin McIntosh,
Mrs. Everett N. Case, Mrs. Edmund
8. Wilson and Miss Florence Lexow.
Before 1929, money was. raised by
the’ alumnae according to the wants
of the college. Having raised 2,000,-
000°dollars in 1920 to increase faculty
salaries, they. realized that thei#*mext
objective must combine three specific
needs. The first was a_ students’
building; to finance this project they
had started the tradition of Big May
Day in 1912 and intended to use th«
profits of all subsequent May Days
to this end.
The second) was an auditorium.
The immediate need for such a build-
ing was, brought home to the college in
1924,*when stringent fire laws were
passed restricting the use of the old
Continued on Page Six
MISS WISKEMANN
TO TALK ON NAZIS
Miss Elizabeth Wiskemann, of
Newnhan College, Cambridge -Univer-
sity, will give a lecture on The Nazis
in Central Europe in the Music Room
of Goodhart on December first at
four-thirty. The lecture will deal
in particular with the Nazis in Czecho-
slovakia. $
Besides being a lecturer, at Newn-
han College, in Wiskemann is as-
sociated, under the direction of Pro-
fessor Arnold Toynbee, with The
Royal Institute of International Af-
fairs which produces the most schol-
arly interpreters of modern po-
She has spent much
time gathering material in Czecho-
slovakia, Poland and Hungary, and
has supplied informatién to Runci-
man during the recent crisis. In July,
1938, she published one of the best
existing studies of present. problems
‘The Czechs and Germans.
> = rt
“No More’ Regular”
“The Athletic Association re-
grets to announce that: due to.
higher prices and lack of outside
-help it ig unable to sponsor the |
foy,an unauthorized strike,.an
Miss Perkins,
Miss Bondfield
Speak on Labor
J “i of Ruslana !
And Workers Urged
For Stability
RECENT LEGISLATION
IS BRIEFLY OUTLINED.
Goodhart,
auditorium crowded with outsiders as
November 10.—In an
well as students, the Honorable Fran-
ces Perkins, Secretary of Labor in the
United States, and the Right Honor-
able Margaret Bondfield, former Min-
ister of Labor in England, spoke. on
the Relation of Government to Organ-
ized Labor. Although each presented
the point of view of her own country,
principle expressed
was the same: ‘stabjifty of jobs and
incomes cannot™be expected unless
there is mutual cooperdtion between
the worker and employer. =
Miss Bondfield kept this principle
constantly before her in describing
briefly the background of the English
labor movement, in pointing out the
present political importance of the La-
bor Party (as an alternative to the
Conservative policy and as an organ
through which citizens can speak)
and in explaining the recent legisla-
tion in behalf of labor.
Miss Perkins, besides stressing the
importance of balance between the
worker and the employer, explained
the differences in*the development and
the relationships of organized labor
here and _ in- England. She pointed
out the movement during the last 30
years toward minimum legislation for
labor and the realization of the need
of a central institution to make our
state_laws uniform.
Because of the recent increase of
American social legislation, Miss Bond="
field believes the history of the Eng-
lish Labor movement should be of par-
ticular interest to us. In her brief
summary of this history, Miss Bond-
field) mentions, as the first positive
legislation in favor of labor, the Trade
Union Acts of 1876. About this-time ~
the Trade Union ‘Congress, consisting
of both employers’ and_ workers’
unions, was founded. Not until 1889
did the unionization of the unskilled
laborer begin, resulting in an organ
ization .resembling the C. I. O., and
arising because of the great exploita-
tion of this class, which not only
affected the wages of the laborers
themselves, but also those of the
skilled workers. The craft unions,
through the Trade Union Congress,
continued to work very closely with
this C. I. O. organization.
In 1906,.after one union had suf-
fered_.a_suit_of 23. thousand A diate ae
wen
Continued on Page Three
the fundament
COLLEGE CALENDAR
Friday, November 17.—A. S.
U. meeting. .Common Room,
7.30.
Monday, November: 21.—Sec-
’ ond. Anna Howard Shaw Lecture
by. Judge Florence Allen.
Goodhart, 8.20.
Tuesday; November 22.—Cur-
rent Events, Mr. Fenwick. Com-
mon Room, 7.30.
Wednesday, November 23.—
_ Thanksgiving vacation begine,
12°45. ° : ti ¢ :
“Monday, November 28--
Thanksgiving” vacation ends,’ 9.
a. m. Salzburg Trapp Choir.
Goodhart, 8.30. .
Wednesday, November 30.—
_ Dr. Salmony will speak. Dean-—|
a
only, the first two rows of the balcony
will be two dollars_and the next three
rows one dollar and 50 cents. To
students only, 30 one dollar tickets for
sold in advance; on condition that
these students are really unable to
afford to buy seats.
a : r pune 3 a ; i
ae ‘é = 4 Sierahermrrvnnsnnten hs
Seon : ie ae se toa gies vat.
ding room in the baltony will be|.
weekly skating hour this year.
The Philadelphia Skating Club -
is, however, very glad .to have
the Bryn Mawr students skate |
during their open hours. Tick-
ets for this are quite -reason-
able. See A. J. Clark, German .
House, for further information.
ery, 8.30.
Thursday, November 1.—Eliz-
abeth Wiskemann will give the
‘Mallory Whiting Webster Lec--
ture on National Socialism in
Central Europe. Music Room,
4.30. Fritz Kreisler to give vio-
lin recital. Goodhart, 8.30.
“ foreibly ‘by the extraordinary allegiance of the alumnae.
a ag
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
—
THE COLLEGE NEWS
‘(Founded in 1914)
Christmas and Easter Holidzys, an;
of Bryn Mawr College at the ~
Mawr College.
Published weekly during the College Year (excepting eating Thanksgiving,
.during examination weeks) jn the interest
Magu re Building,
Cd
Wayne, Pa., and Bryn
Editor- in-Chief.
: The College News is fully protected by copyright.
it maybe reprinted either wholly or in. part.without written permission of the
Nothing that appears in
- News Editor
ANNE LOUISE AXON, ’40
Betty LEE BELT, ’41
Doris DANA, ’41
ELIZABETH Dopce, ’41
SUSIE INGALLS, 741.
OLIviA KAHN, 741
<
N
e
' BARBARA Avoumotese 40
~
Business Manager
CAROLYN SHINE, ’39
Nancy: BusuH, ’40
RutTH Ler, ’41
Peccy Squiss, 41
. ; Editorial Board
. Editor-in-Chief
Mary R. MEIGs, 39
Ass’t News Editor
EMILY CHENEY, 40
Editors”
y SrioussaT, ’40
* Photographer
Doris. TURNER, ’39
Sp orts Gorrespondents
VIRGINIA PETERSON
Business Board
4 Graduate Correspondent
Assistants
Subscription Board
Manager
ROZANNE PETERS,
é
Copy Editor
‘MARGARET MACG. OTIs, 73.
~
ELLEN. MATTESON, 40
RUTH McGovern, 41,
JANE NICHOLS, ’40°
ELIZABETH Pops, ’40
VIRGINIA SHERWOOD, ‘41
t
\
_
Prccy Lou JAFFER, 41
Advertising Manager
DOROTHY AUERBACH, ’40
~
LILLIAN: SEIDLER, .’40
NANCY SIoussatT, ’40
"40 , '
BETTY WILSON, ’40
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
MAILING PRICE, $3.00
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
Freedom for Thought
In spite of our advice about taking examinations for pleasure and
measuring the results against a personal criterion, we are still dissatis-
fied with a system that allows for so
little mental expansion.
the value of examinations, but only in so far as they do not exceed
their purpose, which4s to correlate a mass of information so as to be
able to write intelligently when one is questioned on it.
An examina-
tion also helps us to know better both what we do and do not know,
and unless we are completely vapid, we tend to think about the ques-
tions afterwards and decide how we should have answered them. °
Too often, however, students read over their notes until they are
well memorized, reel them out systematically with a few direct quota-
tions and are rewarded by a commendabl
In other words? evén our answers to “good”
edge of subject matter.
mark for thorough knowl-
questions usually show that the professor has done most of the thinking.
It seems to be assumed that in an academic college knowledge is
more important than originality, but as far as permanent value is con-
cerned, we think that factual knowledge ought to underlie the power
of thought and discussion. We know how hard it is to prod_a class
into discussion, but the result for the class is that the whole meaning
of study changes and it becomes
memory.
a matter of thought.-rather than
The only alternative to an oral discussion is a written paper, and
we think that papers or open-book tests should be substituted for
quizzes as often as possible.
After all, the seniors, if they are lucky,
have no midsemesters, no midyears or finals, and. rely on discussions,
-papers_and honors reports, and comprehensives for their years’ marks.
Essentially, it is an adult system which should have been started
sooner.
To remedy the situation, we ¢an only suggest what would have
helped us: prepared class discussion in all courses, more papers and
fewer quizzes, and perhaps indépendent work something like honors
in the junior year.
a He. ‘ Divided
Noo
We Fall
Wher we review the past history of the college, we are ae
Since 1920
they have raised no less than 3,750,000 dollars and have been respon-
sible for financing nearly every phase of Bryn Mawr’s growth.
Evi-
dently this feeling of loyalty grows proportionately with the years;
we-as undergraduates
the alumnae must have k
lo not. think of making a ace facritoes as
foné'to provide for collegé ne :
Perhaps our unwillingness is due to #ur calisita ses of | ‘college |
ye °F
Spirit,” that good old-fashioned quality that used. to unite undergradu-
ates in the name of the college, regardless of whether as individuals
.' rewarded by nothing but a con¥non pride in Bryn Mawr.
eer eal
Fairbanks, Jr.
they would be benefited or not.
Tt is this spirit, or something like
it, which makes the alumnae give endlessly as a group when they are
It would
be better for us and for Bryn Mawr if we, like them, could occasionally
forget the: individuality we are so fond of mere Bam remember
our more important undergraduate unity.
Be Poa a
Aileen: The Young. Pasa to heart a com-
edy with Janet Gayiior and Doug
o
‘Arcadia: Marie Antoinette, histori-
eal drama with Norma Shearer, Rob-
gp ait “The cas ‘Waltz, rent
; Strauss musical with Fernand Gravet
cand
cle The Gladiators, comedy with
Tn Philadelphia oan
Keith’s: Suez, drama with Tyrone
Power, Annabella and Loretta Young.
News: Dark Angel, reviva> of this
triangle romance with Merle Oberon,
Herbert Marshall and Fredric March.
Stanley: Men With Wings, air
drama with Fred Pia Bar
" Stanton: Girls’ School, with Ann
Shirley, Nan Grey and Ralph Bel-
lamy.
Studio: Grand Tnston, with Eric
vén Stroheim and Jean Gabin con-
| tinues.
We admit|
‘Dungeon, Don Juan, John Donne;. do
re Pee ek: Siew Fak Fs
llwares END|
DON JUAN
(Canto XVII continued)
“Age cannot wither eb nor custom
stale
My infinite variety. Not so,”
Said Juan sadly. “Wty, the humble
snail
Is Yar more infinite than I, though
slow.” |
(Dites-moi, mes vieux, do you feel
wan and pale
When J uan comes upon you, yes or
no?
[f yes, to every-reader in the college,
I
ender a humble and abject apology.)
Juan was musing on his last rebuff
And wondering if he really was a’
hero.
Byron had brought him through all
kinds of tough
Adventures_with the nonchalance of
Nero.
“T“must reform,” he said.
enough.
I am a ‘Thinker, not a éaballen.
Henceforth I’ll follow,-not my feeble
whimsy,
But in the sootateps of Lord Peter
Wimsey.”
_ “Enough’s
“I -can’t- acquire a. parrot profile.”
Ju(a)n
_ Was rather proud of looking like
Lord B.
He’d just* been reading Busman’s
Honeymun,
His favorite romantic mystery.
(You know it, where they’re always
quoting Donne.)
“Not faint Canaries,’ said Don
Juan. He
Stopped and a sudden thought oc-
curred. - “My name
And Donne’s reversed are practically
the same.”
“John Donne, Don Juan, sometimes
John, indeed.”
Juan surveyed his convalescent
luncheon. <
Food from the Inn — had. always
atrophied
His appetite; this was no time for,
munchin’ .
Too green green peas. Juan decided
he’d
Received an omen. “I must quit
this dungeon.
I quibble?
I hear the voice of
Sybil.”
the Cumaean
a
He fled them down the labyrinthine
ways,
Out of the window, up the road to
Pem.
He lefthis suitcase and his safety
raz-
Or at the inf. “I’ll borrow one
from Lem,”
He panted, running through the morn-
‘ ing haze,
Breathless even from such an
apothegm.
And with the vigor of Popeye the
Sailor
Dashed up the Senior Steps and into
Taylor.
(To be continued)
MISS GRANT GIVES
Ethel Grant, hockey, tennis and
basketball coach and instructress at
Bryn Mawr, has recently. given a lec-
ture and demonstration on refereeing.
She addressed a group of twelve stu-
dents who are attempting to get local
umpiring ratings at Wilson College,
Chambersberg, Pa. In order to get
their national rating, they must first
qualify locally. Miss Grant refereed
a hockey game for the students to
demonstrate her lecture. These girls
will further their study by umpiring.
fér their own interclass games. ’
+. =
Stone.
Erlanger:, Brother Rat, comedy of
life at a military institute.
Forrest: Shadow and Substance,
ir—~Gir--Cedric Hardwicke, deli
Locust St.: Golden Boy, Clifford
Odets’ drama with Frances. Farmer.
Walnut: One Third of a Nation,
Federal Theatre presentation. !
___ Suburban Movies —
Seville: Tonight, I Am the Law,
with Edward G. Robinson. Thursday,
age (ON REFRRF PINGS
Haydon and Sara Allgood aoekioaia
| Scholarships _ Open |
To German Refugees
(Specially contributed “by Jean
Morrill, ’39.)
At atime when attention is sharply
fornyed| on the persecution of Liberal,
Jewish and Catholic minorities in Ger-
many, and when’ every liberal feels
keenly the weight of his impotence,
an opportunity to be of immediate and
effective service has come to Bryn
Mawr.
New decrees have barred all Jewish
students from German universities.
Those already in this country or in
England are unable to continue their
work for a degree because of lack of
funds. In this situation a college like
Bryn Mawr has a unique function, one
not shared by any other relief group.
It alone can provide the training
without which adjustments to a
changed future cannot be made.
Because of a coincidence of circum-
stances, it is possible for Bryn Mawr
to make a significant contribution at
the time when it is most needed.
There is room in the college this year
for two additional students. The Board
of Directors has offered to grant free
tuition. Living expenses only are
needed to bring two German refugee
students to the college for one year
from the date of entrance.
The following have consented to
serve on a joint committee of faculty
and students to work toward this end:
Continuea@ on rage Five
PUBLIC OPINION
To the Editor of The College News:
Your article on Lantern Night in
the current issue is instructive, de-
lightful, and just, especially the criti-
cism.at the end.
There is one other change that
mifht well be made, but of course re-
version to older days is not popular.
Not for the world would I go back
to the giving of lanterns after the
Sophomore play, but it seems to me
that in between those antediluvian
days and the present, the Sophomore
music used to be heard coming ove1
the campus, perhaps from Pembroke
or even only from Taylor, but the
singing starting in the distance and
coming steadily nearer added an in-
describably lovely touch. If the tem-
po were increased it would not be too
hard on the singers nor would the pro-
cession seem so long. Surely several
directing lanterns could be used along
the way to prevent too great aberra-
tion in the beat. With classes increas-
ing in size something must be done
to keep from dragging out the effect,
and making it too dirgelike.
Is it wrong to wish we might see
the impressive affair? Perhaps the
date was set to Hénefit the Alumnae
Weekend, however, which did not coin-
cide with the full moon whose rays
give the crowning touch of perfect
illumination to a charming occasion.
Signed, ;
Fe : 1897,”
To the Editor of the News:
What you quoted as a complete re-
| view of my book, Reality, by Professor
Northrop, of Yale, was in fact a par-
tial summary of it with which he had
nothing to do and which the pub-
lishers printed on the dust jacket.
eat, Northrop did, was to comment
on the book for the benefit of pros-
pective readers. Those comments also
appeared on the jacket, which per-
haps accounts for ‘your confusing his
remarks with those'of the publishers.
: (Signed) PAuL WEIss. |
To the Editor.
In .the artiéle on the Industrial
Group. meeting of November first, I
would like to correct ‘two items. First,
in connection with the beginning of the
Bryn .Mawr Summer School—it was
started by- Miss: Thomas; Dr. Kings-
bury and Miss Hilda W. Smith who
was at that time Dean of the college.
Secondly, thé: ame. of, the summer
school student from. ‘Denmark who
spoke at the meeting is Miss Sophie
Fricke. .
+ —_~(Signed) MartTHa VAN HOESEN.
BOOK REVIEW
‘Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier,
Doubleday Doran — $2.75
woes
Daphne du Maurier’s new book is
rather difficult to classify. Its central
episode is the discovery of a murder,
but it is in no sense a detective story.
Its plot is’a succession of rages, mys-
teries, sinister influences, suicide,
blackmail, and finally fire, but it man-
ages to avoid. melodrama.: It is domi-
nated from beginning to end by a
dead woman, yet it is not a ghost
story. Indeed, the only book which
it even remotely resembles in form is
Daphne du Maurier’s own Jamaica
Inn.
Compared to Rebecca, however, Ja-.
maica Inn fades, into a mere prelimi-
nary sketch. Hts tricks of suspense
seem’ obvious, its horror laid on a
little too thickly.“ In Rebecca, on the
_jother hand,. the individual incidents
are quite normal, completely ordinary.
It is the reader himself who feels,
but is not told, their terrifying sig-
nificance, their strange, hidden possi-
bilities of ugliness and evil. There
are no outrageously repulsive scenes,
as in Jamaica Inn: no wreckers loot-
ing bodies in the sea, no albino
preachers riding like birds on grey
horses. Its symbols of wickedness are
a little formal garden with a satyr
and a slim woman sitting on the edge
of a table swinging her foot in a
striped sandal.
Yet: in spite of this doateaint or
perhaps because of it, the horror of
Rebecca is infinitely greater than that
of Jamaica Inn, just as its characters
are much more terrible because it is
possible to realize that they are hu-
man beings. Mrs. Danvers, the house-
keeper, with her skeleton hands and
skull-like head, her infatuation and
malevolence, is one of the most ter-
rifying creations of recent fiction.
But Mrs. Danvers is no abstract
monstrosity. Her motives are per-
fectly understandable, her warped,
half-mad jealousy and hatred of her «
master’s second wife entirely human..
The same brilliant understanding
and insight is’ found in the drawing
of the more sympathetic characters.
The heroine of a mystery story is no-
toriously a stock figure, but the young
Mrs. de Winter, who is also the nar-
rator, is the most finely conceived
person in the entire book. She is
frankly not a clever girl, nor a self-
confident one: she is awkward,
ashamed of her clothes, afraid of her,
servants, and hag-ridden by her in-
feriority complex. Much of her suff-
ering, she admits herself, was unneces-
sary, the result of diffidence and hy-
persensitivity; but certainly, if ever
a woman had an excuse for both, it
was she. She married Maxim de
Winter _in Monte Carlo, and returned
with him to his manor-house of
.Manderley, only to find it still com-
pletely dominated by the personality
of her husband’s first wife, Rebecca.
Rebecca was everything that she is
not: beautiful, eager, poised, dashing.
The servants and the neighborhood all
worshipped her, and the second Mrs.
de Winter was generally resented, as
an intruder. Worst of all, she felt
that her husband no longer cared for
her, that he was brooding,*constantly
and strangely, over the memory of
Rebecca. It was not until Rebecca’s
boat-was-recovered from the bay and
Rebecca’s, body found : the cabin,
she realized exactly what that
thoes al ae ee be pre
She relates all this simply and ob-
jectively, writirig down her impres-
sions of scenes and. people in series
of tiny, vivid details. The sentences
are annoyingly choppy and verbless,
and except in the first chapter, there
are none of the long, cadenced de-
scriptions that marked Jamaica Inn.
The jerkiness of the style is irritating,
but probably calculated. It gives the
narrative’ a kind of swiftness and .
urgency, andthe very lack of ‘any
beauty or distinction sets the mind
free to realize the full horror. and
dramatic power of the plot. |
. E. M. P.
ye
for six days, Hold That Co-ed, with .
Hoch with Bing Crosby, Fred Mac-
Murray and Ellen Drew. Sunday,
Monday ‘and Tuesday, Too Hot to
Handle starring Clark Gable, Myrna
Loy.
Suburban? Wednesday “and Thurs-
day, Atmy Girl, with Madge Evans
and Preston Foster. Starts ee
‘ ,
Dent 3 sig a Pee eam i
“ORIN TLR REINER carneneN
John Barrymore, Joan Davis and
Marjorie Weaver, ‘
Wayne: Wednesday and Thursday,
Algiers starring Hedy LaMarr and |
Charles Boyer. Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, Hold That Co-ed, with John.
Barrymore, Joan Davis, Marjorie _
You Sinners, with Bing Crosby, Fred
si
ee
meen se Plime Pe
? Map
‘Weaver. Monday and Tuesday, Sing —
conned mt MER
_ Says Munitions Embargo Would
wheat, but not munitions, to the Span-
Se ee a
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Bos Page Three
Rose Terlin Speaks
On Peace -Measures
-Stop Japanese Aggression
In- China
Goodhart Hall, November 11.—
Speaking at the Armistice Day chapel,
Miss’ Rose Terlin outlined. several
courses of. action’ for peace which
Americans can take now. She em-
phasized the need to stop present
aggressions. This can be done, she
believes, by imposing a munitions em-
bargo on Japan,> by resisting Nazi
influence in South America and by
sending food to Chinese students.
The United States has a strategic
position as the necessary supplier for
the aggressor nations; moreover, its
people, unlike those of many Europea.i
countries, need not be silent but can
bring pressure to bear on the. State
Department to follow a constructive
policy for peace. Miss Terlin urged
that peace organizations send mes-
sages of support when the State De-
partment is considering a move of
which they approve.
An embargo on war supplies to
Japan was first advocated by Miss
Terlin, who stated that 54 per cent
of Japan’s munitioris come from the
United Stateg On the other hand,
support should be provided for starv-
ing Chinese students, “who will be
badly needed in the great reconstruc-
tion of China which must follow the
war.” Miss Terlin also pressed for
shipment of medicines and surplus
ish Loyalists.
“The complete lack of realism in
the American view of Nazi ideology”
was next criticized by Miss T€rlin.
The German extremists really believe
democracy is decadent and that Nazis
must bring a new civilization to the
world. They are now trying to spread
this idea in South America, since raw
materials from this continent are
necessary to any German expansion.
—
Miss Perkins and
_, Miss Bondfield S peak|
Continued from Page One
passed “which made it illegal to sue
unions in.court. Another advance was
| made in-1913 when the unions. estab-
lished the right to extract levies frqm
their members for political purposes.
Out of the disorganization of the
next. 12 years. came 4a_ greatly
strengthened labor party. In 1926,
however§ there occurred a_ general
strike in sympathy with the miners
which aroused legislation unfavorable
to labor. In” this legislation Miss
Bondfield pointed out two clauses par-
ticularly unsatisfactory. One gives
the government power to declare a
sympathetic strike illegal if designed
to coerce the government. The second
and more important clause provides
that the Civil Service employees may
not join any union but that of Gov-
ernment workers and cannot join the
Trade Union Congress.
Kh Miss Bondfield then explained the
cooperation of the Trade Unions and
the Employment Unions with the
Government’s Department of Labor.
The Labor Exchanges also form a
much closer relatiori between employ-
ers and workers. Miss Bondfield con-
Miss Terlin- advised peace organiza-
tions to urge firm support of South
American democracy in this country.
In the past few years, five Fascist
governments in South America have
fallen and been replaced by demo-
cratic systems. But this favorable
trend, warned Miss Terlin, will change
unless the United States continues on
its policy of active support.
Finally, Miss Terlin urged a policy
of firm resistance to Nazi demands
for colonies and_ trade _ tkteaties.
“Germany’s pledged word .is worth
nothing, and the German people are
becoming increasingly ashamed of
this. Their opposition within cannot
grow,” said Miss Terlin, “if we out-
side keep yielding to the.demands of
extremist Germany.”
a
Aid for German Refugees
An Americanization group has
been formed to work with Ger-
» man refugees in the community.
This group will meet for tea and
discussion at four o’clock every
Thursday in the German House.
Anyone ~interested shaqgld_coni-
municate with E. Aiken, ’88,
non-resident, and Ethel Clift,
741, Pembroke West.
cluded by pointing ow: that a large
part of the ‘recent social service leg-
islation is due to the Trade Unions
and the Labor Party whose influence
in polities is becoming of increasing
importance.
Miss Perkins in her speech showed
that much similar legislation has
been passed in the United States by
both the Federal Government and the
states. This legislation has been done
from the point of view of setting a
minimum mark below which:the stand-
ard of living should not. be allowed
to fall. Such is the purpose »f child
labor restrictions, regulations for
women, wage-hour. laws, the N. R. A.,
the Social Security Act, the Fair La-
ber Act and the Wagner Act.
In noting the differences between
the organization of labor in America
and in England, Miss Perkins believes
of prime importance the fact that
there has neyer crystalized here a
struggle among workers and employ-
ers where one side could not speak
out, and therefore we have never felt
the need of a Labor Party as the Eng-
lish did. The sovereignty of the
states with their separate laws has
also made the organization of labor
into one unit more difficult. The part
Trade Unions should play in the
world, however, is now being realized
and this accounts for much of the
recent legislation.
Miss’ Perkins feels, however, that
once the rights of labor are defined,
“sueh discipline as necessary to
maintain within labor means for se-
curing these rights should be scelf-im-
posed and not imposed from without.”
1S
LOCAL TALENT WILL
ENLIVEN SAKS SHOW
(Especially :contributed by Louise
Sharp, ’40.)
At eight o’clock, November 17, the
Common Room will be taken over-by
Saks “Fifth Avenue in an effort to|
afford entertainment for those, of us
In
addition there is to be the usual two-
who are at all*clothes-conscious.
day showing at the Inn on the sevén-
teenth and eighteenth, an amateur
fashion show with college models, re-
freshments, music and even a sweep-
stake element. Everyone who comes
will be given tickets which are to be
signed and put ina box. From all of
them will be drawn three lucky num-
bers whose owners will receive prizes.
A.Bryn Mawr bride will: appear
with, two.attendants at some point in
the evening in an attempt to remove
us from the unhealthy atmosphere of
quizzes.
Ginny Baker, Bryn Mawr ’38, will
be there witha Saks friend whom we
are told is the pérfect model.
Mrs. Woodrow of the English De-
partment has consented to be one. of
the models, the others being: Nancy
Angell, Blair Ballard, Babs Black,
Charlotte Hutchins, Marian Kirk,
Madge Lazo, Susie Lippincott, Marga-
ret Huyler, Prudence Wellman.
Patricia Robinson, quite appropri-
ately the bride, is going to be attended
by Martha Eaton and Adele Thibault.
Exhibition of Photos
The Bryn Mawr .Art Center
-is now showing an exhibition of
the photographs of Alice Bene-
dict Jackson, of Bryn Mawr.
Mrs. Jackson is a national figure
in the photographic world and
an opportunity to see her work
should not be missed. The ex-
hibition is open to the public
from November 12 to December
second, everyday but Sundays
‘and Rélidays. —-
Musical Group ‘Stirs
- Wide Campus Interest
: a
New Extra-Curricular Activity
Under Miss Riceis Received
Enthusidstically
(Specially contributed by Louise
Herron, ’39.) :
With the appearance of Miss Rice
as warden of Rhoads, ensemble mu-
sic has blossomed into one ‘of the most
enjoyable extra-curricular activities
on the campus. No less than twenty-
two students followed up the first in-
vitation to “those interested” and are
now supporting the new venture with
unbounded enthusiasm, -Most of us
had not even dreamed that such a
thing was possible in a gollege which
does not give'a music major, yet an
amazing amount-of talent has cropped
up. Violinists and pianists, violists,
cellists, flutists have been organized
into informal groups which meet once
a week to get first-hand acquaintance
with one of musical literature’s most
important branches.
>»
Miss. Rice has shown herself a mas-
; ter at making something out of noth-
ing. At first she had no cellists. As
this instrument is a necessity in quar-
tets, she immeédiately undertook the
converting. of Miss Goth, a graduate
student, from the double bass to the
cello and announces complete success:
Two more cellists, Naomi Coplin, °38,
and Mr. Jamison, of Haverford, are
as zealous as any of the undergradu-
ates. Violists presented another prob-
lem. The violist is usually considered
the backbone of a quartet, but is rarer
than a violinist because the instru-
ment is not a solo, Miss Rice her-
self plays violin and viola with equal
finish and Helen Bacon is now work-
ing towards the same. versatility.
Madge’ Haas Donner, also a violist, is
another alumna who more than
pleased to join us once a week.
is
The groups all have such a good
time that the upperclassmen can only
Continuea on Page Four
———5
YOUR WILL-POWE
ae
.». LHE MODERN HAZARD
TO YOUR NERVES
,
"
| : BEAGLE HOUND LE ‘ .
English fox-hound in minia- iE / "i \
ture. Solid and big for his | p st 7 HE’S GIVING HIS
inches, true beagle has the —. — :
long-wearing look ofthe hound NERVES A REST....~
| that can last in the chase. One
- of the oldest breeds in history
| —close to the original breed AND SO IS HE
. of hounds. U. S. standards
specify 15 inches maximum
height—any true hound color
i acceptable.
HE frazzling pace of these fast-moving warning stage of nerve strain. Will-power
i doesn’t mean a thing in the life silences the instinct to... pause and rest.
™ of the dog. Although his complex, high- And yet jittery, ragged nerves are a dis-
keyed nervous system closely resembles our tinct handicap. Don’t let. your nerves get
own, when the dog feels-his nerves tire he that way. Learn to ease the strain occasion-
settles down—relaxes—as the beagle hound ally. Let up — light up a Camel! It’s such a
above is doing. That is instinctive with the pleasant, effective way to rest, your nerves
oo wi dog. We aré not so likely to break nerve —a brief recess, mellow with the pleasure
ig oan tension before it gets our nerves upset. We of a Camel’s mildness and ripe, rich taste.
¢ drive on. We worry. Ambition ahd: deter- Yes, no wonder smokers say Camel’s costlier
f mination push us on and on...past the tobaccos are sosoothing to the nerves.
They’ve learned, as millions have, to give nerves relief...they
“Let up—tight up
a Camel”
t Smoke 6 packs
; ie In the heart of the Congo, of Camels and
“Leila Denis (eft) and ber: - *'< find out why...
explorer husband filmed , - they are the |
Universal Pictures’ epic, LARGEST-
. “Dark Rapture.” Camels SELLING
were an important item in
Mrs. Denis’ 42,000-mile
trek. She says: “Such ven-
~ tures can be quite’ nerve .
straining, but it’s my rule .,
to pause frequently. I let
‘CIGARETTE &
— Smokers find Camel’s Costlier Tobaceos are SOOTHING TO.
Page Four
THE COLLEGE -NEWS
he
¥
5
\
See
a
‘EXCERPTS from EXILE
Exiling oneself for a year to the
wilds of the center of Europe, far
from the fatal fascinations of the
Greek’s and the College Inn, to say
nothing of the Bryn Mawr-Haverford
fate bureau (of which I. have just
heard frém a Haverfordian sojourn-|
ing here too) has its points. The at-
mosphere over here is very conducive
to learning; one does it subconsciously |
without opening a book, and the li-
braries all have such wonderful views
of the lake and the mountains that it
is actually an aesthetic experience to
go to them and delve into deep
treatise on international law or di-
plomatic history.. Not that the
Genevois students don’t have their
fatal retreats: too: ‘yéu may know all
“about the famous café and journal-
ists’ resort, Bavaria, and the Maison
Internationale ‘des Etudiants, which
has now moved right next door to the
university, and where there is a good
set of reference books and tea every
afternoon. But as most of our classes
‘/come in the afternoon there is seldom
time for tea, Except for Friday and
’ Saturday nights the Genevois we have
discovered go/to bed at ten-thirty, and
the streets are as quiet as New York
on the Fourth of July, so as a result
we all feel as though we shall have
accomplished great things at the end
of a year. ‘
There is one unfortunate thing
about being right in the center of in-
ternational political excitements, espe-
cially when one is here to study the
future of international relations. That
fis that no matter how hard you can
try to figure out a way to be right in
the middle of things, it never works
out. How. was I supposed to know
‘last year when I read the informa-
tion of the Junior Year in Munich
that all the excitemént was going to
be there instead of in Geneva? I
went faithfully to all the sessions of
the League of Nations, and I heard
wonderful discussions on how to. in-].
terpret Article 16, but no one men-
tioned Czechoslovakia except in the
corridors. As I had obtained press
credentials so as to be able to come
and go as I pleased in the buildings
without being herded around like an
all-American tour, I managed to
'.get my ear in on some good conversa-
tions. outside the Assembly Hall dur-
ing the translations. But it was dis-
couraging. Bavaria hummed with
rumors about all Americans in France
being ordered home; the French group
from Smith went all the way from
Dijon to Havre, but we stayed settled
through everything, banking our faith
in Swiss neutrality and the sixteen
airplanes that manoeuvred. around
over our heads from time to time.
The night of the “Obscursissement” or
blackout. we gathered all the Ameri-
can students. we knew into the pen-
sion where “Le Groupe Delaware”
- lives, and huddled around the fireplace
“and sang. Bryn Mawrters would be
surprised at the calm way I take such
‘things for granted now, if they can
remember at all the great agitation
the Peace Council put up last year
about the blackout in Farmingdale.
It seemed essential to be prepared for
anything over here when only the
Alps: separated you from the threat
of war. The Altantic is a different
matter. I even went to our Ameri-
can Hallowe’en party in a costume that
represented the obscursissement, for
want of any other original ideas.
But then, while we had one inter-
national-crisis, you were having cy-
clones. As I live on Long Island
right in the thick of the stormy area, :
_ I was inclined to cable the family to
“a |
fi
r ’
come right over here and seek safety!
We spent all our time for one week
HENRY B: WALLACE
Caterer and Confectioner —
‘DINING ROOM —
Estimates given’ .
22 and 24 Bryn Mawr Avenue
br
a ee se
+house without bicycles.
Bryn Mawr, Pa..
os.
|
“Tailored Clothes”
Me
Group Insurance Plan
Continued from Page One
In money-raising, Mrs. Chadwick-
Collins said that it is bett&r to raise
money for several different objectives
than to concentrate on one at a time.
In this way money could be obtained
from people who were particularly in-
terested in one thing and each goal
would benefit as.much as if it were
the objective of a single drive.
The need for student awareness of
college: expenses was also stressed,
and it was suggested that the under-
graduates would feel more closely
connected with Bryn Mawr’s aims if
they played a greater part in the
discussion of its problems. This con-
tact could be made if an undergradu-
ate delegate were sent to the meetings
of the “Committee on the Needs of the
College.” Representatives could be
elected in: the. halls, and the Under-
graduate Association. could hold a gen-
eral meeting .in which discussion
would take place. ‘
Bryn: Mawr has been asked to par-
ticipate ‘in a seven-college movie.
Such a film would tend to be disor-
ganized since each college would prob-
ably wish to be represented in a dif-
ferent way. Miss Park said that the
only practical plan in which we could
join would be a movie done as a his-
tory of women’s education.
Other subjects under discussion
were Alumnae Weekend and rules for
the Record Library. Mrs. Darrow re-
ported that the weekend had been
very successful and*that the alumnae
say that they have never enjoyed their
return so much. She recommended
that last year’s plan for the Senior
Luncheon be resumed.
this plan, the seating of seniors and
alumnae alternated so that an alumna
would have a senior on either side of
her.
Rules governing the use of the
Record Library were read. . It was
decided to close the Library on Sun-
day for:the present, and to permit
only those trained by the committee
in charge to run the victrola.
between the sessions of the League,
the American Express’ news service,
and radio broadcasts about the inter-
national situation. , However, when
my friends from Smith write to tell
me that because of the storms they
were without electricity for several
days, our blackout seems a paltry
sacrifice! '
The international crisis is now
over, and also the sessions of the
League Assembly, to say nothing of
the special. courses in-French gram-
maf_and_conversation—we~ have been
having ever since we set foot on the
S. 8. Georgic, July 23. We have had
a week of rest and are just beginning
our work at the university and at
the Graduate Institute of Higher In-
ternational Studies where we are ad-
mitted by special concession. We are
completely enamoured of the life here.
We scarcely stir one foot out of the
The univer-
sity is twenty minutes from our house,
and the institute about fifteen. Often
Discussed by Council]
According to}
French Accents: Recorded
(Submitted in Colleges News tryouts)
The French department is making
gramophone records of the voices of
its students, this fall, in Miss Hen-
derson’s office. Arthur, the Rat, ‘is
pgralleled\by “Papa ne pars pas pour
Paris” and other selections of French
poetry and prose, in an attempt to
track down the defects of the Bryn
Mawr. French. accent.
Miss Henderson has proclaimed the
Wyndham dictaphone “fool proof.” It
is to be used for practice work in
pronouncing and, Mlle. Germaine Brée
hopes it will prove a great aid: as
the quality of voicé is lost in record-
ing, the accent is easily observed. The
French professor$ ‘will play these rec-
ords to the students and prescribe
corrective exercises, as is done in the
Freshman Diction class.
Musical Grou p Stirs
Wide Campus Interest
Continued from Page Three
regret its not having been done be-
fore. There is no pleasure so keen
as that of making music with other
people, and the music which has been
written for the enjoyment of just such
groups of amateurs is practically lim-
itless. _Numberless classic, romantic
and modern,quartets for two violins,
viola and cello; quintets which add a
piano or a flute, the Bach Concerto
for two violins, and piano, Handel
sonatas and ensembles: all these offer
the amateur untold riches without de-
manding virtudsic technique. Rather
than working on any one composition
exclusively, the players read through
several different ones and if possible
practice their parts between times.
Miss Rice hopes soon to give the
college an opportunity to hear what
we are doing by having an informal
musical evening. Otherwise, with the
exception of the Dvorjak Terzett,
which was performed during the in-
termission of the One-Act Plays, our
efforts are private rather than public
and confined to a smoking room in
uninhabited Rhoads North. Miss Rice
is such a seasoned player that she can
put the others back on the beat when
they stumble over a barline’ and. can
bring everybody through to tl® end
together. And she succeeds in mak-
ing us feel as if we had done it all
ourselves. We always leave dn a
glow of well-being, sure that we have
spent the finest two hours of our col-
lege week.
we have only about. fifteen minutes to
make connections between classes and
burst panting into our courses with
faces red as beets after a mad tear
across le pont de Mont Blanc. And
I felt sorry for the science students
who had to go from Dalton to the new]
building between classes!
LouIsE Morzey, ’40.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 252: We Deliver
Charge accounts Vases of all kinds
CONNELLY’S
The Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont-Bryn Mawr, Pa.
* hf p ‘ ra ‘ # Re
eon aes ‘ ‘it et id. ae ae
care
COMING TO TOWN...
Thursday, Nov. 17, and Friday, Nov. 18
at the College Inn
Miss. Louise Sharp_ of Pembroke West ~~
is our Saks Fifth Avenue’ representative. nee
You can order clothes from her any time.
| Come to aur Sweepstakes Fashiop Show, at the
_=y~ ~~ Common Room, Thurs., November 17, at 8 P.M.
we OPT
pe
OW iter 7. L a
ee
tT
GENE IRISH SPEAKS
ON IDEA OF INFINITE
Common Room, November 7.—At a
meeting of the philosophy club, a
paper entitled Two Theories of the
Infinite was read by Gene Irish, ’39.
The fii eoncept of infinity defines it
as simp pon fit and therefore end-
less. Miss
tradictions. implicit in this theory and
concluded that it is, at best, an en-
tirely negative concept. -With it she
of the infinite which is positive in
nature and “seems the more logical
concept of infinity.”
The endless, non-finite concept, said
Miss Irish, “is self contradictory in
that it leads always to a finite result.
We have a finite quantity, and to
makeit infinite we move the end,
further on. But every new end will
mark a finite quantity.” Secondly,
Miss Irish showed that by this theory
we can arrive at two sets of infinite
multitudes whose sums are different
finite’ magnitudes. “Yet the theory
gives us no possible ground on which
to say that two infinites can be un-
equal.”
Miss Irish next dismissed the defi-
nition which simply states. “The in-
finiteis not the finite.’ This is ab-
surd, “because if the infinite is and
can only be what the finite is not, it
is then, in a sense, bounded by the
finite.”
The failure of these {wo theories
must lead us to suspect that a truer
definition must consider the infinite
as the positive quality, and the finite
as the negative. The concept of an
“infinite class” replaces: that of “in-
finity as an independent entity.” In
such a class, a part can be put into
one-to-one -.correspondence with the
whole. In the discussion following,
Miss Irish mentioned the Dutch
Cleanser advertisement, composed . of
a number of identical pictures within
each other, as an illustration of this
theory of infinity. “
ish showed two self-con-|
contrasted the newer organic theory
Black and Daly Late
For Dinner at Dean’s
Dean Manning must have been
rather puzzled last Sunday when two
undergraduates whom ‘she had in-
vited to dinner did not appear. until
well into the middle of the meal. This
is their explanation for their strange
Behavior.
It seems that when Babs Black, ’41,
and Madge Daly, ’42, received their
invitations to dine with the Dean they
went to a mutual friend to ask where
the Mannings lived. They were told
to go to the “little yellow house—be-
hind Pembroke,” and accordingly ar-
rived there at the specified time. To
their astonishment, no one answered
the doorbell, so, after a timid knock,
they walked in. Their coats were
taken and they sat down in the liv-
ing room to wait for the arrival of
their ,hostess. :
Judy Martin, °’40, and Barbara
Longeope, ’38, arrived, and finally
Miss Gertrude Ely came in. She
greeted Judy and Barbara, and then
turned to Babs and Madge and said
she was afraid their names had slipped
her mind. Slightly confused, Babs
and Madge _ identified themselves.
Then, to make conversation, they
asked about Mrs. Manning’s children,
where they went to school, how old
they -were and other conventional ques-
tions. The conversation became more
and more confusing for every one.
In the next rogm they could. hear
the servant hurridly setting two more
places at the table. They waited for
the: Dean to come in. When Miss Ely
rose to go into dinner they gathered
enough courage to ask about the
whereabouts of their hostess. Ex-
planations naturally followed. Miss
Ely explained she. often invites stu-
dents to meals and sometimes for-
gets about it later. Therefore the ar-
rival of two strange guests was not
unusual. Babs and Madge excused
themselves and backed out of the
house. They arrived at the Mannings
Ny. Tennent Reseach just in time for the second course.
Mr. Tennent has been working ||
for several years on the experi- | JHAVE
mental modification and control YOU
of cell division. During the last | SEEN
four years he has worked on | OUR
the photodynamic action of vital |! CHRISTMAS
dyes on cells and on the processes SHOP?
of cell division. Special studies ||
on this subject have been and 778 LANCASTER AVE.
are being made by graduate stu- | BRYN MAWR
dents in the department of Richard Stockton
Biology. | :
Save YOUR WA MPUM,
y = ie Vey
cL pee
lal YL
GO BY GREYHOUND
PUGRIMS..
Er
ie Rise ry
Aig Viewer ©
a OH mR)
Sample
Round-Trip i ares
When you start the annual pilgrimage home to
OX
get a good square meal (we presume you’re Washington .. $4.05
«20, not-dimmune to the charms of a home-cooked Pittsburgh, Pa.. $9.90
-=*. drumstickf) rémémber the sage advice of the* Néw York .=. 2292.70"
Puritan Fathers ... “Always travel by Grey- Boston ...... ", $8.40
. hound and save your money for a rainy day Scranton ..... $4.50:
or a really swell party!” You can manage the ‘Chicdgo....... $22.45
whole out-of-town week-end for a little more Richmond ..... $7.65
than you'd spend hanging around the college. Buffalo ....,.$11.10
oa trip, at Greyhound’s low fares, cost less Cleveland : "$13.50
ee. rm half as much as oe a _ : coo St. Louis ees $26.55
ee oh 909 LANCASTER —
BRYN Bryn Mawr 1280
MAWR, PA.
Es2 eA
_
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five .
PUBLIC OPINION
To the Editor of The College News:
Our celebration of Armisttte Day
this year has been clouded by the
realization that we are nearer to war
than at any time since 1918. The
Munich Four-Power Pact ‘has not
‘brought peace to the world. Instead,
it has meant the destruction of de-
mocracy in what remains of Czecho-
slovakia, and the continuance of an
arms race of unheard of dimensions.
Fascism has already begun the. sec-
ond Imperialist War for the redivis-
ion of the resources of the world at
, the expense of the so-called democ-
racies.
The success of the fascist offensive
in the world today is not due to their
inherent strength, but to the weakness
of the foreign policy of the democratic
powers. Very. few people doubt that
Chamberlain has been acting hand in
‘glove with Hitler and Mussolini.
Chamberlain represents the ultra-con-
servative Cliveden set, which sees in
fascism a bulwark against “‘commun-
ism” and against a resurgence of de-
\% mocracy such as exists in the France
of the People’s Front. Daladier, his
aide in the Munich betrayal, is already
undermining in the interests-of “na-
tional defense,” the legislative achieve-
ments of the Front Populaire. In our
own country those who cry for a pol-
icy of “neutrality,” or isolation, are
. the most bitter opponents of Roosevelt
and his program of social legislation.
The section of finance monopoly. capi-
tal which controls Germany today is
also backing Chamberlain and Dala-
dier, because they represent the only
policy ~which can save fascism. even
temporarily from going down under
the weight of its own internal contra-
dictions.
The success of the éxtremist foreign
policy in Germany has meant an in-
creased war threat to the rest of the
world. A campaign of anti-Semitism,
the most brutal which the world has
ever seen, is. the direct result of Mu-
nich. It is also a product of the in-
creasing tension inside Germany,
caused by the huge cost: of the re-
newed arms race and the aggravated
financial situation. The virulence of
this campaign, as well as the adop-
tion of an anti-Semitic policy by Mus-
solini points not to strength, but to
great and increasing internal weak-
ness.
In the light of the terrific defeat
of the-forces for democracy and peace
through the Munich Pact, it becomes
necessary to formulate a policy for
immediate -action which will’ unite
people of all political opinions in the
struggle to preserve democracy and
peace. ‘
_ For Americans the Munich Pact
means the increase of fascist influ-
ence and propaganda in South Amer-
ica. As Bryn Mawr students we are
faced with the necessity of concrete
action. Our opinion is important, be-
cause a firm stand by the U. S. could
mean the check of fascist influence
in both hemispheres.
As regards the intensified attack of
Japanese militarism on China, which
measures of neutrality
Mr. Fenwick A ppointed
To Attend Conference
.
Continued from Page One
tural relations among the ¢ountries of
the Western- Hemisphere. This year
the purpose is chiefly to form mutual
agreements: about common. defense.
When asked about the relation of this
conference to the frequently mentioned
“Fascist menace” in South American
countries, Mr. Fenwick only referred
to the speech of A. A. Berle on Sun-
day night. Mr. Berle is also a dele-
gate to this conference, and a report
of his talk over N. B. C. appeared in
Monday’s New York Times. It sum-
marized the achievements of the pre-
ceding conferences and the aims of
the present one.
- The achievements of the conference
in 1936, where President. Roosevelt
headed the United States delegation,
were chiefly to arrange for interna-
tional consyltation in-case peace were)
threatened from without or within.
One important aspect of these regular
conferences lies, Mr. Berle said, in the
demonstrations of increasing mutual
co-operation and friendship.
In a Foreign Policy Report for
July, 1987, Mr. Fenwick has reported
the results of the conference in the
preceding December. A .Consultative
Pact provided for conference among
the American states “in the event
that the peace of the American Re-
publics’ is menaced,” to determine
when and how they may “eventually
co-operate in some action tending to
preserve the peace of the American
continent.” A. second important
achievement was the Convention of
Treaty Co-ordination and Neutrality.
This improved the existing.-machinery
for the fulfillment of treaties and
provided for adoption of common
in case of
failure of .peaceful negotiations. Par-
ties in dispute agreed to report such
failures to the other signatories of the
Convention.
to the Lima peace conference and
President Roosevelt’s good neighbor
policy will have a great influence.
The Young Communist League of
Bryn Mawr ‘College, while it differs
in its long range policy from the other
organizations engaged in united front
activities, still in immediate action
ssuppotts the, program of the Bryn
Mawr,Peac@®(Council, the United Peace
ORest for aid to the victims of aggres-
sion in Spain and China, This policy
is not as long range as we would like
to advocate, but we feel it is one on
which students of all political opinions
can unite. The issues are vital, not
only from a humanitarian point of
view, but also in the light of our own
national interests. It is time that we,
as a student body, realized that world
peace is indivisible, and that we“have
responsibilities which extend outside
the boundaries of our campus, or even
of our nation.
Bess BROWN LoMAX, ’41,
EMILY DOAK, ’39,-
ETHEL -S.°. DANA, .’39,
AGNES W. SPENCER, 739,
Young Communist League
of Bryn Mawr College.
CURRENT EVENTS
(Gleaned from Mr. Fenwick)
The latest reign of terrorism in Ger-
many can only be attributed to sudden
and compigte madness on the part of
the Nazi leaders. Mr. Fenwick sug-
gested that such actions, if continued,
tion, because “Whom the Gods de-
stroy, they first make mad.” The new
outrages against the Jews in Ger-
many were perpetrated by the as-
sassination by a young Polish Jew of
Ernst vom Rath of the German Em-
bassy in Paris. As a_result,° the
crime of an individual, impelled by
mere youthful frenzy, is being avenged
on a whole race.
Minister Goebbels explains the new
outburst against the Jews as a
“spontaneous demonstration of the
feelings of the Nazis” toward the as-
sassination. The whole’ affair was
obviously a concerted and planned ac-
tion, sponsored by the Nazi leaders.
Coincident with this demonstration
was one against the Catholics, in the
form of attacks on the home of Car-
dinal Faulhaben of Munich. The Car-
dinal’s previous appeal for police pro-
tection was completely ignored. Sec-
retary Hull has recalled Ambassador
Hugh Wilson from Germany as a
sign of the United States’ disapproval
of the latest crisis.
Britain and France are both increas-
ing their armaments, in an attempt
to rival the armament policies ”° of
Germany and other dictatorships.
“The important: problem arising from
this action,” said Mr. Fenwick, “is:
Can a democracy rearm to match a
dictatorship, and still remain a démoc-
racy ?”’
More immediately concerned with
the United States are the results of
the election last week. Both parties
seem well pleased. The Republicans
are.satisfied with their gains, and the
Democrats are satisfied with their ma-
jority. The only chance for complete
reversal of administration in the 1940
elections will be the failure of the
Democrats to start the country on an
upward trend to definite economic
recovery within the next two years,
In either case, the fundamentals of
the New Deal will survive, because
the country has seen its advantages
during the experience of: a nation-
wide depression.
WINETTE COSMETICS
THEY’RE DIFFERENT
THEY’RE- BETTER
BECAUSE
THEY’RE PURE
Representative on Campus
NANCY. SIOUSSAT
37 Pembroke East
: * Phenomenal Value
TWEED SUITS
84.95
KITTY McLEAN
SPORTSWEAR
BRYN MAWR
was strengthened by the Munich Pact,| ©
it is our duty to stop American par-
ticipation in this aggression by press-
‘ing for an embargo on war materials
to Japan. (The U.S. now supplies
54% of Japanese war imports.) At
the same time, every aid we can give|.
to China will also help to shorten the
war and speed reconstruction.
The Munich Powers are preparing
another “appeasement”. for Spain.
We must make sure that they are not
able to starve the Spanish people into
subjection. This we can do by mak-
ing available to the Spanish govern-
ment our huge surplus of wheat. The
lifting of the embargo on Loyalist
Spain is of primary concern to all who
desize to prevent the spread of fas-
cism in Spain and South Ameri¢éa, as
»»Avell.as. in France. In checking fas-
cisin in “South Ameri¢a,- our “support:
Jeannette’s Flower Shop
| gad Lenensee Aye.
ae
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HOME BY
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That’s the way to vacation in style
—with nothing to do but go. Just
- loék up yur trunk and: bags-add
phone Railway Express. No extra
3 charge— no dickering or doubts.
__Bryn- Mawr, Pa. ~
Let os “Say It With Flowers”
BRANCH OFFICE:
(R. R. AVE.)
for you. Style arrangement,
quality, freshness and service
guaranteed.
_ Phone“B. M. 570 -
RAILWA
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One easy move: Youvsee your baggage go, and can take your train with
" a sigh of relief. © Convenient? 100%—and economical, too. Our rates.
are low, and you can send “collect,” if you wish, same as with our “home-
and-back laundry service.” When you phone, tell us the time to come. -| ___
BRYN MAWR AVE. ‘Phone BRYN MAWR 440.
BRYN MAWR, PA
EE NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE ih
UR VACATION BAGGAGE
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XPRESS
INC. on
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emancipate = ‘ .
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would be Germany’s ultimate destruc- |
Varsity Downs Penn
5-3 in Fast Game
In the most spectacular game of its
season, the varsity hockey team de-
feated the University of Pennsylvania,
5-3, after trailing 2-0 in the middle
of the first half. Edith Lee and Alli-
son Stokes, playing left inner and cen-
ter, were outstanding among the for-
wards for their accurate drives and
quick follow-up shots. The fast-play-
ing Bryn Mawr team was in control
of the game throughout most of the
second half. :
After two brilliant goals by McGin-
nis and Harper, of Pennsylvania, the
Bryn Mawr team rallied and forced
the ball down the-field. Two handy
push-shots by Stokes“*byought the score
to a tie at the end gf the half. ,
Bryn Mawr took the lead at the
start of the second half, as Nancy
Howard, left wing, tallied on an angle
shot from the middle of the circle.
McGinnis, Penn right inner and cap-
tain, broke through to tie the score,
but the varsity quickly recaptured the
ball and Edith Lee made Bryn Mawr’s
fourth goal. Later, she took the ball
again, near ‘the fifty yard line, eluded
two Penn backs, and went down the
field unopposed to make the final goal
Scholarships.O pen :
To German Refugees
Continued from Page Two
Marian Edwards Park, Helen Taft
Manning, Ewnice Morgan Schenk,
Karl L. Anderson, ‘K. Laurence Sta-
pleton, Barbara Cary, °36; Vesta
Sonne, graduate; Elizabeth Aiken;‘39;
Annie Emerson, ’41; Laura. Esta-
brook, ’89; Cornelia Kellogg, ’39; Mar-
garet Magrath, °42; Jean Morrill,
89, Chairman; Virginia Nichols, '41;
Jean Rauh, ’39; Agnes Spenser, ’39;
Eleanor Taft, 39; Martha Van Hoe-
sen, ’39. ,
An emergency meeting of faculty
and students will be held in thé audi-
torium of Goodhart Hall on Thursday,
November 17, from 7.30 to 8 p. m.,
at which Miss Park and Martha Van
Hoesen will speak.
on a hard drive from just inside the
circle.
E. Foster Hammonds, Inc.
fy Radios -- Music
(v) Re Records
829 Lancaster Ave. .
Bryn Mawr _
Very Special Dinner -- $1.00
. THINKING OF THANKSGIVING
= why not
Make reservations for Dinner
at
BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
Served from 1 - 7:30 P. M.
‘There'll | be a
.."~ Enough said?
- Number please !
Vacant Chair
at Home Conight
Someone wil! be missing atte dinner table
tonight — someone whose place only ‘you can
fill. And there’ll be a’strange silence about the
house that only your voice can dispel.
Perhaps you have been too busy to feel
” Jonesome, but the folks back home would be
thrilled to hear your cheery “Hello!”
And listen! Most long distance rates are reduced
tonight after seven and all day Sunday, You can -
reverse the charges if
you’re- short of cash,
BO Ct Re
ee
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA
saceaieiaaiaal
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‘French Consul
Concours.
Page Six
~ LA
HE COLLEGE NEWS
i enemaien
_ =
’ Question is Disputed
At Concours Oratoire
Among _ Judges;
Pegey/ Otis\ Wins Medal
Wyndham, October 15.—The: annual
Oratoire for a_ medal
awarded by the Comité France-Améri-
que was held here today at four o’clock
with M. Coppinger, French consul in
Philadelphia, M. Scherer of Swarth-
“more College and Mr. Williamson of
Haverford College as judges. After
tea in the living room, those who had
been invited to listen,gathered in the
mfisic room.
Mile. Bree, who was in chargé, de-
scribed the character of the concours
in a short speech. She then intro-
duced the concurrentes, Patricia Rob-
inson, Peggy Otis, Grace Dolowitz and
Nancy Wood, all of the class of ’39,
and gave the subject which had been
chosen for the concours: l’ Américain,
a-t-il besoin de connaitre une langue
étrangére?, It was -evident, Mlle.
Bree remar ‘ked, that college had in no
way discouraged the critical faculties
or subdued the personalities of the
nine students who had originally pre-
sented themselves for the concours,
as they had almost all attacked the
subject given. ;
In her discours, Patricia Robinson
disputed the question on the grounds
that once one was familiar with a
language it was no longer foreign.
Peggy Otis considered that the Ameri-
can,was in such a position that he
both needed and did not need a foreign
language. Grace Dolwitz took a posi-
tive stand, showing that the knowl-
edge of a foreign language not only
opened up an entirely new civiliza-
tion, but also led to a better under-
standing of one’s own country. Nancy
Wood held that the key to the ques-
tion | in the exact significance of
“avoir besoin de,” and that a foreign
language was an advantage rather
than a necessity.
The very length of time needed
by the. judges to decide upon the win-
ner. indicated the difficulties involved.
They had to take into consideration
the: originality of Miss Robinson’s
ideas, the purity of *Miss Wood’s
French and the extraordinarily good
development of Miss Dolowitz’ speech.
But, in finally awarding the: medal to
Miss Otis, M. Coppinger explained
that the judges had considered that
»she had answered the question most
exactly. He admitted—to her —after-
wards, however, that she would not
have received the medal if it had
been a language contest. ‘
M. and Mme. Coppinger, the judges,
members of the French Department
and the concurrentes then stayed—at
Wyndham for a buffet supper, during
which they were highly amused by the
hors-de-concours speech of Deborah
Calkins, ’40.
The editor welcomes letters on
timely topics from ‘its subscribers—
or others.
Rhoads Housewarming
There will be a tea dance in
Rhoads from’ 4 fo 6 on Decem-
ber 10, before the Undergradu-
ate Dance. All students are in-
vited. There will be a minimum
charge that may be put on“pay -
day. The exact amount will be
announced later. -
College Money Drive
Is Long Term Sche&ne
Continued from Page One
chapel on the. second floor of Taylor.
Except for the gymnasium, this. was
the only general room for lectures and
entertainments before the completion
of Goodhart. XN
The’ third need was ‘an endowment
for the newly created Department of
Musie and a building to house it, for
in 1921, a course in the Appreciation
of Music had been included in the cur-
riculum. Mr. Cram, the supérvising
architect of the college, recommended,
that the three necessary buildings be
combined under one roof, and his sug-
gestion materialized as Goodhart Hall.
By 1925, the alumnae had raise‘ a
total of 750,000 dollars, 550,000 dol-
lars for Goodhart and 200,000 dollars |~
for the endowment of the Department
of Music.
The five-year plan of. 1929 covered
all the developments which have since
taken place in Bryn Mawr. Academ-
ically it provided for: modern labora-
tories and laboratory equipment i a
new Science Building, adequate library
and classroom space in a new wing
of the Library, the maintenance of a
scholarly faculty with increased sal-
aries and more individual work for
advanced utidergraduates.
In order to increase the annual in-
come of the college, the plan further
provided that the tuition be increased
by 100 dollars, that a new dormitory
be built from college funds as an in-
vestment, and that to parallel this, the
undergraduate body be increased to
five hundred. - The first step in this
part of the plan was taken in 1930
with the increase of the tuition from
400 to 500 dollars.
The rest of the plan was delayed
by the depression, but in 1934- the
Alumnae Association decided to raise
1,000,000 dollars as a Fiftieth: Anni-
versary gift to the college.
this grew the Million Dollar Drive,
which was to cover the cost of the
Science Building and the Library
Wing, and was to decrease the debt
incurred. by the purchase of Wynd:
ham.
The Executive Committee in charge
of raising this money soon realized
that dt must enlarge its objectives so
as to cover all possible donors: and
therefore asked President Park’s ap-
proval for including in the Million
Dollar gift all the money given t
the college. As a result of the drive,
all the immediate academic needs of
the college ¢ been filled with the
exception of 4n Art and Archaeology
ALBRECHT’S FLOWERS
ARDMORE, PA.
12 Lancaster Avenue
Tel. Ard. 2850 ~
Out of |-
y : :
GREEN HILL FARMS
City Line and Lancaster Avenue
Ardmore 3600
A reminder that we would like
to take care of your parents
and friends, whenever they come
to visit you.
For reservations:
C. GEORGE CRONECKER
Spereswenr
{gia <2 acd iste: MES Won; Pood
778 Lancaster Angpne
SPICE for
Thanksgiving
in
at’
~ Colony House. Ine. |
e
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ch
Afternoon
‘ pie hi nt
2 oR 2 eee
Tarsus “‘Dig” Reveals
Traces of Bronze Age
Continued ‘from Page One
people who wear shaggy hats. They
are divided into three groups, basket-
men, shovel men and pick: men.
pick men are the most skilled and are
permitted to use little knives and
brushes. _To prevent the workmen
from keeping their finds; they are
given baksheesh: in exchange.. The
basket men get more baksheesh per
find beeause their chances of holding
anything ‘valuable are slightest. Gold
is rewarded according to its weight
value so that its finders will not be
tempted to melt it down for them-
selves. The workmen go to work at
five a..m., lay off at noon, and go
back to work: again in the afternoon
when it is cooler,
Tarsus itself is a town of 20,000
inhabitants. At the time of Antony
and Cleopatra, who once met. there,
the Romans had dredged the river
Kidnas so that the town could be ap-
proached by boat, but the river mouth
has filled up since and the town is
noyws about 10 miles inland. Just to
the northward are the Silesian Gates,
the pass in the Taurus mountains,
crossed by Alexander the Great and
Xenophon. In the Hellenistic age,
Tarsus was noted for being a center
of culture. Its most famous citizen
was St. Paul, for whom the city gate
was later built and named.
Life in the modern city is still
fairly primitive. Its chief assets are
Building. What remain are Bryn
Mawr’s marginal needs: the Theatre
Workshop, the squash courts, the Tar-
sus “dig,” and ever-present needs for
scholarship funds, Library books and
gifts for special lectures.
The
MISS KRAUS CHAIRMAN
OF STUDY COMMITTEE
Miss Hertha Kraus is chairman of
the Study Committee for the Regional
Conference of the Pennsylvania Con-
ference of Social Welfare, to be held
at the Bryn Mawr ~~ Presbyterian
Church on Monday, December fifth.
Miss Kraus is. a. member of the
Board of Directors of the Y. W. C. A.
a beautiful rose garden and electri-
city, but none ofthe streets are paved
and most of the transportation is done
by donkeys. Miss»Goldman’s house is
furnished with running water which
comes through a pipe from the river
and .is so dirtyythat it can only be
used for washing the floors. Water
for all other purposes is brought by
a donkey from the well.
Members of the expedition in 1937
consisted of Miss Goldman as. direc-
tor, Mr. and Mrs. Ehrich (Mrs.
Ehrich was Anne Hoskin, formerly .a
graduate student at Bryn Mawr), who
were in charge of the excavation, a
technician and an ‘architect, Frances
Follin Jones, ’°34, who was studying
Hellenistic and Roman pottery. . May-
nard Riggs, ’35, was the staff pho-
tographer.
* =
ae
Poster Winners
First prize in the Ente
ment Series Poster Contest
won by Margaret Bell, ’39. Sec-
ond prize was won ‘by~ Mary
Mason, ’41, and third prize by
Ellen Matteson, ’40.
of Philadelphia and also of the’ Ad-
visory Committee of the American
Association of Schools of Social Work. |
The association has, through a grant
the- Rockefeller Foundation,
been. made, able to undertake a study
of the field of training for ‘social
work. and public welfare, as ‘well as
a study of the schools comprising the
association. (The Carola Woeris-
hoffer Graduate~Department of So-
cial Economy, Bryn Mawr College,
was a charter member/of the associa-
tion, and has. participated continu-
from
ously in the development of training:
in the social services.)
WM. G, CUFF and CO.
Radios oo Records
855 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr 823
Victrolas
culture, ezra_pound,./2.50
interpretation in teaching, i
new books at the country bookshop, bryn mawr
trial of a judge, stephen ‘spender, 1.50
overtures to death and other poems, c. day lewis, 2.00
modes of thought, alfred north whitehead, 2.50
on the frontier, auden and isherwood, 2.50
collected poems, william carlos williams, 3.00
Ls richards, 4.00
man’s hope, andre’ malraux, 2.50
toulouse-lautrec, gerstle mack, 5.00
|
errs nity Penna,
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Pictiek Stine ‘cic AROSE LETHE ESE AN Eee
«
re
m.
Rillful is the word that best describes
Chesterfield’s can’t-be-copied blend
it It is the RIGHT COMBINATION of .
mild ripe home-grown and aromatic
Turkish ...the world’s best cigarette
‘And it’s
oneness armen op
a new pleasure in smoking.”
es ‘the Siena: that can’t be copied
» «>» @ HAPPY. COMBINATION Of the .
world’ s best cigarette tobaccos
ae 8 »
‘Copyright 1938, Liccerr & Myzrs Tonacco Co.
tobaccos. .. that makes Chesterfield
_ different from all other cigarettes.
the skillful blending
of these tobaccos with each other :
. for flavor, for aroma, for
mildness and for taste, that has
made Chesterfield the cigarette
“in which millions of smokers find 2
i)
College news, November 10, 1938
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1938-11-10
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 25, No. 06
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-vol25-no6