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. year will be charged and a subsifliary
permitted at any time.
~ Gn,” thé “inmates began -to cirtulate |’
~ and the laxness of rules dealing with
_erucial moment.
Z-615
THE COLLEGE
a
VOL. XXV, No. 2
BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA.., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1938
Copyright TRUSTEES OF
BRYN MAWR.-COLLEGE, 1938
PRICE 10 CENTS
a
College Council
Discusses Old,
_ New Problems
Freshman -Week, the Record
Library, College Movies,
'- Are Main Topics
GLEE CLUB PLANS
STILL UNDECIDED
The President’s House, October 13.—
The first council meeting of the year
was-held at Miss Park’s house last
Thursday.
of the council discussed the minutes
of the meeting on May 10, and later
progressed to problems which have
arisen this year. The main subjects
under discussion were the Record
Library, Freshman. Week, a new
schedule of meetings for the A. S. U.,
the International Relations Club and
the Industrial Group, plans for the
Glee Club, and a movie of the college
to be directed by Miss Barbara Cary.
Rules’for the Record Library have
been drawn up by an Undergraduate
Committee. The collection is to be set
up in Rhoads in two rooms, one for
the victrola and the other for: records.
A membership fee of one dollar a
During dinner. members
rental fee of five cents for two records
and ten cents for an album for three
days. Fines will be five cents a day
for overdue records*and two dollars
for breakage. Students must use non-
metallic needles, and jazz will not be
The record room will be open Mon-
day and Friday and the victrola room
every day “except Sunday when the
library will be closed. It was sug-
gested that it be closed on Saturday
instead of Sunday because students
usually work all Satyrday and: have
leisure time on Sunday. Eleanor
Taft replied that records can be ta
out for three days and played any
time over the week- oun including
Sunday.
A larger committee of upperclass-
men and prearranged appointments
for freshmen coming with their par-
ents made Freshman Week run much
more smoothly this year. The fresh-
man chairman said that she would
have liked to see even more upper-
classmen because it was easier to get
to know them before the rést of the
undergraduates returned. Martha
Van Hoesen, '39, thought that Stu-
dent Advisors should be more aware
of their responsibilities. She sug-
gested that they sign up earlier and
have a meeting before the end of the
year to explain what they must do.
Continued on Page Three
Four Organizations
Hold Joint Meeting
Social and Political Heads Give
Outline of Their Platforms
For the Year
Common Room, October 13.—Bryn
Mawvr’s four organizations designed to
promote interest in national and in-
ternational affairs came together for
an evening to introduce the freshmen
to their activities. The speakers at
the meeting included Elizabeth Di-
mock, ’41, of the Bryn Mawr Chapter
of the American Students’ - Union,
Laura Estabrook, ’89, of the Inter-
national Relations Club, Helen Cobb,
’40, of the Peace Council, and Lucille
Sauder, 739, of the Industrial. Group.
Each organization explained its
function and platform. Laura Esta-
brook introduced the speakers and
conducted the first half of the meet-
ing. She stressed the point that none
of the groups ‘represented conflicted
in any way, and that it is possible to
work for all four of them. Later
Elizabeth Dimock presided in a i
eral A. S. U. discussion.
Miss Dimock was the first speaker
of the evening. She emphasized -the
fact that the A. S. U. is based on four
main. points, Peace, Freedom, Equal-
ity, Security, and that it is possible
to join the group and work. fof one
point only. The A. S. U. is divided
into small groups which work on top-
ics such as Labor, Students’ Problems,
Continued on Page Three
JOURNALIST TO DISCUSS
LATE EUROPEAN CRISIS
Raymond Gram Swing, author of
Forerunners of American Fascism,
will speak in Goodhart Hall, next
Wednesday evening at 8.30, under the
auspices of thé Entertainment Comit-
tee. The subject of his speech will
be Intrigue for World Power.
Having just returned from Europe,
| Ma, Swing will be in the position to
givé those interested first hand _ in-
formation-about- the European crisis.
In past years he has gained a large
following in England as well as in
the United States for his interpreta-
tion of American and European af-
fairs. He has received recognition
primarily as a radio news commenta-
tor, but he-has also given lectures for
such groups as The Herald Tribune
Forum and The Town Meeting, of the
Air,
Mr. Swing will spend Wednesday
night on campus and will be on hand
for discussion Thursday mornifig. A
recording will be made of his voice.
The admission fees for the tecture,
while not as yet definitely set, will
be soon announced.
New French House in Wyndham Boasts
Apple Trees, Piano and Reference Libraty
Last year, .when uhdergraduates
weré told of the projected French and
German houses, their approach was
characteristic, that is, suspicious. Al-
though the French House quota was
nine and the German House, seven,
thy were hard to fill. The Good Old
Halls ‘and Good Old Friends took on
‘an aura that made them seem too
precious to leave, and_ pessimists
painted realistic pictures of treks
across snowy hockey fields to classes.
Nonetheless _ the respective _depart-
ments and a strong sense of duty
among language majors brought pres-
sure to bear and enough people,
mostly majors and their martyred.
roommates, signed up to make the pro-
ject possible.
Almost as soon: as: they. had mowed
cheery reports about the pleasantness4
of wardens, the excellence of. food,
breakfast and quiet hours. In spite
of thése bulletins, ‘most of the people
signed up for second semester in ‘the
French ‘House dropped outa at the
- As the year “wore on, however,
campus enthusiasm soared and French
they knew that the Dean would want
her héuse back. At. length it was
announced that. the French House for
the coming year would be Wyndham.
Wyndham holds seventeen people, and
not only were those seventeen easily
found, but also over seventeen more,
who...are. waiting eagerly for their
turn during the second semester.
Though Wyndham lacks some of
the surprising elements of Mrs. Man-
ning’s house, it is undisputably the}
most attractive hall on campus and
has particular advantages: a~ large
garden with three apple trees that.
bear, a piano and a good library do-
nated by. the French government.
Mademoiselle Brée is still in ¢harge,
with ais Bill, ‘35, as a. ae
sistant. ~ Se ea * nen
‘In many ways the —. French
House is a modified version of the}:
original. -But- if one can no longer
wheedle Mary, who is cooking once
again for the Mannings, into produc-
ing an eleven o’clock breakfast, one
has on the other hand priceless refer-
ence books on the premises; and al-
though Wyndhamites cannot _ look
forward to Mrs: Manning’s crocuses
in the spring, they have the Diezes
House inmates’ desponded because}
.
in their back yard.
‘other the entertainment.
COLLEGE CALENDAR
Friday, October 21,—Lantern
Night. The Cloisters, 8 p. m.
Saturday, October 22:—Var-
sity Hockey Game. Lower hock-
ey field, 10 a. m. Formal open-
ing of the New Science Building,
2.30.. Interhational Night in
the French Nuse. Wyndham,
8.30.
Sunday, October 23.—Infor-
mal Conferences on Mathemat-
ics, Psychology, Biology and
Physics and their place in the
Bryn Mawr Curriculum. Dal-
ton and the Library, 9-10.45.
Dalton, 11 a. m. to 12.45. Les-
lie Glenn to speak in chapel.
Goodhart, 7.30.
Monday, October 24.— First
Anna Howard Shaw Lecture by”
Judge. Florence. Allen. Good-
hart; 8:30.
Tuesday, October 25.— Cur-
rent Events, Mr. Fenwick. Com- °
mon Room, 7.380.
Wednesday, October 26.—Lec-
ture by Raymond Swing. Good-
hart, 8.30.
Friday, October 28.—Two one-
act plays to be given by the
Players’ Club. Goodhart/* ‘8.30.
Integration Troubles |
Will Cause Nazi Fall
Further Conquests Will Eitsten
Death From ‘Indigestion,’
Says H. A. Miller
PREDICTS CZECH’ RISE
In an interview on the European
Mr. Herbert A. Miller,
lecturer in Social Economy, said he
situation, |
Was convinced that Hitler’s desire for
territory would not be appeffSed until
he had extended his boundaries across
Europe to: the oil fields of Rumania
and the Ukraine. However, like Na-
polegn’s empire, he feels the Nazi rule
will fall rapidly because. of Hitler’s
inability to integrate the lands and
the peoples. once he possesses them.
The chief outstanding result of the
Munich agreement is that Germany
has actually become the victor ofAthe
Great War and will Shell die
less conditions today as if she had
won it in 1918. Almost overnight the
importance of England and France
in the balance of power has been re-
duced to a minimum and Germany
will) probably have her way with
both eountries. Germany has further
increased her strength and conversely
weakened that of France by moving
thirty divisions of troops from the
Czechoslovak up to the French border.
From Hitler’s speeches it is. obvi
‘!that he is under the illusion that th
Germans are a race of supermen who
ought to rule the world. His present
goal, Mr. Miller believes, is Rumania;
it was a desire for a path to this
country: and for the resources of
Czechoslovakia. rather. than any moral
struggle for the rights of Germans
that led him into the Sudeton. It is
perfectly possible that he will attain
his: ends in Rumania quickly, but
this is not an event to be deplored:
Mr. Miller feels that it would even be
Continued on Page Two
ALUMNAE TO WITNESS. \
INTERNATIONAL NIGHT
On Saturday night, October_-22,-at
8.30, the Alumnae will be entertained
at an “International Night” held in
Wyndhant Hall. Only the French and
German Clubs: were originally in-
tended to take part, and Wyndham
was chosen as a setting so that the
-| Alamnae would” be able to ste--what
the French House was like.
As the idea grew, it- seemed a pity
not to include graduate students as
well; an informal skit which might
be named “Impromptu International”
resulted.
,Cider and eookies’ will» be served
Should it
rain. Friday .evening, Lantern Night
will be postponed until Saturday, and
International N ight will take its
place. nt ce
Geologist to Study
“Piedmont ee ae
Miss Anna Hietanen Will Help|
Watson and Wyckoff Study
Rock Crystals
The research activities of the ge-
ology department are devoted. this
year. to the problem of the history
of the crystalline rocks of the local
Piedmont region. The college has
given extrg~aid, in the form of grants
and special scholarships, towards a
vigorous and systematic study of this
controversial ~quéstion. Nr
Miss Wyckoff and Mr. Watson, of
the geology department, are directing
a symposigm of graduates “in_this
field. Miss Bascom, professor emeri-
tus of geology, and Miss~ Hietanen,
from Helsinki, Finland, will join in
the work.
The “Piedmont: province” extends
along the Atlantic seaboard east of
the Appalachians, from New England
to Georgia. The rock in this region
ls gone through tremendous altera-
tions, having been, buried, compressed,
remelted and recrystallized in differ-
ent eras. The well-kept lawns of local
residential sections, and .the humid-
-|climate impede the study of processes
which must be observed at consider-
able depths and over a large area.
The technique of Petrofabrics, de-
vised by Bruno Sanders in_ Inns-
bruck, will be used by Miss Hietanen
to study the rocks. This method de-
termines the direction of the axes of
the individual crystals in a_ rock
sample. From this polarization is
theoretically deduced the history of
the erystal, the crushing, folding and
shearing to which the region — has
Continued on Page Two
Florence Allen to Give
The Anna Shaw Series
Rise of Constitutional Powers Topic
Of Six Lectures
Judge Florence Ellenwood Allen of
the United States Circuit Court of
Appeals will be the speaker for the
Anna Shaw series of lectures entitled
the Historical Development of the
Constitutional Powers. Although this
is her first appearance as a speaker,
she will have a far larger audience
than the college alone. Students are
coming from the University of Penn-
sylvania and from the Temple Uni-
versity Law School, while many “out-
siders have already asked for the
dates of her talks...
Judge Allen seemed eager to ac-
cept Bryn Mawr’s invitation, although
her court routine will ‘prevent her
from giving her six lectures in con-
secutive weeks. She will, however,
live on campus for a two week period
sometime during the winter and thus
have-a-good opportunity to discuss
‘her particular field with the students.
The Anna Howard Shaw. fund was
established» in memory of Dr. Shaw
of Bryn Mawr (1928). It provides
for a series of six lectures to be given
every three years, the speaker to be,
preferably a woman eminent in poli-
tics, social science or any other field
of scholarship.
The individual titles for this year ’s
series-are as follows:
The Constitution, an Instrument for
Freedom (October 24).
Separation of the Governmental
Powers (November 21).
The Bill of Rights (February date
to be determined later).
Constitution and Labor (March date
to be determined latcr).. _
‘Democracy and the Constitution
(March date, to be determined later).
“Judge Alle’ did not begin her “law
practice until 1914. Before this time
she had been. correspondent to the New
York Musical Courier, 1904-’06, and
Musical Editor of the Cleveland Plain
Dealer, 1906-08. From 1910 to 1913
she served as a lecturer on music on
the New York Board_of*Education.
- Judge Allen served five. years
“(1921-'26) as judge to the Court of
Common Pleas in Cuyahoga County
and two terms, 1922-’34, as judge to
the Supreme Court of Ohio.
termite what news shall be given out
the
Numerous New .
Poems Are Read
By Miss Millay
Archaic Sonnet Requested by:
Enthusiastic Audience -
_As Encore
DRAMATIC PROGRAM
DISPLAYS VARIETY
Gevdhart, October 17.—A little over
a- third of the poems which Edna
Saint Vincent Millay read Monday
night were new; some had never been
published before, some had been pub-
lished only in magazines such as
Harper’s. Miss Millay, apolpgizing
for the number of unknown poems on
her ~~ said: “I hope you don’t
mind. ’m so much more interested
in the new ones myself.” The best’
poem she read, the Archaic Sonnet,
was one of these. It begins:-
“Dark famished grave I will not fill
thee yet,” and in it she says that she
will die in her own time, only after
having lived so full a life that there
will be little of her left to give the
grave.
Miss Millay has a rich rather poig-
nant voice, and she read with rhyth-
mical and emotional emphasis. Un-.
fortunately most people in the second
section of seats could hear little more
than the kind of song her voice mad
of the poems. She enunciated clearly
—her diction is beautiful—but there.
lurks in Goodhart a. faintly slurring
echo whfch makes speech intelligible
to the back row well nigh impossible. ,
Whether people like Miss Millay’s
delivery of her own poetry or not,
they must unanimously agree that she
is a good actress, and that as an ac-
tress she reads her poems. She uses
gestures, wery restrainedly, and can
make her voice do anything she
pleases. It would be impossible to
evaluate a poem one has merely heard
her: read, for she-can give-depth and
poetry to verse that has little of
either. I think she did essentially
that once or twice last night. “Now
that the West is washed of clouds and
clear,” is the poem I have in mind.
Her reading is undeniably creative—
as she read-In a Fine Country and
similar delicate little poems, she man-
aged to show the significance of slight
poems; that is, she showed them as
real things in their own right.”
A great many of the poems Miss \
Millay read—she read 27 in. ald
were poems that dealt in some way
with childhood. Childhood is_ the
Kingdom Where Nobody Dies, from
Wine From These Grapes, was the
first of these; there followed the *
Ballad of . Charling Down, Come
Along in Then, Little Girl, I Know a
Continued on Page Four
Sources of College -
"Information: Listed
Gosdhart, October 13.—Speaking on
Questions and Answers, Miss Park
devoted her second chapel of the year
to explaining how students “can ob-
tain accurate information about the
college in the quickest way.” They.
should not try to obtain it, in the first
place, either from members of the
faculty or from other students, both
of-whom are sometimes new. to the
college and uninformed. She then
went on to describe the four” official
sources of information. First. and
most important are the hall wardens.
As a group, they are cheese
fitted to give. advice or to" refer the,
student to the right person.
Secondly, the College News is the |
general source of all college informa-
tion. It is inclusive, carefully checked,
and regulated by a committee which
meets every Monday morning to de-
\
that week. This committee includes
the Editor of the News, the Editor of
Alumnae Bulletin, Miss Park,
Mrs. Chadwick-Collins, Miss Hows
and Miss Barbara Cary. 1
Continued on Page ‘Three -
@
(Founded in 1914)
Mawr College.
Published weekly during the College Year (excepting during Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter Holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest
._ of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building,
Wayne, Pa., and Bryn
The Collége News is fully protected
it may be reprinted either wholly or in
Editor-in-Chief. e-
by copyright. Nothing that appears in
part without written permission of the.
—
News Editor
ANNE LOUISE AXON,
Ass’t News Editor
EMILY CHENEY, ’40
’40 (
DEBORAH H, CALKINS, ’40
Susig INGALLS, ’41
ELIZABETH
BARBARA AUCHINCLOSS, ’40
" Business Manager
CAROLYN SHINE, ’39
LILIAN SBIDLER, ’40
4
Editor-in-Chief’
Mary R. MEtGs, ’39
Editors
Sports Correspondents
Graduate Correspondent
VESTA SONNE
Assistants
Subscription Manager ;
ROZANNE PETERS, ’40
Copy Editor
MARGARET MacG. OTIS,
Ass’t Copy Editor
IsoTra ASHE TUCKER, 40
39
OLIVIA KAHN, ’41
ELLEN MATTESON, ’40
Pope, ’40
Prccy Lou JAFFER, 41.
Advertising Manager
DOROTHY AUERBACH, ’40
Betty WILSON, 40
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY
MAILING PRICE, $3.00
BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wagme, Pa., Post Office
=
For the first and only time in
To the Alumnae
the year, we are handing over the
keys of our city. We, who as undergraduates can enjoy the pleasures
of possession, are relinquishing them to you for the week-end. Because
time has unfairly prevented you from graduatifig later than 1938, you
_ have missed what we have barely time to know: how it feels to work in
the Science Building, to climb’ up three flights to a class in new Dal-
ton, and to live in Rhoads. Some
of us have not done any of these,
but we have grown up with the Science Building and Rhoads, we have
echoed through their empty corridors, and we are proud to be a part
of the enlarged pattern they make of academic life.
As alumnae you are part of a
greater Bryn Mawr pattern. You
have more right than we to Bryn Mawr’s new possessions because they
are your creation and your heritage.
We saw their birth and develop-
ment, but we did not plan them and work for them as you did. There-
fore we are glad when even for a
~
webk-end you can see Bryn Mawr
with the eyes of ownership, and we welcome you by giving you our
most valuable daily privilege.
By Their Fruits, Ye Shall Know Them
Before the first issue of thee Lantern appears, we would like to
commend its editors far refusing to admit what was thought last year
to be defeat.
tendency is to turn into a revival.
It is not easy to produce something new when its natural
The undergraduate temperament
cannot change and some of the same mistakes will probably still be
made, but the response has changed and undergraduates know now
that the Lantern has no real limitations and that it will not try to
impose any style on its contributors.
If they have been tempted
occasionally in the~past to adopt a brittle, self-conscious style, it was
because they were trying to conform to a standard which, never existed.
We-do -not-understand why a—magazine— with sueh_potentialities
should not be successful.
bound ;
Compared to the Lantern, the News is hide-
it admits that it has a style and that it imposes it, and yet
\ people continue to try out for the Editorial Board and to enjoy work-
ing on it.
~be’ some channel other than the News for literary endeavor,
testing-ground that will show you
We think that it is of primary importance that there should
a kind of
in a small way. what it,means to
contribute to a magazine if you should ever want to in the future.
Experimental Writing courses,
for material.
especially, should be fertile sources
Last year, the editors of the Lantern said that they
would rather have a bad idea which was W ell written than a good idea
which was badly written.
For this reason, they rejected some of the
Experimental Writing papers because of their very obvious technical
faults.
We think that there is a plethora of latent good ideas and that
aul they need is stimulation, encouragement and a little polishing. We
disapprove of bad ideas no matter
/ ‘
how polished they may be.
The Lantern, because it is creative, should be primarily experi-
mental, and if it is experimental should be willing to accept a certain
amount of natural inexperience.
~ coming physiogiomy.
Already its editors have..solicited
contributions from a diverse group;-and ‘people w ho were afraid‘ of
the Lantern’s esoteric reputation have been attracted by its new wel-
We hope that it will be like the Phoenix, lighting
its own funeral pyre and rising triumphantly from the ashes.
a
In Philadelphia :
. ‘Movies
Aldine: Alexander Korda’s Drums
with Sabu, plus a good deal of genefal
anguish ‘and bldod-letting; in “the: he-
roic British colonial tradition.
Boyd: The Sisters, with Bette Davis
en reporter, played by Errol
Fox: Deanna Durbin and Jackie
an boper doing their best to prove that
Phat Certain Age can be prmreres
a cae.
3 Karlton: Garden wo the Moon, con-|
taining Pat O’Brien. ee |
_ Keith’s: The Marx Brothers 4
‘Broadway: anet giving cate
Service.
Palace: Too Hot To Handle, with
Clark Gable as an-on-the-spot news-
paper photographer, who also plays).
.cannibal -chief. and rescues oe
Loy’s brother. mt
Stanley: Frank Capra's You “Can't
Take It With You, starring’ Jean Ar-
all as the noble: wife’ of ay teen, Lionel pier and Janies
Stewart. -
Stanton: One of the annual fall
productions, Touchdown Army, with
John Howard and Mary Carlisle.
Victoria: Edward G, Robinson as-
serts I Am the Law.
Orchestra | ee
ihichineninet Three Preludes, C
rp Minor, G Major, and G Minor;
Se
| rymore-—--
‘TJames Cagnéy?
-_Berlin’s music.
Miss Josephine Petts has adopted |{
a new method of teaching posture
this year. She has taken movies of
fifteen students who are interested|
in improving their posture. They will
study their own movies, become aware
of their faults. and find a means to
overcome the difficulties. Emphasis,
is to be placed on the,fact that good
posture is not muscular, but a thing
of balance, imagination and rhythm.
Most of the work will be accomplished
through dancing since posture is not
static, but a matter of movement.
This past summer Miss Petts in-
structed dancing in.Salzburg. There
were three de Mawr girls there
who took part in the Salzburg fésti-
val. These were #onnie Allen, ’38,
Jane Ludwig, ’88, and Lydia: Lyman,
’39. Miss Petts has been in Austria
for the past ten summers and says
that in spite of political affairs the
atmosphere is as artistic as it has
always been.’
£
Geologists to Study
‘Piedmont Province’
Continued from Page One
been subject. By avelling thi
evidence the geologists determine, ac-
cording to diverse theories, ‘how many
times this has happened, and when,
in relation to the established Pre-
Cambrian, Cambrian, and Ordovician
periods.
Miss Bascom, who founded the de-
partment at Bryn Mawr, was the first
woman geologist in the world. Hers| «
was the preliminary work in the study
of local crystalline rocks.
Two of Miss Bascom’s pupils, Miss
Anna Jonas and Mrs. Eleanor Knopf,
were responsible for some of the con-
troversial opinions that have ap-
peared: in the last forty years. The
widening general interest has brought
many new interpretations based on
increased evidence. In the light of
this controversy this year of directed
intensive study is ~very_apt. ~~
Mr. Watson has long been inter-
ested in the same problem. He
worked on it at Johns Hopkins, and
after coming here eight years ago he
found that following the latest theor-
ies, the region required remapping.
The twelve graduate students who
will attend this symposium have had
little such .experyénce with this type
of _problem.__Miss_Bascom will con-
sult on the project, and Miss Hietanen
and other experts on this type of
rock formation, besides Miss Wyckoff
and Mr. Watson, will lecture to the
seminars.
Among the graduate students is
the first man to be. accepted as candi-
date for a Bryn Mawr Ph.D. degree,
Mr. Adolph E. Meier. He is on the
Continued on Page Three
Symphony No. 3, Allegro moderato,
Adagio ma non troppo, and Allegro;
Concerto No. 1 in F Sharp minor,
Moderato sostenuto, Andante canta-
bile, Allegro sherzando.
g
rea Theatre
Chestnut St. Opera House: Alfred
Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in ace atte
tryon 38, at 8.80 sharp.
Forrest: World premier of the mu-
sical comedy, Great Lady. Begins
October 20.
Locust St. Theatre: Until October
22, Eva Le Gallienne in Madame Ca-
pet; beginning October 24, Mazo de
la Roche’s Whiteoaks, with Ethel Bar-
a Wig - Seni a ens g, nee ee ee Ee
‘Local Movies
Seville: Wednesday-Thursday, Next
Time We Love, with Margaret Sul-
livan and James’ Stewart; «Friday-
DON JUAN
(Canto XVII continued)
Juan was maséd; he was almost
wood,
As Geoffrey Chaucer. often used to
say.
It seems to me thaf stone is just: as
good,
But then we’re harder in this age
and day,
We turn to stone, I mean. Well,
Juan stood fe
And wished ‘the were a thousand
miles away.
Or in some mental realm,—for in-
stance math, or in »
Victorians ‘with Miss Woodwind
(Mary Katharin®).
adn’t even made his wishes vocal
When lo, Miss Woodwind, fairer
than a star,
Became an image at-the point called
focal
‘ Of Juan’s absentminded retina.
“Come on,” she said, “the next Paoli
Local
Will. get us there in time.
far.’?
For your enlightenment, Miss “Wood-
wind sponsored
The Friday-series Philadelphia con-
cert. v
Ttisn’t
>
Don Juan followed, meeker than a
mouse,
Wondering what Miss W. was doin’.
ey’re going to play a werk by
Richard Strauss,
‘vivid parable in tone,’
Juan,”
Explained Miss Woodwind.
they arrived the house
Was filling fast, and in the rush
ensuin’,
Fighting like knights of ‘good Sir
Thomas Malory,
They panted to the. purple peanut
gallery.
A Don
When
“O. magic realm, illimited, eternal,”
(Reading the program, Juan
thought, “What’s this?’’)
“Of gloried woman,—loveliness
pernal,
Fain would I, in the storm of stress-
su-
ful bliss—”’
(Juan in interest almost ate the
‘ Journal)
“Expire upon the last one’s linger-
ing kiss!”
“That’s me, Miss Woodwind. ‘This
composer, Richard
In picturing Don - Juan . has
pitchered.”
me
“Sh,” said Miss Woodwind. An or-
chestral crash,
A contrapuntal tempest, made _ it
plain
This was a mighty Jugin, like the
rash
Manfred, or like the heaven-defying
Cain.
Our Juan, filled with reminiscent
pash,
Arose and exited in cold disdain,
And moving swifter than the Nor-
mandie,
Flew to the side of Mr. Otmandy.
(To: be continued)
Page Two THE COLLEGE NEWS , |
MOVIES TO BE USED . || : || COLLEGE YEARS’ MAKES
"THE COLLEGE NEWS IN POSTURE ANALYSIS! W/IE°S IE ND INITIAL APPEARANCE
: ei |
(Especially Gontribvited by Mary
Elizabeth Wickham.): - \
College Years, the national _inter-
-eollegiate- magazine to be published
four times during the college year,
will contain articles by leading educa-
tors, college professors, officials and
undergraduates on subjects of: inter-.
collegiate interest, Prominent figures
in public life, including writers and
columnists, will be _intérviewed and
will contribute articles pertaining to
college students and colleges them-
selves. Photographs and drawings of
college events will be included.
The initial issue of College Years
will be released this week-end and
will contain thirteen stories and three
columns, including Liberal Education
in-a Democracy by Henry Wriston,
president of Brown University, an
article on the National Youth, Ad-
ministration by Aubrey Williams,
The World’s Fair of 1939 by Grover
Whalen, and The Razzle Dazzle Cal-
lege Life of the Twenties by Lucius
Beebe. There _ witl be approximately
130 illustrations, photographs and
drawings, possibly representing as
many. as.seventy-five colleges. The
issue also includes a spot section, a
fashion section in color, an album sec-
tion, sports, cartoons and letters.
This issue will enjoy a wide circu-
lation among the ten contributing
colleges, Yale, Princeton, Harvardy,
Dartmouth, Williams, Brown, Bryn
Mawr, Smith, Vassar and Wellesley. -
The magazine will sell at twenty-five
cerits a copy, seventy-five cents for
four issues.
Integration Troubles’.
Will Cause Nazi Fall
Continued from Page One
desirable to have Hitler take over all
the areas he wants as quickly as
possible because it means inevitable
indigestion. The Germans and Aus-
trians have always shown themselves
inadequately fitted to rule_minorities,
and at present their racial illusions
will make them more incapable than
ever.
For a 1000 years conflicts have ex-
isted between the Germans and the
Czéchoslovaks which were understood
by® President Massaryk when he
formed the Republic. Great progress
was being made toward the solution
of these problems until Hitler and
Henlein created an impossible situa-
tion by their agitations.
Hitler’s demand that the territory
be returned to Germany. was. false;
the boundaries of thé kingdom of Bo-
hemia have been the same for 1500
years, The world, Mr. Miller said,
now has to run the course of this—-
fever of nationalism and racialism:
the question is, how long?
Three-fourths of the original area
of Czechoslovakia remain, and the
same proportion of the population, but
only 60 per cent of its resources. The
Gzechs are industrious and even with
this disadvantage they can survive.
However, their immediate survival is
dependent on co-operation with Ger-
many, which means that their gov-
ernment. must be approved by the
Continued on Page Four
Mr. Foley. Outlines 6000 Dollar Landscaping
Project for Rhoads and the. Deanery
Since the unveiling of the Deanery
this summer, it has stood self-con-
sciously.as.mgi made it, in all its
beautiful simplicity. Rhoads, on the
other hand, does not feel the need of
clothes since it has always been with-
out them. We think that there is a
certain stark’ grandeur about a build-
Saturday, Laurel and Hardy in Swisstyp- untouched by-nature;-and that-it
Miss, plus latest March of Time; Sun-
day - Monday - Tuesday, Three Loves
Has Nancy, with Robert Montgomery
and Janet Gaynor; Wednesday, Boy
Meets Girl, with Pat O’Brien | and
Suburban: Until cele a ounbes
2%, Alexander’s Ragtime Band,
Tyrone Power, Alice —_ and Irving
Wayne: Thursday-Friday-Saturday,
Fours’ A Crowd, with Errol Flynn
‘and ‘Olivia De Havilland, plus latest
March .of Time; Sunday-Monday-
Tuesday, Spawn of the North, with)
Henry Fonda and Dorothy Lamour.
Ardmore:
Friday-Saturday, Algiers, with Charl
with| :
must be defective if it has to be ecov-
ered up. with Rhododendrons and
Drooping Leucothoe. But far be it-
from us to throw monkey-wrenches
into Bryn Mawr’s plans for clothing
its ‘lately® acqhited“ nudist “colony” of
buildings, ;
‘Mr. Foley, who is: supervising the
planting, gave us some obscure blue-
prints and a very intelligible price
list. After an intellectual wrestling
match with the former, we found the
eanery’s front door. Somewhat to
ine, southward was the library, and
by it a circle of Existing Hemlocks.
We crept past the hemlocks and came
Wednesday - Thursday-4/to a wall covered with Winter Creeper,
ey inter Jasm
ine and Clematis Verti-
Boyer and Hedy Lamarr. .
‘Hemlocks,
This was a modest beginning. Mak-
ing our way ‘comparatively easily
through the Yew Trees surrounding :
the road, back to the ‘front door, into
the small court and along the wall,
we lost our bearings in a thicket of
Existing Cherry Trees, Canadian
New Laurel, Rhododen-
dron, Sweet Bays,Ground. Covers, and
a-garage hiding behind a Holly Tree.
Emerging breathlessly, we walked to
the corner of the driveway at the end
of the parking area, only to be
plunged into Azaleas: Nudiflora
(Flowerless .Azaleas), Kalmia’ Latia:. <<
s
a,
\
folia #{Mahy-leaved- Latitel)}-Rhodo- ~
dendron- Maximum (Super Rhododen-
dron) and Cave Canem: Florafftia
(Flowering Dogwood).
The front of Rhoads is to be deco-
rated in much the same fashion. It
‘will be covered with Winter Creepers,
Clematis,, Winter Jasmine, and three
or four kinds of Ivy, with Yews and
Maidenhair Trees stuffed in the avail-
able niches. .This jungle paradise-will
eost exactly $4161.66; the Deanery’“ ~ +s
planting will be $1907.36. cm 1.
M. Ri M
cillaris. \ a
MEE
eS PEPER
4
~ CURRENT EVENTS
“THE COLLEGE NEWS
%
Ren
(Gleaned from M re, Fenwick)
‘Common Room, Octobéy, 18. — The
outstanding political event of ‘the sum-
mer ‘was the President’s effort ‘to: pre-
‘vent ‘the renomination of: the: \‘Demo-
_eratic’“*senators who: had been the
leading opponents of his New Deal
policies: - His: “purge” failed in Geor-
gia, South Carolina and Maryland,
and was only partially successful in
New York.
In Europe the defeat of Great
ris ae and France has thrown all
central and southeastern Europe into
confusion.
coal, factories, and iron ore lost, its
economic independence gone, will prob-
ably submit unconditionally to Ger-
many. Hungary, too, is pressing both
Czechoslovakia and Rumania for the
Hungarian territories granted ‘them
at: the end. of the war. The non-
Serbian Croatians. and Slovinians are
also threatening civil war in Yugo-
slavia.
The ultimate obit of Hitler is un-
doubtedly the disintegration of the
British empire. He has already sug-
gested indirectly that’ since the Ger-
avy is limited by treaty to 35%
ritish navy, the British air-
ld be correspondingly limited
to 35%" of the German. At Saar-
briicken, he intimated further that he
would regard the election of a hostile
prime minister as throwing doubt upon
the validity of the agreements made
with Chamberlain.
Chamberlain’s surrender at Sunich
has also immediately resulted in new
Japanese “aggression in Southern
China and_ renewed Arab rioting in
Palestine. In America, President
Roosevelt, realizing that hencefofth
the United States may have to defend
it alone, has~ already introduced a
bill aSking increased appropriations
for the army and the air force.
College Coxlnci Holds
First Meeting of Year
‘Continued from Pabé One
Last year, meetings of the A. S. U.,
the International -Relations Club, and
the Industrial Group were all sched-
uled for nights in the middle of the
week. The heads of these organiza-
tions and Eleanor. Taft, ’39, decided
that this made the week too congested
and thought it ~vould be ‘better if the
meetings were changed to” Friday
night. Miss Park said that the ma-
jority of students spend their week-
ends at Bryn Mawr and would be in-
terested in having something to do.
Plans for the Glee Club are still
unformulated. The Princeton Glee
Club has changed its program for one
which Mr. Alwyne. and Misg ’\Park
consider unacceptable. If Bryn Mawr
decides to give a concert, the big
spring week-end could be taken over
ee Players’ Club. Mrs. Manning
thinks that this gives the Players’
Club a good opportunity for giving a
really interesting play. A. J. Clark,
739, said that members of the Glee
Club prefer to work exclusively on
singing rather than mix singing with
acting. Mrs. Chadwick-Collins sug-
\ gested giving a Mozart operetta like
Figaro or The Magic Flute. _Mr. Wil-
”.Joughby; “however; says that it=would
A: > Bryn Mayr eg es
have to be done with men and that
rehearsal difficulties would make it
impossible to co-operate with Prince-
ton. Something other than Gilbert
and Sullivan might Je arranged with
the Haverford Glee Club.
After the discussion of the Glee
Club, Miss Barbara Cary, publicity di-
rector, outlined her idea for a college
movie, which could be shown to un-|,
dergraduates, to alumnae and prospec-
E. Foster Hammonds
Incorporated
Radios’ --
» Music’ -- . Records
829 Lancaster Ave.
’ COLORFUL COPPER.
pee |
Vases Pitchers |
Teapots
An attractive decorative
medium at attractive prices
_ Richard ‘Stockton
‘Bryn Mawr
Czechoslovakia, with its]
Four Organizations
Hold Joint Meeting
Continued, from Page One
Peat: and .Publicity. Members join
one-or more ‘groups accerding to their
interests.
Theynext speaker was Helen Cobb.
She explained that the Peace Council,
founded two years ago, is strictly a
college organization committed only
to such action as college opinion may
advocate. “Run on democratic lines, it
is influenced by_no national or district
policy. Miss Cobb also gave a brief
summary of the purpose and accom-
plishmepts of the Bryn Mawr summer
hich is maintained for the
benefit of workers from all over the
Last year, for example, women
from England, Toronto and Denmark
enrolled.: The classes are mainly dis-
cussion'groups and are based on the
school
world.
experiences of the students.
The Industrial Group, part of the
Bryn Mawr League, was represented
This group con-
sists of students and workers who dis-
Its purpose is]
the study of these conditions; it*takes
Outside lecturers are _in-
by Lucille Sauder.
cuss labor ‘conditions.
no action.
vited to speak to the members.
Laura Estabrook summarized the
platform of the International Rela-
tions Club. Non-partisan in character,
it takes no active stand on any policy.
Mr.- Fenwick is -its adviser and out-
side lecturers frequently address the
group.
- Miss Dimock then took over the
meeting and reports were given on
various activities of the A. S. U.
Emily Doak, ’89, who attended the
first meeting of the district A. S. U.
this year, described the business of
She mentioned the
that meeting.
membership drive which A. S. U. lead-
tive students, to» parents and to
schools.
of the Alumnae Association, said that
nothing would be more helpful to
alumnae groups \than a good film of
lm must have the
cannot be all-in-
the college. The
proper balance, an
clusive since this weuld tend to make’
it choppy; fortunatel} it will be able
to profit by mistakes which have been
made in the past. Mrs. Chadwick-
Collins thought that people like to see
the campus even more than interiors,
and. suggested that it be arranged
according to seasons. The general
opinion was that colored films are
more effective even though they are
expensive. What is needed for the
production of such a film, said Miss
Cary, is. the co-operation of indi-
viduals.
Mrs. Darrow, the president
GERMANTOWN IS “TIED
BY BRYN MAWR TEAM
Saturday, October 15, Hockey Field.
— The Bryn -Mawr hockey team
mantown Cricket’ Club, whose team is
reported to. be the best in this vicin-
ity. The field was extremely slippery,
but it was a fast game. Captain
Delia Marshall, ’39, Chris Waples,
42, and Helen Resor,
standing on the varsity. Nancy How-
ard, ’41, accounted for the lone Bryn
Mawr score and Miss Thomas scored
for Germantown.
Score:. Bryn Mawr, 1;. Germantown,
1. te.
Time: 25 minute halves.
Line-up
BRYN MAWR GERMANTOWN *
Weadock .:.... 1 a Ee ener Oak
OS Oe ck Perry
Stokés #33 ....:5 G4 Cof
OO 5. t% oie Rol at Thomas
MLOWATO ois BOW i es Wurts
Wilkinson .. eon Connell
WODICS oo .'s00 5 ec. h. Reichner
MEPSHall sss. Re 645 ee Brown
Resor adewW Bh SP ia vias Homer
cu ae Soi kciins ... Heist
Alexander. ..... Beccesceses Wallace
Substitutions: B. M.—Beck for Al-
exander, Norris for Taylor, Clark for
Stokes.
Umpires: Sharp and Ferguson.
a
ers hope will bring 700 new members
into this district by the time the next
A. S. U. convention is held, She also
spoke of thé labor conditions in Phila-
delphia, where the garbage and taxi
drivers’ unions have been on strike.
Agnes Spencer, ’89, enumerated the
activities of the labor committee, and
then Helen Cobb reported on the
World Youth Congress which was held
at Vassar College this summer. De-
spite the opposition of American dele-
gates, the Congress took a stand for
dgllective security. It favored anti-
Fascism and wider education. The
Vassar Peace Pact, drawn up at the
convention, favored unity between the
youth of all nations, and opposed ra-
Ncial discrimination. Wars of aggres-
sion were denounced and it was pro-
posed that in the future effective as-
air be given to victims of all such
aggression.
The last A. S. U. business of the
meeting was to elect a permanent rep-
resentative to the district council, and
a new chairfnan of the Publicity Com-
mittee to take the place of Jane Har-
per, ’41, who resigned the post. Mar-
garet Squibb, ’41, was chosen for the
former position; Olivia Kahn, ’41, for
the latter.
Breakfast* Lunch
MEET YOUR FRIENDS_
at
The Bryn Mawr College Tea Room
for a
SOCIAL CHAT AND RELAXATION
Hours of Service: 7.30 A. M.—7. 30. P.M.
For Special Parties, Call Bryn Mawr 386
Dinner
Tea
5 a
A HAPPY THOUGHT FOR THRIFTY COLLEGIANS
- SEND your weekly laundry
home by handy Railway Express
Right from your college rooms and return, ‘conveniently,
economically and fast, with no bother at all. Just phone
our local college agent when to come for the bundle-He'll
call for it promptly—whisk it away on speedy express
trains, to your city or town and return the home-
done product to you—a/l without extra charge—the
whole year through. Rates for this famous college
service are low, and you can send collect, youknow
(only by Railway Express, by the way). It’s a very.
popular method and adds to the happy thought.
- Phone ouragent today. He’sa good man to know. .
BRYN MAWR AVE.
BRANCH OFFICE: HAVERFORD, PA.
R. AVE.)
“iPhone. BRYN MAWR- “ig
MAWR, PA
‘Phone ARDMORE. 561
RAILWAY
EXPRESS
AGENCY, INC.
R\ NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE .
opened its season by tying the Ger-}
"42, were out- |
Geotagias- 1 to Study
‘Piedmont Province’
q
Continued from Page Two
staff of Swarthmore College, and has
spent eleven years as analytical chem-
ist with the New Jersey Zinc. Comi-
pany.
Other men students are Mr. Joseph
Berman;~who was one of the men
Bryn. Mawr students for part of last
year, and Lawrencé T. Weagle. Two
more men are expected to join the
symposium. ,
Anna Hietanen, hglder of the prized
Mary P. Collins scholarship, received
her Ph.D. at Helsinki, Finland, in
1936. Her dissertation on the Fin-
nish quartzites was based on studies
made by the Sanders Petrofabric
method. Her professor at the uni-
versity had studied the technique un-
der Sanders at Innsbruck,
Miss Hietanen, says Mr. Watson,
“fits perfectly” into the needs of the
department. She is, he says, easily
«| the equal of any one in this country
in the use of this technique. She will
plot, instrumentally, the amount and
character of. the mechanical deforma-
tion of the local limestone, phyllite
and the Wissahicken 'shist. Mr. Wat-
son hopes-that by the end of the year
renough will have been achieved so
that she can publish a paper.
. Attention!
On Sunday, October . 23, ‘in-
formal conferences on mathe-
matics, psychology, biology and
physics-and their place in the
Bryn Mawr curriculum will be
held-from 9-10.45 and from 11-
12.45. Mr. MacKinnon will
speak on psychology in the li-:
brary and Mrs. Wheeler on
mathematics in Dalton from 9-_
10.45. Mr. Michels will speak
on physics and Miss Gardiner
on biology from 11-12.45, both
Sal
in Dalton.
If alumnae groups are not too
large a few graduate vand un-
dergraduates may be admitted.
Anyone who. isgtnterested should
leave her namé at the Alumnae |
Office in the Deanery before
Saturday night.
~™ be 9
Jeannette’s Flower Shop
823 Lancaster . Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Let us “Say It With Flowers”
for you. Style arrangement,
quality, freshness and service
guaranteed.
Phone B. M. 570
An Absolute
MyDear Watson!
@ ‘This will is dated 1894. Utter-
ly impossible! It couldn’t have
been written before 1937, because
my chemical tests prove it was
inscribed with Penit, the remark-.
able new ink created by Sanford
only last year. Elementary...
my dear Watson!’’
Amazing,-Sherlock! For the
benefit of Dr. Watson and other
students in the Crime Detection
School, may we add:
-Penit isa free-flowing,.trouble-_« é
“proof ink:-It *has”an attractive
greenish blue color. You can
‘count on it for smooth, easy-
writing .. always! Because it’s
ap
2-oz. bottle, 15c; 4-oz. bottle
with chamois penwiper, 25c.
SANFORD’S
he
The Pen-Tested Ink
for All Makes of
Fountain Pens
aes
FORGERY; |}
pen-tested for all makes of pens.—-}|—;--—
Sunday Evening Service,
The speaker at this service
will be the Reverend C. Leslie
Glenn, rector of Christ Church,
Cambridge, Mass.
The choir will sing .as An-
thems I Waited for’ the Lord,
Mendelssohn, and Jesus, Joy of
Man’s Desiring Bach, in which
Miss Helen Rice (Warden of.
' Rhoads Hall) will play the vio-
lin obligato part. Miss _ Rice
will also play before the service
the Largo from the F minor
Sonata of J. S. Bach.
_ An informal discussion will
- follow in the Common. Room.
Sources of College
Information Listed
Continued from Page One
Thirdly, information can be ob-
tained from the College Council, which
meets once a month to discuss college
affairs in general. It is made up of
the presidents of the four classes, the
president of the Undergraduate Soci-
ety, the president of the Non-Resident
Club, the head warden, the director of
Collins, representatives of the alum-
nae and the faculty, the editor of the
College News, and the heads of the
four major organitations on the cam-
pus. The Council has .no power of
action, but may refer decisions or
problems to the appropriate organi-
zations.
For academic information the stu-
dent should go to the two deans, Mrs.
Manning or Miss Ward, or to Miss
Park herself. All three have office
hours, and Miss Park has a supple-
mentary office hour at her home every
Tuesday afternoon. “To provide a
starting point for more personal in-
vestigation,” chapels will also be held
from time to time whenever she has
any specific or pertinent information
to give the college.
Notice
- The president and directors,
of the college invite all the
graduate and _ undergraduate
students to attend the opening
exercises of the new Chemistry-
‘Geology Building in Goodhart
Hall at 2.30 p. m. on Saturday,
October 22.
Meet your friends at...
THE GREEK’S
Bryn Mawr next to Theatre
Tasty Grill Sandwiches, Refreshments
Excellent Lunches 35c; Dinner 50c-60c
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halls, Miss MacBride, Mrs. Chadwickd
Page Three
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Numerous New Posias
Read by Miss Millay
Continued from Page One
' Hundred Ways to Die, and Look, Ed-
win, Do You See That Boy?’ The first
she read with strong feeling, the em-
phasis more on death than on child-
ait hood. . The second is, as it promises,
a ballad, and the last three are little
child-views, very clever, of the world.
Among the familiar poetry, was an
extract from Conversation at Mid-
night. Miss Millay chose the discus-
«sion between the capitalist and the
communist, with interjeetions by the
liberal, ending with the liberal’s ad-
monishing “Gentlemen,. gentlemen.”
She read also three sonnets from
Fatal Interview: the third—
“No lack of counsel from the shrewd
and wise,” the seventeenth—
“Sweet , love, sweet thorn, when
lightly to my heart,” :and the thirty-
eighth—
“You say ‘Since life’is cruel enough
at best.’”’ Several of the poems were
‘humorous, such as Portrait by a
Neighbor, from. A Few Figs From
T histles.
Miss Millay was applauded so
: loudly at the end of her program that
she gave a kind of encore, reading
first a sonnet to Elinor Wylie called
Answer Question, which she had
never read aloud before. It began,
“Oh; she was beautiful in every part.”
A second reading of the Archaic Son-
net followed, and when the audience
refused to 5 Miss Millay ex-
plained that she had to catch a train
and quickly recited Travel.
To judge frome¢heir applause, the
audience really enjoyed her - poetry
Integration Tecsibiles
Will Cause Nazi Fall
Continued from Page Two
S|
country.
Already there has been indication
of a breakdown in democratic ideals
among. the. Czechoslovaks. The be-
trayal by ,France and England’ has
made them cynical, but the friends of
Czechoslovakia have not given up
hope. The 30° Years’ War which re-
duced their population from three mil-
lions to 800,000 was followed by re-
strictions of freedom of: thought. quite
equal to those now applied by the
Nazis, and it lasted six generations.
However, the Czechs came back with
no change in democratic love of free-
dom and next time the interlude of
oppression will not be, so long. .
The ideals Of the constitution, which
the people feel has so little meaning
in these uncertain times, will not, be
lost, and a new president has been
elected by “the usual procedure.
Former President Benes was cabled
an offer of a professorship in the Uni-
and, I suspect more than that, her
reading; for it was not Edna Saint
Vincent Millay’s poetry which they
were judging and enjoying, but Edna
Saint Vincent Millay’s poetry read by
Edna Saint Vincent Millay. Campus
opinion, and as much of the audience
opinion as I could garner from bits
of conversation was, and is, widely
divided between acute dislike of her
poetry and its rendition, and rapture
over both. It is something that her
contribution was positive enough to
allow for no fence-sitters.
: D. H.C.
Cf
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versity of: Chicage which, he has ac-
cepted.
garian demands, Mr. Miller noted
that the facts will be out before the
College News. However, in his opin-
ion, the Hungarian borders did need
revision although their demands were
absurd. Moreover, they ‘could not
take this territory by foree without
Hitler’s help and at present Der
Fuhrer seems to prefer that Czecho-
slovakia be left between Hungary and
Poland. Both, though undemocratic
states, are likely to be. troublesome to
him in the future.
In conclusion, Mr. Miller said that
the Czechoslovakia : people have. not
lost faith, but that patience is essen-
tial. Both realism and idealism are
needed at the same time. . Those who
have “worked to establish and main-
tain Czechoslovakia, do not feel that
their efforts have been wasted, for an
example of efficient democracy has
been given to the world. At present,
Mr. Miller: added, we are very con-
scious of the martyrdom of that de-
mocracy and if. the blood of mar-
tyrs is the seed. of the church, it is
just as important—te the: democratic
state. a
ts The common presumption is that
GREEN HILL FARMS
City Line afid 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
In answer to a question on the Hun-:
Hitler and Mussolini must come into
conflict.
the Italian Tyrol is much worse than
anything that: occurred in Czecho-
slovakia. In addition, the area of the
dictators’ economic interests in the
Balkan peninsula is bound to bring
them into conflict with each other.
Mr. Miller feels that the future will
bring unpleasant’ repurcussions to
freedom-loving Americans. — Already
it appears that Germany is dictating
to England’s government and if we
continue to follow Great Britain’s
leadership, the consequences are ob-
vious. But the wider the area. Ger-
many tries to control, the quicker the
break in her domination.
Patronize our advertisers.
rosea
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College news, October 19, 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)
1938-10-19
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 25, No. 02
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-no2