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VOL. XXIII, No. 8 BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1936 °epyright BRYN MAWR' PRICE 10 CENTS
i ,
Romanticism Cited
In Spirit, Method.
Of Prevost’s Work
His Figures Are Precursors of
The Early 19th Century
: Literature
PAUL HAZARD EXPLAINS
BREAK WITH CLASSIC
Goodhart, November 18.—Paul Haz-
ard, one of Bryn Mawr’s most beloved
lecturers, demonstrated conclusively
in speaking on Un Pré-Romantique
de 1730: VAbbé Prévést that the es-
sential character of the romantic
hero, as found in the literature of the
early nineteenth century, can be dis-
covered in the figure created by the
Abbé Prévést. Not even Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, whose influence on roman-
ticism was of ‘the greatest importance, |
is closer to those later types than are
the persons of the Chevalier des
Grieux, hero of Manon Lescant; the
“English philosopher’ Cleveland and
the other characters of his novels.
The Abbé Prévést made a direct,
though unconscious, break with the
ideals of classicism: stability, method
and conduct dictated by a firm belief.
‘The romantic spirit appears with him
society once he has destroyed it and
in all its essentials. His people believe
above all else in the power and per-
fection of love, which excuses and
transcends all else. His heroes reflect
in their lives his own spirit of inces-
sant restlessness, which never permits
them to remain long in one place or
in one state of mind. As the Abbé
was himself primarily an adventurer,
so are they. He began his studies
with the Jesuits, ran away to the
army, returned to the Benedictines,
Tran away again, narrowly escaped
death by hanging and wandered all
over Belgium, Holland, Germany and
England.__In_-all_ his work he shows
his close relation with the English,
especially in his history of the “philos-
opher Cleveland.”
Further resemblances to the roman-
tic character of the nineteenth cen-
tury are manifested in his characters.
The ennui and the melancholy, involv-
ing a distaste for the present and a
search of some unknown good, are
joined to a love of solitude and even
of things lugubrious. This is shown
in its full horror by the behavior of
the Homme de Qualité when, after
losing his beloved Selima, he shuts
himself in a blatk-draped room with
the heart of Selima enclosed in a
golden casket. The Abbé Prévdést is
a master of imagination; the fantastic
adventures of Madame riding among
the primaeval terrors of the African
jungle are witnesses to that. Some-
times his imagination carries him
along false roads, for although he
claims to believe only in the truth
which is guaranteed by historical fact,
his documentation was often woefully
erroneous.
In some respects it is possible to see
in the work of the Abbé Préviést a
Continued on Page Four
COLLEGE CALENDAR
Wednesday, December 2.—
Sylvanus Morley will lecture. on
New Mayan Excavations. Good-
hart, 8 p. m.
* Thursday, December 3.—Sum-
mer School tea. Common Room,
4.30 p. m.
Mr: Charles Bakewell will ad-
dress the Philosophy Club. Com-
mon Room, 4.30 p. m.
i Friday and Saturday, Decem-
ber 4 and 5.—Players’ Club will
present Barry’s Holiday. Good-
hart, 8 p. m.
Saturday, December 5. —
Undergraduate dance. Dean-
ery.
Monday, December 7.—Mr.
Henry Woollman will speak on
the Horseshoe Trail. Common
Room, 5 p. m.
Tuesday, December 8.—Miss
Kraus will give the Current
Events talk on The President’s
Social Security Program. Com-
mon Room, 7.30 p. m.
Wednesday, December 9.—In-
dustrial Group Supper. Com-
mon Room, 6.30 p. m.
Thursday, December 10.—In-
ternational Club meeting. Com-
mon Room, 8 p. m.
Saturday, December 12. —
Dancing Club Christmas _re-
cital. Gymnasium, 8 p. m.
Sunday, December 13.—Dr.
Alfred Salmony will ‘speak on
The Ancient Art of Siberia and
Its Influence on Chinese and Eu-
ropean Art. Deanery, 5 p. m.
Christmas Carol Service. The
Reverend Andrew Mutch will
conduct the service. Goodhart,
7.30 p. m.
Tuesday, December 15.—Cur-
rent Events. Mr. Smith will
speak on The New Constitution
of India. Common Room, 7.30
p. m.
Wednesday, December 16.—
Dr. Thomas Reed Powell will
speak on The Constitutional
Problems of Roosevelt’s Second
Term. Taylor, Room_F, 2 p.m.
MR. CHARLES BAKEWELL
TO SPEAK ON ARISTOTLE
At 4:30 p. m. on Thursday after-
noon in the Common Room, Mr.
Charles Bakewell, Ph. D., will lecture
on Aristotle before members of the
Philosophy Club. The ambitious are
urged to look over the books on the
Philosophy Club reserve in prepara-
tion for the discussion.
Excluding Mr. Bakewell’s philoso-
phical prominence, he is well known
at Bryn Mawr. From 1898-1900 he
was here as Associate Professor of
Philosophy. During this time he
married Madeleine Palmer, ’99, who
was president of the Philosophy Club.
Their daughter, Mildred, is a junior
at Bryn Mawr. In addition many of
Mr. Bakewell’s books are in use on
the campus, notably the Scribner edi-
tions of Plato’s works, edited by him.
In 1933 Mr. Bakewell retired after
28 years of teaching at Yale Univer-
sity. He has lately: been active in
Connecticut politics.
Masculine Rooters Cheer and Catcall
As Soccer Players Befuddle Varsity
Haverford Scores Six Times:
Bryn Mawr Makes Lone Goal
In First Half
November 30.—The lower hockey
field resounded to the cheers and cat-
calls of masculine rooters as Haver-
ford’s soccer team trimmed the Bryn
Mawr Varsity in hockey, 6-1. Haver-
ford got off to-a slow start; but as
they warmed up and got on to the
game, they managed to keep the ball
at the Bryn Mawr end of the field
much of the time, where they com-
pletely befuddled the backs to score
again and again. “i
The Haverford cheering section en-
after fouls. There were cries of “We
were robbed!” as Haverford failed to
score on what appeared to be a goal
and Bryn Mawr was given the ball,
and equally loud shouts of laughter
as one over-earnest soccer player pre-
cipitated himself into the hedge be-
hind the Bryn Mawr goal.
The single Bryn Mawr score was
made early in the first half by Wea-
dock. Towards the end of the second
half the Haverford goalie left the
cage and joined in the play at mid-
field, rushing back when the goal was
threatened.
Meirs, center eniaud on the Hav-
erford team, accounted for four of
their goals, and with the Evans
brothers formed a fast combination 4
on the forward line.
See Page 3 for line-up.
<
Open Window is a Hit;
Actors Aft Excellent
Type of Play Proves Handicap
in Barbara’s Wedding
Goodhart, November 20.—The sea-
son for“one-act plays as q, means of
gaining coveted entrance into the
Players’ Club was officially opened by
the presentation of a dramatization
of “Saki’s story, The Open Window
and Barrie’s Wedding.
Both plays were done entirely by in-
terested students and were given only
a week’s preparation: before being
performed.
The Open Window, with its absurd
situation culminating im a veritable
Barbara’s .
coup de thedtre, proved itself excel-
lent material for the stage, in spite
of a definite lack of action. The
necessary lines with which Anne
Goodman, ’38, and Janet Thom, ’38,
supplemented the “Saki” dialogue,
were witty and quite in keeping with
the spirit of the story. The three
leading characters showed an under-
standing and control of their parts
which in view of the short rehearsal
period was truly remarkable. The
combination of Winifred Safford,
37, as a little girl with aggressive
self-confidence and an amazing abil-
ity to deceive; of Elizabeth Wash-
burn, ’387, as a young man with a
nervous complex and no poise; and of
Jeanne Quistgaard, ’38, as a practical
lady with a boundless wealth of small
talk was extremely funny. These
characters were able to sustain the
humor throughout the piece and to
overcome the disadvantage of a play
without action.
The second play, Barbara’s Wed-
ding, by James Barrie, was a less
fortunate choice for the hasty pro-
duction necessary. One of Barrie’s
most sentimental ventures, it cannot
be considered a “sure-fire” success
with the average audience. Aside
fromthe question of appeal, it in-
volves definite problems of produc-
tion which can hardly be solved in a
week of preparation. Infinite care
is needed in rehearsal and a light
touch must be felt throughout the per-
formance. The part of the old Col-
onel, valiantly attempted by Jean
Hoagland, ’39, is a difficult under-
taking for any young person. It must
be said that the producers of Bar-
bara’s Wedding overshot their mark,
but under the circumstances they did
a very creditable job. The most out-
standing person in the play was Julja
Harned, ’39, who in the role of Ellen,
the Colonel’s wife, showed consider-
able acting ability.
Ball-Room Dancing Demonstration
A teacher from the Arthur Murray
School in New York will give a demon-
stration of ball-room dancing in the
Gymnasium on Tuesday, December 8,
at 7.30 p. m. Everyone is cordially
invited. Come prepared to dance. If
enough interest is found the Physical
Education Department plans to start
a class with a teacher from this
school.
Mr. Woollman to Speak on Hiking
Mr. Henry Woollman, founder of
the Horseshoe Trail from Valley
Forge to Manada Cap, will speak on
the advantages of the trail for week-
end-hiking or riding on Monday, De-
cember 7, in the Common Room. The
lecture will be illustrated with moving
pictures. Tea will be served at 4.30
and the talk will begin at 5. Every-
one is urged to come.
Mrs. Gilbreth Returns
Mrs. Gilbreth will come to the
college again next week on De-
cember 9, 10 and 11. She will
see students on Wednesday and
Thursday mornings and after-
noons and on Friday morning.
‘The list of appointments is out-
side Mrs. Manning’s office. Mrs.
Manning and Mrs. Crenshaw
will give a reception for~ the
freshmen to meet Mrs. Gilbreth
}° on Tuesday evening.
Cooperative Efforts of Three Professors
Inaugurate Promising Series of Lectures
Cora: DuBois, Anthropo.ogist Krom Hunter, is Invited to Join
Messrs. Helson, MacKinnon and Weiss to Present
Aspects of The Nature of Man
MISS PARK SEES UNITY OF EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES
Music Room, . November 24.—A
novel idea of great possibilities will
be realized next semester in a series
of lectures on the general subject,
Man, Miss Park announced in chapel.
The proposal, which. marks a: new co-
operation among the departments of
the college, is the joint effort of Mr.
Helson and McMacKinnon of the Psy-
chology Department and Mr. Weiss
of the Department of Philosophy.
They have asked Miss Cora DuBois,
a scientific anthropologist of Hunter
College, to present ‘another and vital
point of view of this fundamental
subject. Each; speaker will in two
lectures approach the subject of man
from his special field and attempt to
relate it to the other three and to
the interests of the undergraduate
body as a whole.
Miss DuBois received her doctorate
at the University of California and
has worked at Yale and in the De-
partment of Psychology at Harvard.
She has been highly recommended by
a number of independent informants
as a_ scientific anthropologist with
psychological training, as an excellent
lecturer and as a person of broad
general culture.
“This is one of those new ideas,”
said Miss Park, which “have a kind
of fruitfulness attached to them,
which take with them a new kind of
life and tend to make things happen.
The results of this interesting experi-
ment may take shape in various ways:
it may lead to a new field within the
college, to new teaching methods, to
a new uniting of resources. I see in
the future a possible combination of
fields in a new way as an outgrowth
of this lecture series.
“This is not a survey. Each
speaker proposes to draw from his
own special field, and deepiy; and to
move out to touch the next field. Mr.
Dr. A. Flexner to Make
Commencement Speech
Speaker at Baccalaureate Will be
Dr. John E. Park
Dr. Abraham Flexner, prominent
educator, has been chosen as the Com-
mencement Speaker for this year, it
was announced by Miss Park in
chapel. Dr. Flexner has, since 1930,
been director of the Institute for Ad-
vanced Study at Princeton University.
Having received his A. B. degree
from Johns Hopkins, he holds in addi-
tion an_A. M. from Harvard and
from the University of Berlin, an
LL. D. from Western Reserve Univer-
sity and Swarthmore and an M. D.
honoris causa from the Universities
of Berlin and Brussels.
In 1927 and ’28 Dr. Flexner held
the Rhodes memorial lectureship at
Oxford, and in 1928 the Taylor lec-
tureship. In 1929 he was lecturer at
the Foundation Universitaire, in Bel-
gium.
The baccalaureate sermon will be
delivered by. Dr. John Edgar Park,
president of Wheaton College. Pre-
vious to his connection with Wheaton,
Dr. Park was pastor of the West
Parish Church in Andover, Mass., and
the Second Church of Newton, in West
Newton.
Born in Belfast, Ireland, Dr. Park
studied at New College, Edinburgh;
the Royal University, Dublin, and the
Princeton Theological Seminary. He
was ordained into the ministry in 1903.
In 1923 he“received the degree of Doc-
tor of Divinity from Tufts College,
and in 1927 the degree of Doctor of
Letters from Wesleyan.
A. S. U. Speaker
Mr. John- W. Smith, a striker of
the International Seamen’s Union,
|| will speak on Monday, December 7,
|at 8 o’clock in the Common Room in
an open meeting of the A. S. U.
Helson will begin the series with a
picture of psychology and physiology
as accepted on February 1, 1937, and
will discuss not only the positive side
of the subject, but also the limits of
psychological methods and what rea-
sons there are to expect the present
barriers to break down.
“Miss DuBois will pick up that
material and discuss the origins of
that nature of man and will point out
the limitations of psychology in ac-
counting for the development of man,
and what anthropology coming from
a historical point of view has to add
to the field.
“Mr. MacKinnon will take both the
preceding points of view and bring
them back to the present and social
side of man. He will then present a
psychology of the individual and of
man in a social environment and will
point out where to attack the limits
of the field.”
Mr. Weiss will try to uncover the
implicit’ but common grounds and
methods of the previous speakers, to
remark on the fundamental diversities
and to suggest a means for their
eventual integration and development.
Then he will attempt a speculating
characterization of the nature of man.
The lectures will be given on Tues-
day and Thursday evenings at 7:30
in the Music Room. After each lec-
ture there will be discussion in the
Common Room. They will be given
during the first four weeks of the
second semester. These lectures are
intended for the college at-large and
Continued on Page~-Four
Miss Park Announces
Summer School Plans
British, andinavian Women
To Join American Workers
In 37 Session
REGISTRATION LIMITED
Music Room, December 1.—The
Executive Committee of the Bryn
Mawr Summer School will invite two
British and two Scandinavian women
to attend next year’s session, said
Miss Park in Chapel. This arrange-
ment will serve to illustrate that
workers in other countries act in the
same ways as Americans but from
different points of view.
There will also be six second year
students returning to the Summer
School from previous years and from
schools in other colleges. In addition,
the Director is proposing that ten
second year students be brought back
on working scholarships to assist as
servants in the halls. A more ad-
vanced course will be instituted for
them and their presence will offer an
opportunity to discuss the problems
of domestic workers.
The registration of students will °
again be limited to 60 because of the
greater advantages in a smaller
group where individuals can give
more to others and can more know-
ingly discuss their problems from a
varied outlook. The plan of focus-
ing upon a course in economics in or-
der to bring out the personal relation-
ship of the worker to her studies and
the occupation will again be employed.
Out of the eight weeks that classes
are in session at least one or two
weeks are given up to academic ad-
justments. In order to reduce this
difficulty, a conference’ to discuss
methods of procedure will be held in
the spring with the faculty and staff «
members attending who will then
have been chosen. As usual the fa-
culty will come from other colleges
and if necessary a teacher from a
secondary school will conduct the
course in General Science which is
worked out much better in lower in-
Stitutions than in colleges. .
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
THE COLLEGE NEWS _
(Founded in 1914) -
the College Year (excepting during _———
ys, ahd during examination weeks) in the interest
Published weekly durit
Christmas and Easter Ho
of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn
Mawr College.
1936 Member 1937
Associated Collegiate Press
T ollege News is fully protected by copyright. othing that appears in
it may We reprinted either wholly or in part without written permission of the
Editor-in-Chief. \e
:
"Editor-in-Chief
HELEN FISHER, ’37
: News Editor’.
‘ E. JANE SIMPSON, ’37
Editors
‘ELEANOR a a Mary R. MEIGs, ’39
. MARG TMAs; 8 JEAN MorRILD, 39
MARGs }OWSON, 38 : MARGARET OTIs, ’39
Mary /H. Hu NGS, igi, Seen . LUCILLE SAUDER, ’39
ABBIE INGALLS, 88 JAN M, ’38
/ * SUZANNE WILLIAMS, ’38
Sports Editor, KATHERINE HEMPH , 39
Business Manager Adve ng Manager
AGNES ALLINSON, ’37 Mary ¥ WALKER, 38
Assistants
ETHEL HENKLEMAN, ’38 Mary WHALEN, ’38
Subscription Manager Assistant
DEWILDA NARAMORE, ’38 Mary T. RITCHIB, ’89
* Graduate Correspondent; VESTA SONNE
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
LOUISE STENGEL, ’37
IN MEMORIAM
Mary M. Alwyne
Born
November 1, 1861
Died
December 1, 1936
New Fields to Enter
The average student cannot remember six months out of college
even the fundamental facts absorbed during the lectures in college.
What: most of us hope to acquire is a deep curiosity, a method of satis-
fying it and a general background against which to lay our later
findings. This is often lost in the polysyllabic complications of advanced
major work, and although on principle we object to this limitation, we
seldom find a ready way to overcome it.
This is but one of the hundred advantages of the new scheme pre-
sented by three faculty members to approach a single topic from differ-
ent fields. No matter how far our interests may lie from anthropology,
philosophy and psychology, one and all we look forward to an illumi-
nating and stimulating four weeks next semester. Our only fear is
that from some inertia the scheme will not be carried on in other fields.
There appears in this issue a list of suggestions for such an extension,
but we should like to add a few which are perhaps of a more everyday
nature. Tools could be approached not only by members of the Eco-
~ nomies and Social Economy Departments but also by the Politics, the
English, the Physics, History and Chemistry, Art Departments. Busi-
ness, Immigration, or Food, Shelter and Clothing would present prac-
tical focal points for cooperative illumination from diverse fields.
Not only does the present proposal bring students a new under-
standing on a common ground, but within the faculty itself such coop-
eration may bring a new understanding of fields generally believed
unrelated or incompatible. The idea of interchanging professors is cur-
rent today, research in the sciences is being coordinated, and even at
less scholarly levels the trend is toward a broadening and an interrelat-
ing of all knowledge. This first effort here in a new and promising direc-
tion deserves complete success. Innovations in teaching methods, in
new fields, in new departmental interconnections, in new methods for
the college may follow at a later date. In the immediate future we
hope that other faculty members will seize on the idea and carry it on
into new communities of knowledge.
Enforcing Limits
When action is at last taken on Library rules, the first reaction of
the students is to shout forth a hallelujah. Discipline is a noble thing
and should be maintained; order in the Library is sacred and abuses
must be punished. But like most legislation, Library rules must set
intelligent boundaries, or enforcement becomes either tyrannical or
ludicrous.
Monday morning thirteen students had their privileges suspended
for one week because they returned their books ten minutes after 8.30.
Eight others lost their privileges for two weeks for returning their
books later. This strict enforcement is a splendid idea and should be
continued. What the students rebel against is.the time set. No one
uses the books returned at 8.30 unless they were reserved the night
before, and no one has the least intention of rushing through the cold
to the Library before breakfast in order to avoid a penalty.
A 9 o'clock return rule is both logical and convenient for the bulk
of the students. Those few who rise at dawn and want their books at
8 o’clock need only foresee their good intentions and reserve the book
the night before. Then, if it is not back on time, the culprit should
most certainly lose her privileges for a considerable time. The same
vigorous punishment should fall on the heads of any who return their
books at 10 minutes after 9 or later. But 8.30 is a stupid hour for those
who wish an hour’s study before classes as well as for those who eat
breakfast at 8.15.
There is, however, another aspect of the case which students do
not often consider. It takes some time to check off and replace to the|
shelves the books returned in the last minute rush. The Library staff
eould not receive and discharge the books on time if the hour were
_ 9 o'clock. “We therefore propose 8.45 as an hour which allows the late
-breakfaster to finish her cigarette and the 9 o’clock student to obtain
. her books on the hour. Whichever of these tye propienla i adopted,
s| structure.”
The Student S peaks
To the Editor of the College News:
As a German major I should like
to present my views on the present.
oral system. While agreeing with
Miss Kimberly and Miss King that
the emotional effects of the orals is
undoubtedly bad, I cannot agree with
their criticism of thé courses, nor can
I approve of their suggested reme-
dies.
Miss Kimberley suggests\that st
dents who offer German for entynce
credit be allowed to take a litertaure
course which should be given as & sub-
stitute for the present elementary
reading course, ,as the two courses
now offered are either too elementary
or too advanced. The majority of
students who enter with three years
of high school German are well pre-
pared to take the First Year Litera-|
ture course and are able to pass the
oral with no difficulty. For those
students who had less than three years
of school German, the elementary
reading course provides the oppor-
tunity to acquire a real “reading
knowledge” of the language. I be-
lieve it would be impossible to give a
course “concentrating more on rapid
reading ability and less on details of
Unless one knows the de-
tails of structure thoroughly, one can
never acquire a rapid reading ability,
for the ability to read German de-
pends ‘on the reader’s immediate recog-
nition of the kind of word and its
part in the structure of the sentence.
The elementary reading course gives ;
the student practice in the necessary
study of the German sentence and at
the same time enlarges her vocabulary
so that she acquires a reading knowl-
edge of the language.
Secondly, I do not feel that the
remedy offered for those who take
Baby German is practical or possible.
By the end of elementary German if
a student is not able to pass the oral
she is not equipped with a reading
knowledge of German, in which case
the reading course is absolutely es-
sential. The student who cannot pass
the oral is not equipped to take any
sort of a literature course, but needs
more drill on sentence structure.
I do not deny that the present oral
system presents many difficulties, but
I doubt if the problem can be solved
as easily as Miss Kimberley and Miss
King would have us think, Both stu-
dents agree that the purpose of the
orals is good, but they desire a change
in method of preparation for the ex-
aminations. Can this be accomplished
without a radical change in the cur-
ricula of the college? I am inclined
to think that the present system with
a few minor changes is the most sat-
isfactory one which can be obtained.
It is generally agreed that the Ger-
man oral is the worst stumbling block,
and not the French: this would seem
to prove that time is the essential
requisite to a lasting knowledge of a
language, since most of us study
French throughout our school years.
Can one, therefore, improve upon the
present method of teaching German
to college students unless one requires
at entrance a certain amount of study
in the language?
My suggestions for improving the
present system are as follows: First
to give all students credit for the ele-
mentary reading course, so that they
will feel able to spend the necessary
time for preparation. Second, to al-
low students to be in the advanced
In Philadelphia
Movies
Aldine: The Garden of Allah, with
Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer.
Although this is the best example of
photography in technicolor that has
yet been shown, it is by no means
perfect. While some scenes are of
great visual beauty, there are in-
terminable shots of camels silhouetted
‘against the setting or rising sun that
remind one of Christmas cards.
Dietrich looks more lovely than ever,
but the greatest burden of the acting
rests on Charles Boyer, who is a mov-
ing and tragic figure as a young monk
who broke his vows.
Arcadia: Valient Is the Word for
Carrie, with Gladys George. Reviewed
in a previous issue.
Boyd: Love on the Run, with Joan
Crawford, Clark Gable “P Francot
Tone, continues.
Earle: Theodora Goes Wild, with
Irene Dunne. Reviewed in a previous
issue.
Europa: Lesomy (Dance of the Vir-
gins), “a romance of Bali.”
Theaters in Philadelphia
Chestnut: You Can’t Take It, a
Kaufman-Ferber eomedy about a
peculiar household, with Henry Trav-
ers.
Forrest: The Show Is On, revue,
with Beatrice Lillie.
Locust: Moon Over Mulberry Street,
comedy, with William Edmunds.
Local Movies
Wayne: Thursday, Friday and Sat-
urday, Mary of Scotland, with Kath-
arine Hepburn and Frederic March.
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, Pig-
skin Parade, with Patsy Kelly and
Stuart Erwin. Wednesday and Thurs-
day, Old Hutch, with Wallace Beery.
Seville: Thursday, East Meets
West, with George Arliss. Friday and
Saturday, The Devil Is a Sissy,” with
Freddie Bartholomew. Sunday and
Monday, Mary of Scotland, with Kath-
arine Hepburn and Frederic March.
Tuesday and Wednesday, The General
Died at Dawn, with Gary Cooper and
Madeleine Carroll. Thursday, Mur-
der With Pictures, with Lew Ayres
and Gail Patrick.
Ardmore: Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, The Big Broadcast of 1987.
Sunday and Monday, Craig’s Wife,
with Rosalind Russell and John Boles.
Tuesday, Two in a Crowd, with Joan
Bennett. Wednesday, Thursday, Fri-
day and Saturday, Libeled Lady, with
William Powell and Myrna Loy.
Hedgerow Schedule
Thursday, Cast Up by the Sea, the
hilarious Leacock-Farmer take off on
a two-generation old dramatic style.
Friday, The Emperor — Jones,
O’Neill’s classic, with Jasper Deeter
in the role of Smithers.
Saturday, An American Tragedy.
Probably the most powerful play ever
shown in America is this Piscator
adaptation of the Dreiser novel.
Baby German section second semester,
regardless of mark, provided that the
professors feel that they are willing
and capable to do the work. Lastly,
I should allow students to take the
examinations as often as they wish,
because I believe that this would to
some degree eliminate the emotional
effects, and the ordls would no longer
be a source of such terror to the stu-
dents. Mary LEE POWELL, ’37.
we urge that it be done immediately to remove one of the constant
| sources of student annoyance.
Social Security
The College Council recently suggested that a room be delegated
for the private entertainment of guests.
The show cases, aside from
being phenomenally uncomfortable and unequipped with accessories
are too public for informality. The
Common Room, as its name implies,
is open to every passing pedestrian.
The May Day Room, in which the Art Club is for the present
justifiably installed, is the lightest and most cheerful room in Goodhart.
It is obviously ideal for private entertaining and, though rather
denuded, has great possibilities for furnishing. The room already con-
tains a piano of sorts. Card tables, cards, a portable victrola, a radio,
even a ping pong table could be supplied. There is ample room for
dancing. We see no reason why friends, relations and young men
would not enjoy relaxing there in seculsion from the blantant shouts
and noisy bridge of female college life.
No deus ex machina except our own brain cudgels will solve our
undergraduate difficulties. The securing of a room for entertainment
is up to the students and not to the college authorities. Advocators of.
the scheme are numerous. Oral agitation and specific activity is all
that is needed to obtain this se sal for Pleasant. social life on the
penpys.
WIT?S END
The Personal Peregrinations of Al-
-gernon Swinburne Stapleton-Smith,
or Lost in a London Fog.
Chapter the Eleventh.
Upon their return to London that
autumn, Algae and his mother separ-
ated for a few weeks; Mrs, Stapleton-
Smith to re-open their cottage in
Scuffle-on-the-Bustle, Hants, Pants,
Bucks, England, and Algae to stay
with Lord Mounteverest in his digs
until -the beginning of term. ‘
Reggie found his digs, which were
always rather damp, nevertheless in
excellent condition; and his man had
just lit a coal fire'in the grate, and
was filling the tea-pot in the _—
as they entered.
“I’m very glad to see you back, sir,”
said Withers, bowing, “and Mr.
Stapleton-Smith foo, sir.”
“Thank you, Withers,” said Reggie,
tossing him his hat and gloves.
Algae gave a sigh of relief as he
stretched his weary legs in front of
the grate. Withers scurried silently
past them in his black alpaca house-
coat, his slight shoulders bent for-
ward, his grey eyes behind his steel-
rimmed glasses gleaming, his bony,
pointed nose and chin almost sinister
in the gloom. Algae was fascinated.
“Very efficient man, that,’”’ he mur-
mured, as Withers retired to the
kitchen’ for the second time, after
serving their tea.
“I think so too,” remarked Reggie.
“He’s an ex-service man. I didn’t
get him through the agency, but took
him on trial years ago. Name’s How-
ard S. Withers.”
“Yes, sir?” said Withers, suddenly
popping out of the shadows behind
Reggie’s chair.
“Oh—uh Withers,” said Reggie, a
bit abashed, “did anyone call while I
was gone?”
Withers did not answer and seemed
to fade back into the gloom.
“Well?” said Reggie nervously.
“Oh, no, sir,” Withers replied at
length, clawing at his collar. “I have
a bit of a hoarseness in my throat, sir.
No sir, no one called,” and he was
gone again.
“Rather a furtive sort of a chap, I
sometimes think,” murmured Reggie,
embarrassed. “But I’ve never been
able to pin anything on him.”
WALTER HUSTON’S OTHELLO
It is quite possible that the uneven
production pulse-beats which worried
the first-night audience at Max Gor-
don’s presentation of Othello have
since steadied. Granting this, it will
still remain an underdeveloped Othello,
lacking that tragic coherence which is
to be found in the original play.
This is despite Robert Jones’ powerful,
simplified settings, arresting staging
and wich Renaissance costumes.
Walter Huston, the becomingly gen-
tle and nobly motivated Moor, is an
emotional rather than rational. char-
acter. But perhaps because of the
physical limitations which the con-
cert hall imposed on Mr. Huston’s
voice, he was not a hero whose roman-
tic past had sounded such depths that
he could agree,
’Twas pitiful,
ful.”
Iago crowds'the stage in the earlier
development of the conflict so that
Othello’s jealousy remains unnoticed
until the latter part of the play, when
it springs up full-born in a sudden
frenzy. Forgetting its unjustified ap-
pearance, however, we can understand
Othello’s self-destruction from the
middle of the last- act to the end of
the play with the proper fearful sym-
pathy.
In fact, Iago’s weaving in and out
of the scenes and his_ inevitable
soliloquys are what made the first
part of the play fall short of what it
should convey. Yet great credit. must
be given to Robert Keith’s nimble-
witted, cocky Iago, who would have
won over the house, at least during
the first three-quarters of the play,
if it had not been uncomfortably
pledged to Mr. Huston.
Nan Sunderland (Mrs. Huston) as
Desdemona is hardly “the _ super-
subtle Venetian.” We could have for-
given her forced coyness for the sake
of her genuine fright and crushed
amazement at Aer husband’s brutish
behavior toward her. We could not
forgive her dying gestures, which con-
’twas wondrous piti-
j sisted of three elbow drops of gymnas-
tic pees, ending in a plop
M. C. H.
—_—— ——E———————E——————— er
ee ———————————————————————
* e
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Varsity Bows to Marion Crickes Club
In Last and Swiftest Game of Season
November 21.—The Bryn Mawr
Varsity hockey team surpassed its
performances in previous games to
hold the Merion Cricket. Club to a,
score of 3-2 against the home team.
Bryn Mawr played beautifully} but
the team. was unable to overcome
their more experienced opponents,
who had several All-American play-
ers in their ranks.
Merion Cricket Club scored early
in the game when their center for-
ward sent a hard shot high into the
corner of the goal cage. Other tries
for a goal in the first. half were
stopped by E. Smith. Soon after the
start of the second period E. S. Bal-
lard tallied for Bryn Mawr, and again
a few minutes. later Norris scored,
putting Bryn Mawr ahead. . This ad-
vantage, however, was soon lost when
Toulmin and Townsend‘accounted for
two more Merion goals, the last a
little before the game ended.
The Bryn Mawr forward line played
well together, and showed push, but
were unable to get by Anne Townsend,
who was the bulwark of the Merion
C. C. defense. Ballard not only scored
one of the Bryn Mawr goals, but also
played a strong and dependable game.
The backs played well, though they
seemed at times to hang back instead
of tackling. Altogether, this was per-
haps the best game of the season, and
the team showed a tremendous im-
provement since the earlier matches
ee aicanarmame
BRYN MAWR MERION C. C.
Morris 2. ota RoW ses Wilbur
Boemiand os Pel Gay oe English
BOUOrG- 6s 6 6 us uaa wean Strobhar
Bs ee ee Tuttle
WO a aa cl OW ies 5 Toulmin
MONTIN vec esse sad ce ror Harding
© MUVATO ‘iss > CoN sirens Page
Si VANS 664s. We eae vie Daly
SaCKSOn 2.05.5 ets eer ea Marsh
BPignt .c...s. 1. f. ..... Townsend
BE. Sith °. 6... 0G Wetherell
Goals—Bryn Mawr: Ballard, Nor-
ris.
Referees: Krumbhaar and Grant.
HAVERFORD GAME LINE-UP
BRYN MAwrR HAVERFORD
Weadock ..... Ti Wes can, Welbourn
fe OT ss Pods: ease J. Evans
Penne ce. es: Co Meirs
Bakewell ...., (RD Pa rar W. Evans
HORGIANG 5k xs Le Wesritiers Brown
WOIWGH 246i ecis r.h. .... Goldmark
P.tvans ..:.. CEN) CRA a rae eely
S. Evans ...... Lea as ebster
Mackson .:.... Reh es Lester
GNU i aca l. f. ...,@Hollander
Di@WNtON .6 6k es DMs cas Ebersol
Substitutions—Bryn Mawr: Beck
jor Leighton. Haverford: Cary for
Goldmark.
Goals—Bryn Mawr: Weadock. Hav-
erford: Meirs (4), W. Evans (2).
Referees— Turman and Krumb-
haar.
XA
Varsity-Faculty Game
Continued Into Night
The Golf-Club Swing Disappears
From Professorial Team
November 23.—Darkness had fallen
and the moon was shining palely upon
the lower hockey field before the Var-
sity and Faculty teams had battled
out their annual contest, and players
and discouraged spectators tried in
vain to pierce the gloom to locate the
ball. Varsity came out at the. long
end of the 3-1 score after a struggle
in which members of both teams were
often temporarily laid low.
The game was less amusing and
spectacular than in other years be-
cause the Faculty have improved so
| much that they no longer (with a few
exceptions) swing their sticks like
golf clubs and rush about the field
without regard to their proper posi-
tion. This improvement is largely
due to the coaching of Miss Brady
and Captain Blanchard, and to the
regular practices twice a week.
Casualties were remarkably few,
considering the energy with which
both teams pursued the ball. Mr.
Hedlund fell full length while speed-
ing down the field after an elusive op-
ponent and Miss Collier was knocked
out for a second when hit on the head
by the ball, but the Varsity emerged
unscathed.
Line-up
VARSITY * FACULTY
Weadock...... TOW live Wethey
5, Gb. BH. Ballard, ri. .|\.«.. uacuimore
mee womens crane eso
— —
Page Three
POVNGEG. 50640 6s Oe: teks sia ee Brady half, and two more goals were added
Hoagland....... li. .....,.Blanchard | in the second period.
Wyld... STM. Ween ta eee Guiton Line-Up
Martin, . ...6<<% the. NG Broughton B. M. VARSITY U.or P. VARSITY
Colwell}; ..:.....-+s ih ae Collier | Weadock ..... ewe Hihn
S.Evans....... ee gene Hedlund | Hoagland ..... SE ev McGinnis
Jackson....... ae Senne Opel. B. Batlard ... Goes ck es Hood
Bright........, l. f. ...Frothingham | Bakewell ...... i ee Sullivan
POC ieee ee ss ae e ot Patterson | Wyld ......... Le Conlin
Substitution: Diez for Frothing-| Martin ....... Phe Magill
ham. Goals: Bennett (2), Hoagland. | P. Evans eevee Go R vesisccvc Fry
Referees: Townsend and Ferguson. |S.’Evans ~.... 1. h. ....... Collins
VRERLON Aves s yy even Cleaver
bo [oko Bea ae ene ee Ser ear Fox
Varsities Defeat Penn E.R ics Se Croll
With Scores 2-0, 5-0] Goals—E. S. Ballard (2). Ref-
First Team Shows
Work; Second Outplays Rivals
November 19.—Bryn Mawr handed
University of Pennsylvania a double
defeat as the varsity won a fairly
close game, 2-0, and the second team
overwhelmed the Penn seconds 5-0.
In the varsity game the ball was sel-
dom within Bryn Mawr’s 25-yard
line, but our forwards seemed to have
difficulty getting through the strong
opposing defense for a try at goal.
The varsity showed good stick-work,
and the shots were quick and clean.
Both the scores were made by E. S.
Ballard, one after a corner and the
other, in the second half, on an unex-
pected hard shot from the edge of the
circle. FA
The Bryn Mawr second team com-
pletely out-played their opponents, so
that the issue of the match was never
in doubt. The score stood. 3-0 at the
erees—Smith, Turmap.
Good Stick| B. M. Seconp ® U. or P. SEconD
BOD i POW ives Mercer
CBP ere ce Ses rrr Ginns
M. Meigs .,.... Or iiucen Peabody
Win i... 6 Ay |e a O’Neill
Ferguson ..... ho We vv cere Vivens
TROORGL ois ca Ton, fechas Credo
CMG ee ak Oe ok Saul
Marshall ..... Toe kiss cas Berger
PIO TIS nc vcs 1 Ge ae ee Jennings
Waeme ess Wet ean Hackett
BGGk 6 vise ures Peony ety cee Romeyn
Goals—Clark (2), Meigs (2), Wil-
son,
A Haverford poll uncovered 101
radios, the dorm with the most radios
leading in intellectual grace. Local
dealers are elated; psychologists, puz-
zled.— (NSFA)
“Men and the Masses” is featured
at Smith’s alumnae week-end. A pro-
letarian ballet, not a Smith cut-in
prom.—(NSFA)
Fea Digestion Cake Quoe Camel
Smoking Camels encourages a proper flow of digestive
fluids...increases alkalinity...b
(a sense of well-being
OU eat over a thousand meals
a year! Food is varied. Place
and time often differ. Sometimes
you are free of care—atother times,
worried and tense, Yet, thanks
to Camels, you can help digestion
meet these changing conditions
easily. Smoking Camels speeds up
the flow of fluids that start diges-
DEEP INTO THE BIG WOODS on a hunting trip. No
luxuries here, as “Herb” Welch—famous Maine Guide
—makes noon camp and serves up beans, johnny-cake,
and coffee hot from the camp-fire coals, winding up with
Camels all around. Hearty appetites welcome Camels,
“Herb” says: “Anything that goes into the woods with
me has to earn its way. Camels more than earn theirs.
No matter what I’m eating, it always tastes better and
digests better when I smoke Camels.”
COSTLIER
TOBACCOS!
Camets are made
from
finer, MORE EXPENSIVE
TOBACCOS — Furkish
and Domestic ~ than any
other popular brand
HOLLYWOOD
RADIO TREAT!
Camel Cigarettes bring you a
FULL HOUR’S ENTERTAIN-
MENT! Benny Goodman’s
“*Swing’’ Band... George
Stoll’s Concert Orchestra...
Hollywood Guest Stars...and
RupertHughes presides! Tues-
day—9:30 pmE. S.T., 8:30 pm
C.S. T., 7:30 pmM. S. T., 6:30
pm P.S.T., over WABC-
Columbia Network.
tion off well and keep it running
smoothly. Tension eases. Alkalin-
ity increases. You enjoy your food
more—and have a feeling of greater
ease and contentment after eating.
Mealtime or any time — make it
Camels—for digestion’s sake, for
Camel’s invigorating “lift.” Camels
do not get on your nerves.
Copyright, 1986, R. J. Reynolds Tob ie, Wi
ROUTES 100 TRAINS A DAY. Train
dispatcher H. M. Wright says: “I
have to have healthy nerves and
good digestion. Camels do not get
on my nerves. And they insure a
sense of digestive well-being.”
GLIDER CHAMPION. PetiteDorothy =~
Holderman: says: “Imagine how
gliding affects digestion! It's up
and down for hours. But, tense as
I may get, a few Camels seem to
bring my digestion-sight back.”
Page Four —
THE COLLEGE NEWS
= We
a
— &
Mme. Hazard Compares |
French and U. S. Women
reune Fille” Steadily
in France
caenatie with her
husband at the difference
between them JieS not in the nation-
ality, but~in the class system. The
ctly, to the influence of the Ameri-
can women. be
In spite of increasing similarity be-
tween the two, there are still: various
differences which will probably never
be obliterated. The French. woman'
Professors Inaugurate
Series of Lectures
Continued from Page One
not primarily for the departments in-
volved.
Commenting later upon the series,
Messrs. Helson and Weiss said that
the idea originated im a conversation,
and. that it was conceived as an inno-
vation in education, since in this way
rigid specialized divisions can be ‘over-
come without forcing individuals to
give: up their specialties. Such an
interpretation by people of different
approaches, -training and emphasis
can best make manifest the basic as-
pects of things.
It is a way of integrating special-
ized knowledge in terms of a’ basic
is more responsible where the Ameri-| concept and yetspermitting each sub-
can is more enterprising. It is the
* wife in a French home who has
chafge of the family finances, and
- Madame Hazard remarked in passing
that a French woman would never
dream of asking for more money sea
that which had been provided for her |
In France a woman may be at the
head of a lange commercial enterprise,
but the chances are that she will have
less initiative, less audacité, than an
American in the same position.
The American influence is making
itself felt in the increasing activity
of the French girls, socially and po-
litically. The custom, which arose
after the War, of sending American
girls to live for a year or so in
France resulted in a change of atti-
tude concerning the behavior of
these jeunes filles. The French still
have not become entirely accustomed
to the practice of young girls going
abount unchaperoned, but freedom in’
this respect is increasing. Girls in
the best society have begun to take
part in sports almost to the extent
that Americans and English girls do. |
Although women have not the fran-
chise in France, they are beginning
to interest themselves more and more
in politics. There is a_ suffragist
party, but on the whole, there is little
agitation over the question of voting.
Women are inclined to agree with
their husbands on political subjects
and the man of the family has in
general a great respect for the wom-
an’s intuition and advice.
Romanticism Cited in
Spirit of Prevost’s Work
Continued from Page One
closer relationship with the later ro-
manticists than Rousseau himself.
The latter feels obliged to reconstruct
society once he has destroyed it, and
his heroines end by making jam in
completely bourgeois surroundings.
Manon Lescaut would never have had
such a fate. Furthermore, a profound
contradiction in the romantic spirit,
wherein the sense of sin can never be
completely abolished, appears in the
work of the Abbé Prévést, but never
in Rousseau.
The new human type, replacing the
stricter classic character, began then,
with the Abbé Prévést, and continued
to dominate the spirit, both literary
and social, of several generations. It
was portrayed by the Abbé Prévdést
in a style which reflects the return of
lyricism to French literature. His
prose had a subtle rhythm which is
more powerful than regular poetic
measures.
Ns
A thorough course in horsemanship
is offered for beginners, intermediates
and advanced riders at-Mount Holy-
oke College. Riders can enjoy the
sport and receive gym credit for par-
ticipating.— (ACP)
ject to retain its. own distinctness,
now made clear in unified terms. Each
speaker will try to integrate and re-
late his own lectures by trying to
criticize, expand and follow the lead
of the previous speaker for the first
part of his first lecture.
Less could have been included in
the series, or the treatment could have
been expanded, but the present, rather
arbitrary. limits, were decided upon
purely as an experiment. The inno-
vators hope that the idea will.be per-
petuated in other fields and that other
branches of the faculty will profit by
the successes and mistakes of this ef-
fort to break down departmental bar-
riers and to open new interests to
the students.
Miss DuBois will submit an indis-
MOSSEAU—O pticians
A Complete Optical Institution
Broken Lenses Duplicated
Low Prices
610 Laricaster Ave.
pensable. list of works on modern an-
| Seropelony which students can read
in advance of the series, These, along
, with books recommended by each of
the three Bryn Mawr professors, will
| be put on reserve.
| SUBJECTS SUGGESTED
FOR LECTURE PROJECT
Indicating a few of what he be-
lieves to be the possible consequence
of the new idea for leeture series
among departments, Mr. Weiss has
sent the following letter to Miss Park;
Irrespective of the success or fail-
ure of the series of lectures planned
by Professors Helson, MaeKinnon and
bodies is at once a new and impor-
tant one in the field of education. I
think that it is worth repeating in the
future, and hope that our plan will
prompt others to follow out a some-
what similar scheme. The following
is a series of very tentative sugges-
tions, permitting of the cooperation of
men in different departments:
God: history, religion, psychology
and philosophy.
Imagination: English, art, mathe-
matics and the romance of languages.
Woman: medicine, biology, psy-
chology and English.
War: economics, history, politics
and education.
The City: art, economics, social
economics, history and politics.
Music: music, physics, psychology,
art and physical training.
The Past: history, geology, history
of art, Latin, Greek, philosophy and
the romance languages.
The Future: biology, economics,
politics, chemistry and geology.
The Good:
ics and metaphysics.
Discovery: archaeology, mathemat-
OE ARNE SS AORTA ete SIE
ALICIA MARSHALL
announces
A Christmas Nook of unusual
and moderately priced gifts. .
Your order may be charged to
pay day account.
42-44 E. Lancaster Avenue
Ardmore, Pa.
myself, I believe that the idea it em- |:
ethics, politics, econom- |
Bryn Mawr 829
Q Samdal of Satin
This lowcheeled slipper will
carry you in comfort through
many an evening of dancing. —
Of dyeable white satin with
“PRELUDE TO EXILE”
IS LAWSON TRIUMPH
The Theatre Guild’s new play, Pre-
lude to Exile, which opened Monday
night, demonstrates clearly that Wil-
fred Lawson is one of the greatest
actors on the English-speaking stage.
In all fairness to the rest of the cast,
we must say that Prelude to Exile is
almost a one-man play, and that the
character of Wagner, whom Mr. Law-
son impersonates, is one of the most
fascinating and awe-inspiring char-
acters in history. Nevertheless, we
are forced to maintain that Prelude
to Exile could not be the exciting pro-
duction it is without Mr. Lawson’s
remarkable performance.
has: done a great deal of research on
the life of. Wagner. He centers his
play around the period when the mu-
sician lived on the estate of a patron
in Switzerland. and fell in love with
his benefactor’s wife. Much of the
dialogue is authentic, its source being
the letters of Wagner, his wife,
Minna, and his associate, Hans von
Bulow. At this time von Bulow and
his wife, Cosima Lizt, were the guests
of Richard and Frau Wagner. The
composer was not yet interested in the
young Cosima, who eventually became
his second wife; in fact, Cosima was
merely an interested spectator of his
affair with Matilde Wesendonck.
The plot is simple and typical of
many incidents in Wagner’s life: he
makes himself conspicuous as_ the
suitor of Matilde, and then is forced
to part with his patron. Without sev-
eral moving musical interludes, the
familiarity of many of the characters
and the inspiring portrayal of Wag-
ner by Mr. Lawson, the splay would
have little meaning. Eva Le Galli-
enne, who plays the part of Mathilde,
does full justice to her excellent repu-
tation with a performance which is
never out of tune with the play as a
whole.
Wilfred Lawson is an Englishman,
who appeared last year in a rather
small part in Libel, a melodrama of
the law courts which enjoyed a small
success. His performance then was
mentioned by many critics as notable,
although as a prosecuting attorney he
had little scope for variety; what
seemed particularly remarkable about
lim at that time was his ability to
grow red in the face when supposed
to be angry. In Prelude to Exile, in
an entirely different kind of a part,
his performance is so convincing that
if one had never seen him before one
would be tempted to believe his own
character similar to Wagner’s. J. T.
ics, history and Spanish.
The Soul: philosophy, biology, psy-
chology and religion.
Greece: Greek, Latin, history,
archaeology and philosophy.
Youth: biology, education, art, psy-
chology and social economy.
Society: politics, history, philoso-
phy, philology and anthropology.
Speech: psychology, biology, philos-
ophy, anthropology and religion.
Truth: logic, religion, physics,
mathematics and art.
OFS EH EES HOH H
Exhibit
of
Fanslow
Tailored Clothes
at
College Inn
* * 8
Thurs., Dec. 3rd
*- * *
See Our New
Bryn Mawr Shop
e
a
William McNally, the playwright,
Seville Theatre
MR. FENWICK’S PEACE
OPTIMISM PRAISED
Either by accident or design, .im-
portant developments may follow
from the Inter-American Conference
for the Maintenance of Peace, outside
of its agenda. This is because of the
appointment of Prof. Charles G. Fen-
wick, professor of International Law
at Bryn Mawr College, as a member
of the American delegation.
To explain: Professor Fenwick is a
renowned student of early American
history, especially of the events which
led to the drafting of the United
States Constitution. He told 200 stu-
dents from. 29 colleges in the Middle
Atlantic States, assembled at Vassar
last March, not to-be discouraged by
the paradox of a universal desire for
peace and the apparent inability of
nations to achieve it. - The students
were conducting a model League of
Nations ifi the manner of Geneva.
Why He Was Optimistic
The reason for Professor Fenwidk’s
optimism was his comparison of pres-
ent international relations with the
emergence of the Constitution of the
United States from the original loose
Articles of Confederation.
“Scarcely had the American revolu-
tion been won,” he said, “than the 13
new States that had accepted the Ar-
ticles of Confederation began to seek
their. separate interests.”
Professor Fenwick pointed out that
the principles which the American
founders then induced the sovereign
States to accept in order to form the
union of 1787 were the same which
are now before the world. He enu-
merated them as the yielding by each
State of the claim to be the sole judge
of its own case, as well as a system
of collective security whereby all the
States would protect any one of them
if attacked, together with a removal
‘| of ‘economic barriers so that raw ma-
terials, markets and undeveloped ter-
to all in the general interest.
He believes that these principles of
the American Constitution are the
only ones upon which a permanent
peace is possible. “To its concentra-
tion on preventing war by guaran-
teeing the existing order are due the
failures of the League of Nations,”
he asserted. “It offers no hope of
remedying existing conditions except
by resort to war. Instead of attempt-
ing to guarantee an old order, we
should attemptgto. build up a new
order in which "the reasonable needs
of} individual States should be ade-
qpately met in territory, markets, raw
aterials and disputes.”
Sees Hope in League
He believes, furthermore, that the
League of Nations could be revised
to, conform to such American prin-
rCiples, just as the Articles of Confed-
eration were revised to draft the
present United States Constitution.
When it is recalled that all the
nations of this hemisphere, except
Brazil, which are to be members of
the conference at Buenos Aires, are
member states of the League of Na-
tions, Professor Fenwick’s ideas may
have an influence upon the proceed-
ings.—Constance Drexel in the Brook-
lyn Eagle.
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THE COLLEGE NEWS
\ Page Kive
Social Workers Can
Aid World Security
Strength of Society Exists in
Women’s Courage, Says
Miss Salomon
TEACH CHILDREN PEACE
Miss Fairchild’s House, November
19.—The strength of society lies in
the efforts for mutual aid and social
reform made by such women as Eg.,
lentine Jebb, Susan B. Anthony and
Mrs. Josephine Butler, said Miss Alice
Salomon, chairman of the Interna-
tional Committee on Schools of Social
Work and formerly Director of the
Berlin School of Social Work.
Eglentine Jebb, 1876—1928, pos-
sessed a spirit for reform which rec-
ognized that “the degree of culture
is measured only by the protection it
extends to the weakest.” Conse-
quently, in 1919 she organized the
Fight the Famine Council and Save
the Children ‘Fund to offset the im-
mediate needs resulting from the
War, which she realized had not only
destroyed one generation of man, but
had also retarded the development of
the children of that generation.
In attempting to spread the good
work of the Fund all ovér the world,
Eglentine Jebb encountered opposi-
tion in those countries where the war
spirit still lived, but the economic
barriers which these countries wished
to set up were broken down by the
demands of the social-order and the
need for aid. Eventually, the great
amount of money which she succeeded
in collecting was administered by an
undenominational agent in all coun-
tries. Therefore, with peace and the
understanding of the world behind it,
the Fund succeeded and today has its
headquarters in Geneva.
Following this success, the League
of Nations in 1924 accepted Eglentine
Jebb’s idea of a Magna Charta for
children, which stipulated as its main
point that in times of distress chil-
dren were to receive the first relief.
Such success was, however, rare
among social service workers, and
Susan B. Anthony, 1820-1906, who
carried on her work, was a great
woman who did not live to realize her
achievements.
Raised on a farm and a frequent
witness of the conditions existing
among the families of the drunken
farm hands, Miss Anthony was roused
to fight for temperance and for the
modification of the law whic
women and children surren
their rights to an incapable hus
and father. In her work to o
equal suffrage, Miss Anthony’
periences of planning and organizin
the movement were not at all like
the trials of sociology students today |.
who “write books before they are out
of their ’teens’” but never organize
a movement from the very bottom as
their predecessors did.
' Every year for thirty years Susan
B. Anthony saw to it that a delega-
tion was present at Washington to
fight for a suffrage law, and when
friends, who realized that she could
never afford luxuries from her casual
earnings, sent her to England for a
vacation, she found that here was a
“new continent to be conquered.” In
1889 the Organization of Equality for
Women had its first meeting in Lon-
don.
Another great organizer was Mrs.
Josephine Butler, 1828—1916, who be-
came known in England as a rescuer
because of her interest in the inhabi-
tants of the workhouses where the
poor were compelled to engage in the
lowest kinds of work.
It is this spirit to fight for reform
which characterizes women’s courage,
Dr. Salomon added in answering sev-
eral questions. The success of social
service does not achieve good once
and for all, but every generation of
women must win back this good by
vigilance and continue the fight for
its expansion. In the complicated
situation of today, women can help |i
Meet your friends at the
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
(Next to Seville Theater Bldg.) °
The Rendezvous of the College Girls
Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Sundaes
Superior Soda Service
Music—Dancing for girls only
4
Faculty at Large
Mrs. Fiesel’s course in Etruscan
linguistics is being attended by Mr.
Carpenter, Miss Swindler, Miss Tay-
lor, Miss Lake, Mr. Broughton, Mrs.
Holland, Mr. Kent of the Univesity
of Pennsylvania, Mrs. Doan of) the
University Museum, Mrs. Lattimore
and Mr. Comfort of Haverford. / The
purpose of the course is to show what
scholars already know about the lan-
guage and how far inscriptions can
be interpreted. The course also re-
veals the methods of research in
Etruscan and its relationship to other
languages.
In the second semester there will be
collaboration with the departments in
philology and archaeology concerning
Etruscan mythology and _ problems
which correlate with linguistics.
Mr. Diez, of the Department of Ger-
man, has been appointed secretary of
the American committee supervising
the Junior Year in Munich from the
American point of view. The plan is
to incorporate an executive council
under Professor Camillo von Klenze
for all American colleges that send
students abroad.
Mr. Mezgér, also of the Department
of German, has been appointed con-
sultant in. the fields of Old English
and general Germanic linguistics by
the Modern Language Association.
Mr. Bernheimer, of the Department
of History of Art, attended the Inter-
national Congress of History of Art
in Switzerland during the summer
and delivered a paper on Precaro-
lingian Sarcophagi. Mr. Bernheimer
also gave a lecture in October at
Rosemont College on Early Printing
and Woodcutting in China.
Dr. Ernst Diez will give a lecture
on “Simultaneousness and the Fourth
Dimension in Modern Painting” in the
“Artists’ Union,” 1212 Walnut Street,
Thursday, December 38, at 8.30 o’clock.
Miss Taylor, of the Department of
Latin, has been working on a paper
dealing with the chronology of Cice-
ro’s letters to Atticus. This paper
will be published in Classical Phil-
ology. In addition, Miss Taylor has
been engaged in the study of re-
ligious ceremonies connected with the
Roman theatre and is at present con-
ducting a seminar on Livy in co-
operation with Mr., Broughton, also of
the Department of Latin. “They are
engaged in a study of Roman family
history in the Republic.
Miss Taylor is continuing her work
with the Latin Commission of the Col-
lege Entrance Board.
At the November meeting of the
Fullerton Club, held on Saturday, No-
vember 14, in the Deanery, Mr. Velt-
man, of the Department of Philosophy,
read a paper on Mystic Consciousness
as a Primitive Form of Experience.
Mr. Gillet, of the Department of
Spanish, has been appointed a mem-
ber of the Committee on Scholarship
of the Modern Language Association
f America and is publishing a play,
titled Alonso de Salaya, in the com-
issue of the Publications of the
n Language Association.
Mr.\Gillet spoke to the Main Line
Women’s Club on the subject of South
America on Monday.
Errata
Mr. Miller did not speak before the
Forum of Pittsburgh on the topic,
“A Way Out for Nationalism,” as
stated in the News of November 18,
but before the evening Community
Forum on “The Changing Warfront.”
Victrola Concert Program
The program for this week’s vic-
trola concert will consist of Invita-
tion to the Waltz, Weber; Symphony
in G Minor, Mozart; Violin Sonata in
A, Franck. The concert will be on
to conflict with the play Friday night
even more by educating their children
to see the world differently and to
realize the advantages of peace.
a Lunch
Breakfast
Thursday night at 8.30 in order not],
A)
Current Events
(Gleaned from Mrs. Smith’s speech.)
Common Room, November 24.—The
Popular Front in Europe was defined
by Mrs. Smith as a political coalition
of left-wing groups against the rising
by two governments, those of France
and Spain, and by four Internationals
in European labor partjes: the Inter-
national Federation of Trade Unions,
the Labour and Socialist International,
the Communist or Moscow Interna-
tional and the Red International of
Labor Unions.
w. The first, the I. F. T. -U., founded
in 1901, is fairly conservative and is
made up of members of national trade
union groups. Its organization is en-
tirely industrial.
The Labour and Socialist Interna-
tional takes the place of the old sec-
ond International. Its object is to
unify the political organizations of
laborers and to bring about: the social-
ist state gradually by peaceful meth-
ods.
The polices of the Communist or
Moscow International, which is
largely political, are far more war-
like. It aims_first_ at world revolu-
tion, or at revolution in every capital-
ist country, second at a dictatorship
of the proletariat.
The R. I. S. U. is the industrial
side of the Moscow International.
The hostility which has_ existed
since 1921 between the Socialist and
Communist Internationals has tended
to diminish in the last three years in
the face of their common danger—
Fascism. In 1923 the Moscow Inter-
national suggested merging their dif-
ferences, but its advances were’ re-
jected by official trade union authori-
ties, who felt that by acceptance they
would lay their countries open to revo-
lution and to propaganda. Local situ-
ations, however, as in France and
Spain, -are different. Stalin, after a
talk with Laval in 1938, permitted
“comrades” in France to cooperate
with other French groups. The
French feeling toward Communism
has changed, but it is merely a truce.
The same thing happened in Spain,
where no Socialists were allowed in
the Spanish Parliament until Au-
gust.
The I. F. T. U. meets every three
years. Miss Kingsbury, Miss Fair-
child and Mrs. Smith went to the last
meeting, which was held in London,
and listened daily to a discussion of
the question of the United Front.
The Danish delegation presented a
resolution to the effect that Interna-
tional Trade Unions should indorse
the United Front movement. The
Spaniards, French, Belgians and Nor-
wegians ‘were in favor of it; the Eng-
lish, Swedes, Danes and Dutch op-
posed. There were no delegates from
Italy, Austria or Germany, and no of-
ficial delegate from the United States.
Three unofficial American delegates
sat with the British, The American
Federation of Labor belonged to the
International Trade Unions till 1910,
but withdrew at that time. A move-
ment is being made to join again and
negotiations are under way now, but
it depends entirely on what is happen-
ing in Spain.
Foreign Novelties to be Displayed
Mrs. Paul Woronoff will hold an
exhibition and sale of foreign novel-
ties at the College Inn on Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday, December 7,
8 and 9, from 11 a. m. to 8 p.m. The
exhibition will include English leather
goods, Russian smocks and blouses,
jewelry and peasant craft of many
countries.
F. W. CROOK
Rooms 9-10, Seville Theatre Bldg.
BRYN MAWR
Ladies’ Tailor
1 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.
re
We Do Pressing
Tea Dinner
For Special Parties, Call Bryn Mawr 386
—-
menace of fascism. It is represented:
iNDIA ACT NEW TYPE
OF GOVERNMENT PLAN
Common Room, December 1.—The
Government of India Act, passed by
the British Parliament and signed by
King George V on August 2, 1935,
was the subject of a lecture given by
Mr. William Roy Smith in the fourth
of a ‘series of lectures on current
events being given in Mr. Fenwick’s
absence. - ‘
The Act, which established an en-
tirely new type of Constitution never
seen before in the history of the
world, has two main parts: one going
into effect early in 1937, which will
control the provinces of British In-
dia; the other not going into’ effect
for two or three years, and perhaps
not at all, depending on the individual
rulers in the 580 states which com-
prise that part of ' India called the
Indian State Territory.
Before 1858 the British East India
Company conquered two-thirds of In-
dia, put it under their own govern-
mental officials and called it British
India. The remaining third of the
country remained unconquered partly
because its petty rulers refused to
come to terms, and partly because
the land was not worth a conquest.
This section of India, known as the
Indian State Territory, is subject to
its own hereditary rulers and its own
native laws.
In 1858 the British Empire took
over India from the East India Com-
pany, and put the government ex-
clusively in the hands of the British.
No natives were given positions of
any responsibility. Reconciled only
temporarily to this fate, the natives
formed, in 1885, the Indian National
Congress, conservative in nature, de-
siring reforms in government but
only through strictly legal methods.
In 1905, because of Japan’s victory
over Russia, native Indians saw that
it was possible for an Asiatic nation
to overcome .a. European one. In-
censed by reforms in the universities
made by Lord Curzon, they made
headway for the first time, and the
British were forced to take some ac-
tion which took the form of the Mor-
ley-Minto reforms of 1907-1909, in
which more Indian members were
allowed in the elective legislatures.
This was satisfactory for a while,
but loyalism soon wore away and it
became necessary, in 1917, to make
more reforms allowing Indians- more
positions in the government as well
as developing a gradual system of re-
sponsible governments as in Canada
and Australia.
In 1919 an Indian Constitution was
passed which went into effect in 1921,
setting up a diarchy in the provinces,
part of the government being under
British control and part under native
control. Ghandi refused to cooper-
ate with the new Constitution, and a
more extreme element fought against
it by getting control of Congress and
working from within. The Constitu-
tion was thus never given a chance
to work, and it was supplanted in
1935 by the new Constitution, which |
has three main provisions.
In the first place it creates an All-
Indian Federation which deals with
the states as well as the provinces.
This in itself’ is a difficult thing to
do because it is an endeavor to bring
medieval monarchical governments to
cooperate with modern democratic
governments in the provinces. If
more than half the states refuse to do
this, even though certain provisions
have been made to prevent it, they
will be operating under, the Constitu-
tion of 1919, whereas the provinces,
which are forced to accept the new
Constitution, will be subject to it. ©
The second provision of the New
Constitution is to set up an autono-
}mous rule in British India. For this
purpose the Federal Court of India
has been established to settle all dis-
putes between the provincial and
Federal governments.
The third provision is to establish
a responsible government with safe-
guards. In other words, the execu-
tive power is responsible to an elec-
tive legislature, but there“are certain
limitations, one of them being that
some of the departments in the gov-
ernment are not put undg native
control. Also the governors are given
powers to override Indian legislation
if he thinks anything is about to hap-
pen which may interfere with the
“safety” and “tranquility” of India.
There is considerable popular op-
position to the Constitution. The only
safeguard here is that the British
officials can step in and control the
government if they refuse to cooper-
ate.
Alumnae See May Day Movies
The alumnae of Eastern Pennsyl-
vania, Southern New Jersey and Dela-
ware will meet at the Deanery for
luncheon and business organization on
Saturday.
After luncheon the May Day movies
will be shown. Undergraduates who
have not seen them may go to the
Deanery at 3.15 to see them.
Mr. Blanchard Addresses Nucleus
Undergraduate Room, December 1.
—Mr. Blanchard, of the Department
of Biology, addressed the Nucleus on
Exposures in Taking Pictures. He
discussed the various types of time
exposures, showing his Exposure-
meter, by means of which the ex-
posure is regulated. The talk was
illustrated by photographs taken by
Mr. Blanchard, one an unusual and
interesting study of Pembroke Arch
at night.
|
Before
“HOLIDAY”
Dinner at
THE CHATTERBOX
Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
ITANNIC
b hi YORE, DEC. 18,
TTT Vath ausite
TO ST. THOMAS, LA GUAIR \, :
Enjoy the gayest holidays eve
ship. There’ll be
the West
merriment. A day on
Indies an
of the Internationa
ball Championship.
1616
Midnig
AN NATI
CURACAO, CART
.-- at sed,
fun no end - ~ sae pmocion adding
d night in Panama,
the National Sports Fes t
Havana during | Amateur Boxing Tournament.
etc. Return to New
ISTMAS AND
EW YEAR'S CRUISE
ht se 15 Days --> $187.50 up
FESTIVAL
ONAL spORTS
AGENA, PANAMA, HAVANA
in Britain's largest motor
dances, dinners --- six high-
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YEAR'S EVE
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CUNARD WHITE STAR
WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA
\ epee “2 e
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ABROAD AT HOME
After a prolonged period of dis-
covering Philadelphia as a place of
amusement and evening entertain-
ment, it might be well to turn our
attention momentarily to the more
educational features of that same
city, which have their foundation
deeply rooted in the history of, Penn-
sylvania and this, its major city.
It is perhaps fitting that we turn
to the Franklin Institute, named after
the early Pennsylvania benefactor,
who initiated many practical improve-
ments into the government and ordi-
nary living facilities of the State. The
Institute, on the corner of 20th and
Parkway, houses not only a museum |
of historical and scientific import, in
also a planetarium which is an exact
reproduction, on a small scale, of the
different solar changes occurring in
different seasons. During the Christ-
mas season it is the custom to show
the heavens as they were the night
Christ was born.
By sirgply crossing the street to the
other side of the Parkway we may
step from the realm of science into
that of art. The Rodin Museum is
small, but within its walls are works
of art worth going to see.
Much larger and more elaborate is}
the Pennsylvania Museum of Art, also
on the Parkway, but a few blocks ,
further out of the city. History of
Art students know it well, but the
pleasure of visiting it should not be
confined to this group alone. The
works of Edgar Hilair Germain
Dégas, a French artist of the nine-
teenth century, are being exiibited un-,
til December 7.
Progressing from the Art Museum
down the East River Drive, we find
M. Goldwasser Reads Paper
Thursday, November 19.—After a
brief business meeting of the Philos-
ophy Club, Marjorie Goldwasser, ’36,
read to the group the paper on Kant’s
theory of aesthetics which she wrote
for the advariced course last spring.
The paper was a critical evaluation
and analysis of Kant’s theory and a
suggested expansion which would per-
mit the theory to account for experi-
ences classified as aesthetic today.
Miss. Goldwasser pointed out the basic
identity of the sublime and the beau-
tiful in Kant’s system. Kant himself
denies this and takes great pains to
make a diversity between the two con-
cepts. Miss Goldwasser emphasized
the necessity for a “sliding-rule” sys-
tem of aesthetics which would adapt
itself to individual differences in the
comprehension of beauty.
The club is extremely interested in
hearing papers by students, which,
they feel, would be of general interest.
Anyone who has either a paper of
her own or an idea to bring up is
requested to speak to Leigh Stein-
hart, ’87.
the Aquarium, which certainly speaks ,
for itself. Fish are always fish, but
there are some more beautiful and in-
teresting than the thousands of gup-
pies you may have raised yourselves.
Aggwe watched City Hall being pub-
_licly bathed, we were reminded of the
intricacies of that great building,
which is.constantly being invaded by
winds congregating from every direc-
tion. William Penn surveys the city
of his founding from a tower on top
of the building, and on Penn’s head
sits a hat with a brim large enough
for a car to run on. The top of the
| hat: is,“though you probably. won’t
believe it, the highest point in Phila-
delphia. M. H.
|
“NINE OLD MEN” RIPS
THE SUPREME !COURT
Nine Old Men, by
Allen.
With the New Deal -policies being
ripped apart by the Supreme Court,
Messrs. Pearson and Allen, authors
of Washington Merry-Go-Round, de-
cided to write Nine Old Men. It is a
vitrolic book, tearing aside the black
robes of the Highest Tribunal in the
land, and spraying away its aura of
sanctity and veneration with the Flit-
gun of adverse publicity and ridicule.
Anyone with the faintest bit of
liberalism in his make-up will reach
the uncomfortable - wriggling stage
after reading the case histories of the
conservatives.
He who is markedly radical will
be in the hurrah-for-anarehy, soap-
box stage. However, one must take
into account the feelings, animosi-
ties and prejudices of the authors.
Besides disliking conservatism per
se and the atmosphere of high-
handedness of the Supreme Court
bench, they also delight in stirring up
muddy waters. This is done by em-
phasizing such irrelevant matters as
the fact that at the ceremonious
corner-stone laying of the new cour!
building, along with a copy of
the. Constitution, important Supreme
Court decisions and a picture of Wil-
liam Howard Taft placed in the cor-
ner-stone was a picture of the Su-
preme Court bitch, Fannie, giving
suck to her seven pups.
The book is interestingly written, in
Pearson and
THE COMMUNITY § KITCHEN
864 Lancaster Avenue
LUNCHEON
AFTERNOON TEA
Buffet Suppers on Appointment
Tee
a fluent, better-than-newspaper style,
but retaining the freshness of good
newspaper writing. It is the sort of
thing one cannot put down (unless too
annoyed by the flippant style) and it
goes quickly.
Opening with the corner-stone lay-
ing, the authors show that even on
the matter of a new building there
Stone and Cardoza dissenting.” They
then go on with a brief /history of the
rise of the Supreme Qourt from dis-
repute to omniscience/ hes hag this
are biographical gee e Nine
Old Men, arld.theeone log fete
are concerned a baa the Nev Deal
cases.
Pearson ot Allen havé “einai to
strengthen and @latify their work
with anecdotes ofthe Justices, apéc-
dotes bringing to light the men’s
characters. But the harsh glare of
this light often brings out the sallow,
bad complexion of their Honors. In
keeping with the ultra-streamlined
Dec. 7&8 Open 11 A. M. to 8 P. M.
EXHIBITION and SALE
of FOREIGN NOVELTIES
Shown by Mrs. Paul Woronoff
at the College Inn
was a 6-3 decision, “Justices Brandeis,
Ne pl A ell «ee eT eee eee LS ee ee Oe eae
Dancers’ Club
The Dancers’ Club will give a
Christmas performance on Sat-
urday evening, December 12, at
8.30 o’clock in the Gym. No ad-
mission will be charged.
style of the book are. the chapter
headings: “The Man On the Flying
Trapeze”, describing vascillating Chief
Justice Hughes, “Bruiser” applying to
Butler,
However, if you liked Washington¢
Merry-Go-Round and are interested \
in a biased, amusing and two-thirds
true portrait of the United States’
“Ultimate Appeal,” by all means read
Nine Old Men. L. J. S.
GREEN HILL FARMS
City Line and Lancaster Avenue
A reminder that we would like
to take care of your parents
and friends, whenever they
' come to visit you.
L. ELLSWORTH METCALF
Manager
ieee
tin.
Follow “The Christmas Trail”
TO JEANNE BETTS
underneath the Country Book Shop
for gifts from many lands by
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. of N. Y.
When I’m for a thing I’m all for it!
I like Chesterfields...I like ’em a lot
...we all go
Chesterfields are milder...and when
it comes to taste—they’re SWELL!
Jor the good things
smoking can give you...
se agers
Be
for ’em around here.
‘Copyright 1936, Licczrr & Myzrs Tosacco Co,
College news, December 2, 1936
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1936-12-02
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 23, No. 08
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol23-no8