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Bryn Mawr. She said she was un- , bef 1
was here once before, in 1933. "he
usually glad to return to college rou-| News of December 20 pein pris
] F , 1938, says:
in two worlds, one confined to a few|;, yead to us, and she read so that
acres of security and the other com-| .jo6 could be mcaee ay There was dis-
prising the entire world with its pen ‘ : ; si gale
Rr : ~| cussion later in the Deanery. Reg A
spirit devastated and frightened.”| Qn Monday night she will simply Sophomores Capture tributions of the students. In their| now Hitler’s greatest oratorical weap-
Miss Park warned against letting the|,.aq selections of her own poekiy
latter wor poset :
4 alan — the em ote the | without commentary, and will unfor-
«AeA v one oe eee sine tunately be unable to stay after her
that of individuals or small organiza-|,.ading, for she has to satch a night
tions like Bryn Mawr. Before dis-|tyain ia : .
cussing our duties toward the larger ne lee’ ehiimhued h os
world, Miss Park described the| serch ee childhood, when, like
changes accomplished this summer at Be a Ashe A ae ary
Bryn Mawe. poets, she wrote for Sain icholas
: \gold and silver medals, Miss Millay
‘THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
e Three
| Brady
}. XXV, No, 1 SEY MAWR ANE WAYRENR, OCC E _ copmiaht TRUSTEES OF, PRICE 10 CENTS Port of
: a nina anmmoMnee ere e ae eT ‘ion
. ; . . | |
iss Park Sees (Miss Millay to Read | College Calendar Fresh Talent Sought |Gertrude Ely
taking
St. Vincent Millay will read se-
Progress With |
| ~~ . |
| Greatly Enjoyed | rent Events, Mr. Fenwick. Com- In Magazine
Conditions Among Austrians
htresses College Stability In| || mon Room, 7.30. International
Chaotic Modern World | The Entertainment Committee is| ee meeting. Common Room, For the benefit of the freshmen, let C d R
| presenting, as its first speaker of the|} °°?: us explain that the Lantern is the| ompare to Recent
Czech Crisis
Friday, October 21.— Alum- Bron Mw Goll . .
nae week-end. Opening of Sci- en vig
ence Building and Rhoads Hall.
year, Edna St. Vincent Millay, who}
will read a selection of her own poems. |
of Conflicts
ten, edited and published by the stu- i
Music Room, October 11.—Miss Ger-
Goodhar 4.— » firs : : ‘ a :
Goodhart, Oct. 4.—At the maid Miss Millay is on a limited two| oud Beal F L 6 Salk the'ebadentn A
chapel of the year Miss Park ially |? of — — reer Monday, October 24.— First dents for the students. t present it : : a
I year Miss Park officially | month tour of the country and Bryn Anna Howard Shaw Lecture b if eine . _\trude Ely, speaking this evening to a
welcomed old and new members of Mawr is one of the few Eastern col-| Jj rts F ages a4 is undergoing complete reorganiza~\), 15. audience, described her impres-
Judge Florence Allen. Good- tion for two reasons: first, because) .. : ue i
sion of Austria after Schussing’s
leges at which she is speaking. She |
hart, 8.30.
B the greater part of the board gradu- .
Tuesday, October 25.— Cur- g P & resignation was announced, the sud-
ated last year, and second, because|qen tenseness and suspicion which
tine, for the tension of the European “Tt is not often that a Goodhart endi:| rent Events, Mr. Fenwick. Com-
summer had wakened her many nights sian edad a: poet with wack alin mon Room, 7.30. A. S. U. meet- formerly only a small part of the|overcame this usually cheerful and
to feel, as she supposes we all have, sien as that afforded! Edna. St ing. Common Room, 8 p. m. campus was represented in its pages. friendly people.
the whole burden of the future. _ | Vincent Millay... . For not only did | Wednesday, October 26.—Lec- New editors have been elected and This same change, she asserted,
Today, Miss Park continued, we live cha veut! well, aba resed al 30 she like ih " 7 Swing. Good- a drive has been started to get sub- must now be coming over the Czechs.
art, 6.00. scriptions. Now only one thing js The great irony of this disaster 1S
the fact that Wilson’s theory of the
needed to make it a reality—the con-| .ejf-determination of our nations is
effort to get new interests and new|on against these people. Miss Ely
ideas represented the editors are mak- | ended with a plea for all who are
ing a special appeal to freshmen and| Joyal to the human race” to oppose
to those upperclassmen who have said,|this inhuman way of life and to ana-
mt write, put it’s not Lantern ma-|lyze while there is still time ‘what
terial.” they want for human beings in the
Last spring when students were| world.”
asked if they thought the magazine} During the days of the crisis Miss
should be discontinued, the answer| Fly was visiting an Austrian family
Wir definitely “no.” Moreover, the| who lived outside a small village near
editors are convinced that if the stu-|the frontier. Stressing the fact that
dents will co-operate by handing them] for the last 20 years this family had
material, they can publish a magazine} jived a peaceful life, similar to that
of general interest. However, in or-| of many American citizens, Miss Ely
der to do this they must have a wide| told how the house was searched: by
range.of writers;0p whom to rely. German soldiers 24 hours after
One . ~ first gpa made by the| gchussnig’s resignation; yet within
eines OS ee this time, Miss Ely’s hostess had
: burned every paper, pamphlet, or book
Mr. Sloane Plans Project in the house which revealed her past
With Aid From Art Club) interests and associations or related to
“eontroversial” subjects.
Throughout their preparations,
those who had most to fear from Nazi-
Parade Night Song
Freshmen Break Through Ring,
Class War Ends in Dance
Around Bonfire
Parade night ushered in the new
college year on October 4, with honors
divided. The freshmen captured the
bonfire in approved manner, while
the sophomore, who had discovered the
freshman song, danced around them,
chanting their parody. Naturally
“
New Quarters for Sciences : :
After the fiftieth anniversary and has published a great many things.
its gift of a million dollars, Miss ee book, Renascence, came out
Park said the campus became a “big, | ede & so — a deca eraduahon
buzzing, blooming Sat cies 1 ‘hia Vassar. Renascence was writ-
the greatest developments are the two ae yer: he ee ry nineier ys
There is the new Chemistry-Ge- Gontinueaah Phd mia resisting sophomores were knocked
ology building with an outside show- down, and one of them swears she
ing “bone and muscle under its skin” : saw a classmate whose neck was bent
and an interior full of light, magnifi- Glee Club Discusses in two directions.
cent lecture rooms and Emiall “in- Plans for Concerts Before the battle, the freshmen
dividual laboratories. Remade Dal- |marched down to the hockey field
ton, however, is even more surprising. preceded by the Bryn Mawr band.
Their song, set to the tune of “When
He Considers American Artists
Abolition of Gilbert and Sullivan |
Have Scope and Power
Miss Park mentioned several of its Proposed for This Year :
wonders, such as the greenhouse on | Johnny Comes Marching Home” ran ism—soldiers and government officials
the fifth floor, the switchboard in the| Taylor Hall, October 10. — At a2 > rele ae Joseph C. Sloane, Jr., Associate _maintained a cold calm. Miss Ely
basement, and the great increase of | special meeting of the Glee Club, Mr. cree in nae, 2 ea ¥ vwo | Professor of History of Art, has come discussed the dread these people had
light in the laboratories. Alwyne of the Music Department, €0-| v1 foxes pee Rag 8 SS tecuets | Oe Mawr with new and construc- had for several months of just such
ou foxes fall as we Drea rough,| +: -. ideas, not only for his courses, an invasion. When it finally came,
they resigned themselves, tried to de-
These two buildings provide a/director with Mr. Willoughby of the |
| Hurrah, Hurrah, a
but also for the Art Club and for the ‘
stroy any incriminating evidence, and
combined library and reading room| Glee Club’s Gilbert and Sullivan pro-| Y ees ;
for each of their departments and|ductions in the past, outlined his plan | ou haven’t learned our song We). Gents, A graduate of Princeton,
double the space formerly allotted|for a new series of concerts which | snow, he received his M.F.A. at the same allowed their homes to be guarded
would take the place of Gilbert and So give us a cheer as off we g0, college in 1934. Since that time he| and searched. Miss Ely stressed the
fact that this must have been as offen-
Mathematics and the four natural Y a ld f cea ee
sciences. Due _ to such inspiration, | Sullivan this year. The projected ou sly old fox go feast on your), . held the positions of associate
«ye ues ; : sour grapes. . :
courses providing for the joint | of program is the result of an exer curator of the Cooper Union Museum sive to them as it would be to an
| change Th h id , i
| e sophomore pride was salvaged) . ; ‘ ae o48
L Pp 8 for the arts of Decoration, of instruc- American citizen.
are being | invitation from Princeton to co-oper- | | oe aN H 1
tes and|ate with them in a more serious kind | aagetenpmgiegrdheos 4 arg tor in art and archaeology at Prince- Storekeepers, postal officials and po-
xt|of musical enterprise. a a fat “a ard a “a ‘i : ton, and last year was assistant pro- | licemen, who had previously been
the first research professorship Mr. Alwyne, who was one of the ~ = : ze t rir mite wae fessor of art at Rutgers. friendly and co-operative, suddenly be-
Ten-|founders of the Gilbert and Sullivan dio gibi pris. pee ae fis The project which he hopes to work | came reserved. Miss Ely described a
tradition, claimed that the Glee Club| ~. s A pon S greeted) + with the Art Club is to provide policeman who, without daring to
with the following song: : : oe : . ks
| the college with rotating exhibits of | change his expression or look directly
agnating, and that because it is Tt h EERE ESS
he sophomores are watching wo y : rf :
’ . *|framed reproductions. These can be| at her, quietly motioned her not to go
rtain streets which were filled
new
teaching of the sciences
given already for the gradua
will be for the undergraduates by ne
year;
in the college’s history—to Mr.
nent—has also been inaugurated.
The success of the two buildings is| is st
largely due to the ever inventive Mr.| following a tradition, is getting itself | tea
Francis Stokes, chairman of the into a rut. Other colleges, he said, | J Ha Ha: Ha Ha rented from the engravers and allow| down ce
Building and Grounds c amittee, and | are doing much more interesting The wily fox hae beak ree ia us to see excellent pictures which we|with Nazi demonstrators. Telegraph
to all the department heads, especially things and we should conform to their : =y rey Ha H ‘ ’ cannot afford to buy. The Art Club| and telephone operators merely stated
Continued on Page Four Continued on Page Four ‘ a a, a a, Continued on Page Five Continued on Page Six
— - —— —$ $$ << ET So give us a cheer as you pass by, ahi nome ae reine ache EE er ee ae
ew Plumage of Dalton As ounds Campus "|" 2 brisht red| Freshmen in Plaid Reversibles Overrun
Reserve Room, Chat in English Accents
Rivals Scientific Sibling You are very sly but you can take us
all out to tea.
_ The freshmen broke through the | :
biology, and Mr. Michels and Mr. : The Class of 1941 was noted for its
N s Building,” eaeese in physics devoted their sophomore ring easily, and shortly t “es eae
“New Science Buuding, atters y§ ‘ : afterwards, the big ci : . | braids.
ici ‘prise to us this summer to the transformation job. coy gg Be Tpadiecg pli irlish hallmark can be set upon the At the other extreme, So many of 742
tinipelede were a sbelebrea: : They displayed scientific versatility Si, dane P . Seto: : . , lave registered for first year geology
fall. But the rejuvenation e Daltes in everything from the architectural |’ ee oy gaae classes went to Pem- freshmen. If anything, 1942 may Pe | that no accurate estimate has yet been
Hall from pitiable dowdiness ‘0 _— planning to uprooting discarded wir- edhe Arch for ris LE singing
streamlined a ee oe ing systems. Photographers from the | : '
er miracle than the much a vertise@| senior yearbook caught two professors —
birth of its younger sister. in futuristic masks, armed with paint| MR. STEELE THINKS NEWS | college during the Age of Dirndls (or
No one had expected Victori#n Dal-| Even the graduates and the) WORK GOOD TRAINING | worse still in that prehistoric era of
the Brooks sweater uniform) must
sprays.
ton to blossom forth. True, the pro- :
Theodore Steele, who will teach one bow to the new vogue. But counting
: research fellow, when they arrived in|
fessors who were to be left behind, | seytember, were set to work with |
of freshman English this} 0” stiff resistance from the ranks of
the dirndlers, our own prediction is
after the trek of two sciences into | paint and brush.
had been mulling June several under; raduates f
over changes for the old building. bunt ee the equipment pen store that the plaid dirndl is the true gar-
These had to be kept secret: the hopes it in the first floor wing of Pembroke |‘ ment of tomorrow. : a
of financing any such face-lifting| pa.t. The most convenient bedrooms |!” 1937 and has been a reporter on But the Class of 1942 is not entirely
operations were 50 frail that succes-| 6 makeshift offices for the profes- the San Francisco Examiner and Fort| preoccupied with matters of dress.
ns of blueprints and estimates de-| .ors, while into others the equipment| Worth Telegram. Any one of the reserve-room workers
air castles. TW0|....’ sorted as glassware, analytical Mr. Steele wants to study literature | would be willing to testify that all
ein chiefly as “the history of social ideas.” |of them have been in that room
t of the past week, generally clus-
He has worked extensively, from the} mos
philosophical, as well as the literary, | tered about’ the freshman English
point of view, on the writings of | shelves. It is even rumored that a
Dostoevski, Nietzsche, and Tolstoi.| number of freshmen habitually re-
Ugly Duckling
The technical perfections of the intelligence, it is reported that one
already an- freshman is taking second year Greek.
This year no such naive and
division the subject of “Bastard British.”
year, graduated from Dartmouth Col-
lege in 1935. He received his M.A.
shiny new quarters,
at Oriel College, Oxford University,
sio
fined no more than
fore Commencement an article, | balances, and heavy non-precision ap-
already linotyped, describing a nr paratus. Mrs. Patterson used the tea
projected changes, ye pantry to house her dyeing root tips
1 the News, for again 86) ang to make afternoon tea for the
days be ”
mum of
able to withstand force of numbers.
snatched fron
a.
tt Club
38.
characterized as a tribe of reversible made. There seems to be a large
plaid coat wearers. Those of us who number of real or pseudo English ac-
were so backward as to have entered cents, which may give new hope to
that department of the college which
cherishes ideals about our speech.
Secretly, we hope that it will result
in a new tirade by Miss Henderson on
Statistically speaking, the freshmen
are 153 strong. This fact carries a
hidden threat to the junior class:
should two of their number disappear,
they would be outnumbered two to
one. It is also rumored that a fresh-
man meeting in the Common Room is
scheduled for 7.30 Tuesday evening,
the well-known Fenwick hour. This
brings to the fore an interesting vital
question of whether tradition will be
Selection of Poems | Monday, October 17.—Edna B Ys Edi
| y Lantern itors Physica
| Tells of Recent = fs"
| New E Ul t | Poetess Revista Bryn Rican Die lections from her poetry. Good- Need Wide R f Wri
ipmen eats : 3 . hart, 8.20. ee ide Nange oO riters pe bs
q | vious Lecture at This College | Tuesday, October 18.— Cur- To Rouse General Interest Visit to Austria mnected
eel cr knows
from
at Ir-
taught
Jountry
She
Grant
and if
rill or-
She
veserve
; Yea-
swim-
vutside
t feel
ng too
team
‘gular
, with
ze for
M.
{|
He is also interested in teaching com-| serve books for 8 o’clock a. m. The
While not unholding the| only note of doubt about all this zeal-
ousness comes from Miss Terrien, who
med to have fallen through scientists.
could be released. ; The most obvious improvement is
rather than confi-| ...tainly the paint. Complete figures
plans see
and still nothing
Hall Election
position.
Rhoads Hall takes pleasure in
Inspired by hope ; pe ; Sa
ents ysics £ : P ar y ‘ urnalis
lence, the departments of physics and) he hogsheads of white paint are| re". value of mourn : :
OF tarted to empty Dalton into | exhig i pei able 98 os A were | 20 believes that newspaper work, | reports that four copies of Moss, The ‘
biology started t pty not yet available but 28 gallons v
after Commence- ‘ey - |which requires the “simple effective | Birth of the Middle Ages, disappeared announcing the election of Gene {
Pembroke on the day after Commence-| yceq in the basement alone. This a ; ; , Irish, ’39, as hall id
: exposition of ideas,” is a valuable| during one day. rish, ’39, as hall president.
In the line of incidental scholastic {
{
the hired workmen, unaccustomed brightness makes one
Continued on Page Three training.
mer. ‘4 Resides
a ir, ? |
i
ons
rere
ers
dy,
the
FE.
the
SH Ona4d & & }
r
rs
as
n-
he
n-
on
n-
ed
y>
2d
id
ss
mn
ic ten dee as
oe r’
Page Two Be XS Te lek
THE COLLEGE NEWS
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(Founded in 1914)
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
Mawr College.
$$ BOSD
The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in |
it may be reprinted either wholly or in part without written permission of the |
Editor-in-Chief. |
SS PUL ge OR eee ee, Se Sean —_—_—_____
Editor-in-Chief .
Mary R. Meigs, ’39
News Editor
ANNE LOUISE AXON, 740
Ass’t News Editor
EMILY CHENEY, ’40
Copy Editor
MARGARET MACG. OTIs, ’39
Ass’t Copy Editor
Isora ASHE TUCKER, ’40
Editors
DEBORAH H, CALKINS, ’40
OLIVIA KAHN, ’41
Sustg INGALLS, ’41
ELLEN MATTESON, ’40
ELIZABETH Popr, ’40
Sports Correspondents
BARBARA AUCHINCLOss, ’40 Preacy Lou Jarrer, ’41
Assistants
LILIAN SEIDLER, ’40 Betty WILson, ’40
Subscription Manager
ROZANNE Peters, ’40
SUBSCRIPTION, $2:50 MAILING PRICE, $3.00
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME
Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office
To the Class of ’42
It is a time-worn custom to write a word of welcome to the fresh-
man class, and to give them a ponderous piece of advice relating to
their future as citizens in this novel community. The seniors, who are
almost at the peak of their undergraduate Parnassus, are supposed to| ¥
be able to look down for a moment and point out the pitfalls on the
way, making sure to look quickly up again before they forget that the
hardest part of the climb is still ahead.
As seniors, then, we admit that there are pitfalls.
warned, to be sure of the most obvious ;
Handbook, and formally; by the Self-Government Association. What
we would like to tell you is not that you should start studying now
instead of before your first quiz or that you should remember the T
rules in your green rule books. We think that the greatest danger
in Bryn Mawr lies in the state of mind which arises whenever
puzzled about meaning or value of the college. If you do not have a}
tendency to isolate it and to overestimate its importance in relation to|
J
You have been
informally, in the Freshman
you are]
the outside world, you may take the opposite point of view and decide |
that in a liberal arts college there is no progress as far as practical | Tx
accomplishment is concerned. The first is likely to lead to what leit
/ be called “holiday” disillusionmént and the second is the favorite ana
most influential theme of well-wishing members of the get-out-in-the
-| Bi
world school.
What we know as Seniors is that you must have
Bryn Mawr to look any opposition squarely in the eye and still be
sure that you are doing the right thing.
blind surrender to academic life,
from a wholeness of perception.
|
faith enough in|
We are not suggesting a
but the middle course which comes
All the advice we ean give you is to
believe us when we say that after three years we are glad for the three} 'Th
years, and even gladder for the one that is left.
We Never Knew a Dear Gazelle
It is difficult for
factory to everybody
us to comment on a situation which seems satis-
except those who have no part in it. We refer
to the proposed reorganization of the Glee Club and the abandonment
there is-everythine to be said on the other side.
. 5S
Experts are opposed
to amateurs,
musicians to traditionalists, and we must be thick-witted
indeed not to perceive that Brahms or Bach are superior to Sullivan
and that Gilbert is trespassing on the Glee Club’s unhistrionic terri-
Glee Club would consider: itself a
return tothe realm of pure song.
The Glee Club, moreover, is being as reassuring.as it can under-the
circumstances, According to the new plan everybody will be happy:
its members, because they love to sing; the Players’ Club, beéause - it
can give a huge compensating production; and the rest of the college,
because it is told that a new Glee Club constitution will mean the
revival of Gilbert’ and Sullivan: whenever the afore
desires.
tory. Naturally -an acting-singing
hybrid animal and would want to
Ss
ney
A
Lau
said Glee Club so] day
gom
Mar
Personally we do not care whether
Gilbert and Sullivan is revived
or not five years from now.
Our immediate
concern is this year and
80 We are not assuaged by honeyed promises.
We are among the inde-
terminate mass of Spectators who tiever tire of the Glee Club’s Gilbert
and Sullivan performanees, and go to them as the brightest event of the
college year. Mr. Alwyne says that we should conform to the standards
of other colleges. So be it; as Bryn Mawr we will conform; as individ-
nals we mourn. No idealistic regimentation can prevent
shedding a tear over the grave of our
In Philadelphia
with
Frid
us from
buried pleasures.
ME ap wrsrcyr ayn tee SAM eT eee
Betty Grabel and Eleanor Whitney.
nicolored big trees and adventure,
played by Charles Bickford, Wayne
Morris and Claire Trevor.
Boyd: The Sisters, 9 super-drama
Douglas and scorns Jackie Cooper.
Karlton: Too Hot To Handle, Clark
Gable is a cameraman and Myrna Loy
as.an aviatrix.
Wz
| Is harder to suppress than Konrad
His hero rhymes with ruin, not with
| Juan expects to be a Bryn Mawr don.
Who in the course of time, if they are
May win their share of self-determina-
A Cambridge accent’s so much
Miss Gryphon (off the record) made
Juan like others had no great objec. | S°Phomore years have done so largely
We’re all impressed by something, and| 8'egation
The shiny splendor of the water units.
Her Juan sauntered up to, full of| that you come
This Waldorf Ritz.
His eyes grew round, he scratched his
Miss Loghve had fallen down the
around a racetrack.
Nancy,
Seville: Tonight, Little Tough Guy, the sophomore
der’s Ragtime Band, for four days,
Pears anxious to have one Service conducted
Seeetaut: Beginning a two-week €N-!/by the students alone and are par-
gagement on October 17, Amphitryon
: , ticularly interested in etting an idea} qyntn » deed
38, with Alfred Lunt and Lynne Fon- y Ste g & Arcturus, the star
taine.
parently unnamed as yet.
One Third of the Nation, presented by Macauley and Sheppard Strudwick.
Speakers for Sunday |
wires re D Services Are Chosen)
DON JUAN
(Canto XVII continued, if you can}
believe it) |
Welcome, my friends, the
somewhat chillier
Than when I saw you last,—Com-
mencement noon.
| students in the hope of discovering |
Now I see faces strangely unfamiliar, | what the undergraduate body thought
Populus novus, but I’ll know them |
Again This Year
—- last year have heard a gre
| (Specially contributed by Janet} times.
weather’s| Russell, 40.) | liteness rather
Last
interview with ourselves on
Jabout Sunday Evening Services. | ject.
amas This article is to be a summary of} Q. How does it eel to be back?
1 think I said that nothing could be the answers returned from those ques- A. Funny.
milter tionnaires. | . How do you mean, funny?
Mean. believe in ee deuiie of Of last year’s 11 speakers the Rev-|_ A. We’d forgotten what it felt lik.
Juan, ory JCOrs ‘
erend C. Leslie Glenn was the best| to do some work
liked. The Reverend
drich and Hornell Hart followed to-| world.
The pen endures the sword; the hand-
traced pen-line
Byron established this priority; by Dr. Glenn.
been here.
John,
And so I bow to his authority.
: the Institut at Tours,
favorite. In the questionnaire the
majority of students requested that
™ ¢ - | abros as year?
the speaker’s approach. be practical | broad last yea
and not philosophical, intellectual, or leita ever had
emotional. The committee felt they | V°-ve eve °
too should be practical
Thus far he’s backed by a minority,
patien’
tion.
and select
uan’s a renegade but very charming; ;
He came among us in the flower of| miles of Bryn Mawr.
youth In the addresses, the students want
liss Gryphon Says she found him| Personal problems and general social
: ; ; problems discussed. There was also
quite disarming ;
Down in the voice-recording room,|® large group who favored philosoph-
forsooth ical problems.
To the question: “What aspects of ti a
, lons, you or us?
the Church are you most interested | ry
PREIS | A. You or we.
But to tel]|in?” the most frequent answers were
comparative religions, prayer and the
study of the Bible, Missions was the
aspect which interested Bryn Mawr
the least.
Those who have ceased to go to
|Chapel since their freshman and
| Vews last year.
were they?
Q. You said it.
Space, didn’t we?
less
alarming
Than Bastard British.
the truth,
to get into the tracks again?
the admission,—
he basement now provides some com-
|
petition.
to us.
man.
Q. Do you blame them?
A. No.
e
a
is al-
RETURN from EXILE |
- : “How does it feel to be back?"s This
= ’ - if . a ae . ; ;
Last Year’s Favorites Will be Heard | 1S a question which we who trans
| planted our education to foreign soil
t many
It is probably asked out of po-
than curiosity: at the
May the Chapel Committee|same time, self-contemplation
| distributed 400 questionnaires to the} Ways agreeable and we would like
seize this opportunity to have
to
a@ short
the sub-
and we'd forgotten
Donald B. Al-| how many women there were in the
There seem to be some new
compare
: ri ot aia To| houses around too.
Ya » abies a : gether, and Dr. Suter was third. To} § %
Graduate. Corvesponiient Henlein. satisfy these preferences the services| Q rer does this October
mateo ' this year include Dr, Al-| With last October?
Business Manager Advertising onegey. This is Don Juan; please don’t call ee in Feet inclod wervions A. It was more exciting to be
CAROLYN: SHINE, ’39 DororHy AUERBACH, him Wan. , é se s
A. Well, we had to fill up column
Q. Look here, who’s asking the ques-
Q. O. K. Does it seem at all difficult
A. Well, we felt a little queer at first
but the sophomores were pretty nice
They thought we were a Fresh-
: because of their work. One junior ; 5
Peet registered and seen the|¢onfessed she had stopped because she ois ee "ac ies discouraging
Dean, was attached to Charlie McCarthy. A. The ohig in ae rene: Hod
) starting a Grand Tour of inspec-| The majority were against com- speak better French than oe dt '
tion pulsory chapel with the exception of ‘
one radical who suggested that it be
compulsory at least once a month. In
rst down to Rhoads, for Lemuel had general, +e students considered the
an affection idea good in theory but not in prac-
For its old Gothic battlemented | mee,
mien, The students who make up the con-
would like more music.
They want familiar words and hymns,
especially around Christmas time. The
committee understands that the hymn
is called| 0oks are arranged differently from
}most, but as a solution we suggest
more often and get
With Lemuel Liggett Munch as g0-
between; away the French have given
couldn’t wait to get back.
Q. Really?
thing about this college,
for Juan it’s g0 abroad yourself and find out.
e chatelaine of Rhoads Ludiones To Present
Miss Loghve,
“Diplomacy’s| Other during the service as long as
they do not spoil their tone in doing} _ The
the dope,”
is free,
lowed by a square dance in the
nasium to which
invited.
The play,
storm on the coast of
translated by Camilla
Terry Ferrer, both
of Massachusetts
cane,
when singing the anthem and other-
wise face each other.
Nearly everyone likes discussions,
but wants them very informal. The
committee is most anxious to have
everyone come to these discussions and
to ask their questions without embar-
rassment. It is: only by “give and
Beery running| take” that anything can be accom-
plished.
: Of the 400 questionnaires, 99 were
sities Nate es ah filled out, 48 completed and 51 in-
rel and Hardy. Thursday, Fri- complete. Twenty-five of those who
and Saturday: Three taba Has| 20Swered were in the choir. There
Janet Gaynor, Robert Mont-| Were 18 services last year. From the
ery, Franchot Tone, and The questionnaires it appeared that the
ch of Time. : average senior attended 15.75 times,
91.4, the freshman
9.03 and the junior 4.125.
Thursday, The new year has already
North’s finally ope—”
head hirsute;
laundry chute.
(To be continued. ) Riggs
tanley: Stablemates, Mickey Roo-
and Wallace
exceptionally free translation
classical style, with musical
of the comedies of itg period.
the Dead End Kids.
ay, Rich Man, begun.
gestions at any time concerning all
: will produce the
aspects of the service. We are most
all branches of
and acting.
farce,
Theatre staging,
CAST
of what the students would like in
and Norman Clark but ap-| gagement on October 20, Great Lady,
4 | with Norma Terris, Tullio Carminati,
17,| Irene Bordoni, Helen Ford, Joseph
,
Palaestra, his long-lost daughter
siebie Ampelisea; her friend .;
Ptolemocratia,
Beginning October
priestess of Venus
|
Plautus’ Rudens will be presente
Q. But isn’t there any let down?
A. Let down? Ever since we’ve been
us so
much Bryn Mawr propaganda that we
A. Why you don’t know the first
You’d better
Annual Plautus Farce
hope a to ea oe cay si biongy is Ferrer and Riggs Make Free Trans-
That he might be a favored resident ee ee oe i
of i pan members of the choir to face each lation of Play
annual farce by T. Maccius
He thought complacently “Miss| 8° After a good deal of consulta- rie me xtra be presented November
this year, at least, of a Gilbert and Sullivan performance. As is usual Lowk d tion it has been decided that they)* im Goodhart at 8 p. m. by the
3 ‘ ( Fis : a oghve, my dove, shoul 5 a: th P Ludiones of Bryn Mawr. Admission
on an occasion when a delightful tradition 1s about to be saecrificed,| Do you suppose when Rhoads| Should turn toward the congregation
The performance will be fol-
gym-
Haverford will be
which is about a wild
Africa, was
and
40, on the coast
during the hurri-
Although the college’s French,
Spanish and German plays are in the
languages of the originals, the Latin
play has always been in English. The
of
d in
inter-
ludes and the conventional costumes
The
oe. Vi Nichols,
tentative title is Flotsam and Jetsam.
Rehéarsals began on Monday. As
Poor Girl, with ? previously in the Menaechmi, Mos-
Robert Young, Lew Ayhés aria Gis The Committee hopes that everyone) peta ria and Miles Gloriosus, Miss Ag-
Kibbe Begins October 15, Alexan- will feel perfectly free to make sug-
nes K. Lake of the Latin depart ment
supervising
costuming
"41
Sceparnio, a slave ...:.. D. Dana, ’41
Aldine: Drums, revolt in India, with} Europa: To the Victor, a beautifully frlatiger: Beginning October 17, that service. Plesidippus, the hero.V. Sherwood, ’41
Sabu, the elephant boy, directed by} acted Scotch film. George Sidney and Gerta Rozan, in a ; renee: a Kindly old man
Alexander Korda: Fox: That Certain Age, Deanna department farce, written by Louis} Forrest: Beginning a 15-day en- J. Follansbee, °41
Arcadia: Valley of the Giants, tech-| Durbin falls in love with Melvyn| Shecter
C. Riggs, ’4()
-A. John, ’39
d the Philadelphia unit of the Federal Philadelphia Orchestra Tishyce ns os Sprague, ‘41
with: Bette Davis, Anita Louise and Keith’s: Hold That Co-ed, John Bar- Theatre, and adapted locally to fea- Corelli -Suite for String Orchestra] ““2T@*: @ villainous. slan-
Errol Flynn. rymore as a daffy governor. ture the collapse of two bandbox| Strauss ...........,..... Don Juan], ; ; AWW
Earle: Campus Confessions, about a News: Looking for Trouble, Spen-| houses in South Philadelphia, with | oo an. gOS ee ean a Iberia | Charmides, hie x 58 “. .
kindergarten college, with the Kids,| cer Tracy and Jack Oakie in a revival. | seven casualties, Sibelius -Symphony No. 2 in D iden! sou? » \ rai
in a
Dr. Suter has already| Perfectly new place, but its nice to see
people you know again; it’s nice to see
As 74 k uggested and|® full-blooded autumn with red trees;
s Speakers were suggested <¢ 3 nants. j
. and if you think it’s hard yetting your
only 11 were allowed, the committee | 2" if y : & ey
we " not been able to get everybody’s| COUrSes Planned here, you ought to try
as ‘ st everybody’:
Q. Humpf! Are you sorry you went
A. No. It was one of the best winters
Q. We wouldn’t have guessed it from
those who live within a few hundred|S°Mme of the articles you wrote for the
A. Oh yes. They weren’t very good,
il
-_ —
———
I eat a meme
—_
‘THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
New Beauty of Dalton
Astonishes Campus |
Continued from Page One
| sabbatical
the Public
gathering material
Jack oe “y =
remember the previous walls as dark Back from her leave,
spent partly in
| Office in
brown, although actually they were no | Record
worse than a dirty cream. In the cor- London
the the
woodwork is a restrained green, which, |
book on the British Em-
1820 to 1830, and partly
on window ledges, harmonizes effect- | Mi ; ; miei and. France, Mrs.
3 ; anning is delighted at the growth
with the outside. The| | S : oe ie
hichies lecture room “i f i108 the campus and is far from re-
j 2c e room sports a cheer : : ae a
ee te Sports a cheertul) oretting the busts in Taylor. “The
coat of “Stokes red. The : > ;
tue to the insist rae |living quarters in Rhoads are ele-
due to the insistence | ,
é ed ae T-|gant beyond compare,” she says, “and
Stokes, chairman of the| Fe the exhibits in
building and ground; mmi Nai ‘ldi bi ;
ge gro s committee, that) the Science building. I objected at
this room be red, and partly to com-| lfirst t the view from the
memorate the invaluable role _he| house toward campus blocked by the
played in bringing the project through | yew dormitory, but I like it very much
its uncertainties to a triumphant | now.”
finish.
New lighting contributes
beauty to the changed building.
Park has avowed partiality
|for another
ridors and most of rooms
pire from
traveling in
ively trees
name is
partly
Francis
especially admire
o having
she believes that the num-
further |ber of students should be proportional
Miss|to the number of subjects taught, the
the| Dean is enthusiastic about larger in-
new switchboard that controls the| coming classes at Bryn Mawr. “Any
laboratory power. With its gleaming] that wants to be alive must
rows of varicolored plug inlets it war-| spread its interests. And if you cease
rants a visit. to have a good group in each sub-
ject, you must give it up. A small
group isn’t good for the students, be-
Because
for
college
But another less spec-
tacular switchboard is responsible for
the brilliant illumination of the entire
building, inspiring to those who have| sides being uneconomical.”
worked in the old semi-obscurity. The When asked whether she thought
jlast year’s
‘Dean Manning Approves Scigias Building, g,
Rhoads, and Absence of Busts in Taylor
freshman class or the
present class of 1942 the prettier, the
Dean and Acting Director of Ad-
missions answered tactfully, “Looking
at it with an eye to the future, I will
reserve judgment as to which class is
the prettier. However, I will say
that I think the freshmen very hand-
some.” Mrs. Manning has not yet
met the sophomore class as a group.
Although the Mannings left Eng-
land before the Czech crisis, they
found the country worried about
bombardments and pacifist in senti-
ment. Mrs. Manning noticed that
there seemed to be strong sympathy
for the Austrians at the time of the
Anschluss. and remarked that there
were probably closer bonds of per-
sonal sympathy between England and
Austria than between England and
Czechoslovakia. On the whole, in the
early weeks of August, the French
seemed less worried than the English
had been in May, when they were
there. She stated that it was amus-
ing to watch the enjoyment of the
French workers on their first vaca-
tions with pay guaranteed by the late
Blum government.
raw bulbs have been replaced by opa-| —— —-
lescent chandeliers. The modernistic| out the building, for
strip of lights down the basement | venience.
hall ceiling has earned that once dark|
passage the name of Forty-second |
street.
maximum con-
Efficiency has been advanced in
other ways. On the first floor a par-
tition was removed to let the cramped
Besides the change in the actual| minor physics laboratory spread
lighting fixtures, several new sources | across the entire side of the building,
of city A.C. and college D.C. have|and in one dark corner small light-
been introduced into the electric sys-| and sound-proof rooms were erected
tem. Much rewiring has been done|for special experiments. Partitions
in the building, and the sinks and | were raised in the old chemistry lab-
pipes are new and shiny. The mem-| oratory to make three compact rooms
bers of the departments can tell tales| for biology. The waste hall space in
of the makeshift methods that were! the basement has made more small
sometimes necessary, before this sum-|workrooms. The enlarged department
mer, to bring light, gas and water to] libraries allow for new books and
the same spot for an experiment. The| reading tables. Greatest boon to the
new plumbing has increased the num-| average student is the “panic-bolt” on
ber of water faucets and redistributed|the front door, which thus opens to
the gas outlets from the old chemistry} the slightest book-laden
laboratory to strategic points through-| arm.
shove of a
The convenience of the systematic
numbering of every room is less ap-
parent to the lay observer. As in
Rhoads and the conventional hotel one
can deduce the floor, and here the de-
partment, from the prefix. Physics
begins at 01 (in the basement) and
101; biology with 201 and 301; and
anything in the 400s is probably
mathematics, although one biological
research room has penetrated to the
fourth floor also. The fifth floor
houses the biological plants and colo-
nies of experimental mice. As yet,
however, it is impossible for the in-
experienced to judge, from a door’s
exterior, whether it conceals a pro-
fessor or a dark room.
By September 15 the equipment was
removed from Pembroke East back
into the transformed Dalton. Physic-
NEW BOOK-PLATE GIVEN
TO COLLEGE LIBRARY
book-plate by Elizabeth
Shippen Green Elliott has been con-
A new
tributed to Bryn Mawr by Judge
Learned Hand. Mrs. Elliott is well|
known for her drawings of Bryn
Mawr, some of which are hanging in |
the Publication Office in Taylor Hall.
The book-plate which is now in use
superfluous leaf design sur-
rounding the central coat of arms,
with crude block printing underneath,
and is bounded by a heavy margin.
Mrs. Elliott’s design is authentic
heraldically, with a gryphon rampant
has a
on either side of a shield bearing the}
three Bryn Mawr owls. The gry-|
phon’s connection with college is un-
known, but well established as a prece-|
dent, since there are two baby gry-|
|phons in relief outside Pembroke
Arch. Mrs. Elliott’s book-plate is
more effective than the old one be-|
cause there is nothing in the design)
which does not contribute to its deco-
rative unity.
ists and biologists, now accompanied
by mathematicians, returned to paint
and perfect and the last painters left
the finished product the day before
classes began.
Dalton has not become a truly mod-
ern laboratory, by any means. Sci-
ence, however, will be able to progress
under her venerable roof, until the
addition of two wings can make the
| ger is
new Chemistry and Geology Adaab bad
Miss Janet / A. Yeager
Replaces Miss Brady
Swimming is Favorite Sport of
New Physical Education
Instructor
Miss Janet A. Yeager is taking
Miss Brady’s place in the Physical
Education Department for the com-
ing year.
Though never
with Bryn Mawr,
before connected
Miss Yeager knows
the college well. She comes from
this vicinity, went to school at Ir-
and, from 19338 till 1938, taught
athletics at the Shady Hill Country
Day School in Chestnut Hill, Pa. She
played on the Merion Cricket Club
hockey team from 1936 till 1938.
Miss Yeager is assisting Miss Grant
with the hockey this fall and if
sufficient interest is shown will or-
ganize lacrosse in the spring. She
was on the United States Reserve
Lacrosse Team in 1935.
Despite her versatility, Miss Yea-
chiefly interested in swim-
ming. She favors as many outside
meets as possible, but does not feel
that this should necessitate giving too
much time towards making the team
better at the expense of regular
swimmers.
win,
a “New Science Building” in fact, with
ideal conditions of light and space for
all four laboratory sciences.
E. M.
Breakfast Lunch
MEET YOUR FRIENDS
The Bryn Mawr College Tea Room
for a
SOCIAL CHAT AND RELAXATION
Hours of Service: 7.30 A. M.—7.30 P. M.
For age eae Call tides Mawr 386
Tea Dinner
cn rae an nanan,
DONT LET YOUR NERVES GET TIRED, UPSET!
IRISH SETTER—Native of Ireland. Be-
lieved to be a cross of English setter, spaniel
and pointer. Originally red and white in
coloring. Today’s standards call for solid
mahogany red or rich golden chestnut. Es-
sentially a gun dog. Bold, hardy, yet remark-
ably gentle nature.
HE DOG pictured above hasanervous
system amazingly similar to yours, with
this difference: It is the nature of the dog to
rest when he needs rest. It is the nature of
mankind to drive on...until nerves jerk
and twitch...until you are cross and irri-
table...tired out without knowing it. No
that
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MILLIONS FIND
“LET UP—LIGHT UP A CAMEL”
PUTS MORE JOY INTO LIVING
TERRELL JACOBS,
“Tony”
my nerves.” “Terrell’s right,’
a Camel helps them to rest.”
mild
matter which of the common forms of
tenseness you feel, try this experiment:
Ease up and enjoy a Camel. Camels are
made from costlier tobaccos. Smokers find
“Let up—light up a Camel”
more gest into life, and that Camel’s
soothe their nerves.
lion trainer,
Concello, circus aerialist (/eft),
both testify to the value of “Let up—
light up a Camel.” “Animals can spring
into instant action—then relax,”
Jacobs. “We are apt to get our nerves all
wound up with our tense way of living—
can’t let go. I find that Camels soothe
’ Miss Con-
cello says. “When my nerves are tired,
FRED L. McDANIEL, cowboy (right),
says: “When I feel nervous I let up, and
light up a soothing Camel. Camels are
I smoke ’em steadily. They are so
comforting, and never tire my taste.’
- LET UP_ L/GHT UPA
giving his
puts
and
says
181680
Smokers find Camel’s Costlier Tobaccos
nerves a rest...and so is he
are
A matchless blend of finer, MORE EXPEN-
SIVE TOBACCOS— Turkish and Domestic
Smoke 6 packs of
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the LARGEST-
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ons
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7
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Miss Park Sees Progress as “Mic!
: t opportunity offered to the college in
With New Equipment! Mr. Gustav Tugendreich, teacher in
seo child welfare and head of that field
{in the Berlin center for 27 years.
to Mr. Doyle, Mr. Michels, and Mr. | :
Patterson for their summer’s work in| college had received this year is the| Which
Dalton. The cost of Dalton was car-| Sift from the Carnegie Corporation of ere
ried by Sophie Boucher’s (1905) be- See wae at nee ae: ean ig tak wane
quest, supplemented by donations from
Continued from Page One
: : standards,
Another extraordinary benefit the | St
books on music and 150 bound scores. The Glee Club is going to vote on
under Miss McBride, and of the great Glee Club Discusses
Plans for Concerts
Continued from Page One
Moreover, the enjo rment . pe say
; loreover, “a oy y . |Rhoads Hall ranged from “Palatial!”
1S produced by Singing is di-
}rectly proportional
> music, and Gilbert and Sulli-
| 7
Gay Furniture and Modern Conveniences
In New Dormitory Excite Comment
| The comments of sightseers on;abounds in many colored chairs, some
| with two arms, some with none, and
In reality, its smells | to complete the scheme, several with
In addition to the show-
reception
to the greatness|t° “Gaol-like!”.
0 > gre: Ss | é
ee are those of a new suburban apart-/one arm.
ment, its noises those of the con- case, several small rooms
struction centers of New York City,/are provided for the more private en-
while its bathrooms resemble those note,
tertainment of visitors. We
the trustees and directors, while the} For this gift a record library has|Mr. Alwyne’s suggestion at the end
cost of the Chemistry-Geology build-| been planned though not completed.
ing was borne by the alumnae gift in
1935.
New Hall and Changes In Old
The new dormitory also adds to
Miss Park reported the undergradu- ee a - dg
ate enrollment to be 453, and that the ie ARtie Soe rag
graduate enrollment to date of 123]. "° y &
that they would be Sorry to have to
was also the largest yet known. The y y
of the week, with the knowledge that
they must decide either on the con-
.. {do the latter again this ear, and at
entering class is 153, and the Admis- & shes
ce, : i ; : the same time, that it would be im-
this confused campus, It is named sion Committee were well pleased :
in memory of Mr. James E. Rhoads,
the college’s first president, and is
built from college funds with the ad-
dition of a gift from Mr. Charles :
Rhoads. Miss Park told of how Mr. Miss
from.
Urges Training for Democracy
Park then
announced that
Rhoads has worked for the new hall| Whereas she had been making a re-
; possible to do both.
with the large field they had to choose
The last time the Bryn Mawr Glee
Club experimented with chorale sing-
ing was three years ago, when it gave
The Messiah, also in collaboration
with Princeton. Since it was Big
as Mr. Stokes worked for the science| port of the summer to all the staff, May Day year, there was no Gilbert
buildings, how Miss Ward and Miss| ‘he faculty and the college at large,
Howe gave up their summer to the| She would conclude by speaking di-
work, and how Mrs. Hibbard, chair-| rectly to the students. She recalled
man of the Furniture and Grounds her earlier statement that today we
Committee, has been on hand at all live in two worlds: that enclosed
times. within a few acres and that stretch-
Miss Park suggested that the ex-|ing across continents. She urged
terior of Rhoads be viewed from be-| that we realize our responsibilities,
tween Goodhart and her house in| °f which there are two in particular,
order to see its graceful curve along| to the second rots
the hillside. Though parts of the in- ree oe isi ri! ai ome Ne
terior are unfinished, the furniture inj ores ele % Prepare to “be an inte-
the bedrooms and the library igs|8rated individual able to work in the
already on view. In connection place to which we are called.” To
with this Miss Park mentioned the} do this we must learn, while at col-
& ss | :
contribution of the undergraduates—| lege, how to use best the tools of
Esther Hardenbergh, Julia Grant, and| Ur future professions.
Sarah Meigs—who helped plan the The second demand democracy
rooms and furniture. In the other} ™akes on us is for “intelligent and
halls, too, are new libraries, of which vigorous interest.” Miss Park warned
the prize is Merion’s, Mrs. Hibbard’s| @gainst giving this second contribu-
gift. tion only in the form of emotion. We
Miss Park said she hoped to give| have all seen, Miss Park continued,
us the pictures of the library wing} the futility and danger of such anger
shortly. Its non-existence, she ex-/2nd moral indignation as the events
plained, was due to the uninamous, of the summer have aroused nee
decision after June that the college} Miss Park urged political action
had already more than it could han-! Which, theoretically, is possible for all,
dle in the building line. though until now the concern of a
Coming Lecturers very few. We must not only take
Ose welcoming the new staff and| Ver the responsibilities of voting, etc.,
= : ale ale 6b, LAs ©
those of the old who have returned but also take Ay the “whole great and
from their sabbatical years, Miss difficult question of free government.”
% are “tp + rar >,
Park announced the coming lectures: | The treatment of the great concepts
for October, Edna St Vincent Millay | of mercy, justice, cooperation and lib-
AS ae : > a 7 sion. 5 ne
@ group of science lectures, and Judge| it pi wIBHS oe the Peon beri:
Allen on the Historical Development| ?'€@kdown in our country as well as
of Constitutional Powers (the first of ° cara: :
the Anna Howard Shaw Foundation me ghee preparation ere, Miss Park
series of six): in November, Paul advised us to be quick and thorough.
| We must train not on rt but tl
Green, author of several plays; and in . a £, Peet Dat the
whole of our minds.
the second semester some lectures on J
Aesthetics given by Mr. Darockiee Miss Park concluded her speech by
Mr. Nahm, Mr. Bernheimer and a “abiien that we be prepared for
psychologist not yet named. Miss|#¢tion and that Bryn Mawr Sradu-
Park told us of her disappointment ates be thoughtful, determined fighters
over the Flexner lecturer, Thomas for democracy.
Mann, who is unable to come. The
latter has, however, agreed tenta-
tively to give the series of lectures in
a later year,
Miss Park then announced the Rie-
gel fellowship award in the field of
Geology to Sara Anderson, graduate
of Mt. Holyoke College, and M.A. of
Bryn Mawr. Miss Park also spoke of
the growth of the Educational Clinic,
MADAM CURIE
Discoverer of radium
Phone Bryn Mawr 809
Bryn Mawr Marinello Salon
National Bank Building
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and Sullivan production in the spring,
Members of the Glee Club who sang
in The Messiah say that they en-
joyed it more than any Gilbert and
Sullivan performance that they have
given since.
Fresh Talent Sought
By Lantern Editors
Continued from Page One
new board was to change the name
of the magazine. On second thought
this seemed useless and silly until the
Lantern proved it could take on new
life and new vigor. There is no ob-
ject in serving old English papers in
a new cover,
Nevertheless, the policy is chang-
ing and the actual organization is
changing. The editorial board is to
be divided into departments for fic-
tion, poetry, art, music, theater and
books. In addition they are endeay-
oring to print as many articles as
possible on science, Philosophy, poli-
tics and economics, on photography
or dancing, in a word on any subject
of interest to Bryn Mawr campus,
Photographers and artists are needed
to help make up the magazine,
With this proposed variety, every-
one ought to find some angle of in-
terest in the Lantern and the editors
feel justified in soliciting both your
contributions and your subscriptions.
I. A. Tucker.
SWEATERS
however, that these little rooms do not
have doors. Out in the main hall
a pul-
previously seen only in Crane’s plumb-
ing advertisements,
the signing out book rests on
Thousands of extraordinary con- ; ;
pit-like structure with an ominous
veniences, in keeping with this rela-
tively futuristic setting, have been
introduced. Circular screws slowly
wheel the windows outwards. Stu-
dents are summoned to the telephone,
or to visitors by an uncanny system
of private bell signals. String, paper,
boxes, ’ books and, we suspect, even
lesser-known freshmen vanish down
the chromium chutes to emerge in the
trash incinerator.
electric clock above it.
Rhoadsiters are rapidly becoming
nature lovers, since they look out on
the two willow trees, and the little
stream—which is conveyed to the
lower campus through an iron pipe.
Student interests are further widened
by the proximity of the hall to Good-
hart while one of the major items
in the life of the Rhoads scholar is
All vestiges of Victorianism, more- | the thrice-daily trip to the Deanery
over, were overthrown by Miss Howe]|for meals.
and the interior decorators in the
matter of room-furnishing. Four-
drawer bureaus of waxed light-col-
ored wood, streamlined desks and
large bookcases which hang on the
wall provide Space for almost any
amount of nicknacks.
E. C., I. A. T.
The Community Kitchen
864 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr --- Phone 860
Afternoon Tea Daily
Buffet suppers by appointment
room — — —_
— ——S=__—_—_——— =
SPORTSWEAR
Downstairs, the smoking
Colony House
778 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR
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was ver
In 19
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the depre
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———E=
‘HE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
nearer ry
THE COLLEGE NEWS
REESE «PSS Go |
Page Five
CURRENT EVENTS
|| Mr. Sloane Plans Project
(Gleaned from Mr. Fenwick.)
A great Struggle to liberate Czecho-
slovakia from Austria’s
began in 1618, when
missioners
imperial co
sent to Prague to ar
trate were thrown out of the
domination
Senior Elections
The senior class takes pleas-
ure in announcing the election
of Nancy Toll as president, Ty-
rell Ritchie as vice-president,
With Aid From Art Club
Continued from Page One
is needed to find ways, means, hous-
ing and hangers who will be respon- and Louise Herron ag secretary-
™M-!sible for the pictures’ welfare. treasurer. Julia Harned was
bi-) In answer
to the much-discussed chosen editor-in-chief of the
palace] question of combining practical in- Yearbook, with Betsy Harvey
windows into a dung hill. This inej-|Struction with the historical and and Alice John as literary edi-
Lo, . critical study of art for credit, Mr. tors
dent marked the beg 7 . .
nicer wm ‘ ginning of the Sloane explained that this is a diffi-
uirty ears’ War. Czechoslovakia, cult, almost impossible plan. Prac-
however, never achie
until nearly 300 years later at t
close of the World War, w
kingdoms of
af ‘ : work voluntarily under intelligent
the territory of the Slovakians, supervision, Miss Barbara Cary, who holds the
Ruthenians, and other minority The Sketching from a model on
groups.
At the time it was Suggested that
the Czechs form part of a great “feq-
eration of the Danube.”
prevented by the intense
of the Czechs.
that the
This
given to Germany.
however, felt that they
been “Austrian
than “Berlin Ge
Germans”
bankrupt country. Moreover, sine
such an arrangement would separate
areas of the interior
from the industrial Sudeten areas, the
Czechs felt that any division would be
The minority rights of
in a
1930 there
the agricultural]
disastrous.
the Sudetens were guaranteed
peace treaty, and until
was very little discontent.
In 1930, however, the Sudeten in-
dustries were badly undermined by
Hitler then began to
autonomy particularly
the depression.
agitate for
among the poor and unemployed. The
Czechs, realizing that if war came it
would be fought in the German areas,
began gradually to withdraw import-
ant industries into safer regions. The
result was greater unemployment
and still greater dissatisfaction with
the government.
In May, after the annexation of
Austria, Hitler felt that he could
safely risk an invasion of Czecho-
slovakia. The Czechs, beliving that
England and France would support
them, mobilized their armies and the
project was abandoned.
In the spring, however, the Czechs
might have treated successfully with
Hitler since at the time autonomy
was all that was demanded for the
Sudetens. But Hitler, convinced that
Great Britain would not go to war,
made his demands greater and
greater throughout the summer until
at Nuremberg he insisted on out-
right annexation.
Great Britain consulted France,
ved independence
hen the new
state was constructed from the whole
Moravia, Bohemia and
was
nationalism
It was also suggested
“Sudeten” areas with their
German minorities be cut off and be
The minorities
had always
rather
rmans” and did hot
wish to be handed to a defeated and
Barbara Cary, 36,
Is Merion Warden
Former College News Editor Studied,
Worked in Berlin
tical instruction frequently becomes
slipshod and artistic talent
easily co-ordinated with the college
curriculum. His preference ig an
atelier where interested students can
he is not
Office of Publicity Secretary and is
also the warden of Merion this year,
graduated from Bryn Mawr in 1936.
She was editor of the News during the
same year.
After graduating, Miss Cary stud-
ied German, history and political sci-
ence at the University of Berlin. At
the same time she worked for the
American Friends’ Service Committee
Saturday morning which has been
Sponsored by the Art Club ought to
continue, Mr. Sloane feels, if the
members are enthusiastic, It is valu-
able to provide an opportunity for
practice since there is as yet no such
studio as mentioned above.
“I prefer not to discuss the Federal
»| Arts Project,” Mr, Sloane said, “be-
Miss Millay to Read
Selection of Poems
Workers’ School Has
5000 Registrations
During its first year, the Univer-
sity of Wisconsin school for workers
had more than 5,000 student registra-
tions in its various courses of study,
it was revealed in a summary of the
last school year compiled by Prof, EB.
E. Schwarztrauber, director of the
school.
The new school for workers, which
operates during the entite year, was
established by the State University a
year ago after provision had been
made for it by the State Legislature.
The purpose of the new school, the
Continued from Page One
Pan American papers. According to
| Living Authors, Miss Millay and Ea-
gar Allen Poe are probably the only
two American poets to have had their
works translated into Spanish.
Miss Millay’s most recent works are
The Princess Marries the Page, 19382,
Wine From These Grapes, 1934, and
Conversation at Midnight, 1987. A
list of anterior works includes The
Harp Weaver, for which she got the
Pulitzer Poetry Prize, and The King’s! first of its kind at any college or uni-
Henchmen, an opera with music by versity in the U. S., is to provide
Deems
Taylor which was staged by
the Metropolitan Opera Company, an
honor accorded no other woman
author.
When she was last here, Miss Mil-
lay was asked to give her definition | of
of poetry. She gave an answer pre-
viously coined in an English final:
“Poetry is something reverently writ-
ten by great men and blasphemously
defined by undergraduates in female
institutions.” Her favorite American
Wisconsin workers with an opportu-
nity for organized study during the
entire year rather : than during the
summer months only.
Classes were carried on in all parts
the State, both in industrial
centers and in rural areas. Because
each of the faculty members of the
school travels from one community
to another to teach either day or night
classes, the teachers can be referred
to as “modern circuit riders.” The
cause it is no longer a matter of ar-
tistic judgment, but a statement of
political Sympathies.” However, he
did express high regard for contem-
porary American artists, who are, he
thinks, developing an individual native
art.
At the exhibit of American artists
in Paris this Summer he was con-
vinced that the Scope and power of
at its central office in Berlin. On
returning to this country, she worked
as_ assistant secretary for foreign
Service and assistant for publicity
with the same organization in
Philadelphia office.
The American
Committee,
e :
its
Friends’ Service
a Quaker project with cen-
ters in five foreign cities, is interested
in international and social affairs.
poet, interestingly enough, is, or at
least was in 1931, Robinson Jeffers.
Because half of the speaker’s fee
has been anonymously donated, the
price of tickets has been reduced to
one dollar for seats in the front sec-
tion, and 75 cents for the rest.
summary shows that during the year
83 different classes were held in 35
cities of the State, while 21 rural edu-
cation classes were held in eight
counties,
We welcome the students and
faculty of Bryn Mawr College
to our community and extend
Patronize our advertisers,
these artists is superior to anything
being done elsewhere at present. This
is largely because they have come out
of the shadow of Montmartre, Mr.
Work camps and other rehabilitation
projects have been organized in this
country and are run on a sound finan-
Sloane said, and no longer feel it mde the past year, Miss Car
necessary to imitate French schools, h b 8 hi a y hed me ae
Curry, Benton, Sheeler, Wood and|@8. been chiefly occupied w e
Corbino are American artists doing publicity and administration of ¥
a cordial invitation to all
to visit
Jeannette’s Flower Shop
823 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
‘Lantern’ Tea
The Lantern invites all who
are interested in contributing
to the magazine to a tea on
Thursday, October 13, at 4.30.
Freshmen are especially urged
to come.
excellent work, and are really trying refugee camp for Germans, Austrians
Phone B. M. 570
and Americans. The camp used the
estate of Miss Hilda Smith, Bryn
Mawr 1910, as first dean of the Bryn
Mawr Summer School. Miss Hertha
Kraus, associate professor of social
economy, also worked on the plans for
this camp.
to record the scene around them.
To the last inevitable question
which, as a Princeton man, Mr. Sloane
had anticipated, he could only answer
that as yet he does not know. The
question was of course, “How do you
feel about teaching for the first time
in a girls’ college?”
ter irt
NEW RADIO PROGRAM || Sweaters Skirts
A program titled The Philadelphia | Dresses
Varsity Matinee will be
broadcast
three times a week from 4.45 to five|
o'clock over station W. I. P. News
of dramatics, sports and other school
interests drawn from the campuses
of the vicinity will make up the pro-
gram. The broadcast studio is ask-
ing the co-operation of college editors
and students in providing material
for the broadcast.
Hockey Sticks
Special Discount
KITTY McLEAN
¢
BRYN MAWR
——
who was pledged to come to the aid
of the Czechs in case of invasion.
By the same treaty Russia had agreed
to fight on the side of France if
Czechoslovakia were attacked.
Prime Minister Chamberlain then
flew to Germany to interview Hitler.
As a result, England yielded to all of
Hitler’s demands and agreed to allow |
the annexation of the Sudeten terri-
tory. France also submitted to the !
RENE MARCEL
FRENCH HAIRDRESSERS
Has newly adjusted prices
Shampoo and Fingerwave
with lemon or vinegar rinse
$1.50
853 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr 2060
terms and Chamberlain went to!
Godesberg to arrange the details of |
the exchange. Hitler demanded im-
mediate occupation. When Chamber-
lain refused to concede it there was
great danger of an immediate out-
break of war.
In this crisis, Mussolini was asked
to intervene. A four power confer-
ence was arranged at Munich, at
which Great Britain and France
yielded even more than they had at
( The great
Godesberg. question is
Bryn Mawr
now: Have they bought peace or
merely a temporary armistice.
E. Foster Hammonds
Incorporated
Radios -- Music -- Records |
829 Lancaster Ave. |
—And another place
to become acquainted
with is...
Richard Stockton’s
Lancaster Avenue |
Books ay! Gifts
Lending Library |
"= 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—all without extra charge—the
whole year through. Rates for this famous college
service are low, andyou can send collect, you know
(only by Railway Express, by the way). It’s a very
popular method and adds to the happy thought.
Phone ouragent today. He’s a good man to know.
BRYN MAWR AVE. ’Phone BRYN MAWR 440
BRYN MAWR, PA,
BRANCH OFFICE: HAVERFORD, Pa,
(R. R. AVE.) *Phone ARDMORE 561
RAILWAY
AGENCY, INC.
NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE
Sr a
Chere'll be a Vacant Chair
——_—— ————_—_—__
at Home Tonight
if! :
Someone will be missing at the dinner table
tonight — someone whose place only you can
fill. And there'll be a strange silence about the
house that only your voice can dispel.
Perhaps you have been too busy to feel
lonesome, but the. folks back home would be
thrilled to hear your cheery “Hello!
And listen! Most long distance
tonight after seven and all day
reverse the charges
rates are reduced
Sunday. You can
if you’re short of cash,
Enough said?
Number please!
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=
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA
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Page Two
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
iinbe THE COLLEGE NREws
Anti-Nazis Broadcast
in Defiance of Police
Short Wave Programs
Crime in Hitler Camps
(No frontier News Service)
“Auf Wiederhoren Morgen,
Gestapo” (You'll hear us tomorrow,
in spite of the Secret Police) —This
slogan, says the British weekly, “Time |
and Tide,” may be heard almost every
night at about eleven by listeners who
tune in on short wave 29.8. The defiant
shout is the regular closing signal of
the German Freedom - Broadcaster
which sends anti-Fascist items at 10
P.M.
“To tune in to short wave 29.8 re-
quires some patience,” asserts ‘“Cin-
na,” who has been publishing in “Time
and Tide” a number of stirring stories
on underground agitation against Hit-
lerism. “Often it fades out and comes
back again on a nearby wave-length;
it has to dodge a great deal of inter-
ference from the very much more pow-
erful Nazi transmitters. Those who
broadcast risk certain death if caught;
and yet they go on, night after night,
addressing millions of Germans who,
spoon-fed with Goebbels-propaganda,
depend on the ‘Freiheits-sender’ for
the truth. (But Heaven help any lis-
tener who himself gets caught in doing
so!) From such a source of informa-
tion one can glimpse the other side of
the picture in the Third Reich.”
Here are some excerpts from recent
broadcasts.
“Recent Medical Congress at Weis-
baden has sent secret memorandum to
Hitler on increasingly bad food situa-
tion; poor bread in particular causing
alarming rise in intestinal complaints.
“Increasing criminality. (Abuse of
‘daggers of honor’ marked ‘Blood and
Honor’ and presented to members of
Hitler-Youth for special prowess in
Nazi ideology.) Decline of health ow-
ing to bad nourishment and excess of
marching exercise. More than thirty
per cent of German youth and in par-
ticular Hitler-Youth physically unfit.
“Casualties among German Franco-
conscripts are running into four fig-
ures. Of pilots alone, there are to date,
218 killed and 38 wounded.
“Pastor Niemoller. Latest news
very bad. He is in Sachsenhausen con-
centration camp. Reported to be very
ill. Not a chance of release or even
amelioration of eonditions.
“Tens of thousands of leaflets were
smuggled into Sudeten-German dis-
Disclose
Trotz
Important Notice
Because an anonymous gift
has been made which covers
half Miss Millay’s fee, tickets
for her lecture on Monday eve-
ning have been reduced for the
college to one dollar for the
front section and 75 cents for
| the remaining seats, including
the balcony.
NEW FRESHMAN-SKUNK
INCIDENT ON CAMPUS
The freshman class does not limit
acquaintance to the
human race. It is proud to announce
that one of its number, whose name
Mrs. Manning refuses to reveal, con-
sorts with the shy black and white
denizens of the Bryn Mawr campus,
who are usually hard to tame.
This animal-lover was
greeted by a skunk on her way to an
appointment with the Dean in Taylor.
Mrs. Manning listened to her sym-
pathetically and assured her that as
the owner of several dogs she was
used to such mishaps. At first there
its members of
anonymous
was a mild and pleasantly remini-
scent odor, but it became more and
more overpowering as the freshman
lingered to plan her schedule for the
year. Before she left all the win-
dows had to be opened. There is
still an unsubstantial rumor that the
skunk waited for her on Taylor steps.
The last recorded skunk-attack was
made on a Vassar delegate at the
Fiftieth Anniversary. As soon as
could reach Low Buildings she
was completely reclothed by Miss Tay-
lor; but it was too late to prevent
ugly insinuations from creeping about.
Joe Graham, the night watchman,
who has had ample time for studying
the nocturnal habits of the skunk,
remarked, on hearing of the late
freshman encounter, that he had never
seen one before except on Miss Park’s
front steps. Miss Park was unaware
»f his presence.
she
NEW RADIO PROGRAM
A program titled The Philadelphia
Matinee will be broadcast
three times a week from 4.45 to five
o’clock over station W. I. P. News
if dramatics, sports and other school
interests drawn from the campuses
of the vicinity will make up the pro-
gram. The broadcast studio is ask-
ing the co-operation of college edi-
tors and students in providing ma-
terial for the broadcast.
Varsity
tricts from Austria last week. Gist of |
leaflets was: ‘Don’t let the Nazis lure |
you by promises of the paradise they
are having in readiness for you! We’ve
come to know that paradise during the
last few months. Let us warn you in
time!”
Illegal literature is also smuggled
The President—
Miss Park’s opening address
to Bryn Mawr last Thursday
was the subject of nation-wide
into Germany with fair success. While
publicity, and was commented
on by Lowell Thomas in his
daily radio review of current
events.
none of the underground activities can
be said to have serious portents as yet,
it all makes the authorities intensely
nervous. As many as 14,823 cases of
smuggled anti-Nazi literature were
dealt with by the frontier authorities
in 1937, according to their official fig-
ures. There were 27,717 confiscations
of prohibited and suspected publica-
tions, while all confiscations numbered
120,286.
Most of this literature is in the form
of small pamphlets printed in the tini-
est type, with covers bearing such
titles as “Practical Recipes for Home
and Kitchen,” “What We Should Know
About Our Colonies.”
| Phone, Bryn Mawr 252 We Deliver
Charge accounts Vases of all kinds
CONNELLY’S
The Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont-Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Blair’s
Hairdressing
Special Contest in honor of
our 3rd Anniversary
Ask any of our operators
about it
Taxi Service supplied
free of charge
64 E. Lancaster Ave.
Ardmore, Pa. Ard. 3181
What Has
MES. WASP
Got Against the
Noble Oak Tree?
We haven’t the foggiest notion.
But we do know she bores into
it to deposit her eggs. And the
indignant oak develops a pro-
tective growth known as a gall,
from which is obtained the tan-
nin used in Penit, the superior
new ink by Sanford.
You don’t care a hoot? We
thought you wouldn’t. But you
might care to know that Penit
is a free-flowing, easy-writing,
trouble-proof . . . a brilliant,
sure-fire ink for every make of
fountain pen. Try it.
2-0z. bottle, 15c; 4-0z. bottle with
chamois skin penwiper 25c, at
your college supply store.
SANFORD’S
&
for All Makes of
Fountain Pens
fe ge
|Ludiones To Present
Annual Plautus Farce
Continued from Page Two
Gripus, a disagreeable slave
T. Ferrer, ’40 | impossible.
| 'T'rachalio, a clever slave
I'wo burly slaves
Chorus of gloomy
A. Kidder, all ’41; E.
Newbury, M. A.
Young, all ’40.
Matteson,
Sturdevant,
F. Garbat, ’41
N. Toll, ’39
L. Estabrook, ’39
fishermen—A.
Emerson, A. Harrigton, P. Hartman,
M.
B. |
League Interest Cards
Bryn Mawr League interest
cards will be collected on Wed-
nesday and Thursday. Anyone
who wishes to ask specific ques-
tions should see the committee
chairmen:
Maids’ Classes—Anne Spill-
ers, ’40, Rock.
Bryn Mawr Camp—Sue Mil-
ler, 40, Pem West; Babs Black,
’41, Merion.
Chapel—Janet
Pem East.
Industrial Group — Elizabeth
Aiken, ’39, Non-res.; Helen
Cobb, ’40, the German House.
Summer School—Martha Van
Hoesen, ’39, the German House;
Eleanor Taft, ’39, the German
Russell, ’40,
House; Helen Cobb, ’40, the
German House.
Blind School—Emily Tucker-
man, 740, Pem East.
Haverford Community Center
—Jane Braucher, the German
House; Rosemary Sprague, ’41,
Pem West.
|
| Invasion 5 et bo ay The Church of the
Depicted »y Miss Ely Redeemer
Continued from Page One Bryn Manr, Pa.
the
cordially invited to the services.
Students of college . are
that communication with Vienna was
They would give no ex-
Sunday—8 a. m. and 11 a. m.
planations. Thursdays and Saints Days
“Life had stopped for some; for| 10 a. m.
others it was a grand celebration,’’| Ernest C. Earp, rector.
Ernest Willoughby, organist
|said Miss Ely, describing the effect of Q
: | and choirmaster,
the Anschluss on the villagers. Some, |
eager to show their sympathies, hung
out Nazi flags and began teaching| and
ir chi “e “ >} itler” wi i = - e
| theix children to “Heil Hitler” within A small but powerful Nazi
Others ;
: ‘ : did
stayed quietly in their houses, or hur- ; : :
|ried along the streets with heads bent. | under cover, using continuous private
Up
pation, Miss Ely emphasized the sim-| until the last moment there was a
plicity and unpretentiousness of the| very real question of whether or not
government and the united patriotism| the militia would be ordered to de-
of the people. Militaristic displays| fend the frontiers.
armed bodyguards were almost
| unknown.
ja few hours of the news. x ;
| which worked
| opposition exist,
Describing Austria before the occu-| propaganda among individuals.
“ONLY ABERCROMBIE HAS”
SUCH SWEATERS — —
they fit, they’re soft, the colors are right and prices too, for they
start at $4.50. In Bryn Mawr they are at the shop of Jeanne Betts,
local representative for Abercrombie & Fitch Co. of New York.
= BERICE
ee ee ee ee ee ee ee
The Chas. Tis Room
LANCASTER PIKE
BRYN MAWR
LUNCHEON, DINNER, and A LA CARTE SERVICE
SUNDAY DINNER 12:30 8:00
FOR LARGE PARTIES PHONE FOR RESERV ATION
BRYN MAWR 453
ee ee ae ee ae ae ee
PAUL WHITEMAN
Every Wednesday Evening
GEORGE GRACIE
BURNS ALLEN
Every Friday Evening
All C. B. S. Stations
EDDIE DOOLEY
Football Highlights
Every Thursday and Saturday
52 Leading N. B. C. Stations
Ss
hn aiflten allen. silltien allen alien ates ane, afin atti ent uae on hn. atlin ain dilin adie allie atte adie a
cae
pa tts
More smokers
everywhere are turning to
Chesterfield’s refreshing
mildness and better taste.
It takes good things to
make a good product.
That’s why we use the
best ingredients a cigarette
can have—mild ripe tobac-
cos and pure cigarette paper
—to make Chesterfield
the cigarette that smokers
say is milder and better-
tasting.
LicGett & Myers ToBacco Co.
Resterficl
MORE PLEASURE
Jor millions
Copyright 1938, Liccerr & Myers Topacco Co,
Coll
Dis
N
Freshm
Libra
A
GLEE '
hi
The Pre:
The first
was held
Thursday
of the
of the me
progresse¢
arisen thi
under dls
Library,
schedule 0!
the Inter!
the Indust
Glee Club,
to be direc
Rules fc
been draw!
Committee
up in Rho:
the victrola
A member
year will D
rental fe
and ten ce!
days. Fin
for overdu
for breakas
metallic ne
permitted a
The reco]
day and Fr
every da
library
gested that
Instead of
usually wor
leisure tin
Taft replied
out for t}
time
Undergradna
Van Hoesen
;
dent Advisor
College news, October 12, 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)
1938-10-12
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 25, No. 1
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-no1