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College news, February 7, 1945
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1945-02-07
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 31, No. 14
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-vol31-no14
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VOL. XLI, NO. 14
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, 1 and BRYN MAWR, PAw WI WEDNESDAY, FEBRU FEBRUARY 7, 1945
Philosophy Dept.
Presents Lecture
By Dorothy Walsh
Dr. Walsh, Smith Professor,
Will Discuss: “Literature
* And Truth”
Dr. Dorothy Walsh,
professor of philosophy -at:-Smith
assistant
College, will speak on Literature
and Truth in the Music Room,
Goodhart,
8:30. This lecture is made possible
through the Theodore and Grace
deLaguna lectureship in philosophy
established last year upon the re-
tirement of Mrs. deLaguna by
friends, colleagues and students.
‘Dr. Walsh received her A. B. de-
gree from the University of British
Columbia in 1923 and her M. A.
from the University of Toronto in
1924. .She was fellow in philoso-
phy at Bryn Mawr from 1925-1926
and received her Ph. D. here. She
studied under Mrs. deLaguna while
She has
written on aesthetics, ethics, met-
Thursday evening at
she was at Bryn Mawr.
aphysics, language and poetry, and
is remembered here as a very vivid
and effective teacher.
The Theodore and Grace deLa-
guna lectureship in philosophy is
designed to permit one or two
speakers to be selected each year
by the philosophy, department. Dr.
Walsh is the first speaker\in this
lectureship.
Bryn'Mawr to Give |
Party for Wounded
Men at Valley Forge
Through the Red: Cross, Bryn
- Mawr has been granted the privi-
lege of giving a quiet party on
Saturday, March 3 for the wound-
ed soldiers at. Valley Forge Gen-
eral Hospital. Seventy girls have
been asked to volunteer. The party
is sponsored by the Bryn Mawr
Red Cross unit; and is supervised
by Patricia Acheson ’46 and Nancy
Niles ’47,
Transportation will ‘be provided
by the Red Cross Motor Corps, and
the volunteers must be ready to
leave Pembroke Arch at 5: 30. Each
car will be numbered and each girl
willbe allotted to a car. Following |—
the party, the girl must return to
college in the same car.
Since the girls are guests of the
hospital and of the army, they
must abide by their rules. The
most important of these is that
they must not leave the recreation
hall. Otherwise, they are expected
to entertain th -wounded with
cards and cheerful talk. A col-
lege octet will provide entertain-
ment and the Red Cross will serve
‘refreshments. Each girl. will be
asked to pay .$1.50 to cover the
* ‘eost of refre8hments and ten lucky
number prizes will be awarded.
A list will- ‘be posted in Taylor
for those interested to sign up. If.
more than 70 volunteer those who
have done the least war work will
be eliminated. Those who sign up
must be certain of attending. This
is not a party for our pleasure but
for. theirs, and no one must go.
who is not prepared to accept her
responsibility.
se
April Oursler, Designated as ‘Fallen We oman
Brings Philosophic Approach to Editorship
eq
By Alison Merrill °45
April recently-elected
editor, of the College News, de-
scribes herself as a fallen woman.
She has been falling, she says, ever
since she was a little girl. Elected
on the anniversary of having’ fall-
en and broken her toe, she reacts
to her greatest fall with the
thought: “I’m going to have to be
neat and systematic.” She will,
further, have to heed the words of
QOursler,
her father on the occasion of her:
falls:
ate.”
To the editorship, April brings
ample experience, only exceeded by
the size of her feet. Joining the
News in the middle of her Fresh-
man year, and proceeding to the
Editorial Board in her Sophomore
year, she lays claim also to a sum-
mer’s experience on’ the Swarth-
more Phoenix .as a sub-cub-report-
er in her days of acceleration, .She
has since decelerated and insists
that she has coined the word.
Working last summer as a copy
girl and assistant Letters to the
Editor editor on the Herald Trib-
une, she brought back an amazing
journalistic facility. as well as the
idea for Incidentally. Finally, she
has served two years as campus
correspondent for.the Herald Trib-
une and two years as Merion’s fire
captain, which will fit a girl for
any job.
A philosophy, major, April has
the claim to fame of being perhaps
the first philosophy major to edit
the News. The effect of this on our
yellow sheet we hesitate to proph-
esy, but Mr. Nahm’s only reply is,
“IT hope it doesn’t make you any
less a philosopher.”
Actually, Ajpril’s status as a
philosophy major is __ distinctly
shaky, since she entered college as
a chemistry major, and quickly
“Coordinate, April, coordin-
\
French Club to Have —
Movie, Gourou Lecture
The French Club will present the
film _A-Nous la Liberte in the Mu-
sic Room of Goodhart on Friday,
February 9 at 8 P. M. The show-
ing of this Rene Clair comedy was
originally scheduled for the first
semester but had to be postponed
on account of projector-trouble. M.
Clair is known in this country as
the director of The Ghost Goes
West.
* . M. Gourou
On Wednesday, February 14, the
French Club invites members and
all others interested to- hear M.
Pierre Gourou, graduate’ of the
Sorbonne and professor. of Geog-
raphy ‘at the University of Brus-
sels, speak (in French) on some
present day actualities, Mr.
Gourou is in this country Lempor:
arily, serving on a French Gov-
ernment colonial mission. . His lec-
ture will"be given in the Common
Room at: 7:30 P. M.
Rescheduling
Recommendations made.
the faculty Curriculum . aoe
mittee will be based on the
answers to the questionnaires
distributed ‘tonight. Complete
~~
changed to biology after mid-
semesters. With mid-years she be-
came an English major and stead-
fastly; remained one until last
year’s Shakespeare paper. “So far,”
April comments, “I’m safe in phil-
osophy.” She complains, however,
that Mr. Nahm thinks she is ‘a
Sophomore and Mr. Weiss forgets
that she is a philosophy major, for
which we could hardly blame him.
Experiencing distinct feeling of
fright,~the new editor plans to
continue in the News such editor-
ials as that’ on .dramatic activities
in an effort to campaign for mére
life on the campus and for.more
constructive activity. She prom-
ises to fight on for rescheduling
and to inject more humor into the
weekly journalistic effort, mean-
while injecting vitamins into her-
self to ward off constantly recur-
ring ailments. ©
Undergrad Elections —
‘For 45-46 Officers
lo Start Next Week
The election of officers for the
chief undergraduate positions for
the year 1945-46 will start next
week to continue until spring vaca-
tion. The following procedure for
the voting has been planned:
After nominations a description
of the duties of the offices will
appear in the News, along with
pictures of the candidates and
brief write-ups of their college ac-
tivities. Students should attempt
to know the candidates before vot-
ing takes place. The following
week elections will take: place-in
the halls directly after lunch. Vot-
ang will be by ballot, and all un-
dergraduates will be required to
sign their, names as they cast their
votes. ‘Non- resident students are
urged to be at the college for
lunch on days when elections occur.
_If any candidate receives 15
other votes cast, she is elected. If
no candidate, gets this plurality,
revoting will be held the next day
between the two or three highest
candidates. In this case, the winner
must have 20 more votes than the
runneryup.
\- Schedule. of Nominations
Feb. 15—Nomination for Presi-
dent of Self-Gov. (by Junior Class)
Feb. 19—Nomination for Presi-
dent of Undergrad: (by Junior
Class)
Feb. 22—Nomination “for Presi-
dent of League (by League Board).
Nomination for Secy. of League.
(by League Board).
Feb. 26—Nomination for Presi-
dent of Alliance. (by Alliance
Board and Junior Class)
March 1—Nomination for Presi-
dent of Athletic Assoeiation.. (by
A. A. Board)* ‘
March 5—Nomination for Com-
mon Treasurer. (by Sophomore
Class).
March 6—Nomination for Vice-
Pres. of Self-Gov. (by Junior
. Class)
Nomination for. Secy. of Self-
Gov. (by Sophomore Class)
Nomination for. 1st Sophomore
Member of Self-Gov. (by Fresh-
man Class)
March 12—Nomination for Vice-
Pres. of Undergrad. (by Junior
Class). :
and immediate replies will en-
able the committee to take im-
mediate action. |
March 13—Nomination for Secy. |
‘of Undergrad. (by Sophomore
(Class)
finial taears
rafter the war.
more votes than the;sum of ail the|
Dr. Thomas{[to Speak
Bryn Mawr
‘pcorgriett rustees of
PRICE 10 CENTS
aM exe. 1944
I
fst Semester Work
Surveyed by McBride
At Special Assembly
Goodhart, February 1. Speaking
in a special assembly on the open-
ing day of the second semester,
Miss McBride pointed to this sem-
ester as a time for a new recogni-
ent during war. She spoke also of
changes in faculty membership, of
extra-curricular activities, and of
the academic picture of the first
semester.
Obligations
Referring to study now as both
a hardship and a privilege, Miss
McBride asserted that ‘it is essen-
tial work which must be carried on
and which can be carried on only
by those who are able.” The coun-
try will be short, Miss McBride
said, in all fields of knowledge as
a result of the war, and our edu-
cation will help men see the im-
portance of returning to college
Further, we will
have a background for an under-
standing of problems after‘ the
war and the possibility for action.
Changes
To the faculty, the second sem-
ester brings back Mr.: Watson of
the Geology Department after six
months in Montana and Miss Kraus
to the Department of Sociology
after work with UNRRA. Mr.
Carpenter will leave. during the
second semester to give a series of
lectures at the University of Cal-
ifornia. ‘His, place will be taken
by Mr. Post of Haverford.
Activities
The past semester, Miss McBride
announced, had fewer academic
casualties than last year, partly
due to the new plan for attend-
ance at classes. A survey of extra-
curricular activities indicates few
of us working at the top of our
abilities. The situation now calls
for help from those who ane: so
far held iback.
On ‘Way of St. James’
The well-known literary histor-
ian, Dr. Henry Thomas, Keeper of
Printed Books at the British Mu-
seum, will speak under the aus-
pices. of the Spanish Club in the
Common Room on Saturday after-
noon, February 10 at 4:15.
This talk, called the Way of St.
James, will be illustrated with
slides and based in part on the
book of that name written by Geor-
gianna Goddard King, former. head
of the Bryn Mawr Art Depart-
ment. This subject concerns the
pilgrimage of St. James from
France to Spain.
Dr. Thomas; an/yexpert on six-
teenth century Spanish printing;
is the author of Spanish: Romances.
of Chivalry and of the Short Cata-
logue of Sixteenth Century Span-
ish Books. His lecture Saturday
will be given in English and is open
to everyone. Tea will be served in
the Common Room at 3:46.
‘es
_Engagements
Roberta Arrowsmith ’47 to
Louis V. Mills. _ :
‘Annette Elizabeth Peters ’47
’47 to Ranulf W. Gras.
tion of one’s obligations as a stud-]”
-Draw the
Harvard Concert
With Bryn Mawr
Notably Executed
Enthusiasm, Delicacy Combine
To Set High Standard
Of Singing
This, year’s Harvard-Bryn Mawr
concert, the second in the college’s
history, was characterized by a re-
markably high standard of execu-
tion with both vigorous enthusiasm
and sensitive delicacy.
Although the program ranged in
period from 1400 to 1945, both the
joint renditions and the separate
college selections were performed
with an almost perfect tonal blend.
The musical rapport evident dur-
ing the whole évening was notable ~
particularly in view of the fact
that the colleges had ‘had less than
two hours of rehearsal before the _
concert.
The performan¢ée ot. Irving
Fine’s clever choral patterns from
The New Yorker, probably the
most striking part of the program,
is an indication of the alertness of
choral direction, but above all of
the live spirit. which ‘characterizes
both choirs. ,
Bryn Mawr’s performance of the
two modern Ave Maria’s was nota-
ble for its full round tone’ and ex-
quisite expressiveness. The Dufay
chanson and the Welkes madrigal
deserve special mention as exam-
ples of: smooth blend and acute
sense of tempo.
Harvard’s group of madrigals
were presented with colloquial
charm. The diction of the Bac-
chanale and the. Patience choruses
was unusually clear and the imagi-
native interpretation of the Sulli-
can selections was striking in con-.
trast to the “usual hackneyed _per-
formances of such music.
Powerful intensity and brilliance
in--the dramatie cut-offs charac-
terized the rendition of Handel’s
Tear from .Hopeless
Love. A truly expressive delivery _
of the magnificent Thompson Alle-
luia closed the concert on the per-
fect note.
Forsdyke Will Speak
On British Museum
7™
Sir, John Forsdyke, ‘one of the
foremost archaeologists of Britain
and Director and Principal Librar-
ian of the British Museum since
1939, will speak Saturday evening
at 8:00 in the Music Room on The
British Museum in War.
Sir, John, graduate of Keble Col-
lege, Oxford; began working with
the British Museum in 1907. Editor
of the Journal of Hellenic Studies
from 1912 to 1923, he became a .
Fellow of the Society of Antiquary
ies of Londor and of the Libra
Association, and, later, Honorat
Secretary of the Hellenic Socie
From 1982 to 1936, he was Keeper
of the Greek and Roman Antiqui-
ties in the British Museum.
His written work has.
is’also author of the fi
of the British Muse
1