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THE COLLEGE NEWS
VOL. XLIII, NO. 19
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA..
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1947
Copyright Trustees. of
Bryn Mawr College, 1945
PRICE 10 CENTS
Fire In Rhoads
Results n$1500
Damage to Hall
Room
Smoke billowed from the maids’
wing of Rhoads Hall Thursday
nizht, April 3, as both Bryn Mawr
and Ardmore Fire Departments
fought to extinguish a blaze on the
second floor.
The fire, caused by cigarette
sparks that had lodged in the
cushions of a sofa, started in the
maids’ sitting room where several
of the maids nad had callers earl-
jer in the evening. \A kitchen man
noticed the smoke around ten
o’clock, and immediately sent in
the two-bell alarm. The fire, how-
ever, had been smouldering quite
some time before it was discovered.
Crowds returning from the Har-
ard and Bryn Mawr Concert at
Goodhart watched the action from
the terraces of the Deanery and
in the driveway.
When the firemen arrived, dense
smoke had consumed the third floor
maids’ rooms and some were throw-
ing the blazing furniture and cush-
ions out of the window onto the
drive. The fire was extinguished
after about 20 minutes.
The room in*which it started was
completely damaged to an estim-
ated cost of $1500. The blackened
-cwals revealed charred and broken
‘plastere A smouldering black heap
of springs, fabric, furniture and
rubbish filled the floor and corri-
Smoke still rose from the
torn and charred curtains which
lay in a black mass under the brok-
en window. Long after the fire-
men had finished, the walls of the
room and the corridor remained
red hot.
Mrs. Baldwin, manager of the
Hall, remarked that it was fortun-
ate that Rhoads is a fireproof
building, since checking a fire in
one of the older buildinge would
have been almost each
‘right to
Strauss Explains
Hobbes, Classical
Absolutist Theory
Goodhart, April 7. “There are
two chief types of absolutism, the
theologic, or divine right idea, and
the philosophic or J lar idea.”
Thus Dr. Leo Straugy , Professor of
Political Science, | ee School for
Social (Research, opened the Mal-
lory \Whiting Webster lecture in
history on “The ‘Classical Theory of
European Absolutism.”
Illustrating the distinct break
into the modern realm of political
thought and science from the me-
dieval ideas of a supreme Pope and
its product of divine right, Dr.
Strauss emphasized Hobbes as the
first to take a modern view on the
absolute state. Hobbes, he points
out, believed that the best political
order was not probable, but poss-
ible, a matter not of planning but
of chance. )
After Machiavelli’s disbelief in
the possibility of the best political
order, philosophers aimed for a
practical political order on the
basis of how man actually acted.
On this basis, a government would
be formed which would be the ser-
vant of its people. Dr. Strauss
pointed out that Hobbes realized
that a natural law can be deduced
from certain self-evident actions
and emotions of man, not reason.
The main emotion is fear of vio-
lent death. Therefore man is jus-
tified in everything he does to
avert death. Man is given absolute
protect himself from
death.
The most distinctive feature of
Hobbes is his liberal theory on the
absolute right of the individual and
the purpose of the state to secure
this right. Dr. Strauss pointed out
that here we find the change from
pre-modern natural right where
emphasis was on duties, to the
modern concept of natural right
which emphasizes rights.
(Peace is a necessary demand of
natural right to avert death, Dr.
Strauss continued. Peace relies on
security and for a government to
be secure, it must be absolute. The
state, by establishing civil order
and peace, limits man’s fear.
Harvard Spends Night in Merion;
Receives and Leaves Billet-Doux
by Cecelia Maccabe, ’50
Thursday afternoon saw _ the
scattering of Merion to the farth-
est reaches of the campus as the
Harvard Glee Club descended to
take over. The Merionites, how-
ever, were reluctant to leave. The
long-awaited new couch and rug
arrived simultaneously with Har-
vard, a strange coincidence, and
they ‘were not to have the pleasure
of breaking them in.
‘When 5.30 arrived they were be-
ginning to make themselves at
home in strange and unfamiliar
surroundings, ranging from Pres-
jdent McBride’s house to the hous-
es of friends in the vicinity. (Miss
McBride’s offer of shelter ‘proved
to be a snare and a delusion. It
has since been disclosed that she
exposed her guests to the measles,
contracted by her maid). Sune
Harvard’s reaction was varied,
as was their welcome. There were
those who found friendly notes gen-
erOwity
ment of food in the event that
than would be desired. They were
met with notes, at appropriate
spots in bureau drawers. ‘Well,”
and “People just don’t do these
things” were among the witty com-
ments. In response to her plea to
please not steal it, one girl found
her choice. Harvard banner. hang-
ing from the ceiling of a room
down the hall which displayed. a
rich collection of Yale banners. A
poster, left over from the Prince-
ton football season, challenging
“Crush the Crimson,” was turned
face to the wall, showing Harvard’s
disgust.
The individual who collects
Scotch bottles, corked with can-
dles of course, found two additions
to her collection. One Harvard
chorister was caught in the act
of announcing, as he left the Hall,
that Merion’s bridge tables were
well adapted to the circulation of
poker chips.
The final touches of Merion hos-
a added. at 9:30 Friday
morning ‘Ghen a dozen girls gath-|
ered. on the front steps p. Serenade
‘These were received with thanks
Don’t ‘ask us what else. . There
‘were others among .the gentlemen
‘who made themselves more at home
44. versus. American Democracy.” ”
Caps and Gavels|k
Are Given Over
In Inauguration
The traditional passing of gav-
els and caps, which symbolizes the
inauguration of the new officers of
the Undergraduate Council, took
place Wednesday, April 2 The
ceremonies were held on “Taylor
Steps,” but due to rain, on the in-
side ones rather than the usual
outside ones.
Meg Urban, outgoing president
of (Undergrad, declared that “It is
the end and the beginning, the end
of the old regime and the begin-
ning of the new.” Reports of the
year for campus organizations have
been placed in the Quita Woodward
Room, she added, where all “Ipso
Factos” may loek at them.
The outgoing and incoming of-
ficers were:
Mary ‘Lee Blakely to Page Hart
—Self4Government Association.
Meg Urban to Helen Burch—
Undergraduate Association.
Helen Poland to Rosamond Kane
—League.
Nancy ‘Bierwirth to Libby Bagley
—Athletic Association.
Alison Barbour to Ning Hitch-
cock—Alliance.
Nancy Morehouse on behalf of
Emily Evarts to Harriet Ward—
College News.
Leach to Lecture
Qn American vs.
Scand. Democracy
Dr. Henry Goddard Leach will
give a lecture in Goodhart Hall,
Monday, April 14 at eight o’clock.
Dr. Leach, the President of the
American-Scandinavian Foundation
and a well-known authority on
Scandinavian literature, will speak
on the subject of Scandinavian ver-
sus ‘American Democracy.
Dr. Leach was the editor of the
Forum and the Century magazines
between 1922 and 1940. He also
spent much of his time lecturing
to American universities and civic
organizations, presenting political,
literary, and educational theories.
Suspending publicatton af the
magazines, Dr. Leach devoted his
full time, at the beginning of the
second World ‘War, to the Ameri-
can-Scandinavian Foundation. This
is an educational institution for
the purpose of advancing intellec-
tual relations between Americans
the Scandinavians. Through Dr.
Leach’s efforts international edu-
cation has been greatly increased.
CALENDAR
Thursday, April 10
7:30 Rhoads Showcase. Bryn
Mawr-Penn debate on Labor
and Management.
8:30 Common Room. Pedro
‘Salinas, “An Hour in Spain”
(in Spanish).
Friday, April 11
9:00-12:00 Gym.
Non-Res Dance.
Saturday, April 12
Open Night at the Gym.
Sunday, April 13
7:30 Music Room. Chapel. Dr.
_Eduard C. Lindeman.
Monday, April 14
8:00 Goodhart. Dr. Henry God-
dard Leach, “Scandinavian
Informal
‘Tuesday, April 16
Harvard Wit a
featuring “You Can Tell a Harvadd
Man” and “Going Back to Nassau
Hall.”
~
“Russia and America,
Strategic Factors. a
per,
4 ee
in the U.S.S.R. He is the author]
oer
Lixistence of God
Proved by Weiss
In New Synthesis
Goodhart, April 1. “The three
traditional proofs for the existence
of God are the teleological, the
cosmological, and the ontological.
Defects can be pointed out in all
of them and we can conclude that
the three of them taken together
prove what you really want: some-
thing supporting the universe con-
cerned with evil and good.” Speak-
ing to a full house of students and
professors, Dr. Paul Weiss, Pro-
fessor of Philosophy at Yale Uni-
versity and former Professor of
Philosophy at Bryn Mawr College,
lectured on God and Evil under the
auspices of the Philosophy Club.
After showing the fallacies in the
most commonly accepted proofs of
God, Dr. Weiss offered an original
proof for the existence of a perfect
Being and then discussed the basic
attributes of God and His relation
to Good and Evil. Dr. Weiss’ proof,
like the cosmological, takes our
own existence as its starting point.
“We are beings in time and as such
facea future.._Our existence _ is
our becoming in that future thus
making it real. At present,”
Dr. Weiss explained, “the future
is abstract; by living we make the
future concrete.” This abstract
A VES.
future constitutes a unity, because
the future is common to all of us.
Unity, in turn, has been accepted
to mean excellence and the good,
since it is a harmony of all possi-
bilities.
Dr. Weiss then demonstrated that
this abstract good which is the un-
ity represnted by the future is not
very good itself. In order to be,
the idea of the good therefrom
must depend on the concrete. It
Continued on Page 2
Salinas to Give
Spanish Lecture
Pedro Salinas, one of the best
of the contemporary Spanish
poets, will speak in the Common
Room Thursday evening, April
10th, at 8:30. His subject will be
“An Hour of Spain,” and will be
presented in Spanish.
Mr. Salinas has been professor
of Spanish language and literature
at the University of Sevilla, the
Sorbonne and at Cambridge Uni-
versity in England. He has been
in the United States since 1936,
and is now professor of Spanish
language and literature at Johns
Hopkins University.
Mr. Salinas is the author of
many books of poetry and literary
criticism, and a poet in his own
right. His work is known for its
lyric quality, for its restraint, in-
tensity and simplicity, and for the
originality of his approach.
Hopper to Deliver
Russia-U S Lecture
Russia and America, Strategic
Factors will be the subject for
Professor Bruce C. Hopper’s lec-
ture at a College Assembly on
Current Affairs on Tuesday, April
| 15, at 12:30 in Goodhart.
Mr. Hopper is Associate Profes-
sor of Government at Harvard
University. During the war he
¥ywas official histori#f. forth-"*~*th
or Force and the observer for the
. nt World. Affairs
of many books on Russia and Rus-
sian foreign policy.
*
BMC, Harvard
Combine For
Lenten Concert
Stravinsky Choruses,
Bach, Gabrieli
Are Sung
By Ellen Harriman, ’48
On Maundy Thursday in Holy
Week, the Bryn Mawr Chorus and
the Harvard Glee Club gave a con-
cert ‘of Lenten music. The pro-
gram presented a_ surprisingly
rich, varied and extensive assort-
ment, from Palestrina to Stravin-
sky, from a Dutch carol to the in-
tricate counterpoint of Mozart.
Harvard and Bryn Mawr combined
in three long choruses—Giovanni
Gabrieli’s In Ecclesiis Benedicite
Domine, Stravinsky’s “Symphonie
Psaumes” and Bach’s “B Minor
Mass.”
The Harvard Glee Club chose
music which, with one exception,
dated from the 16th century or
earlier. Their first, Hasler’s Can-
tate Domino Canticum Novum,
and their second, Nanino’s Diffusa
est gratia, were exquisitely sung
with what seemed to be great co-
operative discipline and apprecia-
tion of their full harmonic quality.
The Supplicationes from Pal-
estrina’s Litany (1598, one of
the most beautiful passages in
church music, was so _ perfectly
sung that it would have made a
concert in itself. The subtly var-
ied repetitions of Ora Pro Nobis
were particularly satisfying.
After the low-keyed mood of
this litany, the Glee Club sang a
15th-Century- Laude, in which the
man’s soprano part was empha-
sized by a voice—or_ voices—gifted
with that rare intense, woodwind
timbre for which such music is in-
tended. Harvard concluded with a
modern Credo by Alexander Grech-
aninov.
Bryn Mawyr’s first two selections,
Continued on Page 4
College Will Send
Delegate to ISS
Bryn Mawr will again have an
opportunity to send a delegate to
the International Student Service
Conference, being held this year
from July 6 to 14, in Aarhus, Den-
mark. The Conference will be fol-
lowed by a six weeks “tour” of
Poland, Czechoslovakia, or Den-
mark and Holland—the country to
be selected by the delegate.
A delegate should be either a
sophomore or a junior, who has a
serious interest in international
cultural activities, and who would
be willing to participate actively
in ISS work on her return. Speak-
ing ability in some foreign lan-
guage is desirable, and a fairly
good understanding of one other
language besides English is essen-
tial. A candidate should also be a
person of sore personal initiative,
who will not be floored by a split-
second jump from an embassy
banquet to a third-elass bomb-
damaged railway coach.
York around June 21, returning by
September 10 at the latest. Cost
of the trip has not been definitely
Lestablished, but will
between $500 and $750. Anyone
tact Naticy “imorenvase, ~
West. Deadline for applications is
April 15.
.
interested. ‘im_applying should con- ”
aa Aas
The delegate will leave New .
somewhere.
pr
wats. "~~~ Republic magazine. He is the
~Saiiistberties Union,-and_of +s * shor
+ Edueation: Service. -
_ Adelphi College.
iy
Page Two
THE COLL
EGE NEWS
[ THE COLLEGE NEWS
(FouNDED IN 1914)
of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore
Bryn Mawr College.
' Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest
Printing ‘Comopany, Ardmore, Pa., and
in it may be reprinted either wholly
Editor-in-Chief.
The College News is fully protected by copyright.
Nothing that appears
or in part without permission of the
HELEN ANDERTON, °49
Louise Ervin, ’49
HELEN HAte, *49
Auice WapsworTtnH, 49
HELEN GeLpBERG, *49
Gioria WHITE, *48
MELANIE Hewitt, 50
GWYNNE Wi_iiaMs, ’50
Photographer
ROSAMOND Kane, *48
Business Board
ConsuvELo KuHN,.’48, Business Manager
Caro. BAKER, °48,
Mary BEETLESTONE, '49
Rosin Rav, ’50
Nancy Kunuwaropt, °48
EpytHs La GRANDE, *49
Auice LoutsE Hackney, *49
BARBARA YOUNG, °47
Editorial Board
Harriet Warp, °48, Editor-in-Chief
BarBaRA BETTMAN, *49, Copy BetTy-BricHT Pace, °49, Makeup
EmMiLy TOWNSEND, ’50, Makeup
KATRINA THOMAS, °49
HELEN Martin, *49, Sports
Editorial Staff
Subscription Board
ANNA-STINA ERICSON, ’48, Manager .
”
BARBARA ZEIGLER, ’48
JupirH Da Sttva, ’49
Jean E us, 49
Marian Epwarps, ’50
CECELIA MACCABE, 750
Betty DemMpwot_r, ’50
Advertising Manager
Joan Rossins, *49
HELEN COLEMAN, ’50
Betty Mutcn, ’5@
SALLY BEAMAN, 749
SuE KELLY, *49
Epre Mason Ham, ’50
Betty Lyp1na, grad.
Subscription, $2.75
Subscriptions may
Mailing Price, $3.00
begin at any time
Enterted as second class matter
Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912
at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office
Current
March 31. “During the next fifty
years India will probably not -be
as important as other great areas
in the: world, but in a. thousand
years India may assume the most
important position in the world,”
said Mrs. Manning in a discussion
|of India... The next’ fifty years in
India will see a possible civil war
and the country’s resources must
still be developed before India be-
comes a world power. The large
concentration of population, the
character of India’s political lead-
ers who demonstrate a turn of
thought that is open-minded and
the religious and spiritual leader-
ship shown are the seeds of India’s
future power.
(Mrs. Manning explained that In-
dia could easily supply the impetus
for a religious revival and would
be an important sea-and air power
in the case of another war. “The
most strategic points in such a war
would be the islands in the Indian
Ocean around India and _ these
would be held by Great Britain as
long as possible.”
The developments in Indian pol-
[| ities leading up to the British de-
cision to leave India in 194& were
4 | also summarized by Mrs. Manning.
“An attempt by the Labor (Govern-
ment Mission last May to bring
about an agreement between the
Congress Party and the Moslem
League, India’s largest political
factions,” said Mrs. Manning, “re-
sulted in the acceptance of the gen-
eral principles proposed by the
Mission.” The Mission provided
for an interim government which
has been set up under Nehru de-
spite objections on both sides. The
result has been rioting between the
Events
Common Room, April 7th.
Speaking on what Russian plans
are for Germany, Mrs. Coates boil-
ed down the complex Russian
wants to: 1. reparations, and 2. a
Germany: that will function eco-
nomically so as to aid the U. S.
8. Ri
‘ Russia needs reconstruction so
that she can hold Ker head up in
this world and equal the Western
powers. Her losses during the
war were enormous and she is de-
manding the ten million agreed on
in the Yalta protocol.
However, even more important
to her is an economically strong
centralized Germany with a tech-
nical might that will be of use to
her. From 1921 to 1938 she had
this kind of relationship on a
smaller scale. The Treaty of Ra-
pello in 1922, signed between Rus-
sia and Germany at a time when
the Allies were demanding the
payment of the imperial debts,
provided in a secret section for the
transfer of war and peace machin-
ery, German technicians and sci-
entists, and complete factories and
plants to the U. S. S. R. and Ger-
man soldiers to train the army.
This ideal relationship disintegrat-
ed because of Hitler’s antagonism
to Bolshevism but did not come to
an end until 1938. Russia hopes
to revive it for the future.
Moslems and Hindus and a general
confusion.
Plans for a Constituent ‘Assembly
were also made by the Mission.
This was set up by the interim
government, but the Mohammedans
have refused to recognize it.
A New Proof of God
Presented by Weiss
Watch Those Whistles!
There is no way to express the following cliche except
to express it: Spring has come.
around the trees and the ground has turned into grass, buds,
and even a few flowers, notably the yellow tree on the Pem
Outside Denbigh and Merion the daffodils
are blooming, and there are small rings of bluebells around
side of Taylor.
some of the Rock trees.
The days are getting longer.
to move its firedrill up (or back) to four a. m., and it is almost
time for the Philadelphia journalists’ annual tour de force:
“Let us be killingly funny \pbout those girls dancing around
those maypoles.”
Ponds’ sales are rising, and Merion Green was a verit-
(Remarked one girl proudly:
“T had three pickups’). The rather latent athletic interest of
the Bryn Mawr gir] is suddenly made manifest on the tennis
court, the bicycle path, the baseball diamond—and the gym
able hot-bed of men Sunday.
roof.
Miss Hepburn’s private swimming pool will soon begin
to play; the Reserve Room will find grass stains and squashed
ants:in its copies of Pope and the Communist Manifesto. Pro-
_fessors who can.be.prevailed upon will again conduct outdoor
classes, where the large dogs who evidently grow while in
hibernation will again be literally among those present.
And-in view of. all this, we beg of you: Do not walk on
the grass!
Chapel to be Held
By E. C. Lindeman
“Sources of Value for Modern
Man,” the address for the chapel
service of Sunday, April 13, is to
be delivered by Eduard C. Linde-
man, teacher and author.
Dr. Lindeman, who has received
the degree of LL.D. from Wagner
Memorial Lutheran College, has
been a contributing editor to The
Director of the American Civil
served as trustee of the New York
School for Social Research, ~ of
Briarcliff Junior College, and of
Chinese Theatre
To.Give Classies
ed by Mei’ Lan-Fang,
ditional Chinese theatre to Phila-
|delphia in their only local appear- | «
ance at Town Hall, April 11, 8:30
P. M. The Intercultural Commit-
of Philadelphia is sponsoring the
ties to further knowledge of other
Cathay,” will consist of selections
from classic drama done in full
eostume of the conventional thea-
_ | tre, dances which have been re-
Last week’s green haze
Rhoads has been forced
Fourteen Chinese actors, singers,
dancers and instrumentalists train-
China’s
greatest actor, will bring the tra-
tee of the United Nations Council
performance as one of its activi-_
Apple and mate RY noe
Continued from Page 1
thus is forced towards another ba-
sis. \Since we are entering into the
future as well as existing in the
present, any portion of the future
must be separate and independent.
“The abstract future must be de-
pendent on something not in time,”
Dr. Weiss continued, “and the sus-
taining of the good is God.” “The
abstract good can’t depend on the
present; but since providence is
God presenting the future- to us,
the future may be said to be pivotal
to us and God,” concluded Dr.
Weiss.
The fact that the old theological
doctrine of omniscience which said
that God knows everything that
can be known leads to the conclu-
sion that He is connected with evil
was elucidated by Dr. Weiss. “For
if God knows what can be known
the problem of what could be
known is still unsolved. If he
as the concrete future, he would
know what we are doing and thus
be connected with evil. Therefore,
He must know the future as poss-
ible not as actual.”
In discussing the relation of good
and evil, Dr. Weiss stated that the
ethical good is not the same as the
Divine good. Otherwise acts of
God such as the demand for the
sacrifice of Isaac which seem un-
ethical could not be explained. Dr.
Weiss then distinguished five mean-
ings of evil: religious sinning; vio-
lations of an ethical code; human
disturbances, such as disease; phys-
ical or natural disturbances; and
metaphysical evil. “This meta-
physical evil,” asserted Dr. Weiss,
arises from the good intrinsic in
each _ individual.” The difficulty
lies in the fact that since the good
possesses the quality of expansive-
ness, each intrinsically good: per-
evil.
cannot depend on the present and
(Bryn Mawr SDA
To Be Organized
One hundred and fifty progress-
ive students from forty-four
schools representing all areas of
the United States convened March
28-30 in Washington, D. C. for the
Organizing Conference of a new
national Students
for Democratic /Action, the student
division of Americans for Demo-
cratic Action. Bryn Mawr College
was represented at the Conference
by Marjorie Low ’50 who will pre-
sent the platform of the ‘S. D. A.
at a future mass meeting for the
organization of an 8. D. A. chapter
on campus as this has already been
discussed by the Alliance Board.
The A.D. A. is headed by ‘Wilson
Wyatt and includes such outstand-
ing liberals as ‘Leon Henderson,
Mrs. Franklin D. ‘Roosevelt, ‘Ches-
organization,
knows what could be known such
son tries to expand and this sales :
ter Bowlés, Marquis Childs, Elmer
Davis, Lillian Smith, and Mayor
Hubert Humphrey. S. D. 1A. dele-
gates participated in the sessions
of the .A.’D..A. conference which
was held at the same time.
A rigorous program of political]
action was decided on in support
of progressive candidates and of a
legislative program which includes
planning for full employment, a
national health program, defense of
the rights of labor, control of
monopoly, reduction of the voting
age to eighteen, and enactment of
national. F.E.P.C. legislation. The
§.D.A. will work particularly on
the elimination of discrimination
in education.
Drs. Miller, Berry
Win in Badminton
Friday, April 4. Two benchfuls
of impartial students watched the
fast-moving badminton contests
between students and a T-shirted
faculty team consisting of Mrs.
Miller, Mrs. ‘Patterson, and Messrs.
Broughton, ‘Lattimore, and Berry. :
The first match, between Miller and
Patterson for the faculty and Mar-
ion Harvey and Winnie Runton for
the students ended with a:score of
15-12 and 15-6 in favor of the stud-
ents.
In the second match between
Broughton and Lattimore, and Nan
Garton and Libby Bagley, there
was more life, featuring the wear-
ing out of Mr. Broughton’s racquet
and a very novel serve technique
by Mr. Lattimore, but the stud-
ents won nevertheless with a score
of 11-15, 15-11, 15-11.
By the third match the faculty
had become more. business-like.
The student players, Alta Mae Har-
ris and Lucia Rogers, were thor-
oughly intimidated, and Mr. Miller,
Mr. Berry and the faculty won
25-2, 15-9, 17-15. ‘Cokes and cook-
ies were served for the exhausted
spectators and players.
NOTICES
Non-Res Dance
An informal Non-Res dance will
be-held on Friday, April 11, in the
gym from nine to twelve o’clock.
Admission is $1.00 for couple or
stag.
Toynbee Lecture
The first of Arnold Toynbee’s
Mary Flexner Lectures on Encoun-
ters between Civilizations has just
been published as the leading ar-
ticle in the ‘April issue of “Harper’s
Magazine.” Copies are on sale in
the College ‘Bookshop.
Bryn Mawr Summer Day Camp
The following Senior Counsellor
jobs are available, without room
and board, at the day camp on the
college: campus:
Arts and Crafts—$200.
Music (i. e. to teach part sing-
ing, group singing, and an elemen-
tary course in music appreciation.
Ability to play the piano)—$200.
Athletics (sports and games,
folk-dancing )—$200.
‘Assistant in Arts and Crafts—
$125.
Freshman Handbook
The Undergraduate Board takes
pleasure in announcing Mary
Beetlestone, ’49, as Editor of the
Freshman Handbook.
Show Postponed
The Faculty Show, Top Secret,
has been postponed to May 10.
Open Night in Gym
Open night in the Gym Satur-
day, April 12, 8-11 P. M. Activities:
swimming, badminton, ping-pong,
table games, fencing, bridge,
square dancing (if desired). Ey-
Compliments
of the
Haverford Pharmacy
Haverferd
For a Tea
With
Atmosphere |
ch I I as
GIFTS
For Every Occasion ©
—. alt
5
Pee ND
tice and tradition, and- wahalaed
numbers featuring the delightful
age-old instruments of the coun-
COMMUNITY
KITCHEN
\ Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
erybody welcome, including dates. .
mes ; “Sena
STOCKTON’S- AOA) aN
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Peeve TF ert#
B. M. to Sponsor
Red Cross Dance
' Seventy-five girls are needed to
entertain six hundred soldiers at a
dance at the Valley Forge General
Hospital ‘which will be held Tues-
day evening, April 15 and spon-
sored by Bryn Mawr. Compara-
tively little time has been given to
the Red Cross this year and so
here is our chance to do our bit.
The buses supplied by .the Red
Cross will leave Pem Arch at 6
and will return at 11:30. Those
who go are asked to wear after-
noon dresses, and since they will
be guests of the hospital and of
the Army, they must abide by the
rules and not leave the recreation
hall. A charge of $1 will be made
to cover the cost of refreshments
supplied by the Bryn Mawr
The week before spring vacation
concluded the formal badminton
season for Bryn Mawr, leaving a
record of three wins and three
losses for the varsity, a clear rec-
ord of three wins and no losses for
the junior varsity, and an unde-
feated season for the number one
doubles team of Nan Garton and
Thekla Wurlitzer.
Miss Grant termed this a “pret-
ty good season,” considering the
varsity players lost last spring at
graduation. Until this year,
Swarthmore was the only team
which had defeated Bryn Mawr.
Only two games were played at
the “home” court, the Merion
Cricket Club, while five were play-
ed on the opponents’ courts. Man-
ager this year was Thekla Wur-
Badminton Team Wins 3 Games;
J. V., Doubles Team, Undefeated
Engagements and Marriages
Laura Dimond, ’47, to Dr. Al-
fred Coleman.
Mary Levin, ’47, to Morris
Gordon L. Goodman.
Geraldine Kartiganer, °49, to
Leonard D. Steinlauf.~
1-4, on February, 24. March 2, the Kronfeld. Joan Meyer, ’50, to Forrest E.
varsity defeated Rosemont on the Mildred Nelson, 47, to Joe} Sovring. .
losers’ floor, 3-2, and the junior| ~ Busch.
varsity won their opening game Mary Stewart, °47, to Dr. : MASE OES
over Rosemont, 5-0. The Drexel James A. Meath: 6 Sybil Ullman, ’48, to Merrill
onn.
game, played at the Mérion ‘Crick- Sherry Ann Bordorf, 48, to
et Club, was lost by the varsity,
2-8, but the junior varsity won
again, 5-0. On March 14, at Penn,
the junior varsity cancelled Bryn
MAYO and PAYNE Early or Late
Mawv’s first defeat by Penn, when Card: Gifts YOU CAN GET ‘
they won their game, 3-2. On
March 19, the Merion Cricket Club RADIO GOOD FOOD
courts witnessed the defeat of the
elub team by Bryn Mawr, 4-1, Parts Repairs sath cade sricars
while the final match, 1-4, to AT THE
821 LANCASTER AVE,
BRYN MAWR
Swarthmore at the winners’ courts.
The team closed the season by
defeating the faculty team, 2-1.
There is promise of a good 1948
season, according to Miss Grant,
BLU COMET
League. : litzer and Libby Bagley was cap- |since there are many freshmen on
r p Bao te Peg bs ho ong tain of the team. the squad and few seniors will be “SHE'S
Glew oCere m fayler and © On February 18, Bryn Mawr |lost from the team. The badmin-
those who sign are asked to 20,! played at Chestnut Hill: and came |ton tea will be held Thursday, at borrowed my date
because the party is not for our | of with a 4-1 victory. The next |4:15, to elect a new manager and : and my
pleasure but for theirs. An €X-| same was lost to Penn, at Penn, | captain.
cused cut is being given from}, = =
sii: “Our Vichy Gamble”
2 Take a —Wnm. L. Langer 99
CLEANING AGENCY “Three Come Home” blouse!
: Look at —Agnes Newton Keith
' NOW is the time to have “Mr. Whittle and the
those winter clothes cleaned! The Girl . :
The week of April 14, 30 per Morning “ alee
cent of the bills paid the Merion ® » —Robert Nathan
Cleaning Agency will be given With Flowers e fi
to the Drive. This sum includes - FROM The
the Proprietor’s profit, and all Booksh
commissions. It is hoped that ANNETT’S> Country ooKshop
$500 worth of cleaning will be JE in ae
sent.
I Don’t Miss a Clearance Sale :
COME ALL }
; of Purses, Flowers, :
Eat - - at the Aprons and Jewelry ;
L A . T This Week! i
i) a e sOLD
STRAW |i - 3 eg
, DINAH FROST’S itil re
Haverford — Pa. ‘. Laneaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr : Free booklet: ‘WARDROBE TRICKS ’’. Write Judy Bond, Inc., Dept. H, 1375 Broadway, New York 18
=F tse
POPE A TT TT GE ET TE a ST
READ HOW THE
GLAMOROUS FAYE -
BLESING, NOTED
=F TRICK-RIDING STAR.
OF THE RODEO,
ROPED AND RODE
HER WAY TO FAME
LOORPPAYE ROPED
THE WILD PALOMINO |
———_
eT
FAYE'S PRACTICALLY LIVED Y MIGHT MAKE A G000 COW. 1
P| WITH THAT CRITTER THESE \ PONY, BUT SHE'LL NEVER
= 1) LAST WEEKS—HE'S A BEAUTY! /CALM HiM DOWN ENOUGH
was FOR TRICK RIDING q
me ,
a.
SEVERAL MONTHS LATER—THE EL PASO RODEO
INTRODUCING A NEWCOMER 70 THE
se RODEO CURCUT—GLAMOROUS FAYE BLESSING —
EVERY COWHANO IN THE RIDING HER WILD PALOMINO — FLASH
VALLEY HAS BEEN TRYING
TO CATCH THAT FLASH
OF LIGHTNIN’
Y STEADY, FLASH! DONT Wa
BE FRIGHTENED— ame
THE STORY BEGINS SEVERAL YEARS AGO ON THE COLORADO RANCH/s
OF FAYE BLESING'S FATHER DURING A WILD-HORSE ROUNDUP...
/ IMAGINE DOING THE
RUSSIAN DRAG ONA / { IS AWFUL SLICK— | ~
WILD HORSE HEY, WATCH IT! / WHATTA SPILL!
: A ‘iy (
YOUR “‘T-ZONE”’
WILL TELL YOU
T fot Facte...,
“T-Zone” to a “T.””
"THAT GROUND
WILD HORSE
HE DIONT THROW HER—
HE SLIPPED ON
THAT WET GROUND
900 SA “rte Sor
Pp NG AND. oe
PRR hi F
SURE, SHES TERRIFIC— oe ee
DIDJA HEAR? NEW YORK AGENT
OVER THERE WANTS TOSIGN
FAYE UP FOR THE MADISON
SQUARE GARDEN RODEO
A
A CHAMPIONSHIP—A
CONTRACT—THAT CALLS ©
‘| FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL
SOMETHING
SPECIAL TO ME
RIGHT NOW WOULD
BE A CAMEL
Ww : Y Se - Ve v ’ > 7 )
fn NO A CAMEL
NUP,
(Veer
oe. <>
=,
gE <<< F’ FAYE BLESING has been
YY EXPERIENCE IS THE "a star of the rodeo for 5
9 ee 3 Ef years. Her experience with
BEST TEACHER IN RIDING . ~*~ actous brands of cigarettes ——~-
\ dates back to the war
a «IN CIGARETTES TOO! I’VE destenne “Eine shies
aims TRIED THEM ALE=CAMe > S smoked. a." << asi >
eae : every day,”” she fecalls, .
ar i ~~ SUIF-ME-BEST I “Pat's when I —
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appreciate Camels.” ~ ;
Pete, AHES ML ENE TRO RAMETERS
oe)
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Harvard, Bryn Mawr Concert
Is Varied, Rich in ‘Timbre
Continued from Page 1
the carol, “Awake thou wintry
earth” and a duet from Bach’s
Christ Lag in Todesbanden, were
remarkable for the energetic yet
sensitive mood which they evoked.
The double octet sang two
rounds, both extremely difficult and
therefore not quite smooth enough.
The Mozart sounded almost pro-
hibitively. delicate and complicated.
Bryn Mawr’s last two composi-
tions, Robert Delaney’s version of
“My Soul there is a Country” and
Irving Fine’s Alleluia, were not on
gram,
The work of the combined chor-
uses was the most striking part of
this program. A brass ensemble
from the Philadelphia Orchestra
played with them in Gabrieli’s In
Ecclesiis Benedicite Domine and in
the final selection from Bach. The
horns had some trouble during the
Gabrieli, but during the Bach they
added considerably to the complex,
massive summation of the second
chorus.
Stravinsky’s Psaumes seemed to
the most diffiicult, of the combined
pieces. Mr. Woodworth directed.
Stravinsky’s strange intervals and
syncopated rhythms contrasted
with the more conventional idiom
of the other music, broadening
»
what might otherwise have been a
limited mood. The program as a
whole, thanks to the taste and in-
spiration of Mrs. deVaron and Mr.
Woodworth and the calibre of their
singers, was extraordinarily fine.
. 2
all
Has Spring Fever Got You Down?
A Tea at the
COLLEGE INN
Great Music!
CONTI CASTILE SHAMPOO
presents
THE TREASURE HOUR
OF SONG
Leading Stars of the Metropolitan Opera
Licia Albanese » Jan Peerce » Francesco Valentina
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PLUS Exciting Contest Feature!
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Every Thursday Night
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WIP.®* 9:30 P. M.
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aj
SALE
20% off on Suits
10% off on Coats
Connelly’s Flower
Shop
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn. Mawr 1515
Bright and Appealing
Colorful and Gay
* We Have Dresses
For Every Day
$5.95 and up
~TRES CHIC SHOPPE
Bryn Mawr
University of Georgia's
great All-America back
Lancaster Avenue
by Elizabeth Woodward
America’s foremost authority on young
people’s problems
So nobody loves you, eh? Dates are scarce.
The girls forget to include you when they’re
cooking up excitement. You're left out...
strictly alone and lonely?
Whose fault is that? If you’re so much dead weight, even
a wrestling champ would give you up as a heavy drag. If there’s
no sparkle or laughter in you...if you're afraid to speak out
your ideas or opinions...if you don’t warm up to people...
nobody’s going to know you're around...or care either.
There are two kinds of people, as I see it...the givers and
the takers. There are leaders and followers. There are shy
violets...and the brave who bother to dig into them. There
are live rockets who think up the fun...and everybody who
goes along for the ride.
If you keep quiet, hanging back waiting to see what’s going
to happen ...if you never start anything going on your own...
you're being a sponge. You’re just taking in everybody else’s
vitality, warmth, pep and enthusiasm. You’re not giving out
a thing.
Give out a little interest in what other people think and do,
and you'll find yourself doing it with them. Go out of your
way to be attractive, friendly and warm, and people will want
.to be where you are. Be good-humored, and you'll cheer up
somebody else’s grumps. Do something for somebody...and
your favors will be returned.
Turn your nearsighted eyes out of the narrow confines of
your own alone-ness. Look out...and give out...to people
you'd like for friends. Then you'll find yourself right in the
middle of the goings on... not plunked on the gidelines...the
innocent bystander. :
VOTED TOPS
CHESTERFIELD
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: — ROGER & GALLET EAU de COLOGNE | 7 AMER FIELD IS
Perfume ° Dry Perfume « Lipstick ¢ Compacts
teen
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ees
By shiners 3
- Copyright 1947,.Liccerr & Myers Tosacco.
College news, April 9, 1947
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1947-04-09
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 33, No. 20
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-vol33-no20