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1931 The olC lege News, 1931-03-11, Vol. 17, No. 15 Students of Bryn Mawr College

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The' College News • - jiAi?' �-..; AND BRYN No.1' MARCH • "Vol,XVII, .,/ �AYNB MAWR, PA. WEDNESDAY, 11, 1911 Price:10 ea. ..

Vatsity Pu Economic IJUtability -,------, Inwtn Situation Giva- Root Qlnsid«:rs Dramatics ts 1, D.nct I Dr. Ca CaribL_- • Redlttl So H f ope \1IeI � 'J• IlIIOII me or "":ttIen.e,.t m on LocatTalent Plays II The "annual Dance R«ital will _ ..... l Pope's DidactJ·os· .,. prclented by the Dance. Club ' The C an'b u.:ln'"· region"' IS "I �ave ohen met with .a ...' I __" peer ' and the graduate and undergrad· ·.,np .d;'" n Throe Traditional Forma W.... In" Ihe WI'd e d"'.Iverg n e of the present Indian .ituation with o e 0 ;1 '��;: � u'lte classes in natural dancing UC�___ y l"6'9'UIQ �I"'-�- un:aa.a,..�__ ell tar opinion rCKar.din, it, said F ElHIlce of Dr. : on 17. American attitude toward England rom 1m ., Poetry, Dialogue .. Jones in speaking on "The Problems II Tuesday evening, March pUaioacu CompooitioaJ s-. the Caribbean" Thursday afternoon, The production is under the: the Revolution," �Iared MilS NotProfou nd Content. March in the Common Room direction of MilS Marna Brady, Allen. Enalish Iraduale student, in ". 6. Assistant'Director of Physical I ";:' "But neither the group discussion Thursday evening, spon, SA.DJ Y POEMS O C STAGE SET S INIGI>r-IIC:>lJ5: ��� de- R M.&� • fin d , 'It "d II· nor lI.. t w h' h Education. Costumes are r'U,"".A£, � . I Y IC, L. IC sored by the Liberal Club. Marc h" 6, .� 1 is defeated by it. nor yet the purely signed by the dancers them- --- (Spl!Ciolly Ccmlribwted by in the Common Room at Goodhart. BrynI Mawr College had the of Pro/ellor Killg) detached point of view has much in- selves, and posters are con- honor tribuled b B�rbara Kirk, '31; • "Pursuing the subject further, onc hearing Dr. Rotxrt Kilburn Root. G. G. Ruence on the foreign policy of pro- In the thr� one.-ad plays written and United States. Moreover, it not Alice Thorne, '3.1,_ and Louise finds that the comparison is rather feuor of English at Princ:eton University. is Turner, The recilal will be Pop, ru,d the Art acted last three traditional and ,.n<,u"h to anume that the Caribbt:an '34. far-fetched." Till 1858 the lO"em, lecture on week. l .. ,- given al 8:30 in -the gymnasiulII. 01 Mora'iud dramatic forms were well ace d 'h .probl ems '1lmlar to our Song reputable I .. WIt ment of India was shared by the the Music Room of and all interested are cordially , in Goodhart emplified: the. first preciltly invited to attend. Crown and the East India Company; it HJII on , Friday evening, Uarch Dr. was For�e.xample, few people realize that . 6. to be known a curtain-raiser. remaIned III. the e rown wll" h t h e great . lhe Ann EI,"u·belh SL-bl. wed u the large majority. of the voten are RX,:I'""'ed m:: was getl!ttl y faint y sa , .• I " "" ;m t., that the secret ballot is un- mutiny. Till 1909, the Indians could M rial Lecture in Enlli,h Literature KC:Ond c:omed � ! .. e the third'was t�e. fan:� that come' known, and that it is indi,cree\. to F nch Club P ts hold only minor positions in the civil for this year. r resen the pantomime-even to the "talk politiCl." Guatemala, Salvador· . uLes e es ava tes" service; at that date they attained a The I\lbject conCernc

.. \ • ----­ 11, 1931 Page! THE ,COLLEGE NEWS MAllCH

inspiration. But sometimes we wonder, don't they ever tire of the eternal "The Briand Plan fot" European • • effort to astonish, to make themselves a "figure of fun." Union" and "Disannament." In the • The THE COLLEGE NEWS .only answer to that is tha. the pose everyone of these atti· disc:uuions, each college ddegation 1914) tudinizers is the reason and enlivenment of theirof existence. We are curi­ (wmd.ed in will represent a lingle nation wnich is ou's, however. they throw themselves into gear as they� approach a a league m(mberr In point of proce­ Do possible audience. muttering· to themselves-Hah, I'm Intellecttfal, ot' dure, the Model Assembly will folio..... Bored, or oh so Fond of my college-or about to prOduce a sensation? [ather faithfully that of 'he League We won'tler. itself. The program for the gathering (",Is What's ThU--J System? for a plenary session immediately fol­ m,.,·mb.. It seems to us that one of the be'st institutions at'Bryn Mawr'is the lowing the registration period on the • system of Hall Teas. call it a system but at the same time 'We'are morning of the first day. At this ses­ EJi/or.f1t-Chif/ Elilor -:-We C.",SHi,YOCJC, 1 urging that it be'made more systematic. One day last week, three teas sion, organization will be effected and VI.ClNtA 'J were s:unning riot on the saine aft,ernoon, and it is rather disconcerting. to the quutions for discussioa will be Lucy SAfftOItN, JZ Alli,tfl1lt £Ji/orl ask a 'f riend over to see how excellent the Denbig\'J chocolate is, only to formally referred to standing commit· £Ji/orf find that she is more interested in the Pembroke sandwiChes. We wonder tees.. That ahernoon and the ronaw­ • El.llA8ETU JACKSON, '33 if it migh! not be pos,ible for the various people responsible for Hall ing morning the deltaatu will meet R..... HAT'I'Ul.Oo ')2 laTA CLaWS, 'J) SUIAN.. 'NoeL . 12 ... three committee groups for lengthy BETTY KJNDLass.G . �1 to get together---()r. if that i$ just what they have been doing, to til • • Do.cmru han., ')2 • , Bunnfll M.nll,tr Teasstay of the individual qUCltions • apart-so that we will all have a c�ance at the nJ.ore popular profes­ I sors; or on the second afttrnoon, a Do.crrtfY Asta.a, 'J I at least be able to persuade a friend thad uthis ilthe Hall to SNbmip;ion MIIM,n ' in" by inviting her to tea. Itssion will bt held for discus- • . .... y ')1 sIon aClion.. upon tht r�ports of the Alliltfflll M B. F.OTHJNGHAIo4, '11 "Strict1y Dishonorable" roma� fill«1 with Afri n thrills. Othtr ftaturts of the progra'm'in- FIlANCU RC*ltCfON, MOLLY ATNOIts, '12 ca Earle--Cftorgt O'Brien in a ,lcludt an opening' luncheon at YYOHNII C\Wu!»', ')2 Ea.&ANO. YaAUL, 'll u W.. t.... which Has Record R n of Season Fair Wa,.,.iK9. , Prtsident Hibben. of .Princtton Uni- SUBSCRIPTION, ",10 • SUI!SCRIPTJONS MAn.ING PRlC!!, 11,00 Erlangtr-Unless your"" dislikt ytrsity. will' officiaJly wdcomt tht AT "Strictly Dishonorablt" btgins tht MAY BEG(N ANY TIME comedy includts tvtn Olatlit I and a final .banqutt at which tenth wttk of its tn.. gemtnt at tht City Lig ll .. manu ., •., lt McDona'd P resl'd tn f the is intyitabl. e. ' • 0 Ent.recl MCOnd.d... the W.yne, P POle ORice Broad Sirtet Thtalrt. Philadelphia. Forei� P'olicy Association, will be Europa...-Marltot Dietrich .0 Monday n;ght, March Wh;ch L In , \ 16, r t h e sP(� ktrs. E ntertainmtnt Solution muns the longest run of any otiltt at- (1tIes. the visitors will includt a 5ptcial , II traction the current season, and near. Fox - Ann Harding is �,r::H:��; � � to bt given on the � 1t looks as though we had eached the final solution of our Chapel EiloS' L)lK"� . evening of .,( -Jp a lovtly but is hard to :�: ",. record long run r thi hoult, only • , first. day. problem. Tn our own College ge'neration Chapel has been reduced from seriously.. two other offerings,"'Lightnin'," which the Music Room, I the five days a week in old Taylor Hall to three days in remained there thirteen weeks, and Kcitha-Nancy Carroll maintains( her good Slol tJm, '32 Discusses Big May Day and from three days to two last year. It has been sandwithed in after " he Gondoliers." ten wetks, hayjng record of pictures in � T 3, a longtr period. With the Holmes. Also Rudy allee the o'clock, alter the o'clock and after breakfast, and it occasioned played with Phillips V On Tuesday, March in the Com, 8 10 prtaton .:)�tu rges comtdY still doing a is with us. ... mon Room tea was hdd for-or by­ the remarkable schedule of classes whereby we glorified odd moment�. a satisUtctory busintss it pronlises to Mastbaum-Another gan.'sttr picturt, tht class of for tht of dis- All these fluctuations, however, affected lamentably few of the under- GI'",ftmlo,,', Fo!�, '32 equal tht latter for a long,run tn- J with ohn Gilbert and I graduates, the faithful, aside (rom the Choir, numberi.tg less than ! m t t g ,," and a lust comt a clost twenty- ." ., Louis . Stanley-O,. cN/o, five. Since the students were so desultory in attendance, this final step stcond the record run of t e o to Kleig Manning and ttirJ on Mrs. Collins, who pre- 19 - .. exposed is certainly lncr1cal. There IS' -stl prOVISion .or occaslona ass bl'lest weeks. lights hasn't the .sa-.me awful fa5Cination. sented intertsting utracts from their " _t> o 'II £ 'I Undoubtedly "Strictly Dishonor· Stanton-Lawrtnce Tibbett and Cract own cxptrience with May Days. The while the President, the Dean: and the alOif are---rro1onger regularly Mo$Jt. able" is only play of lht pre.stnt Moore in Iinu effect on' academic work -and the a pracfi�ny non-d i:;tent student body." tht season that has bten attracting out- Philadelphia Orchestra �:��;�:� ot time and ((K)peration re- �--'-"r�lbreto I , of-town patronagt. This is caustd, Friday, March' Saturday, .March of the undergraduatu wert the , (Tile slIbmitted 13; I � folfmuill9 editoricr!s'lucre ill (ompetition) by the popularity of tht pitct, and Monday, March at Metropolitan fI.o NEWS first 14; 16, thtmea of inttrtst. 'Photographs Passion of ONr sttond by the fact that the manage- Opera House-Tlte literature of tht May ..Dav • According 10 S . 1928 Sportsmanship mtnt has announctd that whtn tht shown. I Alattltt!Ul. Music by local tngagtment closts tht comtdY 'lohann Stbastian Bacb. The Mmdels- One of the first things impressed upon the student. �y at Bryn u- . will be shown in no �ther' plact sohn Club, the Choral Art Mawr is the necessity for good sportsmansJ:lip in attiletics. It is...an SocidY, Try These Dttroit and Chicago. where rt- Boys' aloir of Girard Gollege. excellent theory, blJt one is-'led to il1�r.e whether or not Bryn Mawr, as peat engagements have been booked, Movies To vindicatt tht honor of the Bryn 'a college, follows out this theory in its outside athletic relations. T.hc Local play baving been given there prior Seville-Thursday and Friday-Clara Mawr girl who fled when faced with students are urged to be sporting while the college violates one of the first No Utlli/; we to the Philadtlphia engagement. Bow and Stuart Erwin in Scribner's baffling questionnaire, principles of good sportsn)anship. allly Saps Wo,.k, '" As "Strictly Dishonorablt" begins Saturday, with· r.e.,n II prtsenting our own batch of baf- We refer to the present policy of refusing to play Varsity matches ttoth wtek of its stay 'at the Broad, Errol, Richard Arlen, Mary Brian-; flers. Answers for the puzzled art on anywhere except on our own court. It is distinctly discourteous as well the London company will have ended cllly and 1,'uesday. Greta Garbo in 5: unsporting to ask a team to come to Bryn Mawr for a match, whether atiD/I, t of its tngagement in with R r ·Montgomery. the second wtek Whue is San Marino? asit be hockey, basketball or swimming, and then refuse to play the return obc. I. that tity and the other company and Wayne - \Vednesday and To what tountry did what game on their territory. Such a practice can but detract (rasn Bryn Br;de, 2. ytt another will begiJl a t)"o weeks' with Junette Mawr's"ptes'tige anlOng other colleges, and it endless harm to TIll LOII"'� Frtnch king" send bis two sons as does . tour of tht New York sub-circUit. Oon.'lld; Friday and Saturday, hostages? athletics at Bryn Mawr itself. • ' which is a return tngagtment, tht Lon. 'Coogan Junior' Durkin in and Such an attitude, of necessity, eliminates from the list of possible Sawyer; Edw.n'.1 Vllo was the mother of "Bloody don company having rectntl, playtd Monday and Tutsday, 3. \ provide good competition , , lli�?, oppooents many teams which would otherwise In that te tory. All this means � r that Robinson and Douglas Fairbanks Jr., , Varsity. The student body is continually criticised for the lack of n Litlle C,usa,.. ' Place the following Quotation; ,for this popular comedy, which is tht only 4. be exijeCt...... to tum out mterest sh'own V'ar!Uy at hi' etlcs, b'ut It cannot com.dy be,'ng p""""ted ,'n Ph,"ad.'. "And what were thou and earth and 10 e"", and cheer when Bryn Mawr is playing a non-collegiate team; usually stars and sea, phia at this timt, has playtd tvery kty In the New Book Room keeping their weight " sed of women who play for the sole pur� of o If to the human mind's imaginings. city in the Unittd Statt!l, and in a ltr ugll lit, Shodaws w�'lh �"r)l, . compo studentF--- body, however loyal T , . under one hundred and seventy-five. The very short time will bt in ptrformance 0 5" ence an d"so It!J de were vacancy. it may will never mve Varsity whole-hearted and enthusiastic support By 0-1 this city only. That is in this coun- RumJgales* Club Whtre is tilt Garden of tht a }��:��II S. bo, to ' of Bryn . By Jofm under the existing cot\CIitians. With th,e e.'tception Swarthmore, try, as tht Th,floe'" 0/ G,rord Monle',Jl London tngagemtnt is Gods? from the students. Mawr plays no matches which call f.or enthusiasm ronounced and the piect Hopkin.s, p success will Edited with Notes Robert Bridges 6. Where does "Aban: tn all ho,,,, on tht: other'''i Imnd, Varsity played teams composed. of girls from other By rtlllain thtre indefinittiy. Mo:arl'-& s, yt who enter htrt," come 'om? collegesH, who play games with a truly competitIve spirit, there wOJ1ld QfIIJv "Strictly Dishonorable" seems to 1t"f J undoubtedly be an increase in the interest shown. A Cr cal Study by . Dtnt 7. W�ere is the Sistine MadOllna? all of the elemtnts which bid for Sluart hb By Jobn W. Thoma�n, Jr. Where is tht White Horse Pass? Also if Varsity were to play games on courts ather than ollr-Own. roman�e, .c1tvtr· character 8. Whert is Pola, and for wha� it would be of great value to the team. Playing continually on the same i , humor, expert staging and odel 9. floor and under the same conditions becomes colorless and mechanical. M Leagu� Assembly is it famous? I:�: cOllslruction. It has been given .. of the chief requirements for" a good team is that "it should be :::��, One : of the paprika to popularize to Be Held at Princeton 10. Who is the present Stcretary itself to altered The ____ to play well on a strange court and adapt conditions. but so delicately administered, after of War? Of the Inttrior? Of Labor? possibility and advantages of such experience are completely denied the tht Frtnch manntr, that it n er n oJ- Bttween one hundrld and fifty and II. Who was Pennsyh'ania na�ed team by the present one-sided and narrow policy. ftndl. the As all world now'knowl, two hundred undergraduatt delegates, afted The first defense of the existing attitude is the everlasting ope of it il tht story of a little Southun girl, representing twenty.sevt. Il Eastern 12. Whtr� is Gotland? traditiont But is not good sportsmanship also a tradition? Secondly, who "raney fret" faUs in lovt with an leges and univtrsities. will be prtstnt, there is a question of collegiate opponenta. We feel sure that if Bryn 13. What is a fugut? Italian opera singer w-hilt casually vis- whtn tht fifthannual Model Assem- 14 Mawr would alter if" policy, this problem would solve itself. . What is the meaning of the J iting a Ntw York speakeasy in the r b'Y the L eague N'atlons r or h t e Above all, if wel.iJ are to attempt outSide athletics. let us ask no more 0 0r word cl&uistry? company of htr fiance, who il suddenly Middle "'tlantic States convenes at ate willing to giye. us put the theory of good sportsmanship we tclipsed by his rival, the optra singtr, M c IS. Who was SiIllOIll: Martini? tban Princtton Univtrsily on arh and into practice where it is now Letso sadly lacking. 27 Di Ruvo. Mail o'rders art filled in 16. Place the following quotation: order of their rectipt. _____� . ___ The institutions which have dtfi­ "A body ofair, England's. breathing Eng. • A Un;"ersal Occupation nitely signi�td their intention of stn'd- lish .' In Philadelphia ing tleleg:itiQ,ns to tht Prinetton Washtd by tht rivers, blest by the This is a .community of poseuscs. Sometimes it seems that the Broad-S'trictlyDislto"oroble. ! A. .,,,nlb'y ire Albright, Barnard, Bryn suns of home." attitudiniting is a result of boredom, and then again it seems to be done ts �/rerl SC'-"� Forr t il in its lal Mawr, Colgate, Columbia, Cornell, Who were tht for the pure joy of .the thing. Some play at being astonishingly intellec- t 17. ptople desig· '" Haverford, Hobart, Hood, Lafayette, tual, or astonishingly sophisticated, or astonishingly full of college spirit, Wttk. nattd by the following Ilanltl: Lack­ Express, Lehigh, Moravian, -Mount Holyokt. land, Cunclator, and others merely ·at being astonishing. Those who are pompously intel- Garrick-S1'/8tvo)l the unusual Tht Hammtr, Red s Nl:w Jtrsey College for Women, New lectual have, perha'p� the most excuse for -their attitudes. Our college mystery play al o leave. afttr Saturday. Burd, The Silent? o i York State Teachtrs' Colltge, Ntw f Clt not(J'WK, Whtrt is the per colony for encourage that sort of thing, actually if nat purposely . .It is a trifle Lyr c ird of � does i --aNl'�n th York Univusity, University of Penn- 18. I amuing, however; to embraced reverently by a Kipling "ran" on your the melodrama rtvivals which have had the U. S.l seve Rochester, Rutgers, Skid- be . • acknowled t that you have read Kipling and like him rather well ral of tht Hed�row Company 'head- 19.Who said "L'Etat, c'ut moi"? t Swarthmore. Syracust, Ttmple, attitudegmen disgusting when it leads to. discussions of the liter- ing s ca s. , Vassar, Wells and .'William What is the� oldJst Univtrsity in The becomes the Mor)liomJ, 20. . in precieux phrases and a VOi 'tched high enough to carry down Shu rt th s Civil War the world? ary be -M), 1 l.;i'''ith. It i, tstimated that slightly length of a dinner table, The room surrendered opc:rctta.-bas losl its on ' not grip Phila- the YEng has t.q, than fifty of the delegatCi will intellectual attitudinin , but we grow sad when we _�_����mob� ddpbia hearts. be women. F h Qub ____ Th renc r"-n:oo:nta WaInut-T" S"-' Wlhwu, art--. ton mb n . il "La Lionel At- to a considerablt dtar« tholt' �remines Savantes" """������r"�<�"�l� ��'�p�� '"�c�� :�;A�.�•• � ,W � �:!����������;t������� � ��I;��:;'�����expn:ssion � pantomime for of q : : d Academy ���!;�� - .in OOl'f'l'Qfn&-nolil PAO. osa The her eepest , : Rachmaninoff., Saturday 1929. Thl' alsemblie. are opposite, penon who is just full of all sorts i 1 at Q ��!: afternoon, llarch2 2:30. the primary purpese of increasing school, and, to plea" tveryone. there -:----�:��::upondirect Whatthe Stand For, is a more serious offender. d !It n interest in world for 1Iem. • . affairs and is a widt varitty of talent and inter- - tioa traditionsprostitute, and forWe in adopting the college spirit the . . way 1 Ar d - ca � for furnishing tht pretation. So S ia F." comt, one and all, at- a • as O HOI '�:::"::: In Jhe is ridiculousshe, plac:e of which MP twil,I t.�r,-is M,. tiM a knowkdp Lape J4, IimpIeIt urdaY4.Jlareh to 'Hall at poK,-wholly makes • fOfJOUeD COiwnoodearly something lin HedtJ.c1l ... pat of 8:.10 Goodhart remem P. and find out how the or With Lton Errol andlIitzi. in- .a.aId anrer be bered and realized. talkie. ·protrtam , a.r. it to make her "fine cbancter" &ppa{1!Dl,siap rapt The for the Prineetoa I AcislLfoiU Ihe tripina _She .. lOOp with a GreeD. ....,. aod.. p11&nL ()awfGrd IDOther semftl)' calla __ the dlM::1liifoa Philaminte (it must always � -he look aad of ii, that ill. word, ....eN .. arti6dal . type tJTarmieal w all be an "in-law") eatataik . IM'CJde role .. O-C" FHb,� and o the Ut,TIll IS"fi., .. is is till dill: II qae.tioaa, of .n . 1oYer • • Anythiac pillto their-IBiD,�they IriDIl with Hon, a ..-..k '7b1 PoIWt to "he �Iy eftl' afm-."

• \ , • MAacK 11, 1931 c P"l1' THE LEGE NEWS , I , ' � WJ'Of18' CIOmedy? If not, what i. the development h;ue obedience. was ina.uaurat� which in- H Libn.J Cl.b a.na:1e. ...nfortl S 'POR TS approaChin, (rom another put market even in E rope, oil, which eluded rdu .. 1 to buy forticn 'tloth. When ... U QU6ttoo: a public: lecture i.. .1now maku" Venezuela the second then to pay taxel, and culminating in The Liberal Club of Haverford '------, Common Room and ... ), 12, 1931, I joumcd to the for eIi'- I'" .. ' oil producing and th.e great- active disobedi ce ·to the law. olle resenll on Thursday. Varsity, e distinguished visitor lib down oil' exporting country· in the world. - Sen_tor Robert Engl Starring, cussion, The Governm of ndia "Ad pro � ..1.5 why cannot the stucknt. Public order has also improved ainl'e vided for a commissio general . \V\lner, of New York: "Un­ Defeats Baltimore, 30 up in- , baH beHtt? the United States assumed - the has oblip- quiry, PQ.ition of the ar tc. Thi. employment." .Unda' SIdn ti ons and .trtngthentd the ov- 16. the local g commission had repruenta ves of all On Monday, March Repre­ 1900 30-15. B an unusual compoaer,- three political partie. in England, al- .entative Burton L. French. of Again victorious Varsity in ilJ�. ertram, Nucy Sincc thcre has becn an ;ne".a" d though appointed by the Consuvativtl, Idaho, chaitman of the Sub-­ ond ga.mc beat Baltimore, The ' Ileana, an unlucceuful playwnlbt, in the invtltment of fo�eign but there .were no Indian.. Obviously committee on - Naval Appropria­ gamc was ' rathcr rough and .Iow, - Letita Ye.. kanl Imo,tly in private enterprises, 25. However, there wtre .ign. of improve- thi. arouted .ome feeling and the .ub- tion: "Naval Di.armament." · Rupert, an unsucc:euful lCulptor, there• have been heavy inve.tn�nts ment. ordinate Indian committees were boy- On Wednesday, Afarch .•� •.••..... Elko I lecuritits. In addition, the cotted. With Engle in for Remington the Sherwood Eddy, ''The Challenge Sigrid, a Commoniat AnDe forelgn tra�e of aU the counVies ' II . This Simon Commission reported in of Russi.�' The Haverford unity in the centre w .. broken up but mcreased ve fold; our Serge, failure a. a poet. n .union at the pas.ing to the forward. ,was 1930. giving a full account of the tco-- 8:15 o"clock.· ... Loi. have grown more than thc world of grtatly improved. She .eems to be the nomic .ituation, the distribution I Sasha, an enthusiastic Communist, IItge, and have increastd seven�: :';':: only centre who can can.i.tently get : race., and the Seneral background. central location easily permit. the at- Maria Socially and economically, the, I U p�t. , the ban over the guard to the forward poor .are g nfonunately, it i. imposaible to cede (endance of d�lllts from all Norberta, a interior decorator; States and the Caribbean uilder the basket,. Unfortunately this to the demand the whole way at once, of t,h'l"'"l:Jnited Statu, .nd because the "'•• Miriam T. De,d,,, I cI �;� and clostr together. il � .nd by the time it fully granted the good pia),. grutly ollset by tbe "�There are, dcspite this more new building. recently added to the Alida, an un,ucccllful paUtter, faei1itat� going lndi.n. will have re ch the nt e. 10 inability of the centre. to get en oullo:ok, .urviving we,ok_ l . ed poi campu. th arraogements r Eliubetb Pet on where they will accept nothin Wore- together. Batr ' m.naged .uccellfully ::::::�:�',g concluded Or. Lloyd lJ housing, meal. and entertainment. William RUlielt. a sale'lJ\Jn. ' over. Gandhi refused to g to the for to get away from her,... larger and I , Gr: • I , ... is still The other invitation. presented "IP", , confined to a con- Helen B"II Round Tablc C9nference only if slower opponent, Shocmaker, but" .he line. only, and the narrow basis,",;.Ir" - _ the 1931 "congru. were from Wichit., Directed by Sydn.y Sullivan. I .idention would be not of how much was unable to' h.ng on to the ball � ,C;"ci,'n"H,::and�� WUl\ingt���:,on . Sane: Sigrid'. Studio their eConomic life is not a I w�en .he once got it. Tha UDCOIIlIDCMl Tbief but in what way home rule. will be M basis for real selr-government." CoDege Dramatics given. Thi. ot)viously is impn.ible at ToUcn and Collier .tarttd out fairly Jo;:imbatl Root Considers of La1 '''ence' ...... Sallie }C)De. th� present time. The result, fairly Theatre 'tell, but tbe nice interference Mrs. ris M .ry NiCh CanSave C. iller, his fiancee .... M ol. , Po,pe's unanimou.ly reached, amounted to the Kirkland lO n broke up their palS , -...... __ . form in �Urgla� ...... _ ...... Loil M. Tburston following points: A federal of and de.pite Oher absence the .econd dectlVe .... . CMoline Schwab f IWI "'..o vernment comparable to that of ,h. n a recef'lt arhcle"C III the olumbia' '- If, th ey d' Id not get Dirrcted by Janet Marshall (I.nUn.e' r.... Paa. '0.. �. . United States, and to which the prince. SpectAtor Barrett Clark, playreader Totten'. shooting wa. better than . ,,1Sane: '''Thornwood,'' Kimball'. •• · agreed; a bicameral legislature, with for the Theatre Cui d lier' except on free throw. ' wh. 1.0 I .Iand. that the chief duty of the poet was to and editor oflOme- the on ng the •• Senatorial repre.e ttatives fro the z � IU e she failcd to score. Moore and Dumpty u ... , i m Drama Maga i , say. : ' nl u H please b t not at expense"� . ,h of. some .-�•• . umPt7 ', --,...." ' o, w. native .tates appointed by the princes, thing unforeseen occurs in , ,h. Cully were .teady but .Iow. Moore, n, o No, only I« can Mrs. Rumpleworth,' Elinbeth Peterson I 1 • .l'l Il)d repre.entativtl from the British future, don't .Iower than usaal, ,was a!so tradition' of literary criticism favorable 'to how our theatre I h · Virgini� 'ie,b,rt .tate. elected making more foul. than anyo� U ;�h: by the provincial legi.- become much more than a mere manu- e t ';.� :;�::o didactic art but also poetry itself. Any :;b � lature., and a lowcr house ",ith facturing plaut-subsidized by the motion- qn the floor. � Miriam T...... ;;;;, tion of art that would .I;m,JI�'.-d,,. the method. of election as yct undecided. picture iuterests-for turnillg obvious Mrs. Kirkland and Mrs. Code . DiviNe wouldColftedy, eliminate 'FanU the the out Malvina Paine ...... Nancy The form of rtasoall Paradise "MW UM and • ,h. types of popular entertainment." the best of the Baltimore' D'lrect ed by L eta CI ew.. thc DSuhm lilYn· ----8 ,Iso ice b*. difficult The- for Ihis are- largely aric flJn: played a happy home. 'Phe-dKtactic-spiTi\ in The not grad uated, mdirect !Jections are tenta� cial. according to Clark. tb(atre B. M. C. Baltimore General Director, Ethcl Choteau best sense was p.rtiun. It served to . . was_- tively propo.ed. Finally, the Governor cannot be regarded as a mOiney-making . illuminate what already accepted';"to •• 0 ' u Coil"ler...... F...... Those responsible for the .tage .. ert 1 ' ...... - uCI , II General rcserve. ,h '-hl.. ',n,-v.n.... enterprise without loting it value " · , UICl U..... 0 a To en...... 1 F c. kson tlng,' ' con.trucbon, costume. ao d confirm1-- ra·"- I conv.The quea- , 5· r_ .. ' '0 'h,', , 11 10 - not in thc intere.ts of law and ord"', and an art. Better ..... uipment is ntC8sary. ....:-·· ·,·····--__.. ._ ...... ,k of _rybu� ,' --.fo reo not 01 art.... Ba-- · U er�.s : the Indian sovernment i. answerable ..... �y ' B h;c il and the educat�' only R emlng on �...... Jlrl. lVIa owd' Itc E thI e "'" it is didactic w1!ether it of ....Y'0Ie to the Engli.h for foreign affairs, 0 _;c. whether it transmuttl ideas e., n director. and technicians. but also the (Engl.) foreig Dyer, B,e tl' G Id wasser, . fin\nce. i. floating. of loans. theatre-going public. Moor�...... G...... Graton, Betsy Jackson, Alice Lee into poetry Off. and for the army. The solution of the problem, says Mr. McCully...... G.. ... Mrs. In this light, Dr. Root considered the The' H¢enbergh, Robin Kreutzberg, Mar- MON. a� E4sa, an Recently, Vj ccroy Irwin and Gandhi lies with college. dramatic.. (Barton) which bqins with garet Lois Thurston, Rebecca i be MCKelvy, have arrived at a truce, the civil diS- i� �; :,:��I,theatre, in which dau may Referee: Min Perkin.. Time: Wood. stract proposition. a philolOphical thesil, aJlOcia· 321 12222; obedience campaign i. called off, and many C9l1tge dramatic: 8-minute quarters. the raw material of ideas. When the not 22222222. Economic Instabilt'ty but ere will be no further prosecution tions. is limited by cinema standards Score : B. M., 3O-Collier, poetry emer�, the intellectual idea is "ti IS-- wae has for taxes, for the '22211; 122·21. still prescnt, what a thesis non-paxment of or the nece.sity for becoming a tarae Totten, Baltimore. C .. . hal manufacturins of sah; the liquor boy· of income. For thi. reason it Craham, Clark.on, •• Uaaeti I'r...... o�. become a!, image, what was prose taken on the rhythm and texture of i cott will cease and political the powtr to emancipate the 1880, will be released. from disintegrating commercial Playing the Thorne School, the haa fallen every year .ince and dubitable verse.poenl The formal argument N"us. Third Varsity, trailing for mo.t of there are only a few hundred whites of a didactic bears the same On tl\e whole. the .ituation is still 35-34 r h,,,,,' E hic u the game, .managed to come off with a in Haiti. On the mainland the old tion to the work of an as the Itutiy hopeful. The question remains as p eac t s Fo nd victery. The team was vcry dis- nCgTo stock has been somewhat sup- the plot to the narraPorodis,five poem. Just whether it i. better to Itay in the p���: Lost : to Vary Widely jointed; the pl�yers .eemed incapable pfanted by the Indians: This racial we do not value Essoy for inces or gd out. The majority in both ' 01t MON of pas.ing to one another, and it was question is very troublesome, and Cuba' story. ';"e do not value the countries are willing for an artangc- "more luck than good management that and many'tentral American countries for the cOflsistel"lCf of it s argument. ment whereby both may be moderately poem, has tp Should a teacher accept payfor tutoring got the ball info the b�sket. :...,rRiii';;;',legislated-,, to exclude t!:lis Pope chosen ntided. despite a number of die·hard. and COlta on both .ides. As far as can be s�n. hcr own pupils ? Should she accept gi fts The forwards gave the be.t perform. Guatemala poetically of a moral subject in an tpil- a two-hundred- dollar head.. tax und taken the present situation is .tlJe belt which from 'PUpils? Shourd Ihe receive com­ alice despite the fact that they had have tolary manner. He has er to to cnter, and all but now can be hoped for with reason. Were millionl or royaltiel from books or sup­ never played together before . .. Mc- on negroc. trying speak as a cultivated gentleman, now have to encourage Eu- England to lea�e now. t�,ere would re­ plies in the purchase of which Ihe exer­ Cormick was able to score quite con� Mexi co sought matter-of-fact, impassi0rit!3 or fand- ropean immigration. With this la.t ob- main the problem of .the Hindu-Mos­ ci5t.S official decision? Replies to luch sist;ntly if she could get the ball nur ful. Pope: poet.is here as always thenot completely ethica.! by ni lem que.tions propounded a Na­ the basket. The centre. had great Columbia has offered large (a.rm·" civilized One must expect to confliet. other minoritie. such as • :;. tional Education Association committ� • and all have hoped that restricted Essoleek for profound philosophy the the Chri.tian. and Panee., the po.i­ difficulty pasting to the forward being of to selected classroom teachers, principal.. · immigra.tio� to the United States Po� may have picked up a little tion of women, and the possibility jusJ: too slow .nd, therefore, throwing school superinttndents and college presi. would direct the tide to thc South; philosophy from his fr(end, Bolinbroke; Russian invasion. India is no,," a fac­ 93 into the hand. of the oppo.ing guards. dents in every State rcvealed a diver.ity cover but it seem! all to no avail. he acquired dtisn\ from him uncon- tor in the world, and due thought must The guards were not able to wi of attitude, rangin, from a per cent. As to Public Health, "despite the sdously. But that does no�ke Pope a be.,iven to the result were she allowed their forward. and got mixed up with dippproval o( taking royalties from conquest of many phy.ical handic;Ps, philotopher. Furthermore. he tells what to work out her own salvation. Prob- each other frequently. books selr-purchased for a Khool. down'" The Thorne there are m;wy battles still to bc everyone already knows. And because ably, the princes would take over the 29 School forwards were to a per cent. condemnation of aeapt­ both goOd, being able to .hoot as well fought." Some advance hal been his content is well known it is all the rule, and wit� greater despotism than a. ing gift. from pupils. clo.e made: yellow fever is practically better subject maller for poetry. Since now. from a distance up. Seltzer Thorotllh discussion of principles of the side centre being small and quick stamped out, and hookworm, which itEssoy was neither profoqpd nor novel, the Who'. Who From Where ON AtOll the 1733 professional ethic. is needed. concludel a managcd frequently to get her hands once affected eighty per cent. of the thrilled worldMeHforiom of research much recent bulletin of the anociation, on the ball before her opponent The people. hl. been conquered, but a. as as Tennyson'I '/,. Easton, Pa.-In a receht survey of as well .. systemalic-- instruction in the Essoy 0,. guard. were very good, contirl1ntly in- yet no adequate cur� for malaria hu thrilled the period. Therefore, small colleges and 'universiti6, two prd­ Mo,., fOWlo subject in all schools for teachers. That tercepting passe.. The .chool team becn found, and it remain. a great to read the one must fessorl at Lafayette College that thirty-thr� State teachers' organizations was a SOOd deal more unified than drain on the vitality of the people. think very little of the philosophical a�: ::: ::: " e in .mall 'college,s have a better The have alrrady adopted ethical codes is .-. Bryn Mawr and deserved a victory. "If the printed page means noth- ment and consider iU15 poetry. greal of of I getting their names in "Who's lool:'ed upon as hopeful. "Beause their Third Vanity Thorne School ing t9 a large majority of the people, poetic theme which fired the imagination than graduates of the larger uni. and the man: Will peculiar opportunities ror guidin, in­ . ••.•.....•.•..••.. hil member. McCOrmick...... F. :...... Saul then they cannot take an active part of PoPe was paradox of \·tr,ities. This survey based on the · ...... -:toF fluencing the prospecti\-e "f ..all Tatnan,.;.: Folwell in the lifc o£. lhe country. By her own rrtatne5s and his insignificance. It is a proportion of living graduattl who ha\'t mo. .: \'OCItioTll, teache,. have an ad'cc - (Fuliz) reporu, COita Rica is the only one theme full of poetry, instinctive with risen to heights sufficient to qualify them ... poem, tion to lead in the nation-wid- It:nt Ralllon ...... J. C...... J. Scott with less than one-fourth the pas gel . Itwo tIl emotion. Within the sa for "Who's Who." to)Vard higher socialYort levels." Rothermel...... S. C ...... Seitter ninc-tenth. of Guatemala cannot read. which posses. the greatest poetic and in · TiMt� - The college rankinw the highestOut .... points out.-Nl'Ut (Collin.) Despite ·the tremcndous nc.rifices of tellectual value fall into fourteen lines, pd t nt V t IOfInet Wlgth. modern Ham en-S d y in irginia. o Robert Fro. JacklOn_...... ' ...... G • ...... : ...... Camby thc educated "South American., fund. The reader llighti by •• , Gives Exam_ ;0 ' d I' I Rven hundred ....aduat -a mo than' n< f ly CoIl'In...... G ...... B .Sc ott are Ina equate t.h t lit e can be best begin his coosideration of Pope ..... ha\'e their names in "Who·s Who." N. anover .- any o e of !Bishop) done. reading tbe founeen line ))Usages first. None of the large universities with the H , H M t Uea pr cs- au4 one Referee: Miss Brady. Within the lut thirty year., devel· Dr. Root concluded hil lecture by say- sors dislike the idta or riving exams. 34- exception of Harvard, Yale Prince- S. However,' there's who actually- did Sc�tIoi B. M. C., 3S-McCorrpick, opment hal come. They are .11 work- ' that had Pope followed his first_man- • 24; ,Fbeen ,,'crc,�llear the top of the rist.-N. ing toward political a.nd economic in· .t1. ______something about it. Tatdall, )1. Thorne School. ncr he might havc a less volcanic . • . I l· t22. economic no At Dartmouth College Robert FrOlt, Saul. ; Folwell, IS; Fuliz, dependence, at leaat toward Byron but. in his later manner. one o o o was T led HOlt t 1931 Congrell the poet, giving a course in poetry. Varsity Plays interdependence. From the w;'nn;;n8JJ � surpassed him. And, as Byron him. The authorities in.ilted that he givc a of their freedom until recently: the self said in a fiery defense of Pope. 193101 will to, the The Univcrsity Toledo act final examinatMm. Frost dMln't care .. Caribbean was dependent on sugar. diadactic poetry is most difficult kind as holt to the Congress of as he'" wu under orden. he went C t.taM41 rr- ...... 0_ With the abolition of .Iavery a long o( poetry to write. wrote, "00 a I of painful decinel .et in; foreign National Student F"ederation. with Ir- to the blackboard. aqd the they Indian Situation you mosl- co",,,.,diG 1900, to a vin Harbrilht and Howard Dence as that think will please me place in the world thereafter-if ",p;,.1 wa. infroduced, but only Some risked a venture with the extent. Until the average co..congrcSl chairmen. according to the students composed ori«inal dl'U' 0"" . some a play with types .tate borrowed whcn it action taken at the aSixth J\nnual COII- ; others "'rote critical essays; scenario and f A Ian a. supplitd. pantomime .nd p d h.n ; mu. Th ... but O ' the , �...O� .. ' iG��, � � ��!' he� ;"'�O�� �. �������,�, tW�����'� ��',����. t: :�C��N�.��U"'�.�D� The.�� P�. �O �. �" �N�.�����' ���I���� � and out ,-N. S. F. � re- were not.. to delesates at Atlanta. lLL Barbright �F w.lked movement �� � brouaht .up!� � �_� '�1�0ne � some now aad �:. the memory of li..m., somewhat the s train: le t Englanl1 out of India STew, and a calltd the constant support which in one of a small commW'lity like the coli., with The development of the Panama conltitution was attempted which university has given to the federation It .ll happened in Macy'l to and there...... its proper arlOt its own -jo�pouibie is �:;;�":ha��',J:p.:::Oyidtd betkr mean. proved wisu�tlS£u1. owina to Indian- since it. founding.. Every year at lcut alumnae ..orkin&: " �k the fIourilha. If I has ��: :.: lady came up to the: C. p-ad- field where it II and a mean. of con� Wo.lem conflict.. Theciv imodcrate.lizat� were one deleaate been .ent to the ,e:o; :D:�- 1 bat ams, an d asked, "00 on mules?'" we know is) the and men from Toledo have t1 you wail Cas it in the restricted ..... tact with the outside world, thus lacili- anxious for Western Came: (orm . .... nual of individual caricature., tat ion the RTowth of three other fac- extremi.ts wanted fo shat themselves held offices in tbe FedcJ:l:tiou. the polite rtllly, "Cm�inJy, won't shoHh:\ not .V(1oped fl'Olll tora ...... : ...... oI lf41'�!" of lbc- .. f.tJMr 10 t� it be �rody to .aupplcmeal . t�-r�_ ..a&ihd and the for.;':;a '-:�l�U:';."'ai'Yof social satire fr� to pure rruit. which, .ince World War and ItqDe-ntly, a bmpatp civil sene the Coalftl. because

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, • , hila 4 • THE COLLEGE NEWS

hi standing, but well- lie. the unique contribution' of the Two PIaai Offered gh ;.� interetts. who cIt,ire the deeper .centre. It 'is an effort to adapt B�n ConfoeUonery LUNCHEON. TBA. D1NNBR Mawr (or Foreip in sight and broadt.r in ternational progrtssivt: students of .. 0,... out- methods 10 eNu" to &o.,IUe Tb �, BIIk.l $ ....'1. I�l·��.t type Scu .f Y ook w characterize this of college age, and to the CHATrER.oN Eaton and o hich !1led. W.ker Pric::hard Sheldo need The RIIndlPOua ot 1h. OOU ... Olrle of the time for more pcraonal and TU!6 &ond.lebM, DellclOu. SUn a... TEA HOUSIl Chtntr, ltadit\l exRtrtJ in sta�r.rt, ."perlcrr Soda 8e"1ct 9 HI Old '-aIIItIb' Ro.d118' Scholau}1ipt; art available for a limited practical �wledge of vital qua- ror &trw only Mawr are to dram" tours to Eur� MwJ.o-O&ndn& conduct the late sprn,i and summer, I n,""'" of ItudentS, accord- - lions. ' in t and L r to an announc:aJ\Cl1t made by the I advisable � not ntC.tlsary to tw art ,i ven ina u a i.had preparation in either 1. CO"/trt"tU D... of Amua. European university professorJ. Out of Winter . some . ma Lcaaue FraJeh or ltalian. by Tabll! Mr. Eaton. author of Amc.rican Rowrtd DiscH$sioK$ tim. . "The. Motor, bkycle and walking trip. are 2. Q.uJ Actor . Heri- for IUfflnrari6iug. The Round Stage of Today," ' into the surrounding TUlClln tOWOl. « « Into Spring "The and a recent history of Theatre For proanm of the year', work and Tablt discuuioos ate held under tagt," tlJe � hours· . ay lies the sponsmao 's Guild, lead the fourth annual Sum· further inf tion, address Miss Edith the auspices of the pro(elSors, A few wj (J May, ormaDirector ; Eliubeth B. T.doriol paradise ...gir d by fragrant woods me.r Theatre TOl,fr, which htduled Mitt Systrm. with indi· 1tIk ' Ani.tant Dirtc or. ')' 3. TIl. ..il from New York on July The l dividual research and seminar of long_leafed pi . warmed by (he VILLA COLU NA RIDENTE •. es . . will be in Enlland for the 4, _�y 59 . Wid, o/Jpo,.twPlity for dUcwssiolt reasswing;un.Per (,wiling fa irways �. a �zzo", 4. Festival, Orange for the yearly Via uc ' Florence..-11 p'Italy. ' .' th of di�illctwlt in the �u· pea�festival in the Theatrein Antique, in Sal:r;. wi m.,.. J. Ross go American Representative : Mrs. S. N. �eational world and the world of in- -00 S D. Reinhardt Futinl and in grass tees)... tennis couns... rid ing 1750 Harvard .st., N. W., Wuh- bur.Heidelberg, for Mtmich. the: Bayreuth for temational endeavor De,,:, D. C. (membe" , •• polo••. shooting ... atehery. And, ai - -their (edival andInterv iews are ' from the of the League KUOI"Is. to Odeber I Wickford, I. of Nations and of the Cammittte comlTll.nd, the luxurious accom· ... with Sir Barry Jaclu.un. June i R. Y.9� be,", arranced SUMMARY OF THE CENTRE'S Intellectual Co-operation) , who Archibaki Flower. Max Reinhardt. modations of the Carolina Hotel. • PROGRAM (Of' , Sir Craie, Capeb, and others. · are our cutsts at the Centre for a SpecialGordon featurit thewill include visits A-'>.!'j",,�- we;ek or more, not merely to 1«- • « '. .. • .,111 back- I l. SINdy 0/ .l.ogNQg,I-Frenc:h, PH ,fjWM,J.., " UJIdI,,,,,. stage. to investipte thotral equipment ture, but ·to give opportunity for Din. Italian, Gt.r�Particularly1M as a Wltl, """m,GfrI",,1 Pi.,luff'SI, N. C and the will informar discussions and COf1Ver�· and machinery, party enjoy of communicat� and un- tion. Speei41 HoIid", Sports pays both sidd of the footlighll. means from de:rstanding bet ou studmll lite ,eor. si... of tile· ,nJfCi- outsllnding exponent " • and the students.ween profeuors -and S. DNri,.g SbtkSontheatre am.and CheneY, author of (:olUdriu of Ewro,e art vili" d '," of "'The The- peopl� with whom we into /101bring the student in contact with atre-ont nd Years of Stage c:omt; thou.. contact. ' ,,"0 ration" the recently published Dec:o-"New some of their social and educational 2. Study of Ihe History-Economic, World ArChitecture,"aDd will lead the Rut- institutions, to give them the op- Social, Educational, i ' sian 'Thealre"'lrour. Thi. novel tri""sails tunily to meet of the stu- tural, especially of dents of these some.countries, and to from New York on May 9 in order to ' France, Germany, Austria. and have conferences from men e.pt- reach the Soviet Republic while the the- • . Italy, and certain aspects of the dally 6tted to explain their coun- atr" are .'·11 I eslr;...... to I open. 1 I' d ' ...... 1 history of ""'_ .-.-.,.' . ,mall., na- tries' probltms. All travel i. in givt .tudtnts a f ..dnaling oppprtunity 1 ,h . tions Europe, 0such ill Denmark, the nature of a laboratory observa· to view RUliia a. well to s�udy out- of as Czec:hoalovakia, Switzerlancr.- yugo- eXAmples of the Itew drama. mmdinc slavia. C-Studlion.ePl ts- ___ the -'!.K dirtctol' will give lectures 3. .ii(f' ' 00 SINdy of tlu Sewl,turt, Ar ile The stooents are, for the most part, experimental wmd'' heatret� c otller"arl$ cJ. - will be frequent cornpari50nJ with at on. +-�. .. means of tmderstandiollil the culture had uni butni"'- two years tne�Continental mtthodt and with the '" and th6ught of various nations.. rat -r COLLEGs-INN- AND ,'EA ROOM· -:--1-- theRUllian school prtcedini and following iolJ:.. � Stud, nrtoj,. "pcts of D-Plocn- , the ..tork Stanislavsky. Rehearsals 4. 01 Ih, Ais- of tory 0/ Ih' M'iJdfe Ag.s. the The Villa Collina Ridente is itself SERVICE 8 A M. TO '1:30 P. M. witt attended and con£tr will be aissoPlcc, Ru- ences the Fre,uh Rtwltltio,., an asset in this work, by it. heki bewith " leading producer TheatreS both Daily and Sunday .. and the Ni,u·twll" entlury, in situation and because it is run along to be visited include Meyerhold order that the .igni6cance of to- the lines of the pusant-propridor A LA BREAKFAST atre, ldOICOw Art Theatres,lM Kamc!rny CARTE day's history be better undcr- Sllum, "Mezzadria," adopted "'Theatre, Blue Blouse Troupet, rna)' LUNCHEON, APTERNooN TEA ....ND DINNER stood. throughout Tuscany, This in i\lel£ of Satire in ),(olCow,_a.nd Ukran- A LA. CARn AND T.... OlE D'Hon Social is a .tudy ohertain existing social ian National Theatre. B-Af"IIod,- The methods are many, and herein conditions. Folders and full particulars GUEST ROOMS PERMANEN'I' AND TRANSIENT 'can obtained from the rama Travel D Bureau, 15 West 44th Street,League New York. THE VILLI' COLLINI' RlDENTE A Centre for European and International ... Study Tht Villa Collina Ridente. a centre for study, is to y.oung women, students open " . and recent graduate. of American uni­

V'enities, woo desire to acquaint them­ • • Ioelves with certain lOCial, ec ic and onom • • • • II• • political upects of Europe. - - - - caltre di reCted bymodern Miss Edith May,The: i. .ponsored by Eurape:an and American "tducatorJ, and endorsed by the Italian

.. Go emmmt. The of the work at the villa is ? • not to aim spccialill:, but to mtd. the serve. • • pressing needthe of the average isolated student who desires to lay a foundation , for future study, and to obtain a general Which is wider, the gate or the and practical knowledge of certain asptCu of preltnt�y Europe. i. e., its ••L ••• apeningr Maybe your eyes life, culture, history, and "Jts interM- tional problems, fooled you that time .. lhi. end, the fo'iowing methods of instruction1'0 ate tmployed: the permanent • . staR' is drawn from the schools of teo· ' nomic and lOCial and of bistory and literature of thesc:"tenc:es University of Flor­ /' Lectures are ,given in English. ence. French and Italian. Futthtc' instruction pffertd French. Italian and German. • andis theselansuagesin are ustd 'in the YO UR EYES MAY FOOL YO U liIe of the .i Il... The prO«f'lm i. 'Unusual and unique in that it i. suppl ted by profeslOC's and BUT other repres.en ementative from various men of Europe, who .s \'i,itOf's . parts come '- the villa and who �ture and jnforma( dilC:ussion groups on questions pertaining to the problems culture their re.pectin countries. , , •• of Y() U� TAS·T , The ,hldy complded travel: E .Jte//S th e· Truth !�I- first stud)' trip,u of ftVerl.1by 'weeks, various parts of "luly ; tlie of a month, to Austria, CztchoslovaJcia;Itcond, .. many. and Switzerland. In • city P'tance' i. iven l to meet ";,��:: opportunitywho interprd the questioru r men to their natioN. lfhe diftrsc Ii"," of work are con­ I . ver� wee.k of Df MllDER. . AH,D • ��Nations a at .tooy BETTER TASTE I...tque_ilitated of by theGenna. aid of the IhIdy is of. aatioMl by member. the Sec- • " , , . raariat.OHpen aad oftioa . the Committee on - • IechaINo _ punued • ....lilies ""'"' of . aimilar • ..... die Mowt aDd .... &. • is ofI'ered toAmeriQn n- _ ...... • r Vitia • ". _..... '1. lit .. Co1Iiaa •., t .. to ....,. .. 1ct) I 'Ir ...... _ - •

MARCH 11. 1931 THE COLLEGE NEWS

. Cia Basketball Games .... Answers Miss Park the bald. "relpectful" requests th .. make so often. Far bell Beginning the second round of .the in- n Italy. near Rimini. It is CON'J'INUSD FaOM r".GB • the petition. ·howc\ler. is the co · t.frI;Ja.u g:ums last Wwnuday 1933 brat 1. I smallest r�public the world. ON": in '1""" "', To disclose new inform:uio 1931 by a score of 31-13. Berkeley was Francis to. Spain. it might properly come under either. 2. I, ask the colleg6 its rcasons or t the star "f the e�cning, scoring 24 of her Catherine of ArailOfl. The ·former decided that jt wa.s a col- J. '.. its own the student body wou team's points. In the game of 4. lege problem. AttOnd . Shelley's find the conference useful. Ho'no evening 1932 and 1934 wag«l a hotly­ Alollt Blone... In conncction with a student peti the Colorado Spring!. . has lOItered an intelligent par contcstM battle which t'ndro 19-19. 5. tion reeeived in the last wcek. iss Dantc's �l nership between older students an 1933 1931 6. r IHJrrHo. Park suggested that petitions _ would 7. D esden faculty. We should aim towards th Dcrkelcy ...... Macatcc . 6e more effective if they gave reasons ...... F . Alaska. The famous Pan of the intclligcnt CO-oI)Cration in all tt: Candce...... F...... Talnall 8. Trail of for their requests and weTe not merely relationships of college lif C '98. White ...... , ...... J . . .. :...... Benham 9. Isiria. Famous for its Roman • ...... • Leidy ...... S.C...... Dixon arch and amphi\hcatcr. . . .. Lefierts...... Finckley School . . . G...... 10. Patrick I-Jurl�y, Ray Wilbur. of Nursing (Wod) . Oook. . Yale ...... �..... of University Grasl ...... ·�toore II. William Pelll�s father. :...... G . . . th� (Lefferts) _ Prof�S5;on for An island ill the Baltic. once A.• Berkle . 12. Sco{e: 1933, 31: y 2.2.2.2,2.2,- member of the Hanseatic League. Coll�ge Wom." • ' i \ 2.2.2,2,1,2.1; Candee. 2.1,2.2. 1931. 13: 13. A musical composition based otcrutfil in theof .oc:iaI modem. ICientific Tatnall, 2,2.2,2,2,1; Macatee 2. one short Illusical phrase, tak�n up agendei IUYKe m nth•. each \"oic� in turn. �and';: ,'arledeourte .e :f.proervldln.-lence 1932 1934 14. &>phistical r�ason illg. 1:��;�:� etud,. meth_t, leada ;�;;���BA.CItELOR OF NCRSING ...... M . 1. Pettus...... Daniels A Sienese painter of thc R n,;;,-! F ...... , Canleron...... F ...... BUller 15. Preseftt .tudent hody Include. "rad­ Brice...... sa.= ...... j.C ...... S. Jones . 16. From one of Ruptrl Brooke's uftteaof leadln" collecel'!.Two or mo... . yea,. of approved college- work re­ ...... Reinhardt ...... Jarrett sonnets. Quired for al1milllllon.for A few IIcholar·ad­ . � .s.C� . . .hlpe available •..tudenta with (M itchell) 17. King John. . Charles Mar· vanced quaUftclltion .. .._.G • Mueller .. . Smith tei, Frederick Barbarossa, Willianl The eduell.tlonalOIHm f& cllltlee of Ta.le . .. . •...... E. University Ilfe to quallned .tu­ Davi50II . . . . Bishop Orange. dent . 1Ied!« . . . G...... • • •••,d . .... or ",I...... Sco'te, 1932: 19-Cal1leron.. 1,1.2.2,- island of Molokai, in 1·'Of (;;... t0l(&e... T"e••4 DEA.l.tora.HN •• IIofI � .... Nrt "" .. .. T-. , . ..I'. 2.1',2,2,2, 1; Pettus, 2,1; 1934, I9-Dan· 18. Add .., .My '01 Tltryunb Ml_ .. ... Hawaiian ftlands. NURSING .otl". �, r.otick�T_'".. i"" .... Ihi"lcoboroOQ INN iels, 2,Z,?, 1,1; Butler ... .L.2,2.Z. 1 ,2. 19. Louis Theof SCHOOL of InII...... ""'" ...... •• lI ...r in uo � '3 2d', 1934 3d's 8.h.... POOln I(nwllonooIo· ��� ... inun,i,'c course in Ittrellri�1 � cIrI0>1 T_rw ,"" .. Morison ...... F. Jones IiH, ,,,,",,. . 8 I p ..., OUI p"pares cOllege v� 1000h f.-, .... "'''''''''. _101', ...... 1'· ..."hI I"",, ....w. ..,II ...... F ...... t . M lui.,' •• l m. '''omens tu '.'P> 0&-,..,. &f,..J4IIi,. ,..,. Russer ...... Smith ,,'",alnlent I �.... for luperior� i i in n � . .. . . b koowolu-J, "' .. . Ai" hIt.. ,Cif/rII jIf ...... F.. .. . D. pro pot IfonterCf ,ngu i ' Chishohn ...... j.C ...... " .. Hurd ,Va lnc ~ Cn . ! l h'. � III .t. ...._h __ to , .,.J """' ,, d f'ta 1003.for fP O�I' ...... s C . tiona Ita/ret! gndu:uu ofE-..: .... dw- anUllo 101ft...... 5 uCl then • A ue 0 i . .. W.'Lancaster ven .. vid 1 i n ...... s{ :: · . : �. I nd j ua l r o , ___ l...��"' ;O!� :�: : : � . ESia bli.h(d ...... G O In ...... �y�.k�·,,"' �3�4�1 1 ...... G...... � Chal£ollt . . .. H�ask� ell� I� SCHOOL . . . . . I Telephone, Score, 19" 0I, 222 I 2' Ardmore 2966 \jO THE C F. YOUNG � _«cnL 'f" : )3-'1,\ " ,.. for Secre/arltll T'lfi"i", "-- 'T'" ,,",Tu.In.uncTIMISl'OlT R ._. ... . _... usscr, 2 193' 1 1 .:l.�'�':.;':':"�.:N�.�Y:\jO". !",,,;;;�_�;;;;_� ;;;;;__.�.. .. ;;;;� ' I;:"'" . 2' 't, ",�tiSOIlC S. ,,_.2 , ; � Smith, 2,2, 1. O ��������������;;;;��=Mw:,,:':.�s:"::l� .:'r.:_:�R. :,:....: �_���- ;;;� 193Z 2d''s 1934 2d'; J. \Voods ...... , ...... Allen ...... F " . . . Woods . . . . ?III. . . . . F...... Graton...... ) .C...... Nichols Frallchot...... S.C. ... itclicll : ... :...... �I Alexanderson ...... G ...... , (Milliken) . (Yoakam). Sanborn ...... DuallY . G . Score. 1934: 26-Allen. 2.2.2,2.2,2,2,- , 2.1; Polachek. 2,2.2,1.2. 1932. 10- M. Woods. 2. ,2; Woods. 2�. 2 J. Standings of the First Team,S W. L. T. 1933 ...... "' ... 0 0 1932 ...... 1 0 I 1934 ...... I 0 I 1931 ...... I 0 0 Standings of the Second Teams W. T. L. 1933 ...... -4 0 I '1934 3d's ...... 1 I 0 1932 ...... ,...... I 0 0 1934 ...... 1 0 0 Student Congress Deplore; Subsidization in Athletics Winding up Ihree days of heated discuuions and parliamentary fights studept leaders at the Sixth Annual Congress of Ihe National Studcnt Fed­ cration Atlanta, Ga., December to Januarya1 3, passed three resolutionsZ9 on the cvils of college athletics which summarize general student opinion on the problem. The- resolutions were as follows: 1. That the Sixth Annual Congress - THREE 'KINDS or of the National Student Federation of CHOCOLATE COATINGS America deplore the subsidizing of college athletc In'the Prutige p ...ckasc •• 2. That the Sixth Annual C,,"gm. ! chocolatcs wc dcr fine cxampluof --.Wth, Nafional-Student Fcderation of t ree kinds of Whitman's MILK America on record as favoring h go coatinss: award of scholarships on the basis regardlCl8 of participation Vdnill. CAoco/." .:, Ravorcd with extra-curricular activitie vanilla be.ns. . •. That the Sixth Annual C()O,�",, ! 3. Milk Choco/.'r� �.df with rich of the National Student Federation whole milk. America empower it. officer. to 'make a tfaorou4h investigation of the, � Srn;iSwut ChOCJdte.with half ; bility of sta ing a nation·wide c��: : the usu.' amount of sUSA', de.­ , , ' ence of colre ge presidents, athletic: pendins upon the .weetnes. of rectors and student leaders on I the u� and slvins rich mercialism and profe.sionalism in col­ chocolate u.na. • lege athletics. Thnc arc rcc_ .'

Cet Y Win rich lUI milk,. creamy • OUT Own or chocolate• color, and Kmi_rwnt, Rr.nt yOU One d.rlc.cr th.n the othc ....

REMINGTON � � CoRONA PORT,NILE

Wlll'l'ltlAN'S 'AMOUS CANDIIS, ARI" SOLD ..BY Bryn Mowr Powers H. B. W.n... , Co-Opcrldive B.,...Mow< CoU-. Ian, .,...... Kind,,' Pbannacy.... . , " Rq'll'", Pa. .... Mawr P. .,. Mawr 8rya M. . P .. Society B.,.. M 8ryaColleae : Bryn Coaf� ...... , MoW< Sni11. Condy Shop No. Boob! SUU d .... Book 5< .... .,., ...... -. . 8fya Mnrr, , P.. ... 1 ...... ,.. Mewr, Pa. , •

PrIll. 6 THE COLLEGE NEWS MARCH II, 1931• ' . ITS' AUTO SUI'PUU · 8nH MA.... FRBNCH Summer School , Haverford JEANNE .. ld.nUal - on ""eAcb THB P� BRYN MAWR R 1, Q , Q. SUPPLIBS CO. _Oata". •• -. H!NRY ATHERTON PROST, ColI�,� with ... 06j«t , Al/ Mu" &"'t4 lilt ,.. /lo / Awau. __ Edith Man. ... C\.. ...'I'OI. D"tclO'P� , , Tdcpbonc, M, 11)9 . AI .. �F � Eyn, , 8t4 ,� H eMII'C." !If" .sq.... . in ll'�.. �'Irrn :WT 1M ' , B. BRYN MAWR,. nt7 H,n.,J .. , , . , ;; ; = = , " ,4£.e= , , - ' , --- I, , • , i ' All we sp end ,2,000,000'

" c t� 'prit. AMEL cigar#?ttes •

• • . •

, the UMIDOR A�K in\' DeW

-- r " . . have been In the tobae«:o butlneM long 0,1 the tobacco in Camels, whcthu you buy nir-t1ght could give the df!8fn41 protection. WE a seol time down here at Wlnston·Salem and we take them Wiruton-Salem, Dt-nw'r Timbuc­ mea..ure, 1f'ltile (,Olftiy, In Of' (D) cuuld rcli.,.. a lot or pride in the_ quality or the ellarett" we too. But up to now then' hIlS It y real This fn cUlldition1)(' . 1)II'f'" nr on to keep Camels prime for nBak�. �dift'erenoo in the condit.ifm. of the by ut cj�nrettc" le88t three months in UIlY cUrnutt·. , tho time retlChC41 till' JUnnIUOF. ' .. 'WbUe we have spent a good many mUllon they If you huveJl'reCh ;nil'Alt I)('nt, IIII' Ruvor ,.:rul.!l l,.,luw dollars advertiting Camels, we've always held The and mUcin"!,,,, lillt· tohacco by the Pittsburgh l.uhorutury of not 1� Te� till� to the old· 1ll8hloned .idea thot the thing that depend upon the retenlinll il� flf "" ,,,rtl/� will 8nOW you the exaet rc!lults their added, moisI.ure COll I"", whi" h i... )rime uf ex­ reo.lly counte is what we put into our cigarette . I . at haustive study. Rbout, ond not what we ...y aoout it. ten (..'ent. PCI' -J In spite or our" grcU l ulways to make II we know anything aiM?ut tobacco, and we pnin!!l Camels left the faclory with jUJ;t the a:igbt think "'e do, Camels contain the cboiceat Turk­ • sure amountofnaturul Jnoisturc, no dgareUe Jmck­ ish and the mellowest, ripest domeatic leaves aile had e,'cr yet been designcd that could pre­ that money con buy. vent diat Jlrecious 1JJ0Qture front drying out. In ract ,,'e have every· reason to proud of a8 be the quality of Cameb th�y come from the �IERJ<:IlJ'e threethhip about a cilllre ltc that . raetory, but remark oran old rriend oroun ean sting the tongue aud "unkindly burn tbe­ the from Denver eome time ago ewphui.zed a point throat. tha t hat been the problem of the cigllJ'ette (I) e.. ., ." .., ... induttry for yean. ,,. ,, • (2) P.r""',, .. _ ••, "e" ".,r" II , "'It I. be Inhaled the Imoke from a Camel we he. .. , rUubur,h. Te.tin, wbtJrarory Ae •• Neeo 8 . ,.,,'IIeht.t. e'*HIII- Cameicllllumidor",.t fdJOCfl ,,.,,pldoollydellrerlf __ gave him in our office. one morning, he sighed 1.,, _,-.. .IIQUO. you. cl,oreU.eM tha&. only tlu! iu pritflf1 P"ck CfJ",fjtiUIL with very"evident enjoyment and then .s'ed. (3) , fo yu" jokingly, "What is this, a .pecial blend re­ A ".re",,11 IIr"... "..IIUIo' •• •.".t.re t.... _ hee. De t..I •• t.r.' may su.1'e we gave thle report a lot of eerved for Camel executivel?" e rh.t1.. or er:.,..r.t' Yo u be •• re ••. careful study. We checked it aod re-ehecked it "Certainly not," we told him "Thh package Always certain of the quality or our tobuCC08 and then we went aheod. We tried this device . thie "du..8tJe8x" or Ca';cIe was .bought ut the comer etore- we had already mude'Cumel a cig­ and that. At 188t we met 8UCOO88. The air-tight morning." , arette by the use�C a epecially dceigucd vucuum wrapping involved the dCligulug of , SI)Cciul cleaning a" para tu8 exclmh'c with our (u cl,ory. pl'OCe8l§e8, �I'ecial macWuelJ. "Well," he .aid, "I've been adyed in the wool t2,OOU.- Camelemoker ror a good many yean, but upon Now, If we could perreet a package tlUlt wuuld Tbat costs a lot of m.oney, more tball 88 000 y I my .oul l never got a cigarette 88 good as t.hlaIn actually act a humidor and retuin th.� nutu­ the ea , but after you hu\'c i iiI'S" r r ..d Denftr. If yoJ..w6ii1dilve the or the world ral moiAture content, then Yuma, Arizona, CameLi packed tbis modern new .....ar we - lUI' eell reat could enjoy: you willa,fee i a fineinvestmen t. kin'd of Came" you here in Wineton­ cameLs u much us we do here at , . , the tlore t � Salem, you oUlht to have all the elcarette buel­ Wlnaton.SaJem. For some time nowevery Camel that has left neu ... the Ie�' 'We kn�w what we wanted., our factory h,!.'�e out in this new HumJdor _ We trbd mony thingit. We Pack.

• ..ked the Pithlburgh Testing l-'We have &aid !,othing about it until no , .tatement �Imply em­ � �T Laboratory.to help make 8ure your dealer would able to tUppJy' ., pbubed" again the ct,arette U8. be lOU when the gOOd neW8 came ou"t. induetry'. most important After many experimen and tA problem. Th�' more we humidity tesls covering all Camel 8moken or course ha,'e )already ! di8- thougbt &bou't the ewer method. of packing clgarettee covered that their ravorite cigarette is better h, we were tba t 'be dead" came the detailed report or and m'Uder now than ever before. .0meholC,ow.a right, and tha t which this is the net; If you �n a Camel smoker, them j�t , 't try eomethln. muet done. there really Ie between be (A)No fI,ri.tinSci80rette pac"­ ..to eee what a dUfereDce • Denver ....ntf: getting a fair .8e, includin8 thMe UJNJPped. banh, dried out tobaoco and a properly con­ ciltionecJ, el,aretle. break. Neither in faet w.. in &iouine paper or or"i� • r

piewho really knew how &oocI adequate prot.eetioD d4Jference Camelicouldbto,were tberolb evaporat.jea;-'" , If/renee. � "-bt in Wineloa ..Salem. J here. (8) AU ...... pac_ we're prejud ODd. dIG orcoune That ... due to a factor DO tend to dry out T'fIpidly froID We alw.,.. .. Camel .. the ha belleYeci that c::Ifafttl.e, JD&DulaCluru had wwld'. dsuette. e.er beeu able the01.1 they"'"reIe.-' &om Mot to ractory. ' • CIOOh'ol. it. the N__ """'" , dlh. NaturaU1 ...... DO _r., ...... J... t ..... t to ea-.. _ new (c) Only• pNH>/ ,..,unelf iii - "'''iW 10 the qualit7 ..., ... .."""" 17 ...... lIIimWo.P ...... d -.Jf,..,udoD't _.

COMPANY L J .•DNOLDS TOBACCO...... • JP'bu1toft- /V, C