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Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Bryn Mawr College News Collections, Digitized Books

1937 The olC lege News, 1937-03-02, Vol. 23, No. 16 Students of Bryn Mawr College

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Custom Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1937-03-02, Vol. 23, No. 16 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1937).

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, , " ,THE "COLLEGE NEWSCopyright ', 16 BRYN VOL. XXIII. No. MAWR AND WAYNE, PA" TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 19J7 TRUSTEESCQLLE9E,-OF- tn7 PRICE BRYN MAWR lo. CENTS.' , . " • =

BRYN MAWR BEGINS FOUR· POINT• ' EX�ANSION

DISTRIBUTION OF THE FIFTIETH ANNrVERSARY l·esled th-�·n �1"wr, 1'lIrk 33,900.00 with ill 'I1Htle the Expenses. the President's Fund, Tiffany Cardt:nl ..... Huxley. Pruident 0/ the ClaN 0/ }937 definill'Hlilioulleelllcli1 to Ihe.JoIlu.lic'lll!. hlSI Hillde il outy to nlll'lwer the n(>{'(h� . III ...... : ...... , .... 8,000.00 l'ccognition of �he .amount of work l�ossill!(> IInl Jane Brownell Fund � 11 rev­ wlliell PI'l'SSPt\ the in lilst fel\" but. Susan M. Kingsbury Rese.Uch Institute Assist- they accomplish in a year was IU1V(' ':III"II('sl UpOiI co1J('J,!c the ."\ (·III"�, ...... � ...... • 20,695,00 IItSO In {'xtendlilid illl('rcsls nudrO"Otll"l>eS. antship . .. . l'cl1itllon to.a., undergraduate attending stl·I'nglh('n...its .... . , -: . 25,090,72 the Alumnae Council in- Washington J)( /illit(' pillllll-rOr tile ere-dion of �('ie'1J:e buildilll! provi. Master School ot MUllic Fund ...... the nml ror Ella Riegel Archaeological Fund of December, last ThtfrsdllY, Friday and Satuniu),. simi:; tlil' I.ilu·/lry 1 11 st$'eeillt ilivestiJ!lItion oom.� .i� ••• ••••• •• •••••, •• ••••••••••• wing', c!rllwu 1 hy II 1936 , , , 17,000.00 , Their enthusiasm and interest in ul1 lind uPJlro\"etJ Illf'elilll! Hfmrd • , 81 1\ millC'c. Jo:Pf'Cilli cd· III(' fir Trusll.'CS (Based on present value of stock). the activities on the campus fall' aur- any similar exhibition among r------, : Directors, are now ready to put I • gradullte and undergraduate stu- �� : , execution...... •...... , , .. . '1,0�12'!96', 7!I J� ��tB; Their e id a8 m r8 of TOTAL I SSoel8 Two additional r�nmlcndalion8 - AI ° " � . � bc I!CI' ' F O "' ------' 'p, °i", " '• P - - - 'O f.'Q m - - - umnae A lIon 18 to k rhe ou m. o po"n o , the , by the committee were alllO ap- 1 Dryn Mawr at the top of the ladder, ncw construction and expansion ,c.onstruction to Begin the directors: one deaigned ,------.,-.--;11��" they are willing to do any amount program voted by the Board of work to help the college maintain Trustees and Directore are: effect the long-desired increase in In June, Says Mr. Stokes Yel tob ..e Done- its posicion. It is hard tor most of I-The erection, commencing salaries an.d Pensions; and to sci· The construction progrllm of who are still undergraduates immediately, o"f a two-l!tory to eXl1lain p.nd further lh'e .i nter- Mr. Francis J. Stoke;:- elected last the Board of Directors and realize just how much the college 'cnce building to house geology of the college in the broad field of . autumn to' head the Buildings and Trustees is ready to move ahead. to the alunlnae, but if any stu· and chemistry. II'"'''''' present and pot.cntial contacts. Crounds Committee of the Board of But there is much yet to be done had seen the effect made upon II-The erection of a wing to lllhom art.. tormer will call {or the addition Djrectors and greatly relponsible for to build the Bryn Mawr ot the by the announcements in Milill the.. Libl"&1'}' to house and COI1- the present has kindly sent one hundred students and the future. The following is an in· speech and Mrs. Slade's reo al·chacology. At of unitrin lind a I)asement �to:a �������I�;';;;,tii����·f:;; income 'from,::,.�-; which· will be --'- views: tl!e PJ;Oject for tunds must Fund, sh(l; would have understood why soon as pOlIslble. -jii;-;;i;;::n.:r, . this t>urJ�herea8 the latter "The final design of the two-science ·'yet be td\md: they az:e willing to devote so much HI-The acquisition from col- I . $100,000 ,c«:om,m.:ndla'ion has already hccn put building is still under consideration (1) The other for time and energy to the various col· Jege funds as an inveatment tot" 1 100 effect by the apllointment of Caro- and revision. While it may be that op floon for Library lege projects. Everyone was dis- new dormitory to house 8S the t two ¥ Chadwick-Collins a Director at the exterior will be of gray brick, that Wing. tressed that Miss Park could not be new students and an ultimate Large. is not definitely determined. It would (2) The-two wings lor biology there herself to deliver the very illl- increase of the charge (or lui· 600 Measurements for the science build. be my expectation that if we are not am! physics·mathematics. R,ough 111""'1a,,' announcements in her apeech tion to dollars (the Vassar which will contain two sclencea disappointed in the estimat.e& of. cost.. estimate: 5600,000. Friday night, but a severe ease or figUre), thus providing an ex· (3) academie 00.000 for the laler addition-Rf wpuld commwoo in _J�ne, and Additipnal ap- fiu pre.\'entcd her from attending. tra income of dollara a WID"¥.., biology, physics and would doubtlesa mean that it the sciences. for M',,'iing Opens Informally year for fac�lty "'Salaries and that pointmenta for II1 have alread� been would be completed early in the sum· art and , and in· pensions. 100 meeting was opened tormally out on its site on tbe upptr -The a me�, of 1988. structors for the new stu: Wrh,,,.�ay afternoon b1 Ida Lauer IV appointment of ' 1921, field, and it is hoped.that the "It is my h ope that Ci)nstructlon dentl. Darrow, the new presl'd eot 0, new officer ot the adminislra- $277,000. will be ready fOf occullancy the new library wing can be com· (4) Wyndham debt: Alumnhe Association. Sherry lion lo represent the college in 1938. IS PI the the fan of Definite plans menced d unng" th' summer. ans II 'S6, attempts to make its work . (5) Book s for a d cpa rt- Matteson, al.so Tepresentmg" Ih e been made 'tOT the conatructlon call tor a stone Tudor style of archi- known and to interest its old ments, particularly for art and· "UlnderllTl,d"ale Point ot View," made at least lhe basement and flr'St two tecture similar to the present L·bI rary I and potential friends in its archaeology. excellent appeal for a closer asso- of the Library wing, th e th'nI I building. plall8 and needs. 1 The above are necessary, In � : be'w..n the alumnae and the 1'100'" urth floors to be added when � :� �; fo "The matter of increased lighting addition, the college should like , �� ; �� : and explained how 1 . � : �-�------I ;;ii ci' �1 tUQds are available. , facilities is under consideration. include the 1 I l ; the new program to activities at the 'Deanery are doing Dean Favors Increase Miss Park's spe«h follow8: Whether it will be'met by the instaU- -roll ing, tor which there are o bind these ·two gro4.ps closeI' � � Put together, the reaults of the ment of additional facilitiea or by the nd funa's ja� present: �:��h:';� . Mary S. Sy{ceney, sped.ing In Quota of (6) - Drive form an astonishing purchase of current from the Public New lighting for the col- II graduate school', described the Service has not yet been det:eMnined. of new intcrellts made poRaibls lege.(7) ' Ieeling among the graduate Feels Average of Four The present inadequacy is 80 pressing old interests strengthened. Today Workshop for art courses that they are a class and not In Too - Each Major Low conllot present to you all the widely that a solution must be found as soon and for stagecraft. : :� The incorporation of (8) 11 {���� � additibns to our re80Ureefl, but a8 a satisfactory.sonclusion ia arrived Squash courts. ; into ' a haU solely for gradu. L9) shall mak'e known the immediate .' , at, as well.a.e·the necelJlary finanCeB. Extension 0( the college Mrs. Manning. in discuaaing 0' ,011c- lon students has done much to cement . I e- ', I'1 , P"o@, t PRESENTED TO LIBRARY were... . that at not Trustees should be the son of the col· ;"" resent equipment could take Rockefeller. least, waf Grove given paues; other un- " , � going t o be fit lor habitation by O!- lege'. first president. �_r. Charl 500 students with. few more dergraduates had to p� five cents , priJlj.ing and all who l - 1 ...... :<0 ... Lovers of fine '1-' tober. The pro embl 0 , pravi'd' IIIg y Ience, Rhoads haa lent Tu N�. the 0 l the I"pmen WI I � apiece. E en with this onv�n I" for , �.hl" inlereJlted In typogrllph Y home for th-.-inqRfting students soon there were minor tragedies 'When Itu- lowing statement: We will probably have to was . I 0 L to kntlw" that through the een- became acute. It met by taking "The directon are exeeedingly glad ments f younge: men dents failed to catch the bu.. bee appotn "rooily of Mr. Wilfred Dancro'ft and over-the whole PeDnaytvania Railroad that at lut the coII ep b as n able ao I By the end of the spring vacation, a . elder members �n be mea.sed Morgan, of the LalUlton Hotel in the village of Bryn Mawr. ! B Was ed to make start on a progra� th �t Rockc eller all d ared to be more for their major students. Company, the Librari bas long delayed. hile we Thil structure, Summit Gr01H. since ready ·tor occupancy. The whOie hall haa been 80 W COnOlNed on PacrThr.. out all our dreams at presen¥ with the tY(M specimen torn down, then stood in a park be-- h been �nishcd in cypraa-wood oj cannot carry ad ,,:,e to books ol that orpniution. ThNe tween Summit Grove Avenue and xquisite creamy.tan, especially lhls momen!, �t to. be able Don't For ! an e contain examples of hundreds of vari- Railroad Avenue. It bad, in ita day, n ot RoCkefeller's e a n n a ng a SEGOgdVIA.... cut in o e Mr. ��� • ANDRES �gt � �:...... :!� � e ous taces:. inelllding .orne ft fteen de-- been a country retIOrt for the Phila- .few details h,d not been UOiI leve 1, � once. swamps. A sipcdfor the Monotype Company by delp In t w s c b not been the a�praval ol th� who are IDter· in hian&. 1908, i a aced. completed-the plumbin ad ua be�p carry Tonight at Goudy, usually acknowled«ed .. ramabaclde and a flnt.-trap. )In. tested, the waUs had not been papered, ested In the coI� will Goodhart, 8.30 artiat lbrougn mple ...... greattlt and rnott verafUe 7.:'-- Marion Pari8 Smith. PreMl1t Profes- and ahades for the windows had the prognm to Ita co - s.. ThiI waa ·IlM Nn- y.",.,. the biliory of .or of EeonomiCl, who then the C\rnItUIIa" 011 ....Two tlon." eft J. BBOAU. typ6-dnip.

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• • - "'ge THE COLLEGE NEWS . Two "

Al leniion, Tryouls! THE COLLEGE NEWS 1114) Theaters The final date tor the sub· (Founded In . the People, runda1/. Ma, eli f.-Mr. en­ mission of tryouta Thetor the'College �di­ j PubUahed F Chcstnut: A" Em"!!1 0/ wMJI:l,.Ea.ter durin .. the.. andCOllee. durlnc Tear (ueeptln.. durin. Thank-a:lvlnr. wick's talk on cprrent7.30 events.' torialNeWII Board of OrlatmBryn.. and lIolldaythe Jolalulre Building.uaminalion weekJI) In the Int.rNt with Walter Hampden.Toe" o( lIaw, Collere .z. Wa,.ne. Pa .. and 81')'n Common Room. p. m. has been10, set for6.30 Wednes· ala,", r ... Forrest: On YOI(r with �ay OolltICe. Andres Segovia,guitarist, 8.30will day, Mareh at p. m. full,. protected Bolger snd Tainara Geva. I. b,. Goodhart. They may be given to H. m&7The 00llece " Newa wholl,. 01' cop,.,iCht.without written Nothing p6rmiMlon that appeara of the In give a concert. , Mo,.;..----­ Fi.lf�· 10 It reprinted elUt.,. In part �.M. htft-in­ . . Marv:k Maid 0/ New. Hoek, or Edllor·ln·Chld. - 8. - I • WiJntlJdali. TheThe Aldine: Salem, with office. Tryouts are re· delte Colbert and Fred MacMurray. Editor-i7t-ChiefFISHER, '37 • eighth and last lecture on minded that their criticisms, � N«tl(f'6 o/.Man. HELtN will be given by Arcadia: Mind. Your Own BUlline'8, features and editorials need not New. !o.,. Ed"tor 137 Cop.,-1:rlitor'3S" Mr. Weiss. Music Room, 7.30 with CharlesGrccII .Ruggles. be E. JANI SIMPSON, JANmTHoM, p. m. Boyd: UUht, with Ertol CAST FOR GLEE CLUB , March 5. Editor. R '3S! - League Flynn. LltcI'ezia'.. " Y 11. MIKADO ANNOUNCED ElJtANOtL BAILENHARTM80N, '3a....'38 MA ft.MORRILL, MEICEJ. Europa: Borgia. )l'G"Satltrduy,lcalc .. .Deanery. March m. Meade'. MARGERY C. AN. JEANMARGAIlET OTIS, '39 '- , 1.30o.-Rockeiel· 11.30. Fox: Jo/m Woman, with M�CAJU."TH. HUTCHINGS, HOWSON, '38 '37 , '3'399 LUCILt.E Ed,\,ard, .Arnold and Francine Glee Club takes pleasure iT\ an· ler Rail Dance. to_ .... MuY SA-HDDt,WILLIAMS, SUlkiay, March 1. more. nouncing the casL for their production� ABBIIl JNGI.LL8, 'S8 SUZANNE Leonie 0/ ondon The Mikado 24: selections (rom Kar,lton: J.toycU L , with of on April 23 and Sport. Editor, CA.THERINE HEMPHILL, '39 Adams-wilI-read I) and Tln-onelThe Mikado ..... Cornelia Kellogg, '39 her poetry. . Deanery . p. m. Freddie Bartholomew /bJ.iPle.. ManaSler I ACN£8 The Sunday Evening Serviee Power. TIle Nanki·Pooh.: .... Heien Hartman, '38 , Au..INSON', '37 MJJ

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-- • • THE COLLEGE NEWS • Page Three .' han one desire 011 the individual who, i heir str Man's Needs Clarify ue ure by the person'lIl F Q'Yors DEL . Dean I nc reo.se EGA TE TO ATTEND (or instnnce, may gratify his wish : : The � S - {l<.""Vft S. indiVIdual rencts to a tield MODEL LEAGUE FORjJM InQu o lao "ed n s .r-' Humart P�rsonality for superiority ---=- nnd for object Ilurture by a lproacl�ing the object __ , SI I l of 8l1tisfac- f '"- by forCing his �ambition upon hitl, tion in t.he simplest way l( FebrlUlry he call. Va.e One (,'1)//. 11101/ /loo m. !5.'-Thc Frustration is Necessary Con,tlnue4 fro!," iutcrnRliOllui Factor child.. Equilibratipersonality and ; Jlcllcerul chanjre in «Inncction with th� Nat'lre 0/ o t� t�e un� rg du e8. Personal traits arc determined tween the psychological "Itualion and the importance of a field obst ruction , . � � , , League ovenant imllro\-ed trade Malt. l g 19; �ol l� � euc� . ls �el � rcctlon 1I and developed by the mallller in which U: e end satisfaction. ·As a result for learning. For cxamllle. Pavlov in . l . I . . 1 relat ions. and sandions and eoIlcctive whl(:h education IS generally Inovlng, � ' cr • the individual• meets Iru,lr.',· on 01 there i8 merely an aggreo""ution of order to bring bout salivation in a "ro tY um I Art1c ' e 15, Th ryn It is more important in the rescarch M I beeC B the needs aroused in n given situation lleed§.. withou,t any harmonious con- dog upon the sound or a bell, pre- , '" awr de ,cgalell hav 'l,Ot. yet n 8p-- SClellces t9 have coore

order, the strongest need holds a field, which is the situation as it ex- need frustrated by the forccs of man's unneccssary______,-(ACP) _ pre-- bring out the relations or field" to on ______dominating position . . j'ists for the individual in his percep- environment. ' l.' and the leSIl pow- l another. " erful needs gather under it. Needs lion. � "/ , With for art, archaeology and Illusic can ' ' I am much In sympath ,' I he . . may a 1so 1 use an L._. 80 , h esc payc 0 og ca e s ave a ., o ,' n �'h , ' . work Ih'I , YI)(S I 0 courses IIll0 d ..,..,v me re a h' Id h Vou w,'ll find helplul t e , th e lr ' ted T , , fi h n workshop courses. hei e entunl 1 .more r v lin- general Q ! that the same act will satillfy I definite organizatIOn and are affected ada_ Rea� them. ' T , lan . portanc(' dellCnds, how('\ e,', UllOlI how I

._ �J!!!O.!!iiilg J��lll, 'Yo� enjoy a sense eater TEDIOUS STUDIES tend _\<;�._ -;- � to drag on the. o�rv�s, ofte.n ease while you're eating, and afterwards too! penaliliing " m s dig�stioo. true Ca el help in t',.,.o specific Fred 14,cOaniel says abom Camels is get a "lift" , (below) ways: You in en· backedHAT up lOO% by baseball's "Iron Man." J.-.ouGehrig �rgy Again, with a Camel. W_ by Frank Buck, of. "Bring 'Em Back Alive" fame- by smoking wilh your meals Call\els i· Eleanor Tennan(, ,the landing woman (cnnis coach and afterwards hclpsd outs g�uion run along smoothly. of the S.-and by millions of other Camel smokers in n OD U. d Camw don't get walks of life. Enjoy Camels at every meal. They speed nerves YOW'_ , aU Ayour or tire .te. Camels mi up the flow of djgestivc Increase alkalinity. Help t. arc d! ' fluids, l you ny oJ food. Camels you They're cigarette sct right! tht s(ead'y smoking, Ligh( up a m a "lift.'" Cpr C.a el and gct

, • BUSY SECRETARY. ". smoke , m�ls-ooth ing saYI ,Ca die f" JOK- . , "Camels PUt re (uD 1)'0 Libby_ mo . ioto eating and smoking [00, So maoy girls t (<

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from SUD' "A"ER RIDING.HERD up te sun.dQwn;'the chuck-wagoD looks mighty good (0 me," says Fred McDaniel (ahow, also right). "Bu( I'm sure I wouldn't enjoy my 'chuck' half as much wilhout the pleasure I get from smoking Camels with my meals and afterwards. After a good meal and Camels feel plcnty Camels I O. K. set me right ! They're tbloa � Y t eas t and they Dever get OD, my nerv�s." . ,

aADIO'S NEW S •• SH HITI MJIIdI. a..,eI. Col ...." 0aJrJe a' hd " 00,In-rpt'tMi ' .. Aboble JKk . a , (ioodmP'. . a n .... God � .. ctiu.t"Swia." BeDel,aad aiqiq lIoU ltan-aDd,ileal! .pecill £,«7 lIlU,eott s. 'f,. - -,:)0 pe f. s ..or. .. .. __ •__ • ,

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· - , • THE COLLEGE NEWS �.g. I'au. · , I • " Where, Where? DISTRICTS OF ALUMNAE 0 Two Previous Building Schemes Financed Through �ge Gifts · apd En4owmeri� Qu.u . , , ...... - District. New England ...... :-:- .... .:.: ,76,000.00 rt completed and the new buitdings First O;i ve Conducted in 1900; be- District. . 800,000.00 ' 11 ...... Second, in 1925;. rovid d .... District P e J:oquIPl""U. 1 a att with much ·nee ded --'-_ Ill!. . ,I quota ...... $300,000.00 ff7P Goodhart HaU . additions, the col lege saw no more -- , Subasribed ...... �_ ,. "_ .---"-,�""",,,, . . $39 6 building until 1906 when the late ...... ' 6.JH!1.R ·As. we prepare to begin' the new New York Distiict Mary Elizabeth Garrett, whose un­ building program consider the quota ...... $600,000.00 'dTId [ailing and devoted support of Bryn .• op�rtuniti which it will make Subscribed ...... $383,257.14 � Mawr in its early days made possible nyadable, .seems t�e mo t Diatrict Ill, outh ...... --16.000.00 It' -perhaps s ita continued exilt-cnc:e, rebuilt and - momentous undertakmg which !be rurnished . the Deanery created ·District. lV, Northeast ...... 16,000.00 24,075.02 and �ol�cgc has ever pl nned.. Actually. the Deanery . � garden. tDistriet V, ChMgo and North Central...... 76,000.00 78,821.96 t IS the thr,'d bUII.dmg scheme which . . I � For a period of nearly 20 years . c college . District. VI, South Centra) ...... 15,000:00 9,488.30 t� has financed through after construction was s"spended, as

...... girts t,:Diatrict> VII, Far Weat. . . 15,000.00 '6,000.00 and eooowmenta, and however no immediate need was telt for further : important it may ay pear, is . it no additions to the Forei&n ...... 2,238,83 coilege. In 1925 how­ or niftcant • e si tha the two pro- ever, luge sum Reuninc clasa gifta, s�ial class giIts, miscel· � � � a of money wa� prl!­ J ects which preceded It. laneou. gift.8 reported by the Treaaurer . aented by Mr. Walter Goodhart for ...

...... Th.e first drive to finance construe-- /lew building in memory of his wife or the COllege '\ ...... 23,906.90 tion came in 1900, when the college for which the alumnae were to rai� A eont�r 01 the stach in TaJ/lor­ consisted of four building., Taylor, $457,000. In that year $1,010,000.00 $1,032,895.78 a second great with an a.saorlm,e,et of picture • Mer"lon and a small red brick gym· drive was launched under the direction • ·Wlnner of the Prize of 11,000 awarded to the firat diatrict to complete ita • belonging to tJu� Art DflJ)drtPltttl t. nasi urn (the original haUa), and Den· of Mrs. Caroline McCormick Slade. quota. /nddeJttall" this i. tAtrabode of bight built in 1889·90. More build· result was Ma�jorie Walter Good­ nl tWinner of the Prize of ,1,000 awarded to the second �istrict to complete its t ho.� lost lJeriodical•. , ings were absolutely n�!!Iary. and hart Hall, which contained a suitable quota. after the completion of Pembroke in auditorium to replace the inadequate t,:Winner of the Prize of '1.000 awarded to the third district to complete its , 1902 the situation grew desperate. aasembly·room in Taylor, and housed quota. Gifts Result of Inquiry All of the founder's endowment excep.t the Music Department, which was ,------="'.=,--::-----, Into Needs_of College 385.000 dollars had been spent, and made possible at this time by an FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY FUND MEMORIAL GIF 1 a centhft'1'ighting and heating plant, endowment. ______....:.. __ J another dormitory and a library were Although not a drive tor actual con­ ..,... � I M". Slad� Lists Enrichlll�Jlt.s . L- imperative. The halls had separate probably Amo�nt� Entire struction, the most important � sed Affecting Collegc Marion Reilly .Memorial Fu-n'Ct-r{o r Physics and Mathematics fu.rnac:cs and supplied nothing · but campaign in the history of the college ...... oil lamps to read by, while \he Departmenta · ··.·... ······.. · ···.,.,··.. ··· $25,000.00 (From the Alumnae Bulletin,) Ii· was that in 1920 for the increase of 1 brary accommodations in Taylor were salaries for professors. In this drive, (Raised by the clus of 1901) That the Fiftieth Anniversary Fund .0 poor that students read on every which waa headed by Mrs. Caroline Quit. Woodward Memorial Fund tor the Lib,." Wlng_ . .- ...... • 10609885, . palled the million dollar mark la,' step of the staircases from the first McCormick Slade. $2.221,784 was (Thi. fund include. the gilt or $90,000 from Dr. and Mrs. June was a cause for real rejoicing. to the third fioor. raised. Woodward, an anonymoua gilt of $10,000, and all gifts . Al this time or need Mr. John D. from the dasse. of 1992 and 1934, unlell otherwise Today the figur� stan�s at $1,032,· Rockefeller, Sr., gave to the college designated.) 896.73 and we can now say exactly CINEMA TO SHOW through his son a power piant for . CAMPUSES QF EAST Betty Bigelow Memorial Gift for the Library Wing ...... 10,000.00 how this is made up and for what heat. anO light, and Rockefeller Hall, Library" (in memory ot Anna Powen) .:': ...... • .... 100.00 definite purposes it is to be used. on the condition that. the alumnae Dr. Walter Livingston Wright, Jr., . The wise provision of President raise 250,000 dollars library. Emily Noet.her Memorial Fund ...... 10,000.00 for a President of the Istanbul American In 1904 for the library (This fund wa. raised by a group headed by Dr. Florence Park . that all gifts made to the col· the drive . w�s Colleges. will speak in the Deanery Sabin, or the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research lege should be included in the Fifti· on Monday, March 8, at 6 p. m. Hia .. and sponsored by the moat eminent mathematical .ei· \ eth Anniversary Fund, has been met ASSOCIATION OF DEANS subject, A1Mr'ican C!lmpuscs in. the entiJu in the country.) E�t, wi l be illustrated by col-. In kind by wise and generous giving. DISCUSSES THE N. A. Near � Science Building: __ Y. ored mobon pictures. .. The years of this Drive have beelJ a Jane Brownell Room in Mathematics Department ...... 10,OOO.QO period of keen alumnae inquiry into From February 17 to 20 Mrs. Man- Dr. Wright, who ia the bl'Otber-in- law of Mrs. George Wright, part·time Marjorie Jetreries Wagoner Memorial Fund for the Wagoner the specific needs of Bryn Mawr and ning attended in N'ew Orleans a con- Scientific Library ...... instructor in French at Bryn Mawr, . . 54,832.86 havtS resulted in many valuable girts vention of the National Association long been associa£eti with the Near (This lund includer ali girts Irom the classes of 1918, which have l>ro�ght'both unthought-or of Deans of Women and a cOQference has East and is an authority on Turkish 1926,. 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1933 and the and long-dreamed-of- benefita to tho of the National Vocational Guidance � affai rs. Kis motion pictures will i.­ Undergraduate Quota, unless. otherwise designated.) College. What we lack of the $500,000 ASlJociation, an affiliated society. The elude shots not only of the Istanbul Elisabeth Hedges Blauvelt Memorial Room ...... which we had hoped to raise for the N. V. G. A. is aided by the Carnegie American Colleges, which comprehend (AU gifts from the cia .. of 1896, unless ptherwise desig· Science Building iii more than made Institute in publishing and investi- Robert College tor Men @ond the latan­ na�, are included in this memoriaL) J. up for by these gifts that have en. gating vocational guidance and vari· . bul Women'a College, but also of Ath­ Anne H. Strong Memorial Room ...... 8,056.00 richc.d the entire life of the college. ous profeaaions.. The outstanding ens College, the American University (All gilts from the class of 1898, unless otherwise desig· GifLs that maintain professors or work accomplished by this latter or· and the College at Bei­ .lUlted, are Included this memoria1.) t- t.- ganization was of particulAT in.te�t International In !iring new ones, tha pu new books . its on rut. , and the AmEtricfln Oollegc France. Bliss Tyson Memorisl Room ...... 6,758.00 on the library shelves. that bring aid because of emphaais how-much . . .,. • . what em- of Sophia in Bulgaria. (All gifts from the class of 1922, unless otherWise desig· to students, that make possible proj. and and methods should be - ployed in. givin the y�uth of t�� na- nated, are included in thil rMmorial.) ecta such' 4s the arthaeolori cal dig, . . � . tlon aid In their vocations. Dr. Alfred P. HcsI .Memorial Room ...... 5,599.64 make us all conscious of continuous- Maids! Vesper's Volunteers Myra Little Rosenau Memorial • In the conference's discussion of Fund for eQuipment or furniture 100.00 growth, charted in accordance with a The Bryn . Mawr League . the N. A. the problem considered Adelaide �ndon Memorial for researth equipment ...... 600.00 ecrlous academic tradition. Y. Maids' Committee would like William Bashford Huff Memorial ...... wu how much guidance should !)e 261.00 Now that. we are approaching the volunteers to conduct Maids' Mjller Memorial ...... � .•... given in high school. and colleges to Madge 20.00 actual buildinc. of the Science Build­ Vespers on Sunday aftern()(7J1s...... help students find their proper field. Ruth Emerson Fletcher Memorial ...... -: 1.817.00 ing and of the Library Wing,,Jt is See E. Taft, 7-9 Pembroke E ..t. : Guidance is thought in a larger In me-mory of: .... imperative that the money on out­ 01 sense than merely obtaining jobs. Thel Gladys �andler ...... •... •....•. , ..... �.oo standing pledges be paid in. Notice. ==== ; : purpose is tlY'give boys and rirls ac.!1 ======...... � Marion Wetherill Abbot . . . . 100.00 are being sent' to all those whose pay· r:...... curate and Cull information at each Mary Helen Ritchie ...... •...... ••...... THB COMMUNl'rY KITCHEN::::: :':). 100.00 ment,are due by March 1. pay· ••4 Llnp.lter Avenue • ...... ••...••...... U step of their progress. Charlotte Angus Scott . 6,00 ment is impossible when due, it would .",n Mewr Edith Van Kirk .....•...... ••.•...• , ...... 10.00 be of the greatest help notation There is, however, the danger of itJl . Phone: Bryn Mlwr 869 Agnes M. Wynne ...... 26.00 of' the date" when pay_ment can be deprl'{ing the individual of his initia­ ) tive t\rough too much decision on the Afternoon Tell DII;ry made would be made on the notice I part of advisor. B.,le, Swppe,J ", AppOi"tment ,247,763.68 and ret.urned to the Fiftie.th Anniver· the sary Office. · Payments have come. in extraordinarily we'll, but there is .till LARGE GIFTS THROUG FIFTI£Tii ANNIVERSARY FUND � outstanding $69,706.15, of which '68,801.15 ia due .on tbe Science. Build· • I,100. 000-Dr. an,d Mrs. Woodw� of Cheatnut Hill, Philadelphia,I George ing 'md.....$10,904.00 is due on the Li· $90,000 in me-mory their daughter, Quita Woodward, a member .. of brary wi¥. of the cia.. of 1984, incru.sed by oar) anonymous of $10,000, gift CAROl.INE MCCoRMICK SLADE. to be uaed for the wing of the library to .be named in h� memory. NdtUmaL Chairman. , 5O�iven by the late 1:l1a Riegel of the claas , of \88�. in honor of the late President Emeritus M. Carey Thomas. . Choir, Glee Club' Make Recording , , 25,ooo..-Raised by the clas. of 1901 1n n:ae,mory of the late Marlon Reilly, M,,,.iCl Room. a member of that clalll and former Dean of Bryn Mawr College. �druary !5.-The Choir and Glee Club had the gratify­ $ 54,882-Rai&ed by the clsa. of 1918. the cla8ft. of 1926, 1926, 1927, 1928, ing experien� of .hea,ring their �wn 1929. 1930, 1981, 1983 and 1986 undergraduate classes of aad the voices through the medium of a Presto 1986, 1937, 1988 and 1939, in memory of the late Dr. Marjorie • portable reeording machine operated Jefferie. Waroner, former pn ysician of the COlle�e.· comes ou by Mr. Robert Littler. The�maChinc 10 y I '150,OOO-FroM t.he Camerle Corporation lor endowment. makes instantaneous recordings of ex· , 26,696-Glv-, by Mis. Fanny Travis COthran. graduate of Bryn Mawr c:elJent quality using a special acetate Col1ep of the cia.. of 1902, to itart an In.tltute of Re­ Soda) recording disc. EARLY SPRING lrinonor of Profel8Or Susan M. K1n&sbur)', 1988. Mirth. retired 10, Iven by Dr. nd Mr... enry Bice-low Concord, Muucbu- t OOO--G � ;'I 8. of In memory of tbelr

LEONIE ADAMS ahe consented to prep&1'e volume DAYTIME ' EVENING · SPORTS her MISS of entitled Tltou Not Elect.. GREEN HILL FARMS lyriCi . TO READ OWN POETRY Now a the Bennington , member of • MARCH 8th, who will aive College fa.euJty, Miu Adami formerly 9th II ... Leonie Adama. tau ht English at. Sarah Lawrence the c Mooder a radinl' of her poetry in DeAn. College and New York University. In aDd Tuud.y , err on wu f't'Om 1 9 abe wu an editor Poetf'1/ lIarch 7. c.raduated 24 of the Whi, an under- T.,. JI Barnard in. IH2...... in " A/o,a.rirte. . and U�28 COLLEGE INN - poem. ... a • a G m Fellow­ an4ut.e -her A,nl Jlorlolit" ...... t.d � ... T,.. .. N Dip her to atudy priDt.ed ill S.".,.WW. which enabled Iloopit.o lido _...... Ined al>nJOd. t ...... pubUeation NIl ...... ber ,.. a.Jm.d. Her �t .tU tlIat -...... It _ lICIt IHl 01 r_. (1"') . . BItI_ - •

• ,I - - • I. /' ...... , COLLEGE NEWS Page THE Five . ,� Drive Stimulates " Why tl Li brary Wi ng? Rotential Library Wing Increases Spaoe Benefits for New For .C rammed Art; Archaeology Qua

And Ol�" Pt:Pjects n crials o the Depa ' ts of Art Fine Collect ons, Including New ·t l!i( f ';l � -'oriental Acquisition,i Will be and Archaeology. The. ill be prep- Playwriting, Production t::'ourses �.....r CQ.U.iP·"'" -�-� On E Xh.tl·b · uon....: 'uiy "l'U Ittt.u.re..J:oo.-- DlS, vd.t.h.- ad�- � cc Direct 4l.esults; "Dig" I� .__ quate lighting and modern lanterns. In'directly Aided In this t!ra of over-ero"'ding, whose Each IlrofesRor will have a more .pa­ cnd is alnlost in sight, the ease or the cious office, Ica\:ing their old quarter. ' SOCIAL ECONOMY HA Departments of Art and Anhneok>gy (or other .departments· expansion. , 'RESEA CM INSTITUTE � merits immediate attention. Thl!l'c ",·ill be for exhibiting the m lt I!lmet'! , The high hopeI!O for the future in the fine collections which are now stored ' President Park's provision that. all new wing hf the Library serve only 011 the campus. and we shall able gifts made to the college flincc the be be- to emphallit.e present mi!lfonuncs and to bollst of a real Br)'n Mawr Mu- . ginning of th.e Drive be included ill discomfort. The grouping of the Keum, An Oriental coll�tion has a wtde ;t' the Drive fund has resulted in <1'epart.1nellt! in reference has its basi.!O coniC to- Bryn Mawr in the year, variety of donaLiona which answer p.a� in fact, where undef'i:raduate arch. our possellSions in the way Greek specific needs for CJ:tension and open mUllt ot pcologillu ,freque.nt th A� vns and terra:C�llRs aft remark- U)J entirely new fields to the college. _ Seminary and the aManced art his- able. With Illu:h • Qucleus open to In addition the interests 10 IItimulated tcrian! occupy the Arch�gy Semi- general view and IItudy, other collec- by the Drive have Mought other gifts IIl1ry for houra at a tinle. Two l-t ons will undoubt�ly find their way cla., trll a.e which hav �nt;ibuted to the n�s to Itl(df) Greek t' P,re- ' � Mu' Swindler and her honoT . 1VWt. thfJ ressors share an office which would be here. , of the c�1 e on everY side, . l of addition to the crowded crowded ror olle alone: slif,les p. re present difficulty or over-erowd- aid aTeCae8ar. Ill, tkree7'H.IT(II,lIentitlil" foot VlItle i/llft .evlL out here c The the primary aims of fliilll/ cose. topped bll a of there thl'cc scattered lhl'oughout vadouf...office s, ing in the stacks of the Library will sight ,.i{Jh. t, camera qllest cotltaitlillg 'tlllcil of i1ding and the Lib,ary It because or the minute proportions of on the Th� ri8tH on.coilt'.ctioJt. be partially sol\'ed, or at Least allevi- wing, other irect re8u lts of the Arcliaeolollll Dt'lH•r/mNit'. t.'Glu«ble tile .the d08et ror slides. Valuable and ated, by the tact that in the new wing Drive already inllti ted are the " intcrest�ng 'CoUeMions o( de- thete will plare for stacks of the return and Mr. both -be of pi ,ritin college debts $8 250 towards the nndent. ivories "'as another partmenh are inacCi!8sible. books belonging to the Art and Arch· i11 n 'er co' rae i pla $;ift. The new the Library ill Wyckoff', � n'" y Wyndha.m and $5.0�2.34 towards the The departments of Art, F;collomics wing of w aeology Departments. -P, roductlon' esc t res Both a � �en u Goodhart debts �om funda (rom Geology- oWer an increase in space to corres- , s U bOt!.. and also ived s)K!Cilll ,..---u:::-:M�d ::::'"l:r.:::lr.-::..-:Jr.-----; m a.n ent ,I �. new ""I·e Id \v mg t · """ rog I",nd with the growing' ill,lerests and )'0." . , the Drive. grant8, Including $I ,000 for books Iri�nd, .t tA� de nto W rliirur kno,� . ed•• � drama- Bryn Mawr Confectionery , a o . :t" '" Gifts whic:h went to )laying for talk, for the Archaeology Department. ______t,. 'h,ec Ilique. I n wr• I t n""_\ and \'n pr"- to S�,.il/� Th�.If:r 81t1,() I ". v- and entertainments� held in the- Detm- That given to the Ge'ology Depo.r, tment ,year's production and pro- 11 (NUl d Jlfeuiah The R�nd�JvOUJ of fesalona I pr od uct I?n au� . �s Ir_\ h). ",t- eryl have provided much of interest i.s to be IISed for field work the vides for .a .special Ih� Coli.,. Girl. lng, stage manag n , lig t g,. (or - . l � h ! and enriched college life ,generalfy: graduates and will be u8Cd this sum. �emor:ial Fund for the Mathem,atics SundH' tume and scenic deSign, The lare��e WaCi! T·1tf The fund for Dr. lecture 011 mer. The Drive also financed 'Iast Department. MUlliSS:c-O.nci�:!.�n �I�for ;:;:..'rll onl , for both Mr. , Wyckoff an MISS _ . Latham have been provided �b hat \ part or the Drive set apart or • faculty Balaries. , Leas directly tne Bryn Maw� Dig \ has benefited: Witl) the aid o( \0 50 from the Drive the group has already U. S. Senator ,Reynolds sailed tor its t h ird year of excavation " at Tarsus. Miss Goldstein is again director, and Maynard Riggs, 'S5, will secretary of the expedition. be Tbe -plan is to excavate thoroughly - , , the region where evidence of a Myce. ays: ULu�kies are' COnSiderate,' nean level was uncovered last year, and to clear lower levels on the site. \ The Mycenaen level was dated by a • - seal of the wife of the .....H1ttite king • of my throat" Hattusil who as ruler signed the . 111 "Two Southern traditions are oratory treaty battle or Kadesh. This of the, -and good tobacco. Lucky Strike year's excavation closes a threc·ye",� agreement �ith Harvard and tlte sho.... me how to indulge in both: For Archeological Institute of America this light smoke not only pleases my when the-expediti9n was firat sent out, taste but leaves my throat in condition_ From the amoun that the Carola WoerishoWe\ Last fall in North Carolina-when Social Economy Depart­ I ment received from the Drive, aboul made over speeches-l vi,ired the ' • a Susan Kingsbury Re­ 100 $80,000, 1J. Lucky Strike factory. believe dis. search lnat,itute is developing, I I The covered, in the Lucky StTiI", 'Toasting' Institute alreadY' has a research as­ sistant, an advanced graduate student process, �he secret of what makes this who spends most of her time in re­ .cigaretl£ so considerare of my throat. search and who receive8 a year. ' $1090 have been more than ever an Some of the money is to be used (or Ii I adtJOoo cate of a light smoke since seeing the reaeaTch fellowship; some for a re­ scholarship, same for a publi­ extra care and expense detloted to search cation fund and the remainder for making Luckies easy on the throq!." current expenses, Mor4! records, book!! and provision for the reader's salary are the uses to which the 'income from the fund ot $25,090.72 given by the Master School Music of Is to be put. The income �4 ��t� from this sum is about equl\l to the U.$. SENATOR· FROM NORTH CAROUNA amount which the college been ha.s rece1ving yearly from the School. Continuation of the colle_ policy the reducing or th� outstanding , l i, • ...... -,�======:;======. • a recent itideptmdent survey, over· an � - whelming majority of lawyers, doctors, lecturers, scientists, etc., who �d they s�oked cigarettes, ex· pressed their personal prefere�ce for a ligh t smoke. � Sena.tor Reynolds' statement verifies the wis- dom of tltis ·preference and do leading artis�'of so radio, stage, screen and opera, whose voiCes are ' • • their fortunes, :rnd who. choose Luckies, a light Tips for, Bermuda·bound • ' smoke. You, too, have the throat prot�ction lirls . . - . can

So yOIl·.... comlnll to ."mudal w. o( Luckies-a light smoke, free of certain harsh It will be .vorythlnll YOIl 1 ."tlclpall,.. I .1.1 .... _ • partlcul.,.fy you com. . ,,,,,,.d wltll our '�haCIfto 60 irri�ts removed by the exclusive process "It's THE FINEST TOBACCOS­ In .ermud." bookl.t ••.• h.ndy lIulde to tho ....mud. YOIl ottould "THE CREAM OF CROP" know. Till, Mme bookl.t .1110 h •• Toasted". Luckies gende on your throat. n.w. of u •••• our fin. Enllllih are 1HE '.brlc •••• our .ult•• nd topee'" .•• Ollr dellclouo, do.lovely .....t· .' • ..... And, wh.t'. vory n.w, our WATER.PROOF aoCKI .,. whkll ahOIl"', think. be 11'1 .v y e.m· pu.·bound_ trul'lk. TM ... , yours for th• ..,.I\)no to boo "00",lc... . '11. r A • 1270 IlrltI Av.nue, N. .. York. . /. -Light Smoke THE ttI& £tt!llbl�&pnrts &�np '\ Protection To asted"AGAINST-Y IRRourITATION-A-ThroatGAINST COUGH �H, aDJruD.A. . . . • __ _. "I < ' .

, , . . COLLEGE .� THE NEWS =- P • primarily that of Dr. and Mrs. George ' Ne", Science Built/i ng college, Bryn M"wr haa urgent need in memory of Q Revision in Curricuia Planned' by Five Woodward uitp Wood­ i for an official ems8ary. The , ision Cite Marked Ou t word of 'h.s .. ot ID32. nd thnt v .. 't is a large one, the aetual ta.sk- will---­ -Is Cla Departments Who Will Share_N Building of Dr. ana- Mrs. Henry B. Bigelow w ffi itll SUCce88 Pt.ee di cult, cannot be Continued from One in memory of �ty Bigelow of the - be - . gauged for sey-eral years and the at best to paui waiting, Bryn Ma�'� d�p"rtment plans introduce a Class of 19:}Pf"tJlat of Ella Ricgel of . to fruits for the fi r -kourageo l . rst yea s may be sma a :! had e �8h'l �r� &- th �f 1889, and uit s d course in bio-physics. The chemist?y H e that of Q a HIO-Physlcs Cour e Planne ; The. ta.sk.. caUi: not. only upon ,.,.---- .t!.ueeeaaCuUy- "lYood \\lit'aJ o.-m elass. The rough . t er �:;;�:�_ 1 s Statistics May be Off'e red departmenrwill c"(J()�l"llle-witl\o h and the .��tldoUa nand for the coll ge nused . 1),lhOIl- enthusiasm of appointee, but e . But thcy saw cstimate of the archit.ect. ho .....ever on sections in advanced courses such as "S'A a C re at . on the active and ent.hulliastic s up- aso th e coroII at) ' t 0 th' IS CXt raor d'mar) , oc or elnl r an ph t' ch ry, so his first lans t.ood met ing l ke ___ I goo-c h'st y d oo- elmsI I Il J at so h i POlt of each individual al umna, feat : The Alumn e �s�iation could g uscful that it is rUInO-rca ev,cn some � $LOO,OOO beyond the total of these, fi •• tecognition corr�. not for an a lpreclable time comc for- Based on the that Mrs. Collins Elected l ures. r professors may tutJ;l studcnts in them. grea gift An lotion between the sciences is bccom- I ward again bearing a t. . d For Its n Crystallography, geo-chemistry, geo- t was vated y b the BoaTd ot Di maintena ce, the i�lcome 0,\ ing incl'casingly vital a revision ill no OIlC could. !lee on any horizon such n � . �I.: a llble lhy cs and' seismology may be hlt.I·O- �ectors at its special ' mccting th,ot ' " ""75 0 , U ng was av il . .... I .IS b m' g pI 8nm ' :u by the flvc J s.i gift ftom mdlvl(lual do o ' curncu a e _J. , d o o Caro In' c Ch d II' large an n r Ot · be - uced by t h0 ge l gy dcpartment, , l a WIC. k - 0 Ins be elt ec cd .' I ve now put fore you the horns depar Illcnt s wh 0 nre to Slare the new 0 h'Ie h h p c a dI r-l..... or-aI· Iarge a e co II At from any one of the foundatlons .. w of a:lu dilemma ' in the seven years ' I ' ' ,V ' I wh' IC ,. . at res nt the only adequate th ege. ' sclcnce u'b Idmg, hI le f un dk m cn IIt I r t concern th vel WI th e< . .one ,' the P esident s request. shc will con ha\·e ��UK'_ uea- " t. ill in ...,...... utheJ·n Pennsyl".n,·o and s ' . cd I I ince th.e rep(U't of he Committee �nllllllg. . w.11 be scrvcd thI. e par- . t Ill'e � tin e .supcr hon, The Carncgle Foundation had 1930 the 'fundam�tal needs of � , used in pal't. by Haverford alfd the u to vise the work 011 the , th • t c ursca w ll be of- _ "-. U lC<: s, 9 i of given. g"nc.rous 'h e ncr.1 Edu- . Un·, ve -·,h. 01 Penn,ylv.n,·., ,' "J col- publication8 the college and to be . --collcge have stead ily mwnsined .' on'•'· ••••· " ·· •• • , , h,1 )I�, . G. tC)-ed III mat. h emat.lcs an d th e naturaI cation Hoard hau.• reph cd our re- ..bora t'I on wIth 't coII eaguel!, in charge of the sl'V'ak•. � ers and enter thc ot cr hand •. at t he pre . . to h sclenccs whIch will Illtcgrate wolit bor- -I ..� I a . n\s 11 sent Iflo. ' '" " " eo.. t inment in Goodhart flail, b n quests th at th ell' fu '"'' wcre a oc.ated mc t, The sit"e of tho collcge i. ad antag , but egi . n �.. sources on which we havl' dermg on two or more eId s. to at cr arms 0f asS11l ance . ed UCII- th _ u,'f r x� · . I ·, . k,· ning next fall she w ill be relieved of h f t m previously dl'awn !eCm in largc ft o o an c •.� r,m nt 01 h nd. Besidcs advancing p r i sub tion. In �hort. thcn. th1}, dircc.tors part a t cula�r - Not only x p a all her oth(>.r dutics in ordcr to sCI'\'e , closed. can e penses be "e t at . • jectB in g i be d signed t : found a .ituation in .w hich beyond this tra in w ll e o minimum, but the departtnents are the college in this new official capacity, the The Program Today thc present science as one subject and so, - gifts set down on lists of $344,000 intimately connccted. As a 'result Alumnae Confid/t"c ,j c $167,- On thi. dilemma the l 'ast tvw Dir c· to more efficiently q>mmunicate the (It toward a science huilding an;.of . this project the college htll received With· this fourth action of the di to d library building, the col- tOI'S' meetings (De«mber 17 and Feb· advances made in one of aspects to 000 war a a grant 6'1" 150 thousand dollars from rectors my report to you for the e f used, and between ol itsAcco rdingly, mo- leg mu.t help itself. What were our ruary 19) have oc science as a wh e, the Carnegie i'oundation. While . conumttee compo th...o ment c�,oses. ya u WI'11 remem be r my exact needs: what in lhill emergcncy the two a special . courses such as statistics may be ot- sufn is insufficient. for our needs it sed is warning that this program for Bryn posa o�·l\: r. Rhoads, MT, White, Mr, Fra�- fet'ed b t depaltments n el out'p ro ls to meet them? �. ; � �- :repreKcntative ot ihe interest which Mawr was somewhat difficult to pre t l CIS Stokes, Mrs. Slade and he ,Prcs '" mentary course may be Jlt'o\'ldcd In b Exact Statemtnt of , is eing concentrated on the eXllC!·i. sent, You St.'C now the intcrde- Nteds Icl\t h s wo IndiViduals. mathematics � a been at rk. cmphasizing Ilf'l pccSS Tcla- mcnt .... Higher academic salaries ant!tbet- by sc ience at large. pendence of its parts, the attempt to J. I'sl>ccially Mr, R hoads and Mr, Stokes, tive to the JlhYJlical scicnces. \Yt , ter pension' arrangemcnt", In OI'tler is hoped that at least two m e them all more o c h/wc many d ak forward at n e silent a ditional hours 011 I d renova g such d m ucn! to make cvcn relat� small in- n a dition tin e ic alll)oiritments will be made in and epn ribute to, not v u of the to t block. eacV' ariO s aspeclfS Ilroblem. At bio- emis ry physiology the sciences poss crea8CS up and down the' line, to put courses as ch t ' ibly ' in bOI'der-linc other, You see t.he careful adjust- • the 8('1(eiaJ meeting , st ,'eek the ' • � nd experimcntal jPOlogy the �iology fields, Bryn Mawr more nearly in the clttSS a .• . •.m enl of funds to each project, giving '" Committee' 1'epo Its dings and ; of institution. in which "'e like to ' it enough to live on but not allo ing its rcc.omlllCI tions, and they WCI'C w think "'e belong mcant that. our p'l'e s- • it J ance of th \'oted on nd passed unanimously by to encroach on tho a l6 e a of $2(00) ; a building for four depart- if the necessary reill uinder c n b e o · w cM Y'!arly budget it(,m (or academic a b rest or on the steaqy annual financial 00 li ltC ' the- Directors prcscnt. Whel'Et these ments would mean the destruction of tained, the whole building. 'rhe $150 salaries. $300. 0. must be r i d by ,- plans of tho college, And you see e rccoillmendat\pns could be acted upon the Infirmary and would stand'so close 000 received in the dri ... e from the abQut '60,000, A corr sponding in- where and how thesc two necessities they have been put into effect. Thcy- to the Inn that it would be hardly Carnegie Corporation.tor cndowmcnt crease of principal was a 'fa ntaslic - have brought us to compromise , arc as follows: habitable, Mcanfime the architcct will be used as the endowment of dream, but there was anothtlr way tp ' thc bcl�l!ve too u isheartening. had proposed a site unconsidered 'be- plan for t sci- nch'er 1 -{ mee o eill. g ittcc of I. Resid nc Hall he joint teaching of ttrc t bb l The C ;;fro e e Participation Notable T s Clll- �re which the Special Committee ap- enccs drawn UJl by Dr. Tennent and Alun� ae a n DirectOrll on the Futur(' he Fioan�e Committee wa . �"' Th part of e alumnac in this is Jpr vc d ,nam y, th e uppcr'�- kc Y cId , thc h cad so f t heo th CI' SClence dC IHh ..· e th of College hael in 1930 lIuggcstCf 11OWC.'ed to invest from the )Irc84'!nt � 01 o fl . conspicuous. The plan its l is lh I Th I� atT C h,_..v1 spacc fo r th c �bUI Id mg fai' mcnIS, ThIS,' I U'ust, can be be un III e f it: the incresse of the undergniduate uninvested college funds all amount � thc fOUl' departments and was marked thc full of T e I'e�idence l frankly that present by th e 1931 Joint lIumbers by and eventuall.. ... a ri�e flufficicnt to acquire a .I'esidence hall ' Ifl38. h ha l . m it ee, o[ h i hc Louise: f', Mac 100 t l' m t e c pus an d II '11I }c Um."U as an mvestm. nt o co - Co m t w in tuition for all sludents from $500 for 100 studentS , Investigations lIlade 0 O h . m W r I IT especm Y I -_.. • . 1 lay WliS c ir an m d nor Hay II the I rge t I f d e mOIUCllt, Ul lllv tcd ha m and aCCCI)ted by (Ihe p escn Vassar r...-urc ). ",parutely by SC\'cral mcmbel'lj of m Ra b a rec� ege un s at th l es , "0 $000 r ' - 1 . . i t ri e fie. Id I oth . cr W IC tel' pr \ Slon for malllten· the Alumnae ssoc a ion, > Its ad Thc. Prtsiden lind Dean had studied the Committee. Mhowcd that th(' IKU' e llg. h n t I.e h' h af d uc O -". . A d 0 ' ju l cllts are not ditTerences and dis t l n 't� e h ad t wo ecogn cd {IS- ic WI 11 pl' uct e I s m this 1)lan and a" lll'oved it with thc c.ost the most recent dOI'nlitol'ie� u , th 51 l' l1. al e od'Incom f 01' th e co - I d f.. I . aglCt!mcnls from t hc enrliel' orm 0'1 nt ges w h ere d'IS e< III Iege, ' \1 at t lC SpCCIa f understanding that in n dition 1 thc for gencI'II n{ "j� a h'IC \' CUSS F . nteelmg , d 0 women which had a I � I' mit y, I I n 1 • but II recognitio of the conditions SIX dl't[ I1 F irs,.t ,Iunt I the tW 'a new of thc ••"d .t which these deei,,' on 0L' n.. -. ory r('f! iriencc hull and the ncccs· likcnes5 to the tYI)C Bryn Mawi' would .'1 IJO ..... l s ddcd yeat's Jate r he I u nlnue directol's m labol'alorv. ncefore a dormitory vail· etlcs illig t. oreve T e a IS brings us to the astoni hing II I l s ll cou ld wish, but a gl·cat. could be a el' to this is ard to find, but I on l sion x p 1mt a we class-room and laboratory apace, ablo.. and aLudenU could added only I>w h er c c u thnt. with the e ce tion t not . de-- be. deal )('lien' is 1I0t insoluble. the L b ar building fund fnlls short pende<1 on the two the rate of approximately twel1t�·- I i r y lIew buildings, nt. Fou:- Sp::cific Peints five ear. It was sugJ.."'Cstcd that it Chairman Directed o P roceed - of the neCe8.'11U'y total, the whole Ill'o- Sci.e nce Accc>mmod:ltion Plans a y t . gl'ullt might u lon without Let. me set down Cour specific II. for t e four Dalton ul.Ig h' l.- be Wll\e ta rnak' e emp orary ar- Th e I d' rectal's d'lI 'ecte< t hC 01lall'-' Quarters h . be entel'ed J m . ' I borl'owing money ai' encroaching on points. (1) These plans carricd out sciences and the Department of Mathe- rungc ent Ii 111 the nelghbo r h()()( Illl( I man 0f 0 th B1.11 Id 'l Ogs and G roUI1d " I the prescnt college budget. give Bryn Mawr its great major need!! maties, which are auociated in the to add twent)'·fivc students to the Committee to proccOO at once with the c ss and break down in a single year its joint plan for the teaching of the aei- la entering in September, 1937, in plUM (or the erection of a sciencl' Coll g Appointment IV, New e e most dangerous restrictions. It will enccs. TheAe could be provided by ordcr that. t.he change faculty sala- building for thc Chemistry llnd The fourth recommendation of the in c a ned ries and pensions might advanced Grolofty Depal1ments on t s I advance, 110t h i but free, (2) one of two plans: be hi site so t.hink, n new onc year. that it could con;nitt� will be, They are, insofar as t.hey call be made A. A single, entirely ne,.,' building. by a be opened ,and rcady fOI' to thc students and faculty, but it necd so, , .• elastic They will be developed the cost of w hich by a r ough guess II Science Building usc in September, 1988. Measurc- only be state<1 to have you u nderstand 1'he)' cun be changed 8S they move would be $800,000, and the mninten· The ideal plan providing modern mettts... for the buiJdi{lg have already ita close relation 10 all othel' lans , p forwal'd in the coming years. At ance of which ( light, hent, I)owcr, I'C' quarters and adc<\uate allpa'ratus fOl' been staked out. for ,Bryn Mawr . Cuture. A year ago, ' certain points definite large sums will pairs) would be thl) Inco e on the four dellartmcnts and, because of The directors agreed that the dif- before the A umn I)(!I'- elose of the l ae Drive, p m 1 advance them by a great ste , but haps SI50.000 mme ; or, the project for the joint teaching of fCl'el Ce betwcen the cOst of the build- one of the Alumnae DirectOl'S Jlro- small l!Ums will always B (I), A new building for two sci- the science., providing them in i ng and the $344,000 I'uised bl' the posed a, a rcsult of her expericncc ill f.urt.her them !' m and 1945 will have much to �nces--c.hcmistr)' because its continu- Ringle building W8S. at :tlu nae for the science building the dl'ive that the Board o[ Dil'ec­ 19,tO teach t the moment out houl be or ne e ui us and the me hod of I)rocedure ance in Dalton Hall is difficult and, of the question because of the expenlle, II c\ uscointmcnt 0'[ adopted now leaves us free to listen alm08t dangel'Pus, and geology Nevertheless the directors as thcy .The- directors fWSO agreed that while IIOIllt.'One to rellt'esent the college in al­ be- the inte io (3) They add nothing to the debt of caulle its new quarters a're le88 CXPCII- investigated other plan" werc IllOI'e r r of Dalton would not bl' tcmpts to make its work known an d ' the c ollege, They make no demands Hive than those for physics or bi ology. and morc detel'mined to work toward completcly rebuilt, yct a suft!cient to interest its old and its potential on the current budget of each year ,The architect's rough figure in the this as a goal. They decided to give amount from the Sophie Bouchcr Fund friend" ill its plans and needs. Ap- that easy mark for 1\11 the casua 8pring of. 1930 for such a building was UI) thc remodeling of Dalton Hall on should be uscf.- the money now in hand the bascment, the comJllunity . outside Bryn Mawr I come � port to you. At the close ol the cele­ ot 1903, had always been assigned. proportioned exterior, the whol� of which in�ludes the stack room, and sllch as would be given by member- . bration of the Fiftieth Anniversary Whether the plan at A or of B which would coat about S250,OOO, ex- the first and second stories should be ship in the Board of Direct&rs of the we looked affectionately and, grate­ eluding equipment. erectCd, leaving a' third college, W88 adopted, .aomethinc.Jike $50,000 and a fourth •. t - fully to the past nnd hen turned to w.ould be needed for new Site- on Upper Hockey Fie.ld floor to buUt when funds are avail- Position �u-il)me"t be is Definw � the next fifty years. They dawn for the four sciences. T ot ne:c:t able, his i in end an he site the' building· came T f! eX)lCnsive During the recent drive it W88 ap- clearly I believe today, not uncon III. i the Addit onal stack room for into di8Cuuion. It was n wa to bu d and the hope wa e agreed that x. h s x- parent that the Bryn Mawr of the nlO­ neeted with the fir.t. fifty, built.. on many more to meet. the extreme bui lding, in ibM!lf it it pressed that a sum ufficient for he book, however good lI 't ment would need always some specific them rather. pbssible only '?ceause O\'e.rc.roytd ing of the pl'Hf.nt Library st)'le from whole buildi ht be l b at differed radially in Pelll-· ng mig avai a le way to bring ita work directly to the our great. gilt o f grUitude for them apaCeand to providefor a future when broke and Dalton, could not in when we started. , se aland attention not only th� alumnae but possible, too, becau that gift k b yinr Ihould, we hope. p08 i of boo u juxta it on to them. the BCeOnd US<" of Gift Summed Up o i be e,,'en II) who could n t 'rCviait the ehangng was also a gilt of conHd.c-ncc in the more extensive than in the paat, directolS .!'hust place t i. t plaeco the h To .um up he use of the scene often enough to -know the new fifty years to come. ties building for two aeience departme.nts the college gfffabt.. made" in the Alumnae order, but also to fricnd& in the vast My final sentence I should li'ke to ­ Art, Archaeology Facili p IV. and faeilitiea for on a s ace where the wings for the D�ive : the gift of $344,000 made by communi� whic.h the college serves itsel Sllace modern let the college speak f, ulinr the Departmenu-\f the Hi.tory of Art other two departmentS could be added, the alumnae for t� science building directly or yicariouslv. Furthermore. C in lI tr ns ati the words of Helen hap ' a l on ATCh&eolosy, w'"1ficlude if Thi. wall hardly poeeible on t.he ,site will be u!f;(i ' erec once a two- .. to t at it was obvious that from the Chinese : and a room the President her­ or room. In 'which the on Merion Avenue opposite Dalton dcpartment science bujlding and to IoClf could not spare the time to make "[ rejoice the birth thia new .We " i,n .pt of •• pftlent and Hall which earlier had been consid- provid� part or all of the. S50,000 all of the luable pe sonal contacts year; , .....- ,tnuurw the eoU ,)ta r to eomt ml�kePt and exhibited. cred. The two-uni� building pla� neeessa for new equjpmen� for the that she desireJ to make alf of I do not thant- the of the paat , � in � aprings accomplishment of would netealllh,te the tearmg tour sclencu The .Jift of $167,000 th college. With the expandlllg aca· I knoP that the way of my heart ia Toward the JIl t.bere . 'e we . .... C.rb:ef and Dolgelly (with a for the libr.rr- wjll be used to b ld de�c, social and financial toward th fu re. ... IV ...... 10111' ide iIOwn of ui e tu to _ of annual Income-to the o c programs danacII .pecla) cffta college at n e alack room and two floors implicit in the forsaoinl' the Who .ould be a man of ..t nieht!' • Dri.... - 01', 1l1�M of 18 . , . . , - • NEWS Page s.v ... ==� � ==� Site of Building� �. � �����==nd aranc one new­ New Science Building Scie nce Alumna is Surprised .I -J! J)e e= : ill hundred .lCCUpln ta, are metters or great in­ • Pills Need for , .1'R y P'mancial W'izar(lhlan, further lleen completed, to what needs Space for Students, Facultv Felt by MiJny to"be .."" }f t r he c.Qllege will the alumnae turn Expe imenratil'?n Responsib ty i � the r nttenlion? or c'o UrAe there will vji still be two ",rngA to add to� the sci- DALTON OVERCROWDED COUNCIL IS ENTtlYSED cnee builtHng, twpO ftdors to tbe , Librarv,' not to mo•• A (EIlfJJ!ci(1i1r contribllted by Eti:n- mention that ny0 ne who h88 t k a en any 15",...1...,_ nee hnlXlrlnn[ lViIIlOl" CD/Oleillor matter, the need rorJ ever n 191$, ot Br9"n Mawr, or done any work i b('tlt. SmUll incrcnIJing endowment. The olumnao f!'ollt Diatrict IF) of Dorton, tcali7!es how i.uadcquate this and f" iends the college nee«h Pl?C science building to be finislled, the ad- (or the debt on Wyndham. 1938. tn all which she had prepared was read to for number ministration hopes, in the (nil o( Mrt. probability, a o( yean Uppe" HockcJ/ Fieiel toda" with. 8tak�. alt" .. tring. �lIouil1" Uft " Slad.. No othe, alumna Th,', w,'lt hou .. the of ' r l bv (ertain pr oportion Departmen"... T!,CJ the hel'ta(tcr, a of the th8 pr�li",iltary '''Mley 0' tile g ounds. (ould have done this more ' appropri- A I Chemilt;!'tTy and Geology, each�cupy- r umnae Funt! will go toward ately or more eloqueq,tly. the. ing one wing of ,. three-story building...... o( that debt. When it I .to . In ,h.' ,eeend pl ... ,h. I .....fthoug"h only'these two departments paid and' the (011we is "Nucleus" Has New Club Room MERl N . relieved of its will immediat-:ly moved to the new 0 were a!ltounded, and this time Interest ,/ be ::���:paym; ents, we can then go on ' GIVES FIRST DANCE financial wizardry �::;�; The ' uc eus Camera Cluo gave a Ilt the with :which;�, 71�� building, the architect's plans. provide N I �� to other ';(oolll� and (oolhardy" ex- t as (or to be (or the members of MilS Park, and the Trustees and Slade additional wings added tea the (a(uHy plaits, Mrs. on-:e termed the for Februu ry . fo und a the Biology and Physic. D"po.rt· 1 f7 -Wit.h h uy smoking rettors of the college had drive. t or- M �O who were interested in photography, u ,. the illio ollar Mini- I rooms airy rooms, way, apilarentiy to get much more m n men..... I, turned into sitting on Mond ay, March in their new Il than million dolla" worth of build- The need tor mOIe space is to be and the showcase and front hall ' clubroom, in Taylor HaU bo,,'m,enl:, Meanwhile we are more than de- ings, equipment and endowment out to seen most strikingly in the Geology l decked with flowel S, Merion Hall 1 lighted know of .the appointnlent This room, fo rmerly used (or ' of th. M,'II,'on 001 0' Max,'...-um of Department, which now occupies the by h W88 tered the annals of social columns t e college r Mrs. Caroline Chad- Vespers, given to the club 0 2 dollars. This wizardry, o fourth floor ot Dalton. Geology 1, 3 ,805.75be wick·Collins as Director-at·large. . a dilapidated state, full of dust, the hostess of a successful dance" I it should added , is of a sound, this year more students th n n short Quaker characte'"r. l\frs. Collini' years of devoted 8Crvice by roaches and Ipiders. In all other science except biology, and One-fifteen a. m. arrived ' to the college will, we be r. of . all know, fn' f th the -.Iub me'mbe , (," e . .he I Son,. u, 0'. pe,.ulia,lv ,'nte,- the len,' 'pa.e or em t0 work' ,w."d �'t 1f"I(�-e-' pangs 0 " equalled by her great . 1 in building, us'e(ulneS!l in "..+'·'''�'' k'I n t ed i h este<1 the science what. be in. It is contained in five rooms, no �: �;� � ; ing feet. is hoW' to a wider flcld. The :�� p t I , h : of which aTe adequate (or their))rcs- in the new wing of the library ' alumnae her a pleasant In the receiving line, which have pledged their formed it into clubroom. others delight in hearing of he, ent usc. The library is altogether .too I rty cooperat.ion History . In interpreting to 'b ( after the dance had begun, were activities of the Mawr small hold all the and peri. E. Bryn College to tl]e public and M. Frothingham, Richard ., � In the present situation the first An The though. 01 a , . odicals used in t},e depa ment. There Mr. anti In winning th e ,"0II ege new friend . r Mrs. Wood,ow, M" and M" . new dormitory' is, however, in many ... is no poasible place to the fine year Eltudents doing laboratory work Mrs. ry en, Keator and Mn. How· either l D d ways the most extraordinary rock and mil1f!ral Cbllection, worth must be .80 cr()y.'ded togethe ' m sic as hard to son. The u w' well supplied by to an alumna who contempl;�;t;es� ;�: I ==' :����=:�:::; lind it work effi ===" more than $20,000, which the de: t/>o' ltley · :� 1 Walter Howson's orchestra, and, al- picture o( the Bryn Mswr that is to ment owns. Specimens have ���t � or are scattered about the en- lire Roor. though rather blatant because o( be. We proudly take (or gr.anted the crammed into every possible shelC Bnd The graduate physics I slways their acoustics, it seemed to 'plea"se (act that the college is de· corner, but the limit. ot available ,p,,,, students do much of research � dancers. . ways. that in one small room. The moving veloping in intangible But DAY has flnally been reached and new addi. tv,,.o will The crown ing blow to the Bryn Mawr should expand physically tions no;.v occupy a place on tM ftoor the departments re lieve ot new dormi· crowding, and the nmaining de. was a sensational fainting spell in to the exte.nt building a in one of the offices. White! Heat. under- di y throes o( It tory and adding one hundred part:m,,,,'. are in favor of the step, zz 'The new building will give ad�uate last dance and graduates' changes, thoug meana a teml)Orary the next to the as it were, the laboratory space and facilities tor the I h,. it. p on ot the sciences. an unfitting end to the whole (ace o( the college. The site of separate fields In the department. The I�" ",,'; , plan i1 rious evening. new building, its general combined lecture room and laboratory Dalton, even when given over � n be . of the c1 oc their 80Ie usc, will never . t.i81·a'- 1 In spite unexpected ...... !1 . .... for the first-year course will cupy ���:� IIr ., the hall hopes to have another the ground floor on the geology side. top__ Some equipment cannot be used in the .spring, if only to give You will want to n t sweater' The mineralogy blow:pipe. room and in tl}e present building; the k i a smoking room an airing. to your taj!ored analytical laboratory will be located and irreplaceable R,owland match s�rt. -by ::i�;�� l . on the next floor, and the third story made Professor Rowland ' We have a full selection of be over and and in poliession o( 'the Physics Dc· GTea... nj�gs will given to 'paleantology domestic and im'ported yarns. room par ent, cannot be set up advanta - · 8�Tatigraphy, with a amall for tm � "Vacation,' arc a bad thing... . They n . petrology and microscopic o.uSIy excePt in a 8ub-ballCment room . � �!:: � ; make atudents forret of what Our dirut;ons ;nJure each �o�� l ���; � mOll� In addition, ot the geology � ; designed for ita use, such they know." Professor Warner satis/action - as ulty will have a amall office and lab'' ' is p 1anned �(or, Ufe (utun physic. Brown, chairman of the Psychology I will ALICIA MARSHALL, INC. atory. As a member of the depart· wing. While they thankfuu <1 the University oo f lle ' q( . SAIONG 'tOM NEW It I ,. "" more room, the Departments 0; 1 ��';';��'::�:< ��11 .. E.2 Lancucer Avenue ment explainedl the expansion will not ' contradicts the recent 6 �. d · 13', 20 are not satisfied O S'a Ardmor'e, Pa. only open up new Relds in the subject, Biology and Physics two regon t te College psy- MAR•• A.O but will give fresh opportunity to stu- and look forward to the. time when can quarters...... have carried on their work they also move into new • dents who _ �m: in spite of the present bad conditions. ;;:�:��: __ MAR.3·1 2)0·1 7 � APR. MEET YOUR� FRIENDS' �If' 'f'0UII HOlfL lHlOUGHOUf The Chemistry Department has sur· U results are satisfactory, interna· ::::::::: ::: : :.: .hort cruis., 0"'inexpensive feted as much as geology from lack Univer­ I tional broadcalts of Harvard I at A on •• ond a mo,.....lous Spring ot space, though their �uarters at first sity's c1assroOffi:::'''lectures, begun on 17, tonic of sunshine ond glance seem larger and more adequate. February will continue during the The Bryn Mawr College Tea Room •• pens. cruis. f.otvt$"Jun . . AII 1 The first and .ccond year students riaw coming aca d'e lc years. orch.stros, .nl.rloinm.n'•• lc. � for a use the same laboratory, but their _____-_____ ...___ G.o,,,., be j � Oockjn,,� 01 St, schedules must arranged that SOCIAL CHAT.,AND RELAXATION 80 CONSULT YOUR T'RAVIL AOINT, ... they are not worki ng at the same RICHARD STG.CKTON'S Hours of s.,.;c : 7:30 71. M.-7.30 M. .UWI.· EllCA Y�E � � •• P. .• for the continual vibrations caused W 1701 W ...LNUT ST PHILAOELPHIA BRYN MA R' Dinne.r., the first yeaT up would ruin Bre.3kfast . Lunch Tea IN COOPER ... TION WITH (0' delicate experl 'ent. o( the major stu· THOS, COOK SON • · 8< 1m CHESTNUT ST. dents. Stu enla taking advanced GIFTS and GADGETS PHIL... ._ phyaical chemistry use he same laboratory as thOse doing organic work and neeessarily get in each other's way. Sharing the laboratory means that delicate electrical appara· , tus, which would be ruined by the acid fumes from other experiments, has ABERCROMBIE &. - co. to be taken down and put away each NEW YORK _. night . .For the graduate students- in . physical chem1stry the only avail.bl.. research room is Mr.-Crenshaw:s own 1 , laboratory; and it is expected that a \ . more complete course will be made . , The ' Will . Hold An Exhibit Of possible by the increasoo. spa-:e. The new tluilding plan will re"«Ii­ these present evils. It provi des arate laboratory 'space .for first NEW SPRING SUlTS and COATS • year second sfudents, allowing a much . - -- "or� flexible afternoon schedu Ie. Many small research rooms, luitable • • , for two attMenta, prevent crowd· , At 'the shohr 01 will • ing and will be in even clo- seT rela- /" tion 'to geology, and the a� room will make possible, th�i.r ��::�:� hopei, reseatth into .the f\eld of I · N. E BETT S ehemJatry. N 4Moving chemistry geology J E A "30 BR YN MAWR· AVENUE and - the •• new building not OnIY ... will help � I ...... _ Ui em to upand, but will I ::�; I '\ and phyaiCil as well. Although there III . .s is not yet enough money to move 9th, .lOth and 11th and Thursday March .... them. win gain added apace.. va­ Tu esday , Wednesday' ..-t·� , !Her ) cated by the othe.r two sciences. How An Abercrombie {I Fitch filter will be in they divide it i. not yet determined, attenJari'ce' but in any cue each will have about twice .. muth room .. at •••• • ••• •• preeent. il�••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• "••• ••••••• "•••••••• • •• iI

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n d an Alumnae En/husUtsm Gim :: ,:: : t.,� :o:;,n�!� -: VarSity Defeats r.'i g he, new job. She .aid n I , h n Mount St. Joseph' � �. Feeling Students �  31-14", reaJi%Cd there was a difficult task New to dollars, 80 that no atudent can gradu- · G be- . _ _ Secon d Tearn atne More EvenlY'Matched ,fore her which WQuid take many yean ate from college with a debt 0' more - • ___ _ to COml)lctc . Continued from P .... Onl than six hundred d9l1art_ The record Februarll Expens' o the Drive . • ... . Sloppy, J o . . � demlc work of the college and ex- of .repayment of these loans has' been ilt.hm' .(1 - acks n ...... g ...... Coyne � ra cr playing marked WaSl16 rn . .. . Quinii;" All Na�ional Chairman of the Fil- plained ,the new final examinations. remarkably good. The committee ia t�lI nu1 roug( Bryn u ...... g ...... Mawr's defeat of ount St. e ti� �nn!venary Fund, Caroline Mc­ After 4Jn, Manning's lpeec.h the )'Iarticularly proud that "no really tbe:-Al JO&- E, Smit.'fl'7':": g, ..". , ..,. Cott r . • ph nity w th a i e score of Sub.tihdioJU:, , , , CT Co lC� Slade, then gave her meeting broke up a id ad journed swaent haa had � ...a i {lecjJ v Mawr: Wild � 1896, r toOle � flnallc:tOJIa.1 .- . 1l1 I Bryn I awr becau1lle of Two p�y era-181U -gametoP I D -gt"1{t I nr-repo . oh:e�ii tllN1 that-- White HouR."'h �R(IOI5eVeltrm need." -14 . , for--"861g!ma:-'Mt, St. Jo seph: yer 't ere--M be� of Coun- excesSIve fouling. The B�n Mawr for Trachtenberg, Regli fo'r McGinnis, h�ved th�t the 8Clence (acuity enlertained the members thc Junior . �o Y�ar Discussed forwards produced $Ime DIce paulng l wu satisfied With the plana of the cil and the wa.ahiniton umipBe at 0'11' Trachtenberg for Reg i• Krummer for 1..0 ' se B . ngh am her ts. v science buildings lUI r 1916 ' wpich bewildered their opponen but Co ne.. . tbey now stand. tea rrom the' ' Aca demu:" Commlttee,I� . " , ' rcpo.�� I . . oth erWlse· the game was dIsapPQ t- : W I reportin&. on the. eXPensea o.f the Friday" morning the. Dil rict CoUII- ' I" m Goals : Bryn Mawr hitmer (4) n . , aUI d th at Is nvcslIgatmg th e va ue ' , , ' I g. . . D rlv ' jh Mra. Slade said .!-hat they came' clllon gave their reports, Eachl dl!i- m Hoagland (6)" Norris (9). Mt St . of undergrad,!atea 'pending 'tbeir The s ond team game was more le than two cent from one to elev�n ec Jo8cph : McGinnis (17) TrachtenbJ:rg to 8l!l per of the total trlCt no� has , � junior yeal; away from Bryn Mawr even, Bryn out su.m collected: Mrs. Wilson, the Dis- M&wr. Moat of the Mawr coming ahead by Dyer aeholar. m�Bryn . 'in lOme college or university in this (2), (4), the dOle score of but it was J trlct Oouncillor from Cincinnati, reporta were encouraging and ,howed . 14-12, Bryn Mawr II Mt. St. oseph II country In a disc.usion on the for. equally tneuy. In pointed out that it. was one of that �f work d ne the end of the last Bridgman " ... . , f.. . , ...... Regli the enormou. a,mount ? . mation of an A,lumnae College, which quarter J city' • proudest boast. that they 'were .In , Mount St. 08eph rooters Gill ...... for the college the line of raising give a . f.. . . . Mayer would alumnae chance .to do ch�ed wildly , able to kee! the expenses of their Com- val�able student . as their team rallied for .wilde;...... f. " . . , ,.,Marnel mone)' and finding l! ...•. ' IiCrioU4 work in varioul fields, bring m'{nity Cheat aown l a m nt, almost tying the score, but T. Ferrer. , .... , g , ....W alkie Drives to two pe ll�portJ on Sc:holarsh'2 Loans thcll')in closer touch with the colIege. � Ulifl Y subsided aJain wherr 13ryn Mawr- . cent of the Bum collected. When one turd y J. Martin .. , . . ... g, , . . .. , Krummer Friday afternoon and 'Su n It was definitely voted to. have the. pped to conlider that the Fiftieth (�w ards ahot two bafke"ts in qUiCM S, Evans.. , .. , . , . g.. . , . . , . . Reynolds morning we hcard the re }(lrtfl from 1ll0tr!f.)c.ial... Alumnae Weekend' again � l succe88ion ..makin� their victory cer- Il : i l �nniversarl\ Fund was collected all com A Goa .: BrY Mawr Bridgn an ( ) ' the chairman of the standing · next fall, ,vote was Lakcn On. the l T�ov�er c not the lain, . ... ' Gill Wilder Mt, St. J08- the OW1try and within mitlCcl. Miaa Mary Gal'di.ner, advisaoility of having an �lumnae (4), (2). '19UI, Bryn Mawr Mt. St. 'Joseph .cph : RegU Mayer limils of one city, these low expenses gave the report on the Scholarshi p and College next year, but most of the f3). (3). W ,seem even tl(e rem rkable. Gar- t. hitmer,., . . . . . f ..,., Trachtenberg Brown and Tashjin, � � Loan )'und Committee. Misa member. (elt that he Alumnae Week- R�f6ree.: It was feelm� of regret on oagland . . . . f . .. , ... . Reardon SI(batit14tion_: Mt. St. Joseph : Car- diner exproaaed lhe desire of the COIn- cnd should be more firmly catabliahed H " :. . C. Norris" ,., ... f. "",.. . McGinnis lin for Marne!. • the part 0t!.� every CounCIl member tJbat miUee for a publicity bookJ�t which ItS an annual event before any further - with t!l.� end of 'Mrs. Slade's ' report . should be more stimulating than the gathering of alumnae waa attempted. the m�tmg cam,.e to a close. The past . ground will actually be broken in and from the Alumnae Fund, supple- College Calendar. Mrs Collins saill The elimax of the meeting came Fri- few days have been among the most - Ju e for .the ne� acienee building was mented by n)iscellaneous gifts. Vir- that such a booklet was now in prep day night at a banquet given at the n exciting in the history of Bryn Mawr the «nnouncement for whic.h evcry grnia Atmore, Chairman of the aralion, Sulgl'ave Club by the members of the . 1928, .... Collc�.. Every �f" un ciltor looked to t C!,ne h•as u.xn•• ,waiting for many yearl!. F mmce Commitice; gave her repOlt.a Miss Gardiner said h at of the Washington Bryn Mawr Club. After f the future for the coll ge's growth A00 , e odd students in lhe "Undergraduate two introductory lpeeches Mrs, Mall- With the news of the new Library but nothing deflnite wall decided, In . . under the guida! f the woman who 81 d In (i wmg, teah umnae felt t: at at last speakillg 0t the and guidance � school, 101 receive "fi nancial ' ning announee that Miss Park could I' h help haa made this pos ·ble. The Alumnae . ; re th e u I'tlmate goa I of the Drive was in which Miss Park givca this commit- addition to the nine I'eclpients 0t 8PC- not come to the dinner but befo Council has shown the large paM 'sight. MI., Park's fourth announce- tee, Miss Atmore expressed the feel- cial prizes. Although this i. the same she could apeak the twenty.five mem- which the alumnae play in the life of ment that Mrs. Chadwick Collin"! has ing of the entire Council when she number who received hell) last year, bers of the Alumnae Council and the the college and how far-reachin, are said, "After all, Miss Park Bryn the total amount received i. four thou- hundred and one member('" of the been appointed Director·at-Iarge of i. on the• etreeta of every change the year'..- The· A th e co IIege met with a rousing ap· Mawr," , sand dollad leu th an Ialt Waahin-6...... n Club rose to applaud campus. rose . tribute to individual scholarships derive their Mrs. Manning and to show their ap- plause. As we at the end of the Mrs Slade paid a moving Mrs. Collins on the occasion of hc..r I"------�_----� .. means from t¥ in\'e�tment of endowed preeiation of the work ahe has done banquet to sing Thou GradO'u, l718pi- ratio,. to funds, lOme of which paid more than to keep the college alive and up to date a picture of the college came new appointment and expressed the of the college Alum- their quota and others less. The com· in an era of rapid changes in educa- OUI'" minds and we saw how much gratitude and the Tweed Suits mittee hopes to be able to guarantc

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-- All over the country, YOIl hear more' people melltiotZ the refreshing mild: • tZessalld the plea;si,lg J!lstealldaroma •• of Chesterfield ciga rettes.

You heal' somebody com· , . pliment Chesterfields at a party. Another time, the grocer tells yOli it's darn � good cigarette. Or you a group of men 011 a stteet corner, most of 'em smok· ,

• ing Chesterfields .

• Because they have what smokers like, Chesterfields are

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