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1935 The olC lege News, 1935-06-05, Vol. 21, No. 25 Students of Bryn Mawr College

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Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1935-06-05, Vol. 21, No. 25 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1935).

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ege ('oll)'fh:ht XXI, N BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA" TUESDAY, JUNE ew,s VOL., o. 25 , S, 1935 rUll"S' ),IAWIl 'PRICE 10 CENn COLLIWf: :-:EWS, 1531i

. BRVN MAWR GIVES' SEVENTY-FOUR.. , A. B� DEGREESt FI ELIZABETH 'MONROE· IS AWARDED • 1'.ROPEAi./ FELLOWSHIP ' El'cellence of Acting Faculty Appointments Dr. Atigell Discusses Dr. Anderson Analyzes Over Half of Class Re\'ealed by Miss Park Economic Alterations In Bacchae Praised , Trends in Education - . Take.HonorDegrees Goodhart, May 17.-Presidcnt Park ---' ComlilOll ItOOIl'i Ma) 14.-Prpfcssor , ' opened her chapeJ talk to the stu· EcoJlOmic Different Colors 'of Cost umes, Tendency to Higher Standards Anderson. 81>caking on 11,· Granted Summa Cum laudes dents on the last day of classes with fCrlwLiofltllidm. described the growth 3 Skillful Flute Playing Give In Schools, Colleges Praised Given Magnas, Cums the reading of the rules for taking ex· (If the fll'e-War economic system from 10 29 By Yale President • Beautiful Effect aminations. She tlmphasi� the )lOint the international point of view aud 21 DistinctioJ1.� that the examination pertod is nn im· discussOO the effects of the War and CHORUS IS GRACEFUL portant break in the routine work of BRYN MAWR A PIONEER the economic cI'isis of loony on that 27 GET HIGHER DEGREES the year. During the two w�ks set tyslcm. It was 1I0t the events of the (EfJpecially Contribllted by 5 RIIUIJ aside for e"aminationa the student has Goodhart, JUlie . ..:.... At the COlli· War or its immediate effects which Goodhart IInll, June 6-Forty·two Ctl'1Htltter) a chance to do concentrated work mencement exercises Presldcnt AIIgt!II. were primarily imlwrtnnl, but l'uther n Seniors out ot clall8 o( seventy·four The, Oncc/Ute of Eurillides gave without interruption. The introduc­ of Yale UniverSity, discussing cortuin the innucncc which it hilS had and will o are receiving their degteefl with dis Mme. Eva Sikelianoa full opportunity tion of the Comprehensive system in of the Recent DevelolJ11umts itl C l· have or the �lleration8 after those 1937 tinction at the Commencement Exer to combine color, movement, and song will make this even more effec· leoiaite Ecllt catiolt, spoke in· part as events. The existing system J>f inter· into olle of those serenely beautiful tive. The college work will arrange follows: national dependence, characterized by cis�s which bring to a cloae the efTect.s which have made hcr Delphic itself in longer blocks of time and a At the exercises inaugurating the frce movement of goods, ("'ltability of FiItieth academic rear of the college. Continued. Continued. on 1>av. Four festivals a pilgrim-spot in rcecrit 0,. Pac. 811 first President of this institution, an There are three receiving the degree )'f!ars. Her sense for color combina IIIIIIItIfl - e\nincnt Yale msn, then President of CHm llilide. ten magna CUI" tion is particularly happy, though the f Winner o Fellowship Johns Hopkins University, delivered Vung-yuin Ting Wins laflde, Illude. and twenty-nine CIHn lurid green of the American spring an address which was subsequently as The following i, the list of graduate was somewhat too ihtenae a back· H Average 0 f 91.9 published under the caption, 'Address Alternate Fellowship

ground (or her fragile tones. Quite at the Opening of Bryn Mawr College Itudellts receiving M. A.'I and• unforgettable was the brilliant OPI»" Cordial Relations With Faculty for Ladies.' Few phrases could so Holder of Eastman and Chinese Ph.D.'s and of the graduating class BiHon of the stronger colors in the cos- succinctly indicate the amount of �935 Advantage of Small College Scholarships, Chemistry Major, of who are today receiving tumes of the returning revellers on water which has gone over the educa. Says Math Major their Bachelor of Arts degrees from one side of the scene against the softer tional dam in the fifty years inter. Averages 91.87 Bryfl Mawr College. hues of the less robust chorus 9n the vening between that occasion and this. p ple g- WILL STUDY CHEMISTRY PLANS BIOLOGY oth", whBe the fren,;ed ", fi "n,yn Mawr, a. ;. well .....gn;zed, MEDICAL CAREER --- Margal'et Gella Berolzheimer ure of Agave waved the bodiless head did two daring things at the outset. New York of the son whom she had slain. The Elizabeth Monroe, winner of the In the first place, she tried to set Vung·Yuin Ting is the alternate except that 1935-36, 1936. Nancy Leslie Rutherford Bucher weather was propitious, European Fellowship for has her standards for entrance and for fellow for She comes all the , Maryland Zeus. too freely mentioned during the had a consistently high average graduation as high as any collegiate way from Shanghai, China, where she 1tlflgtlfl luude lind with. play, could not refrain (rom acknowl· throughout her college career. In her institution in the country, declining to was born and brought up. When she CIW� dt'IIHttcfiolt ill lJiolaDY edging the reference by gently-s'tfrink- junior year she divided the Charles recognize any differential because she waK seventet!n, she set out alone t"O perform· Betty Faeth Missouri ling the close of the second S. Hinchman Memorial Scholarship, was dealing with girls. And, in the cross the Pacific Ocean and the Amer_ c d flud "Jith diMtinctio�1 itm hflt c J ance. awarded to the student doing the best second place, she opened a division of iean Continent. Since she arrived on 1036, ill. BwlogJl Evelyn Thompson, as the de- work in her major Ilubject, with graduate studies leading to the highcr the Eastern Coast in the summer, she . ro l\ Snrah Elizabeth flanders New York • mented, then suddenly sobered and Vung-Yuin Ting Her major is math· degrees, and to foster this p gram, went to a girls' camp in Andover, M s- honors in .. Ethel Arnold Chine)' Pennsylvania wretched Agave, took the ematics, but she plans to study chem· she furnished a number of 8cholar� 88chusetts, to learn the ways of Amer 1938, 1'11111 lUI/tie acting, as Gertrude Leighton, iatry next year, "if she grndulltee," ships and fellowships to promising ican girls. Having perfected herself "lIIflltII with her meS8enger's story ot the at Newnham College, Cambridge. AI- students. In both ot these measures in the two arts of playing their CHEMISTRY death ot Pentheus, took the honors for though her plans for the future are she was (rankly influenced by the ex- gaInes and of wming dishes as they Alberta Anne lIownrd Pennsylvania illlldtl diction. The otherwise forebearing very vague, she said that she would ample of her slightly older neighbor, did, she came down to Pennsylvania CIWt scmi=' audience. which largely fllled the prefer research work to leaching. the Johns Hopkins Unh'ersity, where and entered the Shipley School for 11 "Margaret Elizabeth Laird 1932 circular grandstand beneath the Old Miss Monroe 'has been to three President Gilman and many members year. In she became a member Pennsylvania Wives' Tale Hollow, showed its agree- schools altogether, and has never skip- of his faculty were generous of aid of the freshman clnss at Bryn Mawr, Barbara Lewis New York I'llI'It lallde ment on the excellence of these. two ped a grade. She went for two years and advice. She could hardly have and at once she distinguished herself t Mildred Marlin Smith Pennsylvania par s. The male ch�raclers were cast to kindergarten at the Hathaway- had a more inspiring example.. More- by her brilHaut scholarship. At the of non- CIWt /twde with dilltillctioll among the great ahen world Brovm School in Cleveland. She spent over, from the- ve�beginning. t� end of her third year she received the utili il& Chetru'.t", Bryn Martyrs and included some well· ten years at the Rye School and fin. administration of the College recog- Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Mem- Vung Yuin Ting China known Greek schQlars effectively dis· ished with two years at Concord Acad· nized the dependence of its success orial Award for the student holding a laude guised. Prof, Shero, as Pentheus, be- emy. She seema. to have developed upon Ute securing of absolutely first. the. highest zank...in the-j.unior class. SIUlVll cum ery neath tightly curled archaic and v early the habit of winning honors, ra �ility in il.$ fncplty. A list of and she divided with,Elizabeth Mon�oe. CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY auburn hair, pointed a splendidly since she won two cUJls at Rye and a men and women who have taught nt the Hinchmao Scholarship given for l-;lizabeth Munn Chambcrlayne his menacing finger at Dionysos and prize at Concord. In 1928 Miss Mon· Bryn Mawr contains an extraordinar� the most outstanding work in the· Virginia lewd. converts and walked more like a roe was awarded the Judson cuJ) for i1y high percentage of the ranking major subject. ijut. after all her CIIIII young god than a member of the school service, and she won the Craw· Ilcholal1l of their time in the country." travels and achievements, she has 1I0t Jean COI'nelia Porter New Jersey faculty. Arnold Post and changed the )JUtl)()se wh1ch she has M.ary Maynard Riggi New York Swarthmore ford cup at Rye a year later for the President Angell then went On to Richard Heath, lookin cnviabl a ed held since she a little girl; she ECONOMICS , r g "highest standards in school activi· comment upon a number of changes W!lS with the whitest of �ads and. the means to be a doctor. Mary Buchanan Bedinger . ties." She won one of the scnolarship. ,,'%ich have in recent .years occurred woolliest ot fllleted bea s, so ob S- The medical pro(�ssion is a tradi· Pennllyl\'8nia ra VIOU prizes at Concord.. and was given a in American institutions of hlghcl' themselves the seer P ys Optics. tion in Miss family; it was in- Catherine Little Massachusetts Iy enjoyed 8S book called h ical Only a He mentioned the voca. Ting's educ tion. . . IOld with dittiNctiolt Teiresias and the Theban Kadmos that evitable that she should choose the Clint lmule no..'" aft ••• fou .I. yea.s. 01 college wo.I"k tional colleges tratnmg men 1or tech • they readily imparted their pleasure same ulling. Accordingly, by the in ECOHotllic. in scientific fields can she begin to nical pursuits of various kinds, par. to others. The magnificently mask- lime she waa nine yeW":!l old, she had Oiana Tate-Smith New Ydrk understand the book! ticularly in the several fields o( engi. immobile face of l.eonide deflnitely resolved to become a physi cllm laude aPld with di.iinc featured and Miss Monroe'a talfles are broad. to the . maO"4 ncering, and also referred ill Economic. Ignatieft' as the malignant and sclf- ciano Her aunt, the Director of the tioK When she was fourteen, she deterrnin· ac.hools affording women expert train. righteous god Dlonysos, who could Woman's H08l ital in Tien·Tsien, waa Helen Catharine Whitney New York ed on a scientific career, and told her ing as librarian. nurses, secretaries, t work outrageou avoc among mortals well acquainled with the colleges of POLITICS family that she was going to study social workers, teachers of physical without ataining is superior divinty, I. America, and she recommended Bryn Ruth Josephine Da\')' Maryland � electrical engineering at M. T. This education, and the science and art remain along th Miss Thompson's v Mawr Vung Yuin not only for the Priscilla Howe New York was probably because ahe had just of the arious sub-divisions of home to - lasting staring·eyed revel as the m08l made a telegraphic receiving set out . intellectual instruction offered, but .. ENGLISH Contlnu.O on Pal'. economics , Flv. of odd bits of wire. and Iteel. Her also for its training in fine living. For Gertrude Van Vranken Franchot He then described the objectives of her more specialized study in medical Masaachuaetts " Ism;ly .a;d nothing, but,she later de· ,. for N ursery Sch Ior W k the so-called progn,slv' e colleges with magnu cllm lnude lIlId ,dtA di.tillc Tramwg 00 to B,yn Mawr instead. school, Miss Ting chose the Univer· .,'ded to .ome their highly indiv,idualistic methods, of Holt ill EHgt�1t The Nursery Training School In school, wh'ich, contrary to the habit sity of Michigan, and now she has their e ,, emPhasis on the per· Boston, the only school 'New E ng- always liked, she ::l � won a acholarship to be held there Elizabeth Lord IIlinoi. III of most children, she student, and f sonality f e individual land primarily for the training 0 en 'oyed English very much. French tor the next four years. When she Elizabeth Mather Illinoia J their disregard of the conventional ob· nursery school teachers, announces a ...... hardest subject, ' has at last gained the degree of Doc· Katherine Mary McClatchy ...was ...... haps her of both the h b . openmg jeetives and methods special Summer Sellion, on though she did finally master it. She tor of Medicine, she will return to Pennsylvania 1 eral and the vocational colleges. At. July and continuing until August China to auist her aunt in the Tien- CIUII luude a'td 1tIitlt. di"li"ctiON was, however, really poor in .....1'-nman . 10. tention was drawn to the wide impor· ill ElIgU.1t Work at the Summer Session will ahip, and received the grade x in it. T.ien hOspital. Her work will be that tation into American colleges in recent be in charge 01 the Director of the haa had three years of a general practitioner in the dill- Geraldine Emeline Rhoads At college she forms of the Eng- • h 0 yeara ot modified N School, Dr. Abigail Adams EI'lO t, W ot .hemist.... and mathematica, two eases 0f women and

, Page Two • THE COLLEGE NEWS

• . ' conclusive proofs the College has ever count IU018 �p my athletic career at ers It es Speak 'W' Shin had that acienee is not suited to UI colleg.;. If I had time. I should like to THE COLLEGE NEWS _ " . tell you about a time when I was (FouncW in 191-4) 811, After . Last, Classes .. .-talill athletic, in the aum r. when _ "And with.this maxi in my brain · '"' . ,!,\ � l08t my 8pect cle8 oul s81hng. and -C��-�-' ili-· -� ---�"-.-,, ---wn--· "---rn-. ----CO '.- ----. -' --.-.a ------li a -"-ir -"----CTh ."-b---·,;-"- • i. finally I, too, had to face �he cli�� � d I � Y . ' p n d , � " � ... h intense 8. Lorer, J. Porter, and B. LeWIS found them aglm at. a depth of filty "'rinm nd E.'ltr Holid'r-, "VId durinl e.umin.tion wut_j.. in t e of of four flights the geology depart. l •• 1 •., Colli,'. to Bryn M.wr CoI el the M'luire Buildinl, W.yne, P .nd Bryn M.wr Declaim at Talyor, Daltpn, ment's quarters in Dalton. Past. r eo- leet, but that i. too long and oxciting and Library pIc with white coats who held huge a tale. . scalpels, past the choking fumes of the Ally only message now is that I • will do have done. can . HOPKINSON AT THE GYM more experimelltative chemists, I hope you as I I .. reached at last the room where I was not get sel;ltimental about this occa (Charttr::l<��JMemberJ ..L...- l ... , �� The ... III to spend man)' weary hours, many sion..-perhaps I should extol the ivy Collee. Ne . I. fully protected by cop),ril'ht. Nothlns that eppure . It was the last day of lectures, and reptllued WNtlen permlMlon or painful days. that. covers these old walls-I can't Edltor·ln-Chlef.It may be either whOIl)' !;Ir hi part wltheut th\ Taylor bell rang fifteen minutes early • ... . for I really don't li((et.he gym; I never 80 that all the undergraduates could "But the arduous climb-to �e fourlYl • have and I never will-and I feel that Edit.r.in-Chiel be presc.nt at the farewell singing of floor of Dalton 1 found was as nothitlO BAR CARY, 36 the sooner we move off to the library BARA the Seniors. Students and pro'fe880t'lI compared with· the conquest of iu. COPJI Editor New. Editor Misery,-weU-named,-and at the rec- tlte better." ANNE '37 ELEN FJSHER, '37 swarmed 1lbout Taylor'steps, tramp­ MARBURY, H ollection of which every first year At the library Barbara Lewis spoke. , ling upon the black-gowned young Editora 1'1 think it was shortly alter Lan- C.uoLINE BROWN, 'S6 ANNE '37 ladies that they had come to hear. It geologist heaves a sorry sigh. And C. _ E. KREMER, topmost peak of tern Night of Freshman year that my HELEN B. HARVEY, '37 ELtZABETH LYLE, '37 seems that everyone wanted to be able yet the climb to the HOUCK, '87 JANET THOftJ, '38 cannot be compared for stack and reserve room privile�s were AlARC to hear Detty Lord make her good. Mt .•Misery MARYARET H. HUTCHINCS, '87 '37 Indefinitely am not one MARY PETERS, bye speech to Taylor. sutreri�g with the climb to the suspended. I t01) 3 Spohr Editor. floor of the' hotel in Lehighton, Penn- to sign B. L. when asked not to, SYLVIA H. E AN , '87 Lucy '87 better far to linger in the shade of KIMBERLY, "Ah_zc vorld she is f ch too much sylvania. V S � fij1 • Bu.ill.tll JUBnagtr ' the water cooler and pounce on the JEAN STERN, '36 ",11 over me, I "Outstanding in the year's difficult tea wagon of books as it passes by. For f\(ty years she break break break activities are' the hardships of this Advflrt.iaing Manager Sub.cript16'n Ma aoer The reserve room plan js obviously DoREEN CANADA¥, '36 ALICE COHEN', ,\36 on my cold grey stonea-chust week-end field trip-even Sallie Jones impractical (to 'study on a camp-stool At8itlant. ... 1 was tired at the end of our fil'st. day . by day and hammock by night), and CORDELIA STONE, '37 ALICE G. KING" '37 . Und Ooooh-vat a vorld you are!­ And my chief recollections are those, as my idea has always been to comply people mit book-vorma und fcd­ not of the ages ot the earth or of the with all regulations in SO far they SUBSaUPrION, 'UO MAILING PRICE, ').01' der boas, importance ot f088i1S, but rather of 8S seem practical, I have not indulged in SUBSCRlPTlOSS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME All day every day zey pitter pitter those days in a bus, of the persever­ the pleasures af!'orded by that place. patter up and down one like a ance of Dr. Dtyden, ot my appear· "Recently, I took a desk in the read­ policeman's chorus. ance, nlas, in the regalia of. a eonl ing room just to see what it was like, Und it you knew vat I henr them to minerr-t.he boots, the heavy coat, the A 'Ye. , and I managed to sUck it out for a each other say-oh I cap with its guiding light. I remem­ from whole day. In this place of peace and To sec the Atumnae different locations, different occupations., and. Everyting, from 'tonight ve �gin ber looking at myselt in a mirror and quiet, have you ever noticed the male different generations returning each year to the campus to renew old mit re finale' to 'But really I'm seeing my face streaked with the coal asso- voice at the foot o( the stairs that ciations and to make new ones is one of the· most interesting experiences of �ure it va� Plato." from the mines, darkened with the . reverberates among the ra(tel'8 like Sometime ze stili sad mUSIC of hu­ dU8t ot the age.a. Science was not be­ the undergraduates. During the regular college term we hear about the Arabian lDQuettes? Or the neighbor manity she calm down a Icetle coming ,to me. activities of t'he alumnae only from indirect sourcea and we .seldom have an whose manicuring process sounds like bit, "And said then, as I say now, the I the sawing of redwoods'? opportunity to understand their point of view. But with the arrival of Rut den, on re bright sunny day, vat phrase formulated for me by that "Once in the winter time went into r should strolling down zc path [ Commencement we gladly turn over our lOOms, ou halls., and our classrooms glance in the mirror, "Science is not to the library, and I thought myself come and on my lap sit suited to us alii' to their former possessors. under the fire of the big bertha. There But someting vat look someting like From Dalton, the crowd hurried to It is a sourcc of regret to many undergraduates and to many alumnae were countless minor distractions such oooh Haverford may�, the gymnasium, and here Joan Hop- that the comact betw�en the two groups is not greater. We hear frequently as the Whispering Corridor of Hop­ Mit zc galooshes und ze umbrella- kinson spoke. kin80n, Lord, Morse, and Meits (who from alumnae the remark that they wish they were more in touch with the mmmm nize babyl "I come here today with two griev� always seems to be invoh'cd in sctt1in� life and work of the students. and we ourselvea 9ften declare that we wish Den at night-ven only Jb Graham Roccs-First, I was told that the reu- little differences ot opinion with her und maybe Dionysius s.hould be 90n was to speak was because I was the activities of the alumnae did not seem so dark and mysterious to us. I friends). out in zc cold not athletic-I should like to refute The appoimment of a committee especially for lhe purpose of eliminating "Study in the lib i8 hot suited to all Ze young ladies-rey descend like­ that belief because I took tennis for the lack of iation between the students and the alumnae makes fed of us. I have been so taken up with usoc us vat vas it?-1e Assyrians on·ze two yearlt, and to my mind that is athletics that I haven't had much time cenain that this difficulty will soon be ended. fold, enough qualification for nthleticism. to use it. Besides, I have most of Now that the Deanery has become the alumnae center on the campus Und, chust as tho' I vas die Housc Morcover, don't want to speak, I I the boqks in my room, anyway. we hope that we shall see a great deal more of the Alumnae at all seasons ot CommonlJ or a hockey field­ have no notes, and my mind is not 011 "Although the practical effects of zey drape themsc.lves nil over my subject because have just gone of the year and on all excasions of imerest. We welcome them back for I the (our year suspension of privileges one und croon through the emotion of having my laat their formal reunions in June and extend them the invitation to return fOI Latin. und Greek und French unl! Gil­ have not been tremendous, mcn will claltR. However, my 8 CCond grievance 80 fight tor a principle. I have fought, many informal ones at other times during the year. bert and Sullivan und gracious is that I am told that this occasion but have not won, and shall die inspirations to ze moon! 8h uld be humor u . I have . d I I � � � IIISI}CCt� with the name of Terrien "graven on Ach, ze moon und I! thiS gym both d and out d -A/que Vale! II'lsl e ..OJ l 1 m y heart like Calais Dcn- some oder times in de clay 1 I" As the Fiftieth Academic Year of Bryn Mawr College comes to a really don't seC anything tunny about tink-mmm-maybc now I gel it. . . . Of course, did watch from close "tjth the �mmencement program, it is natural to reflect on the achieve­ I a schnoor.c the balcony the other night a Greek Roll oj Honou, ments of the past. To speculate about the future, however, is more in Ven, ach,-from zc room on me lelt rlay rehearsal. Class of 1935 keeping with the mood of the moment. The college as a whole is deeply a cry aroose, "My only advice to all of you who Die cry of shall "e say a distressed lIIay use this gym in the (uture is to SUMMA CUM LAUDE concerned with Its own future, as is shown by the manifold activitiea COil­ damozel vat say - "lss diss I Elizabeth Monroe nected \vith the Million Dollar Drive. The Alumnae, while eagerly rtcount­ do what have done in the last foul' Alaska?" yeBI'S. For my method I found a very Vung-Yuin Ting IIlg past experiences, are absorbed, nevertheless, in thinking and planning "A million is vat ve vnntl" Now 1 stining analogy in history. It may Mary Pauline Jones for evCIlts lie ahtad. The Class of is perhaps mOSt greatly ask ya! which 19H torn be far.fetched, but I am sure you will between past and future, preoccupied as its members aTe With thoughts of Vich reminds me-all diss funny ita appJicaoility. As perha 18 you MAGNA CUM LAUDE sec J bissness about a million for de­ may recall, the Maccabees were Nancy Leslie Rutherford Bucher the last four years- and plans for the coming ones. n fense and science-nonsense! of Hebrews living in Judea in Catherine Adams Bill The departure of any dass from the college leaves a void which alway" tribe Did you ever think of tribute to me 170 n. C. Now the Seleucid Empire Ethel Arnold Glancy seems impossible to fill. This year as 1935 leaves our midst, it is particu of cent? Alma Ida Augusta Waldel meyer 0116 wns 1I'ying to hellenize the Maccabees; l larly difficulJ for those whc\remain to visualize what colle�e will be like with· Vat never? Very veil den,-dis lime they foreed them to sllCak Greek, and Elizabeth Margaret Morrow out the seniors. Their capabtlities were generously displayed in every pha5l' ven you say farewell-plces­ to usc G.reek customs. 1.Very reason­ Diana Tate-Smith viii you stay awaS' young flf college lite. In the academic field they have the distin�tion of bc:ingonl. ably, the Maccabees soon revolt..ed. In Elizabeth Kent . ladies! B. C. $Cven Maccabean brethren Gertrude Van Vranken Frimchot of the few das.sca graduate with three of their members recciving the IGG fO Nize bnbies!" became se\'en martYI'a to the cause, Nora l\facCurdy degree laude. Members of 19:H were prominent in dramatic summa ctJ,n Rlld a glorious pevolt ensued, Now Phyllis Walter Goodhart For a moment we were deafened by and were leaders in the reorganization of Varsity Dramatics on a marl' the reason they l'evoltOO, the last popular and a sounder basis. The Undergraduate A55OCiation, led by the upplause, and the next minute we no­ struw. was because tile $eleltdd8 IIUlI CUM LAUDE ticed with amazement that the under­ Gymnasilun for Women Mildred Marlin Smith Senior Class, su.:ccssfully managed the raising of the student quota of jUMt built n. gruduates in a body had been trans.. ill Jerl/lIafCrll. No Maccabean could Susan Ballowell Morse $20,000 for the Drive. The News and Lantern boards have not only wit­ ported with lightning-like speed to stand the thought of their women hav_ Alberta Anne Howard nessed the spirit and ability of the Seniors who have been the guidmg indu­ Dalton. There they a..... aited in sup­ ing to 8wing along the bars or put on Katherine Mary McClatchy cnccs of the past year. �ut they have also had a foretaste of that sensc of pressed excitement the line of Seniors little gray bathing suits and dive into Barbara Lewis Io..� which will be felt by all with the departure of the Class of 1935, since which WitS slowly winding its dign­ the pool. Therefore they revolted very Emma Josephine Baker fled way along the sidewalk to their the Senior members of both bo.uds retired early this Spring. Both as a naturally. Evelyn Bastings Thompson celebrated "Whet4', oh where?" tunc. "Well I am no Maccabean, and Betty Lucille Seymour class and as individuals., 19H WIll be greatly missed. We \vish them the I After they had arri\'ed safely and couldn't make myself a martyr, 80 I Virginia Parker Cooke we hope that they will best of luck and the bc,.q of success. but most of all sung to a long list of scientific (acuity decided that my plan of action would Geraldine Emeline Rhoads return often to VISit and to renew old ties and old friendships. and biological animal friends, Mias be to boycott the gy r simply to Diana Spofford Morgan m-o Jean Porter stepped from their midst. avoid it for four years. A brief out­ Elizabeth Margery Edwards and delivered the following s)K!CCh: Van Keuren Angell Discusses sively. We should like them to have line of my career in this project will Frances Cuthbert Dr I . at least a speaking acquaintance with liB fore came to Bryn Mawr, I show you my SUCCCSS, and I hope you Betty Faeth' • Trends in Education failed my physics College Board. all will be just as, if not more, sue­ Jeannette Morrison the great structural ideas upon which J had to come down early, before the ct'88(ul. Freshman -year, as I think Helen McEldowney our civilization rests and we should ConUnued from Pac_ One other Freshmen did, to take it over 1 mentioned, I played tennis at! Au": Frances Ellen Watson British universities. These ot the especially wish them to gain a vivid 'With a lot of people I had never seen tumn, which, of course, doesn't take Lucy Fitzhugh Fairbanks avera} changes all projected ""ere and informing sense ot the social, � be-fore,-and never saw again. place in the In the winter took Loretta Lamar Chappell background the trad gym. I against the of' l- nomics, and cultural characteristics of "Hoping that the requirements for swimming, but in December I devel­ Beatrice Hamilton Blyth trends American college tional in the the world in which they are living, for, the A.B. degree would be changed, I oped a cold, wh1ch with careful culti­ Elizabeth Anne Eatoll contributions each and their peculiar In without such equipment, they can put off ever !oming inside Dalton Hall vation lasted so long that Miss Brady "" Shizu Nakamura out. These discuuions cue pointed hardly play their full part 8S inteJli­ until my Junior year. thought I really shouldn't into the Eleanor Favill Chene}' comment n go led to the follov.'ing upo gent citizen. Finally, we confidently "I can remember, .. a Freshman, pool at all. That lasted till· April. Betty Clark Little one of the t or these rno.t r«en IU'e-- expect that out of such an edl:cation .....aving goodbye to my (riends on Mon­ In the Spring played tenni... Rebecca Perry 1 vailing trendJ: will iuue a 8tUrdy and discerning days at two when they set out to cut "Sophomore year, as you can prob­ Elizabeth Wain Meirs "After all, I take it that by what. character 'With a reverent apprecia­ up things and came back at f3ur with ably gu08S, I played tennis, again out­ Catherine Little ew:r accomplished, we are all tlon of the ethical and spiritual val­ Anne Cassel Bolloway means souvenirs like fishes' eyes. • doors, and early in November I began to train studentl to actual- which inhere in noble Jiving. Col. Elizabeth Mann Chamberlayne a.. leam Uta "I can remember, as a Sophomore, my perennial winter cold. In the �. to think and for legiate education impliu muth more to tt\\,.nk them- feeling rather blindly sorry for my Spring I played tenniL ...... We ahould be �ly diap- than all thi., but these are qu&1i room·rnate who decided to major "Junior )·ea.r I went twice to the Dr. David vdll do rch work at � bad resea pciDted if tber diecovued no talent ...·bleb are cardinal to it and if �! In chemiltry. I reMised how much gym to attend the dances, and again Bryn MaW!' and Harvard on a mari­ in retpODae: totIM be fruitfully deVe1- happier I waa not knQwin,,-or rath­ Senio!' year I visited time c.rusade from lowe!' Germany and _ lute which, stimulated and the plaee twiee er, tryiq to lmow,�y to dance. au ding land. which resulted in I' Iet!m of the col...... _ oped. the p__ employed not acience. rroun ...... atUmpt to develop la...... nreIJ of minor CIXlIIq\IIIDOI." . . In 10'1 CIIIe 01 the Int "Thi .....0(( ...... � ac.. ibI CODquut of Silv... are . .. lee . J , • • •

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• � • THE COLLEGE NEWS • Pag� Three

t Over Half Awa,ded Vung-Yuin Ting Wins 'Swar hmorl\ Beaten M. Guiton, the new Assistant re80lved to do it, and then �aa never Degree With Honors Protessor of French, wilL offer Alternate Fellowship got around to It. But it she has not By Bryn Mawr Team ___ the Advanced course in.French indulged in this torm of amulICmen� OOntlnu� frorn PI\... One Literature since 1850, and will Cou tlnued rrom l'age One she has .tried all olhen. and between Elizabeth Margaret Morrow winning prizes. atudying scienee and Varsity Defeated by Faculty teach a section of First Year Before she came to America, she a attending conferences, In Closely Fought Matches New Jersey Frcnch and section of Second atudied English in school and attained lIt\,e has �ueez ( ' cum.- ':'.((mul e a"d with di t tlmgna s ine­ Year ...French Language in the cd In a merry lire as well 8S a wise By Score of . such a degrte oC p�ficiency that here 3-2 . Han in French one. year 1935<36. she required \'ery little practicc to Helen Ripley :. Massachusetts speak like a rlative-born New Eng . TEAM PLAYS STEADILY Frances Cuthbert Van Kcuren .Wanner of f!ellowshi • phia (A.B. Mount Holyoke Col­ lander. Yet with all her instruction p .. Maryland the lege lll1S). about western hemiSllhcre, she Has Average of 9J.9 _ May I5.-The Varsity Tennis Team ' cllm La_ude Ettyli8Jl . . held many l)Cculiar beliefs concerning _ won One of it, most important . GEOLOGY ..Sarah Thorpe Ramage, of Swee� the ways and c.hal·ucters o( its IlCollle, Contlnuf'i1 ,from P",. One makhca ot the season from Swarth- Adeline Fs'ssitt• Furness Briar, Virginia (A.B. H. SO for she deri\'(xl her , llhie most vivid i(tclis bel' Sllare time has betn stnge work "more with a !!COre of 4-1. The team IV (A • from the�Americnn 8Sh' tng t on, D. Newcomb Mcmorial College. Tu­ mo\'ies sho\ni in (or various college (llays. She work seem cd to have recovercd from I · ts g No MacCurdy . lane University, 1928). Shanghai. She cannot n w rel�el�1be.r the Deluge. Tile Knight of tho um � cd on deleat the week by Vassar c lClilde lUld 'with ,."retlc/l •. of b�fore �nu disti"c- nny one of her (ormel' 8111'11"1" P llt mlscon�t>tlOns. r ie. Pllflmnlion, thc Bar­ and showed some really excellent tion in Geology . but she 'Hlr of Sedllr, Catherine Fehrcr, of Lyme, Conn.. says that she was. In somc� and designed and exe­ playing. Bett.y, Faeth defeateq her • what the same state of a Go d ',· GERMAN (A.B. Vassa.r College 1934 ).• mind as ce.r. cuted the . . see"cry of the " Ole1'S. opponent, Lapham, in two straight (i'lt Clb8entia) GerllUtk "lid Philollo/my taln meal Ruth Elizabeth Reuting Ch' stu den� who w s guiding One of her dte »est regrets is that she sets with the close scores or 6-4 and . � l • Pennsylvania Beth Cameron Busser, .of YQrk, Pa. a. (emale Ame lclln �OUrlst about . � . cannot sing in as well as work for 9-. 7 Faet h's exce II cnt game seemej S�angh�l. " Margaret Linburg 40bin New Jersey (A.B. Br)'n 1I1awr College 1933). . The mquuntl\'e laJyasked the: Choir and Glee Club l)Crform­ a little aJower than usual in this History allli EcotlomiCIi . HISTORY him I( It \\�ue as she had heard, nnees. She also designed the class in­ match, but she won by her steady that the Ch"i made H milton York Jessie Louise Coburn, of Philadel­ II custom of aignia. a.nd hos wriflen 8Cveral oral playing and stTong driving. Betty Beatrice t Blyth New CUln. lalldo and With distil/clioll phia (A.B. eatin� r�ta... He �eplicd with a.nother songs ; and shc has �n Secretary of Perry lost her match to BrookS- 6-8 in HUJtorll 1933) . questIOn . But In your country, do her clap in her jUnior and senior and 6-2. Perry played. a fast Mlltllcmatic8 you not eat dogs, and what wors , Loretta Lamar Chappell Georgia is e years, and chairman of the Curricu­ and flashing game, but she could not CII],' lallde ' cat them h�t!" Franccs Frieda Rosenfeld, of New . lum Committee this last yeur. Her hold Qut against the consistent .. '" York·CitY ,(A.B. Huntel' Colle...... , �ter MISS Tmg �ad. hved In the Flo.·-nce Cluett J'I 8ssac husc tt s ..� athlctic Ilrowesa is modest, but"she has pounding of hu ,opponent. United Stotes (or she oot only Elizabeth Sophia Colie New Jersey 1984). II time, been on hc:r class hockey, basketball, Varaity won both ot the doubles - learned about the people her Virginia Parker Cooke DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF around . and swimming teams. She regrets matches in spite of the fact that the . " PHfLOSOPHY but she was forced to learn more �bout that she hils nC\'cr 'been a great pa­ Washington, D. C. aBStCa. Arc llleology team seemed rather tired. Faeth lallde atld 1Uitll. di.tinction CI I I her OWII land as well. The Chlncse . ' tron or either the Greek's or the Coi­ elU1t 0 and Perry de:feated Lapham and in HiBtol'Y LTucy aXIS' Sh oe, fAustm,' Texas ns a whole are not" much interested lege IIlII. . Brooks with the closcly matched n ,\ in I)olitics, and shc was no exccption. 6-4. Sarah Perkins Cope Pennsylvania (A.. B ryn " awl' Cell ege 192 7 When asked �or comments on the scores ot 7-6 and Little and • Moreover, she knew lillie of the enol'� Elizabeth Anne Eaton Ohio and ll'I . A 1928) . college, shc had few criticisms to l rene t, relIC L" "nd Jackson, after losing the first set laude 01 1 F I F tI Ile1'(/ture mous country except the Il lacc1 where clln, make. She likes a "short, snappy col­ 2-6, finally de.feated their opponents, Lat'1n sbe had lived all her life In Ameri­ Lucy Fitzhugh Fairbank Illinois . lege ycar," which gives long summer Sonneborn and Jlarviay, in the next cum laude Sl. ca, howcver, shc was cxpected to know 8�6 Edith Armstrong Wright ot vacations to catch Ull on �ading; two sets with the scores of and ' in detail the Cro lS, industries, princi­ Anne Coodrich Hawks Ncw Jersey D aVI d s, P a. (A.B. Mount Holyoke l but she admits that Rr)'n 1\1awr is a 7-6. but only with difficulty, as the College 1927-, B.L.S. Drexel Insti- ple cities, eiimato,. and topography of Joan Hopkinson Massachusetts busy Illaee. There are three l)()Ssible scores ahow. each region y,,1hether ncar to Shanghai, Elitabelh Kent Massachusetts tute 1925, M A. Bryn Mawr Col- fields of activity here : academic SUMMARY lalldc find wi th. di8liJle� lege H130). or hundreds of milell away. Shc was magna CIOn. work, extra-c.urricular activities, and �(Si"gle. ) tion in Hi.torJj Gcr-manic Philology, Genll(nt Litera- also expected to understand the for� what may be summarized as. "week­ lure (Jmi OM NOTse eign and domestic policies of her gQ\'­ Facth vs. Lapham. Won by Bryn Nancy Bertha Lane Washington ends." No one can really do morc 6-4, ernment that she could explain Mawr: 9-7. Jane Hopkinson May Maryland Irmgard Wirth Taylor, of Media, 80 than two o( these. She waits with ..v them to ignorant Ame.ricans. In or­ Perry vs. Brooks. Won by Swarth- Catherine Christine McCormick Pa. (M.A. University o( Pennsyl- inlere8t to see the effects of the new der t� live 1111 to eXI>ec.tatiolls, she set more : 6-3, 6-2. Pennsylvania vania 1930). system ot comprehensives. The ath­ Gcntlanic Pllilology (md Old N01 'Re about to learn all these things ulUl Jackson vs. Sonneborn. Won by Elizabeth Wain Meirs New Jersey Ictic program allows a proper amount 6..(1, 6-0. c m '"ltd. she did. Bryn Mawr: u Mary S£urm Chalmers of Canton, of leeway, she rccls. Both the Self­ At once her interest in national and (Double,) Diana Spofford Morgan N�w York Ohio (A.B. )930, government and Undergraduate Asso­ CIUn. '"u al "nd with di,tinction' M.A. Northwestern University international altairs was called into Faeth and Perry vs. Lapham and ciations Ilre "cry good, and we are 1931). practical use. Churches alld schoolR Brooks. Won by Bryn Mawr: 7-5. in. Hi.tory lucky to have them really run by the t Esther Marie Metzenthin of Chapel in and around Philadelphia re<"luested 6-4. Jeannette Morrison Massachuset s studcl!ts themselves. Required Hy­ lalldo and wUh d,', tim:tion Hill, North Carolina (A.B. Dukc her to lecture on Oriental education, giene and Diction courses seem to her Little and Jackson vs. Sonneborn e1nn 01' "i)l HiAtorlJ University 1929, M.A. Dryn Mawr government, ge ography. During the and Harvey. Won by bryn Mawr: unnecessary. The system o( outsidc College 1930). summcr ahe attended camps whel'e She 2-6, 8-6, 7-5. Rebeeca Perry Massachusetts lecturcs might nlso be changed. cllm lallde Marie Helene Schneiders ot New student conferences were held. Two 16 _ .. thinks that it is a pity to have the idea May The Faeulty�Varsity (A.B. York City Burnard Collcge summers ago, she acted as secretary ot a certain number of lectures each Match has always been the best at- Nancy MacMurray Robinson College to the Chinese delegation in the Jnsti­ Washington, D. C. 1927. M.A. Bryn Mawr yenr, and thut it might be be.tter to tended game of the year. 1t is hard tuto of 'Pacific Rclations when it met Margaret Florence . Simpson 1931). wait and get only very distinguished to think that these men whom we A11Ieric(tn Hil/ o /-1i3torll European. at Banff. Fortunately her duties were � . New Jersey l rl/ . lecturers' as the}, ure Il\'ailable� saw rushing strenuously about the anti ECOnomtctJ 1.,iUl di,tiltdwtl in fjiatoru not too arduous to keep her from hav­ courte are the ' same dignified and One of the. best- things abou�collegO­ Elitabeth Kissam Henderson of ing O'i1orlous time. Here at Bryn sedate gentlemen who point out to us Edith Duncan Van Auken is the ollportunity it gi\'ea one to Ih'c Bryn Mawr Mawr she has joined the Chinese Stu­ Pennsylvania Philadelphia (A.B. with other l)COple who are working the deeper mysteries o( the anatomy denU' Club of Philadelphia. and this Marie Louisc Van Vcchten College 1924, -ond M.A. HI25). ill fields different from one's own. Miss ot the cat or the intricacies of calcu- fiilJt01'1I ami A,lttriC(ln year she has the great honor to be hIS New Jersey EltTO�(mi Monroe said that none of her friends or even show us the hidden beau- . fllltory President ot the Chinese Students of literature. they Frances Ellen Watson New York was interested in chemistry or mathe­ ties ot Latin But Cllm lallde America. Helen Georgia Stafford of Lancas- matici, but rather in other subjects are' the same people and showed � In addition to her trip to Banff, she ter a. (A.B. Swarthmor Col- like Englilh. history, or French. themselves to be 811 capable on the HISTORY OF ART has traveled in the more lege 1930, M.A. Bryn Mawr Col- The most striking thing about Bryn courts as we have known them to Anne Brockie Lukens Pennsylvania widely than many who have lived here lege 1931). 1\1awr is, however, the cordial and be on the lecture platform, for they Susan Hallowell Morse Lalill. Ancient HiJJtorll anti C.,ech- all thcir Iivcs. She"'1mows the prim between defeated the Varsity by a &corLot. Massathusctts helpful I'elatiollsh il) the stu· cllm luude Charlotte Elizabeth Gooafellow of New England country around Boston; 3-2. dents nnd the faculty. This is only Pa. (A.B. Mount she has been west to Detroit. and Chi­ 'n M Coatesville, possible because we ure small col­ Dr. Blanchard, after losing the Elizabeth inot Weld New York cago, where she visited the World's Holyoke College 1929, M.A. Bryn lege, and Miss Monroe feels that the firat set to Betty Faeth 6-1, soon LATIN Fair; and still farther west to New Mawr College "1931) sympathy and time which she hilS rc­ realized that he had a .true mistress Margaret Burns Cole Pennsylvania Mathematic" Mexico and the Grand Canyon. There teived (rom various members of (our ot the game against him and settled Elizabeth Margcry Edwards Harris. she firat saw the American Indial! Ruth Caroline Stauffcr of different Departments. has been truly down to a steady game, taking the Massachusetts 8-6 burg, Pa. (A.B. Swarthmore Col- and discovered all that she could next two sets with the scores of cl/m laude omazing. The generasity of the fac­ lege 1931, M.A. Bryn Mawr Col­ about his history and his prcsent life. Hedlund Betty ulty is the biggest advantage of a and 6-2. Dr. and Phyllis Walter Goodhart Now that she ia 80 well acquainted Ic"" 1933). small student body, and Miss Monroe Perry p Iayed a c Ioae match, but Dr. Pennsylvania PhiloltOpllll and EngliHh with the different sections of this land, clt_m lallde hopes that such prh'lIeges as hers will H edlund finally came out on toP. "ulgna and tfJith diBtinc- 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Margarj!t Bell Rawlings of Tacoma, it seems strange to her that when she wi th the scores Like thm ift. Latin alwl1),s be possible. Although she has Wash.� (A.B. 1927, first arrived, she could not distinguish Mr. Carlson lost the no illusionS" all to the "unalloyed bliss" his collea,..gue, Betty Clark Little Georg;a College 19W). the speech of one region from that of 5-7, Cllm lallde M.A. Bryn Mawr ot her college career, It is IIOmething first set, in his match with Philosophy lind P"ycholoyy In spite of her excellent another. she would not ha\'e missed for words. Peggy Jackson, but he won the next Helen McEldowney Pennsylvania o( English, she knew noth­ CIHn Dorothy Walsh of Vancouver, Brit- knowledge "Bryn Mawr 8uccesafully combines a two seta with th e decwve scores o( l«-lId� . ish Columbia (A.B. University or ing of the distinctions within the Ian· 6-1,_ 6 -�. mediaeval love of scholarshil) with an ._ Peggy Little, playing with ATICS ; a Southerner and a Yankee 111IATHE' IJ1 Briti!;h Columbia 1923, M.A. Un i- goage contemporary Dr. Broughton, won the only singles ' alert interest in the EI,'ubeth 'UI onroe N'ew Yo•-k sounded llike to her. It was 1I0t long, ", versity... of Toronto 1924). sccne." match for the Vanity by defeating ,lUnnia ,,, I•• d. and ,' ,. d,'a/,',,- Social Economy, So ial TII� ory "n d this 6-4 6�4. ,. n. c howe\'er, before she corrected her opponent and In the Hon in. Matht!tltatic. PllycholoOll . error of hera. C:ampus NOleli doubles match Betty Faeth and Betty . Sh ,' ,u Nakamu,a 'apan Feder ot Sr. LoUIS, Considering this business-like way y Leah Hannah vacation Perry defeated Drs. Blanchard and ",m I-"... de , . has conducted her af_ Miss Park will sllend her 6-3), 1\1880url . (A .B fl". ount R0 I yo k e in which she Hedlund (6-7, 7-5 and proving in the Adirondacks. PHILOSOPHY College 1917). fdirs through her yeara here. it docs perhaps that when it comes to endur- ' N Social Economy, Socia l T le01' att(/ in Miss King, who is taking a sab­ Betty Luc,.ll e Sey,nou, ew Yor k I 11 not seem poSsible that her teachers clnn l de Education this year, plans a very ance "the female ot the species is UI/ China disapproved of MillS Ting's batical leave n the male." summer: she expects to more deadly th, Marie Ann Richards Pennsylvania Jennette Rowe Gruener ot Fitch- coming to a foreign country when she inte.resting up works of Alma Ida Augusta Waldcnmeyer burg, Mass. (A.R. Wellealey Col- was so young. Although she had al- go to Calabria to look Havtrford Ties Varsity Team Sicily, and to Austria Pennsylvania lege 1923 and M.A. 1925). ways received gr,ades averal;ing O\'er Mattia Pretl. to »Iog-no Cilln laude her Chinese or her Eng- and Hungar), to look up Spanish :May lS.-The annual game with . TWO YEAR CERTIFICATES IN 90 in either a works. She i. also going to Sardinia Haverford has always been a well- PSYCHOLOGY THE CAROLA WOERISHOFFER lish courses ; although she had \\'on to vilit Mrs. R. A. Giles, who is the attended match. This year the final Emma Josephine Baker Pennsylvania GRADUATE DEPARTMENT OF Chinese essay prize. one of the ve.ry CHm lallde the mother of one of MiSl King's daM­ re.ault ot the singles matches was � SOCIAL ECONOMY ANt) SOCIAL fcw awards offered in her school, let her go matea. Mrs. Giles i. collecting every a tie--2-2. Faeth lost the first set, Eleanor Favill Cheney Illinois RESEARCH wi ll be conferred upon authorities were afraid to cum lllll(l� only seven- a"ailable piece ot ardinian Reli­ S�, to her opponent, Parry, but her Janet Hooks of West Englewood. 80 soon, because she was opp08i� gious Drama and is making a line-(ot­ well�kno",'Jl steadiness and strong Vlr,ginia Naney Wilson Pennsylvania N. J. (A.B. Mount Holyoke CoI- teen. Notwithstanding their line trans:ation. Th"i. work will be playing won out in the end and she DEGREE OF MASTER· OF ARTS lege 1933. M.A. Bryn Mowr Col- tion, 8he crossed the ocean and came Cl(J,�cal Arch(leologll she comlJlete Ind the onl}' ont! in its !'ield. captured the next two sets. 10-8 and lege 1934). J to Shipley School. Not once did to say Mias King is writing the introduction 6-1. Betty Perry, playing Brocker, Clariaaa Compton Dryden ot Hav- Helene Coogan of Bryn Mawr, Pa. give her former teachers cause and Br}'n -Mawr is to have the honor of R8\'erlord, won the first set (6-3); erford, Pa. (A.B. Bryn Mlwr CoI� (A.B. Woman's College. Univt!r- thlt their fears were justified: Her nf publishing it. but alter that her ulual fast pact! lege 1932). sity ot North Carolina 1933). onl). complaint js that she undertook it too stowed down and ahe lost the next two Jeannette Eliubeth LeSaulnier o( ONE YEAR CERTIFI�TES to too much busin�and handled Mias Donnell)' plan .. to spend thtf" be in col- set. (2�, 2�). The next match. be- Indianapolis, Ind. (A.B. Bryn received upon completion of the "' ell; for since sHe has· been .ummer In Northern Italy Ind Eng­ tween Peggy Ja.c:kaon and Bev.an, also Mawr College 1983). Bummer Prartic:um. will be eonferred lege, she h8� not hut rim� to devote land. interest in art. Chinese mu- Htrben and Mi .. Robbin., alllO ran to three seta, with Be\'an coming Education upon to her Dr. 6 out on top with the eeorea of 6-1. 2- . Marion Harris Churchill ot New Priscilla McConnell o( Philadelphia sic she undetstlndlt; but she has IORt on sabbatical leave, Ire going to Eng­ and 6-2. PeaJ' Little. who played York Glty. (A.B. Swarthmore (Ph.D. 1933). track of our music. She haa not even land to work In the British Mueum...... to ret Stokes, from Haverford, "W...on her _ Colt. 1920). in absentia. L. A�_ Williamson ot· Lancaster, Pa. ben able to join the Glee Club as abe They alto hope down to Spain . .... _ ' � ... . ;.l � ·� .. •..•_\.-..-....EVU'J abe ...... ••:: "--yl ....uD n two .m (8-4 .. �' ·...Jlnaca'er Stadie ot Phi1"�= ... UD Coltere 1934). ,.,. . ,it.t;. .. winter. r •

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Pago: THE COLLEGE NEWS • Four Guy Marriner Gives, N.lan,y Undergraduates

__ ot " reHeet. hi, reaponllveneu to all Plait Tri ps Europe Lecture And R,et::iltall ,�1!�;�����: ��;,��I and expense. will be dec-reased by a I 10 ways of life and it �C� a�m� p�u�s��N�o�t��es�� greater.18. eoncen 1936;tration the work. - say where hi' love of Calendar:1 The 30 group embarks Modem Russian will lead him in the future. Sept. Academic work from �Mi" Gardi ner is goinK to England Many Bryn Mawr students are 'hr- omatic:i,m and CMXI�hon I / , ' Show 'Harmonic Experiment :::�: �� �::� I I ' . October to JOne wi th two weeks' •. <:omlf'OsilioOS lof his music i8 worked out IP ; wor k'n t h e University CoIlege In spending the summer vacation In fas- And Innnv�tl' on ��: I vloca';"n at Christmas and in Febru- � accprdlng to a strict : , �� � I cinating tlips to all parts ot E,urope. 8'I'o" n'· r. WI one week in May. - . ... U\: ...... � Mlle. Soubeiran is sailing on eat and beautiful design. 8 England,, seems to attract the g"at- NEW CHORD DISCOVERED l( \. ' The total expenses ,' a for P'arls. 8he II &JI a plon- ,' n vacation trips and theatres, nurnU\:r an d Inear y every traveler of atonality who believes that ',llow-1 th a Izb urg F'estiva I dan La- 01 d room, and round trip New plans to spend some tiNe there.• Helen • Guy Marriner Gives ing the laws of nature rather than the Temainder of8 tbeh summer fayeUe to Munich Tourist$955 Class, but$1,155, not Letture and Recital the in Central0 EUrope and the AIPS .. I Fisher has already sailed on t"e law, of nrt ;, a .urer way ' I ;n,lu,!;ng spending money and laun- Rnd;ng the inner spirit of muaic. D r. d Man rs. mit 'w)II go to E ,_ for a'summer In England, , • range$500 n I an d , k' h B"rllts h .."!" se"jn.l: Irom to 1 'I ' is thus tho.tle has arrived at wor m t e dn France, Spain, and the IIScandinavian el'S WI " :a:d:;.:t�lif they can �nt their house elth�r in advance or in one I theory .. ' ato I,',y "'h,'ch a sum,100. of Sept�mber region.' SIevera Bryn awr- 'II Deanery, May 21.�l\tr. Guy Marrl- summer. Norm(lll(lio. of harmony b.a� twelve 'i the balance in monthly install- be lucky enough ncr, In eth ast of a. scnes'f 0 Iec. ture. D r. 'Mu" II er IS' ' ,gomg 0 to sail' on the new ent notes, i� np-ildistinctlon Ilf recitals, discussed Modern Russiun tonality, whi h is based on one. back to Californi�' 5French liner Among t�em For 50further information, sec Dr, Composers who, with the exceptiotl of Ohords are form� twhich have ico, and Mexico to study American will be Huldah Cheek, who sails June t.he neo-classic Pl'Okoftefl', are imporl- xce Archaeology. He will also viS�" ��:�::; 1� D;ez or write to Dr. Edmund common source or relation e pt l�: for England, where she will be pre- an\. for their experiments and ver, os Angeles, o.nd the � Pros� Avenue, Newark, relati0itexisting Getween each of L : sented at Court: Mary Whalen sails ! ��� vation. in modern harmony, twelve lfote.. When a consonant tone ... Unify in July tor a tour of Europe, during with his mystic chord ; Schonberg Dr. and Mrs. Manning and mass is formed, the juxtaposition Study in Major the coursc of which she will receive daughters e pect to go his work in atonality; StravinS:: kY::�� 'hc ehOrdS is scientifically worked out, x to New M,ox- I<:o,mlm,h,m"i., audience with the Pope. Nancy ; I ; Tile Juggler, summel' Toc:h, with their continual �: ;e ::�:though harmonic resolution is ig- ico. Ham and Japheth Manning W'o,'k1!L"n. and Edith Noble are touring after new efTec:ts, all IHlint the : planning to speng the visit- England and Scot1and : by Ernst Toch, by car 18tLeer • to\V ards unhampered expression ing Miss Meigs .in New Hampshire. "Although a p�pil ot SchOnberg, is an example a comprehensive exam,i,1th; ', summe,. Others who ore tro.vel-v. Dr. Mrs. Nahq'l spend 'modem ideas. atonality in v,:,Wch the' discords arc and will also nation is protracted torture ing in England include Mary the summer in New visiting Scrisbin, who was oorn in less violent than in much of the atonal Mexico hand, it -is actually enjoyable at Powell. Mary HarwoOd, Mary A,ski o.nd to ring. go. was a prophet of the 'Bussian music bci�g written now. Atonality U time it is taken." Slich is Jeanne >!o,r, l and Bertha Hollander. phony 8S Debussy was of the Miss rady and Miss eh are is only one phase of the e/fort to nr- B , L l rison's opinion of the ";�n�"'!:�,:���:.��' A number of students are combin- He was an impressionist and a rive. at a new type of sic which, ing to New Mexico. system:'" Miss Morrison is a : : :���ing pleasure nnd study in their jour- � r I sophist, and fanaticpl in his belief in founded on a rigld form of O . and Mrs. Dryden will do gcolog')' of the graduating c.lass at Bryn I abroad. Catherine Bill will sail the close relationship of perf"Y"le own, will be completely (ree� from work in the Southwest. and has taken honors work in fli for Cermany, where she will Tennent spend the s m color to music. E\'cntunlly he found rules and thus better able Dr. will u · with Dr. Cray. She �lieves that at the University of Heidelburg . expression for his ideas ill the ' . mer working at thc Marine Laboratory preparation for a eomprehcnsive going �o teach at a LycCc in express the modernCal>Pyicc age. io tic chord" which he forncd� from the Carnegie Institution of Wash- amination integrates the France next winter. Louise Dickey Mr. Marriner also played Crrulle • I scale. His manner of' h.,adl; " ington in Dry Tortugas, Florida.f II. IP own ��!:,: �: L gained in various courses and is i study at the same University on �:(palmgPrell/del'en) J j)l G MlwnJ( Dnch'millo) , ·O W/UCn 1 th," chord l"'--nds a strange, I i . r r. Fenwick has J>ublishec;l a case senti. aIf or a h"Istory major course. A s ch ol\I rsh' h'w ICh hs e won recent y. (M08sourgsky-Rachmande inofflittle, ' ' (Iuality to his music, which il d; CIIljr ) 0f mternatJonaI I aw IS t:he comprehensive enables a student ,h, to IIS.,lIy... Todd, Adelaide Davidson, and EI- to interl)ret and to uuderstand. most useful to all students of law o.s gain a knowledge of field as Scattergood Rachmaninoff), and her a plan to study also, demands complete absorption of C,8£OTCS well as students of international law ehcrbartchel f) . In conclusion, Mr. whole, a knowledge which can be , they will be at the University oC performing artist and the ����'; ( 1 �8�,;,:�: '7'-r I I in Bryn Mawr. Dr. Fenwick plans �� : repeated for tained in no other way. When Scriabin'8 music is Cull MinOT� '�1c work most of the summer on a new ... b Prokofieff the As In history courses, a Another group of travelers will tour pr«iated, it penetrates beyond : : F'lIiry Tell, i'l E Fili t. book On constitutional law which I :y Rachmaninoff, a� hensive examination is invaluable in Russia un�r the guidance of Dr. .... I will seck to show the historical devel- " listening ".ge"· until it is no lo'n g,,, � a literature courses. MISS Morrison of the department of Social ,� - ncr's sa I Finally it8 And A I 0f t h e powers 0f Co ngress and explicable in words. er n na yzes is not sure how the complehensive sya- Ruth Davy, Joan Hopkin­ co'-' an e ·II'ial part of one, to inelude within the term '. ' tern would work out m Peggy Little, .and Diana Morgan characteristic points the way to a variety of social and 1. courses. The plan for among them. Theysee may be joined era, when music as a branch of Economic 0,._ issues such as those includ- COntinued from Pace in their major fields for all England by Susan Morse. Eleanor science to - under the N. R. A. Apart from art will be linkeli by is, on the whole, a good one. also may them in the g,'o,,, and thoac three, art, i academic activities he speaks of ' COlli· Morrison is in favor 0f MISS ' of her}EANNE travels inTT'S Europe. science, will be recognilCd as the ba,,;al ''''' fl n ,ml._ ltalk;n.g a motor trip through Quebec. The Divine Poem, e eney, and a exible, cohe nt idea of having a list of books BRYN MAWR FLOWER of lite. tern oC the working parta, was Dr. WeissTile is spendingCollected the PCtpeTIf 8U.lIlmer of lished which would be helpful SHOP. written pletely swept away by nationalistic Cha-rleMHe S(umciers expects to Pic't'ce,complete the sixth studying Cor the examination, and Mrs. N G • T. ra r phrases of four bars and Ilresenting tendencies and changes in the ceo- volume of S. having occasional tutoring. .23 Inc.Av.nu. wealth of harmony. is an attempt nt which he ' -n',.,., nomic I)otenlialities of the cou ries MAWR. PI\.mme hO)les will be published before autumn. Miss Morrison believes that the HRVN "Ilress the struggle Ilnd triumph the world...... ular courses outside of the I the spiritPoem over (Opus sellsual 32), enjoyment. The results of the economic changcs This book will deal w.i,thh elscicntificQ l ec t eII 0 field, which llre taken by students cOIllII06er's growing mysticism is ore os yet only problematical and call- PC'1metaphysics,Jrlf and wit h bl"its pu leatlon,IV' hon Prdlulc., H lit: _'ia a SQI>h' IC portion 0f t e their senior year, present a UI t;n" I _-,;P;;;;;;. ;, dent in Poem, part of not be evaluated. Free enler uise, Ilhilo ;,o;;;;;;;;;;;; .- -l ' IS uvv , obstacle to the comprehensive system. ;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;:- contitting of five an which was the foundation ot the old Tlte Tentativewill , .FotHttia compI ete. tiDn8 D 0f r. I Ph ell\9 '/ Olf- . Is " ' The preparation for a and a wtlich ushered in the system, may have --ne for g<><> fact should be taken into account This ,,-ill be the first 0f a ser· The mystic. esoteric since wi th the destruction oC tree_ en. WI ' other professors. as the romantic quality, of lerprise we take away the greatest ies of volumes ela boratmg' a rh l c ��:�.';��: , I As a whole, however, tKe music is noL fully appreciated natural stimulus toward labor thl' sophie system. The volume 'III d en " r hensive system is e.'dremely I but it. vogue will come again, n,ro'l)Cct of gain. with the fundamental structure 0 t h It takes much time in preparation ; full understanding of it is possible. After the War the old economic a '- universe and the baSIC )lrmcll> es 0 ';�� :�:.; l ,. but its ,'alue in integrating the Like Scriabin, Rachmaninoff' is a paratus was worn out and had to be knowl&lge. f � y- makes it worth the trouble it " ...ft fl It.. .. Romanticist, but unlike the former, he m Miss Koller will do work ut JohnsV('Ti- .,n rebu�-ilt. The structure of inte ation- ... 'I"" IttIrt tf '.wt-w'" i. not influenced bu the Impression· Hopkins in re�ding proo an vend 'f In spite of the Cact that one I al trade was lost, olthough this was .. of the examination oO""tant1IL. .!� ,...... II1'1 f.rt•• •• ista. He 'writes in long sweeping di",rn'isedby a froo flowof investment. OMlm.ing rc.fCJ:e.nces for the.- Spellscr 1 . . weeks beforehand, cats, sleeps, ...... _ TIl. """ ( .. Ilhrase. the R BBian song of poign· Thc excessive rapidity of rcconstruc- ... 'tI . U dreams comprehensivea-"People , •• . ) .n larl' •• ancy, fire and suffering.j" G.His music tion after the War shows tbat it could tw. , ... t PTf'iIUie. us'tho.t we didn't even smile for a1rJ, w"" ••• kRolI" ... haa the lugubrious quality of the Rus- not be 80 important or so thorough as Plans for Junior Year in Germany be<:n weeks before the .rll\l' utll, wUI lilY' t. sian drama. although it should be. International co-opcra-� 1'he 1035-36Junior Yenr in Munich haH I one docs not really i and cvcn ... til•• t.'II ,,,'HI,t. til •• , coml)08C(\ ina major, is, likePrci1uie Tchni- ill lioll was destroyed and each countru reorganized for the Acndemic ' . YOI , enjoys,Margaret the llctunl exnmmntlon,Telephone Ckovsky'. Minor, music, ineffably sad. Mr. to become self-sufficient, putting Yenr under the auspices of Of I� "'nUl, .... 10 Bryn Mawr 809 Marriner also played the up high tariff' barriers in nn nlteml1l the Deutscher Akademischer Aug· not Smith "yond your bud&e" a piece too well·known to provide agninst another war. The tnuschdienst Berlin in collaboration BRYN MAWR in Cosmelicilln CHAS. Ileed comment. Treaty oC Versailles aimed at denud- with the Akademische Auslnndstelle MARINELLO SALON a. uu. y Methner, Ilnother Roman ticist, ing Germany and preventing her from Munich and has been placed under Nuional Bank Bldg. ;oieforma de alIit'rt, sharp contrast with Rach- rising to economic importance ngllin, direction of Dr. Edmund Miller, maninoff because of his tremendous Germany .....as determined to build .up Delaware University, The course 60; which is very IHlpular in he.r industry and succ:eeded in study, consisting of intensive work America, although not on the Conti- but she acted in accordance with the yerman language, courses ill nent. He \\'Tites stories, especially pre-War traditions and conditions ;n-I C;crm,m History and German Litera- fairyFai", tales,Tau ira. characterited E Flat. by n of regarding the new ones. plus four to six hours of elcc- merry mood, as evidenced in The Criais has had further effects. in the University of Munich, will , Nationalism has been encouraged and maintained substantiaU,v as it WIlS I Prokofieft' is a neo-classic by the tigher tariffs the Delaware plan; nut the time ' I!eCOnd only to Stravinsky in the quota system, which is badd,�::;:;: Russl.n music. He attempts to i� is too discriminating. E �REEN HILL FARMS at your sffrvice the spirit of Mourt, and write control, designed to kecp currencies City Line and Lanca"",r Aye. Mozart ,«nuld if he lived no...... AI- stable relationship and thus Hail and farewell, ClaM of though he is not t!Jccessful in carrying commerce, actually has the ctrect of �minderOverb roothatk.Philadelphi. we would like to '35! We welcome rou to out this intention, his work. as thc stopping commerce. Planned market·4� A , work of all the neo-cPrtllulelaSlicista, has ing h�s lost for the United States, lake car your pa�ott and • wider telephone public. done 'a great deal towards clarifying where !J is most efficiently worked, frienw.. wheneyer they come '0 modem music. The is an ex- per cent of her foreign cotton trade. e of yilit you. Depend on the telephone. ample ot hi, �Iean, polished, and high- In the field of currenc)', the so-called The same epeed and cou .... I,Iy-finiahed style. "Managed Money," are grossly mis- L ..E. METCALF, Stravin.ky',has place in modern music managed, through the liberal 'inflation M""",n. tesy, tbe I18me bonell not ftxed because his constant ex- by public works. heavy taxet, and the service you fo und in your perlmentlng made him a A'eo- ripping apart of normal commeree by ______te.r �rding all phases o muscial ntro ____ calls to family and (riends t ;��: ' • :�' �: thought. He hal been b)' tuma, BRYN MAWR COLLEGE::::::::: INN :::::i while at college await you claaeicist... Roman ticilt, Post-romantic­ h TEA ROOM , .-- _ in tbe ilt, Polt-impreMlonist, and Etrec:th'­ " 40. • tury .... all Lunted by the districts already telligently.and beautifully, in accord- ond century B. C, caused the t\!armed nOlVlced that $4�2,05L had been S,hub.,,', ecml>08ition ot the created by the Alumnae Association. I ance with these principles; and he go\'ermnenl to pass a decree de Bllc. collected. 51,057 had just come in Psalm, part ot the The National Committee was org''"- did. good because good was vitally t:lmnaliblUt which makes us realize that moa;nlng, $500 otlit bC!ing from Brahms, and Beethoven's ited and at Mrs: Slade's suggestion interesting. that ttre chorus on the lower hoc.kt)•• Mrs. Dwight �'orrow, who is trying Ch.,,,'. The)ermon was preached Louise Fleischmann Maclay w� ap- field was being too deliberately imlo- raise for Smith. These I RevC!rend !:Donald B. Aldrich, ..... to $100,000 • cent an d that Penlheu.' e."-'temen' • pointed Vice-Chairman. It was deeid: . E,:cell.:",:e fActlng' sums are Itteral figures, nothing�more tor ()( the Ctfurch ot the AscenSion 0 was not merely the modern Cathers' ed to call the campsign l e "$);000.- I or less than what has actually been in New York. He told the gradual. In Bacc Ilae P'ra se d' IS minimum," and to ace pt all do- i Irasci bOl'I Ity at hO daug h ters 'da VanC cod . 000 received or pl�ged ($11, 728 ing class that instead ot looking tor· I'd eas. Nor can th e ca tee h'sI ma re- nations ,in the Corm of nsur.nce --- • I COntinued rrom PIlce One \na. s been collected since Saturday, ward to the world which may or may in unison Qt an obviou.ly '''13 (above the $300 mini ). These • . that the total is now ,''70 not be waiting OutSI'd e, t hey h ou Id 011- )01 were to be used specifica to pay tor 8 impresaion ot the play. group of (orty·two think of the world within, tor this The prize ot $1,000 offered by Wyndham, but not many such g�tts It is more difficult to npprniS(! 'thc lookers ever expect to torm a aerious nfter all will mean most to the outer National Committee to the fint been made. music and dancing. Mme. Sikelian08 reply to one angry or troubled per. been world. In this inward world, the head trict to raise it. quota has EtrQrts tQ raise the nloney have ie: a devotee of the medieval Byzantine son speaking trom his henrt: The and heart are pararijo unt; and it one by district IV. This comprises been and will be vigorously carried modea and has compo sed the modnl dramatic Ilroblem of the chorus makes uses these well and truly, he work states ot Indiana, Michigan, on. The undergraduates have raised .t tunes tor flute and voices .....hich occupy it almost impossible tor the modern of the hano will take cnre ot itself. Ohio, and West Virginia. more then Lhe amounL they promised, nearly half ()t the performance The stage to know what to do with, or tor, trict has n quota of an� $15,000 $20,000. Of this $13,000 came direct- \Ve use our heads for selccLi()n and restriction of the musical accompani ... the ancient Greek IJlny. The llroblem raised $15,620.10. The National ly trom them. It would have been perspcetiye; and the knowledge that ment. to a running pipe and n thurnll- ror the actors is n�ore nearly soluble ; Committee is offering two ' very gratiCying if $67,000 more had we gain must be tocussed on one ing drum obviously removes all temp- and Miss Thompson aQ.d Mr. Ignatietr prizes : one ot $1,000 for \hc been raised by Commencement so that ideal just llli all the clements of. a tation to modernize ; and the general came remarkably dose to showing us district to complete itIJ q uota and the goal could be half reached by to. cathedral lead towal'd the common absence ot llll ollCratic melody is what the solution should lK!. NO' one ol . $500 tor the third successful day. Between now and next No,veln· I altar. One type ot Ilenon tends to clearly very much in keeping. But archaeologist who has sulfered district. The district which will money must be gotten in every scatter all he knows; the other brings the present re\'iewer was untortunate- (rom so-called "Greek drapery" hung probably win the next $1,000 is num- possible way. One nlan whom Mrs. it together, co-ordinating if to make Iy not astute enough to know whether On animate modern tramework tan ber V, which centers in Chicago. It Slade approached seemed interested compact, purposeful whole and to somelhing ,4s adequate and as mean· close without a llpecial word o( Ilrai� has a quota of $75,000 and has l' other people a beautitul and ingful had'been substitutC!d. The skill and thanks (or the wondertully wo"!!:n in helping pa for the expenses of . raised two-third. of this amount. the campaign, which have been ,�t I ,'Ievall« picture of it. These qu.Ii· I,of the !tute player, 1\Iiss Ardelle and d)'cd tAbric' which made 53 Bryn R8 The 51.000 prize for the first gradu- down from t.he original estimate, of ot beauty and elevation are the Hookin., was beyond cavil. But the Mawr undergraduates look much ate class to have per eent ot its - which make a cil'i1ized nation in- union like ancient maids and matrons as 100 $50,000 to $20,000. Girts in honor I.IO<'iOl" ideal of the intimate member. contributing has not yet of people are probably the nlost hope- teresting, according to Matthew Ar- all the arts, which has dazzled the they have any right to dcsire. That been won. The prize lor the first ful way of raising money. Besides nold. If we' feel that goodness in creative theorizers from Plato to they remained attractive is a reeom­ such undergraduate class has been those already mentioned, Dr. Wagon- itself is interesti�g, we realize that Wagner, always threatens to be a will- mendntion for the clusaics as "'ell as won by 1935. er's class, 1918, is raising 550,000 to it is gbod because it is interesting. o'.the-wisp. It would be so wonder- (or l\Ime. Sikelianos. Of this money raised is s into play I $235,000 build the bibrary ot the new Science Here Ilerspective comc fO tree tor the Science puijding. The Building. If one cannot give money, that we can take Jifc, but not our- rest ot the amount il designated selves, seriously. We should achieve there ate other things just 01 use- othel' purposes. Many ful. Mrs. MacMonnies has gi ven any this a.!l pC!rtectiy as has Doctor Dit· gilts are being planned in ()ne ot her husband's bronzes,- and nlars, who took some ot hi! invalu· SO YO U'RE tion • with the drive. The class one-halI o,t the money received tor able time to tell a little boy who hlld has long troped to make its telephoned him how to feed garter 1901 any ot the others. President Park's • • as a donation of $25,000 in memory tour and the publicity Mrs. Collins snakcs. and ended by asking him to ot Marion Reilly. They are obtained have had very good re- call him up again. , this amount thi.�year, and it suits. .) The affection and the impulBCII ot used'to endow a Physics chair. The $1,000,000 wi II..,be r a i sed the heart arc no less important; apd has been given in memory of some day, though it may lake longer to them, e\'cn "the music of the Miller, part of it tor the Library not spheres" is secondary. Our dreams ·NOT than we think. It must take too 'O GOING TO BE MARRIED L " the interest ot the rest to be used by long, however.. since the eyes of all and :lo,Jles, our loves and our ideals, , ( . -�fh Fresiaent tor the needs of the other colleges are upon us. It the are all a vital part ot us; and we college. There have also been the amount is rais ed it will show that trust the impulses of the heart be­ sO-phte- Bouchet memorial of 5]7,000, the cause of privately endowed edu- Iq.·e all else. The man who gave his the Catherine Halliday Daniels mem- cation is still alive. It must be col- liCe heroically to save the home o( , orial of $10,000, and $90,000 in memo lected ..!oL the sake of Bryn Mawr, (or his friend rrom destruction by fire ory of a deceased Bryn Mawr gradu- the sake of women's education, and lived by an ideal that was more real ate which Is to be used for the new for the sake 01 education in genernl than flny other thing. We must re. Library wing. The Music Depart- in this country . mem� r that when we came to col. ment has been given $19,000. ;;;";;;;;,,;;;;;;;;;;.======...;;.= ,,,,======;;.= gifts to fhe college this year being �ounted toward the fund, \,.president Park suggestl:d. The Committee intends to working through the summer makp all intensive :; n':�lli!.� :� �;; in the fall. The day k ;' will come on November which date $1,000,000 I OR AT least, if you've decided to give the artistic been collected. or business life a whirl first, let us tell you about The Alumnae Association decided at ita annual meeting last June to Allerton House_ In the fitst place, it's a Club, give the college in honor $1,000,000 which meons it's gay and comfortable and ot its fiftieth birthday. There was no disscnt and no question as to attroctive ..'. with lounges and game rooms all the suct(!ss of the C!nterpriae. The over the place. Your own living - bedroom is first charge on the money was to be a new science building, which would charming and there are facilities for entertaining. cost approximately one-halt the total amount. Another� $100,000 would be It's in a pleasant nient part of town Ardmore 2048 Bryn Mawr 24J8 Send Yo ur ..which does no �hat he prestige of a BRILL-Flowers young woman just starting out on her ownl Your 'MAR� 8RILL BAGGAGE room and all the advantages, including phone 46 West Lancaster Avenue Ardmore and maid service, can be had for as little as 822 Avenue Hom,e by $10 a week. FRANCES RAILWA Y EXPRESS ALLUTON HOUSE, for Women, lexington Ave. ot 57tk Slr.et No neld burden YOUfHlfwhh Ihe tran.portatlon of trunb, ALLUTON HOUSE. for Men ond Women,l .. 3 Eost 39tlt..Street to ROBINSON bacgage and pe,sonal effKUI at vecation tim •.•. I�d them MIDSTON HOUSE. for Men ond Women. Modison Avenue home by Railway Elrpr.... F F'TIr�Grtllt re4,h�r' aU Rail ..... 38th Street O U -DA \lIDBELA "eQ11 Here'. the wly••. merely lelephone ay ElIpr ... and ot ,.,e11 c.lI for the ehlpmenUl-whltk them away on fa" DRAMATIC pe•• Itilger lwirl y and Afely 10 dHtinalic)n; they11 be Write us for'cletoifed bookie' or r ,....otions INSTRUCTION IrIIlnl, l fo borne almosl .. .oon .. Rates aurprilingly lowi twO ••• Acquire pro r . kmal Iec:hnlque you art;: the Interpret... lion ot dramll.lie role,hi receipts on, at each end-inlure Afe bandling anddelivery. •. - tor atalll: IICrun and radio. under After vacllion . ...e'll bring your blggage back 'gain. eUmJ­ Ihl. tamou. coach. Teacht'r of lila nalin, all worry trouble and unnecuury ('mire. 1f�len Hay". Kltlh.rlne , "'penn. lIelll)urn. Jane "'yall, o..ooa Pt>r­ For or Inrorl¥tlon lelephone ..... kin!!. Doul{..l llon lJomery. Clark ,.rvic:e OBble. Kennelh MacK t'nna and 8ryn Mllwr Avenue 8r;anm 016«: . mAny other "tara. 'Phone BrYn Mawr

end of this year, whic.h brings to Par 1923-24. Li Faculty �pPointment 'thft is, ncle-et Lettr'es, aid Woodworth and l\llss Koller ot absence are 'Mi ee Mis, I n Taylor and Mill close a long and valuable career of University of Paris, 1929. M. the course in Rev�aled.by Miss a Cuiton in giving .English Lil· ltfllrti. .. Dr. Veltman wlll reJna in next · · " �'inlg at Bryn Mawr which has been Assislaht Professor of cr . ' I� >c began ature Miss Robbins' courses wIll be year as the gift of his salary has ..h,e A year and halt ago Dr. French. ?l{iddlebur)lf' College ke Mrs. l l'all'e 1902. a 011<1 pver by Maomng, who will again been ade Fle will gi ve Con}itlued ,from a� ta m a . \Y ,d2hl, of lhe Greek Depa ment, Bryn wr Be ning- give . alao to Ma (rom n the second semester of English cou in the Philosophy of Science su eyor the ccf'ur8Ca covered in rt �"''''''', rse rv re',"''' and the vacancy thus created ton College, where he has been II History, and by Burwash, In- ",b leh will {ollow up this year's work. or three years. le open until the was ft time came for of the literature division tor .tructof In Historyir:1i ho will give the First Year Physics and hil phy The changca in the Facult for n�t To P oso )W Or. Sanders to reth'c also. years 1932-35. course in Co'htine al History. Among are prel'C(lulsite8 for admiasion �o the year are few. The O p rll cnt. e a ll these -two eminent scholars and Four members or the faculty those returning next year aIter leaves course. Creek will undergo several changes. en the college has secured two on leave 01 ab nCe next year. The most notable of these is lhe se re­ men who will be npl)ointcd will be in Snain and, as a 1-======,;,,======,.,======'=� i ent'of Dr. Henry N. Sanders at l".81 "'" t rem Profcssors. Dr. Allister . will tit full A.B., Un ion; LA , Dr. Whe ler' place will Girls! Here's Just the Thing , . e s Edinburgh, comes to the college next year by' Dr. Nathim JR.n!" I for the Summer! . ciully prepared in the Ph.D., Princeton, who has Qe(!n Le.rn FASHION MOOELlNCl """- 1l sida ofJCreek. Literature Proctor Fellow there this yenl'. Dr. remuneratlv, fA,cl ".tlng and pro . mnry inlerest·of 'e. . lon. The New Vorl( ....on I. Richman Herben will be in England next 'In full .wlng noW", and opportunl. plentiful for A.B., Dartmourth .and Oxford, but Miss Glen will l'etut'll and will tl .. are young ladln of hloh type, upeelAlly If th ey Are Ph.D., University of Illinois. MA)'fAlr.trAI"ed. Short, IndlyldUl1 Lattimore has also stUdiCdd a. cour... under per.o nll direction of rom n :�,l Oertrude L. Meye'" p ine t enl fellow ef the' Amerieal , "�� f. .h"," Authorlt)'. .11.110 Comme,ch,1 l BEGIN BUSINESS Photo Po"'ng. Write for dele III. Rome. MAYFAIR ACADEMY The French Department announces (A ..tr;u'. Ori"inel Mellm'qlli'l'l &booll the 81lpointment of M. Jean William TRAINING JULY 8 Gertrude MAye,. '4' Fift'" Ave. • L. Cuiton, i OINotor New York 317 ,..u",. w.m.", ',.m 121 4.,.. Latin, f.,.",t con .... .,. ",ow ."" .11 ... at the K.th.,' '''. Olltl" .'h .... Y may belio ,our bu,l. • ou AFTERNOON TEA 25c neal traminl at either OPf ( Boston or New York School CINNAM01'o! TOAST on Jo1,8, in a apee-iaI 8·month TOASTED DATE MUFFINS Executive-Seerdarial Course TEA BISCUITS eululive.1y for collele woo Make your summer schooling something vital, memorable. Com. a You will be ready ror a Un n ••• BUTTERED TOAST AND MARMALADE men. bine your iftudies with thrilling tour oC the Soviej. io position Ihl! followinl March. travel. li� learn! COFFEE and as you TEA HOT CHOCOLATE Or may .'art the IIInle a 10U Desides the impressive academic value oC month oC courses CAKE OR ICE CREAM 8·month course September 24. . given in English by prom.inent Soviel proCessors, Moscow Summer Wrile Collele COUI'HI Secre­ fllHweeks (ChocoldU or Bwllfmcolch SIIlIce over Crltll"') School includes two oC field travel w��k thr?ughout. tbe In tary for eal alol. U. S. S. n. You have a choice oC lour 8uperb ItIDerarje8 prOVided Every �al is ddiciou,"- UIIr", """"""ory within the one low rate, Alo. /..,. D. D. C. and C. S. •• , . 16 ••• 2�, ..,. " '." .cll ••• ••• ,. . Sessions begin July 6�ld trave� period en�8 �uguSl �n�tl • • University credit granted. �erlcan adVisory. orgaOlzatlon: lute oC International Education. Many special groups are bemg THE CHATTERBOX TEAROOM •••••••• .. BOSTON 90 ifni...... _ !I' •• .... I ...•• , ••. ni e n J' LANCASTER AVENUE NEW yOU U1 P ...... 819 •••• , •• ..... I PIlOVIDEl'fCl: ISS ....u S ���: � :.'b : :�� BRYN MAWR go it alone.t � Write EDUCATIONAL DEPT. Flflh;\ve., now Cor BoolcletBM.6. INTOURIST, Inc. M5 N. Y.

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