.

VOL. XXXIX WELLESLEY, MASS., OCTOBER 9, 1930

German 9 Crisis Forces^ \Six Stranded Scholars WELLESLEY JOINS i NOTED AUTHORITY Select Summer Reading Survey Of Conditions [ WORLD MOVEMENT WILL GIVE LECTURE Because the whole western world is cruiser carrying six members iw sunk in the slough of an economic faculty has been shipwrecked—'

, cor- faculty are marooned on a desert depression, crisis in German j Jane, Visiting Lecturer, Bimillennium Of Virgil's Birth the new Mr. Has politics has aroused high interest Class land. They climb to the tops of Marked This Month by Honors throughout Europe and America. Now eception at highest cocoanut trees, and gaze Specialized On Columbus and that Dr. Bruening, the Chancellor, has he serenade, lently toward the horizon, hoping Spanish America Throughout The Globe formed a cabinet and. with the approv- spy a rescue ship. Suddenly, in Rev. Douglas Horton the Leyden I President Von Hindenburg, an- tropical sllence> tney seem to heal Chapel Church in Brookline will ' the ; Wellesley-College-News-1 ;d that he will carry out his famiUar speaker on Sunday, Oct ' TAUGHT AT OXFORD THREE LECTURES PLANNED financial program in the face of all porter voice asking. "If you were island, Miss Virginia Chapman of the class be shipwrecked on a desert w

three would you take along, ; of German democracy. Chan- '31 will lead the Christian Associa- books On Tuesday evening, October 14. at why?" From the tops of their cocoanut ' irth of the poet Vir- Bruening has himself indicated m vespers on Sunday, October 12, at eight c i ck in Billings Hall, the col- trees they wring their hands, and an- 1 lege wlll nave an opportunity to 1 at Andes near Man- that he intends to master the problem 30 in Agora Society House. hear swer with a groan 15th, 70 B. C. The to establish a ^r . Cecil Jane, the visiting lecturer of The first of the dinners for majors whole western virtual dictatorship; but farsighted President Pendleton would take the History Department. He will speak in the department of Economics and Shakespeare and the Bible, she tells us, on Christopher Columbus, the poet by observing this opinion seems inclined toward the be- \ and De- will eve- Sociology be held Wednesday third, the poems of Robert cordially invites especially during this lief that the Hindenburg govern- and as the partment all those who ning, October 15. At that dinner the one of the great biogra- iber. In our country the will weather this important diffi- Browning or are interested to attend the lecture, students in this department will not it phies, such as that of Phillips Brooks. sical League has already culty as has weathered former ones. | mj. Jane attended University College. only have an opportunity to meet the With Briand pleading at for history and new members of the teaching staff of replies: "The classical history ration of a series of lectures in univer- moderation and vision in both taught at Oxford until the ( the department but also to listen to Bible, sities and schools throughout the coun- and France, the present crisis is inter- break of the Great War. He t i took Mr. Francis Goodell. At the mills a good book: Robinson try, by the presentation of pageants preted not only as an charge of the Hispanic-j economic phe- where Pequot sheets are made, a most it is applicable to the se ' and other dramatizations of the work inked with similar crises tion of the War Trade intelligence De- unusual experiment in co-operation be- Plato. Opera, be- of Virgil, by the "Virgilian Cruises" of Omnia partment, which led him to concentrate tween employer and trade union has through the past summer planned by the Bu- could ever get upon Spanish America. After the war, been in operation since 1927 and has Gardiner reau of University Travel to follow the ustorian S. R. ne taught history in the University of roused much interest among econo- Stuart Political Tracts as course of Aeneas in Mediterranean according to several influential Wales ,or seven yearS| reslgning his mistsmlsts as well as employers and leaders for Plato. My own sug- waters, and by the publication of books journalists of post j,, order t0 secure fuller oppor- England and the United ! s. Mr. Goodell is to of trade gestion is: and monographs on Virgilian subjects. States, to relax their severity before tunities for the study of his special spea k f orking of this experi- Encyclopaedia Britannica, In European countries honor is being 1. The subject. He has recently published, measures be taken to ' show Ger- it from the inside. men t as seen edition, because to detect all of new ! wlth paid to the world poet in much the man chafing under the Allied yoke.) the clarendon Press, Liberty and the errors in it would be the work of ' same way. analyzed .Despotism in Spanish America, a study When carefully, the situation _ . . _ . . „..,, _ ., a lifetime, f the causes of the political conditions Wellesley College will have a share prevailing in Germany is shown IflSh EdUCatOf Will Talk 2. The Oxford English Dictionary, prevailing in the in this world-wide celebration during Spanish-American re- suited to because it contains words publics. He is engaged at present on the week of October 20. Professor Ed- the Young Plan a: On Literary Revival And AE every occasion. the writing of a life of Columbus for ward Kennard Rand of Harvard Uni- Versailles Treaty. : 3. S. R. Gardiner, History of Eng- the Clarendon Press, versity, a distinguished Virgilian schol- The Situation Examined and has just pub- Dr . James H. Cousins, an associate land, because it would serve the pur- Ushed The Fovr Voyages Christopher ar, will deliver three lectures at Alum- A brief survey of the political Condi- of thlrt, v years ae„ nf w P. Yeats and pose of Plato or the Stuart Political Columbus, with the Argonaut Press and nae HaU ot» the evenings of October >ns which caused Germany's last| . George Russell ("AE"), in the Mr Tracts—twice over." 21 the first volume of Select Documents 20. and 23. His subjects will be Irish literary and dramatic revival, and Miss Manwaring Decides i Illustrating the first, "A Birthday Prophecy for Virgil"; Four Voyages 0/ Col- newspapers will in more recen t years a friend of Dr. "For a desert island library," says Miss um bus, for the Hakluyt Society. second, "Virgil and Dante"; and third, ake the preceding statement clearer: j Mr. Rabindranath Tagore and Mahatma Manwaring, "I wish a large anthol- Convention and Miltonic Re- 1 Jane is tne f oremost authority on "Virgilian Since the death of the wise and mod- Gandhi, in India, will speak about his j ogy, of my own picking, including Christopher Columbus. (Continued on Page 6, Col. 2) erate statesman Stresemann, Germany friends, the Irish poets, and about AE both English and other poetry; Bos- las been undergoing a rapid party '' in particular, on October seventeenth, ' well's Life of Dr. Samuel Johnson, to ' . hange. At the last elections an over- , j Dr Couslns [s o£ Msn blrthj a poet provide inspiriting conversation when Smokers Requested to Aid PailltlngS Of CapH Sll0Wn ^tor and lecturer, who knows India I weary of solitude; and the Bible, in the Nazis, or National Socialists, which In Improving Alumnae Hall Europeans know it. He has the King James translation, omitting Now at Art Museum gives them a large number of new Leviticus and most of Numbers, but in- in the Reichstag. These Nazis are : sch00ls and universities in India, cluding the Apochrypha. Since in the German fascists under the The privilege of smoking at Alumna) leadership : f reat interest among them the co iiege of Dr. Rabin- tropics paper soon perishes, I will read ° e to the artistically Hall was originally given with the un- oolitical demagogue and newspaper _ inclined and to college dranath Tagore, and the school at over, in that happy silence unun- the at large j these derstanding that the college felt itsel: r, Adolf Hitler. They have ' should be the Exhibition of paintings won I j by Ahmednabad of Mahatma Gandhi. broken by mechanical noises, untilti l I capable of assuming the resulting re popular vote by the cheap and Norbert Heermann which will be at the : ror a year he was Professor of English; know by neart all that I wai keep pponsibilities. The fact that this pri- method of making political prom- Art Museu™ of Wellesley College un- Poetry at Keiogijuku University, Tokyo. I for good. Before the paper Iders vilege is no longer new does not re by exciting old the Ministry ot til October 17th. The exhibition con- from which and from away r is eaten by ants i ?tIes

move the responsibility; and it is thi he flag of "a strong for- , sists of the Paintings of Capri, , Education in Japan he received the I [ j x win dip occasionally, as my duty individual takes ad' before the _ models and landscapes of the island of every who eyes of the , I degree of Litt.D. ibread-fruit and cocoanut, inl ook vantage of that privilege to see tha overtaxed, underpaid Ger- which URht painted almost by accident. Mr. and It is to be hoped that Dr. Cousins i sellers' catalogues it is Alumnae Hall ha: man proletariat, in whose eyes their way to not abused. the Ver- talk by much read- along as packing for the bi well this sailles Treaty and the whole series of ing of poetry, for he reads with notable Mr. Proctor \ excursion to it hti). the i reparations projects are *** Capri. Perhaps anathema. charm. Dr. Tagore speaks of "his rare as can be published in one volume- The Socialist Party, which had was the famous and picturesque Villa much gift of the sensitive imagination of a but this volume must include at least <3 uattr Ven

WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS FORCES trudged her way all day long GERMAN CRISIS down the steep mountains witl How The Other Half SURVEY OF CONDITIONS charcoal on her head. Luig. of Col. 2) 9A Wellesley Shop Lives {Continued from' Page 1, According to Bruen- 50 Central Street "Know thy college" seems to be the lng's latest announcements, all em- motto of Yale, perhaps for the pur- ployees of the state are to have their 1!1. cent. He was very proud to pose of impressing prospective students salaries rigidly reduced. The same parrot posed badly and coul( with the glory of their future alma measures are urged for private con- profile. Giro C his head in mater. At any rate, the Yale News cerns. This is an expediency by which with a gay boy until has advocated the establishment of a Germany hopes to deflate prices gener- German girl who i a blonde course about Yale, its history, problems, ally, and thus win an entry to the not return his passion. fortunately did aims, and organization. It believes, foreign markets on which her economic would whistle while pos- Extremely After that he s editorial, that a profes- health depends. The idea is sound, melancholy tempo, the same ing, with but the Socialists feel that in several Donna c Mobile (How Treacher- criticism old La wilh szi-adu;He opinion and particulars, and especially in that of Women's Hearts). When, Smart ous Are workers' insurance, the laborers will after year in Capri, Mr. Heermann Bates, which sent the first college a suffer unduly, and bear a dispropor- the island, many models were debating team from the United States left of the financial burden. brought tionate share crowding the harbor. Anita had to England to debate Oxford and which split come about between begged Thus has a white roses, Salvatore had has sent a debating team around the the only two groups which can suc- Guiseppina had first American col- The one more cigarette, world, is to be the cessfully achieve a coalition in the carried a trunk on her head and Vin- lege to debate a team from another Reich. Meanwhile Hitler is progressing. cenco, the carabinieri, majestically nation whose situation is in- salute. Only a raised his arm in a formal 21 a Bates team will de- On October writer in the British Cossack tolerable, says a team over the National Aside from paintings Mr. Heermann bate a Scottish Nation and Athenaeum, could be from Italy Broadcasting system on the subject brought back with him swayed by the extreme and flagrant prizes and two tango (which seems fatally sure to bring forth eleven tennis methods of the National Socialists, Dress Duke of Spoleto, the son a bombardment of Scotch jokes), prizes. The is time, he continues, for the Allied Aosta and cousin of Thrift is a virtue, with the proverbial of the Duchess d' powers to realize the humiliation presented him with a first Scotch side being upheld by the wear- the King, suffering with which they are visiting tennis, a silver cigarette box ers of the kilt, while the Americans will prize in two generations of a defeated country leather case with the Royal crown debate for the negative. in a whose war-guilt is doubted by m Diaz in gold on it. The late General Those Wellesley students who felt Also, adds the writer, unless all The Russian presented Mr. Heermann and Marchesa New least t write turbulent free presses nations of the world, or at the wife of the Governor of moved to Dusmet, of Europe, resolve to carry through about the C.A.-C.G. reception may be Influence Capri, with a tango prize. their program of disarmament, they consoled to know that life could be a Norbert Heermann was the only one Simmons affair of a have no ethical excuse for keeping Hugo Heermann, bit sadder. At a of the six children of in a state of helplessness. similar nature, each freshman upon Germany German violinist, to choose a famous given white The present crisis is a guide-post, to the All Black with Fortunately, entering the room was a career other than music. side the peace anc paper bib and a pencil. The game of nations: on this as his vocation he decided on painting that tin the afternoon was to see who could prosperity of the world, on Persian Lamb rather than any commercial enter- the most signatures appended inevitable results of unrelaxed sever family was delighted, have prise, and his opinion of mori to her originally spotless bib. ity. Today, in the the fact that he would be chiefly over than one editor, not the democracy o violins, silent, since the sounds of two Wellesley Germany, but the sanity of her credi singers had As usual Smith overpowers two cellos, a piano and two the in numbers, for 653 freshmen were twice necessitated additions to welcomed to Paradise Pond when President Neilson spoke in chapel the $55.00 Heermann came to, In 1911 Norbert first morning about the work which Furniture Exchange he began, America, to Chicago, where had been done on campus during the Art In- Chapel Basement his first serious studies at the Very appropriately, consider- summer. FOR SALE—Several tea tables there. Philadelphia under stitute ing the fluctuations of the stock and Vic stands, in excellent condi- then with Chase followed and market. Smith spent most of the sum- tion. Selling out. Academic Julian Tony Pleury at the mer remodeling and redecorating old At $1 and $2. that came Ber- in Montmartre. After buildings, just as stud Cincinnati. lin with Coriotti and then There he became so interested in the You also get Duveneck, that he wrote A conference will meet at Mt. Hol- art of Frank As . Pocket I'c, the only biography existing of this yoke October 10 and 11, when the great American painter. After the alumnae association and the college will join in a week-end of surveying most Fifth Avenue Art Gallery. A early American history. Lectures oni exhibition he arranged there events from Paul Revere's famous gal- Half a successful was one of Duveneck and his circle. lop to disarmament conferences will In 1921 Mr. Heermann married Eliza- occupy the time. and they beth Alexander, the writer, This is the second conference spon- Wood- settled in the artist colony of sored by the association; last year the Desk Set" stock, New York. subject under discussion was the life and letters of Emily Dickinson, whoj was a student at Mt. Holyoke in its SMOKERS REQUESTED TO AID When you buy a Parker Duofold IN IMPROVING ALUMNAE HALL Bewildered sophomores and juniors, whose minds are wearily fumbling with Duofold PEN prophets, find conso- ninor may Jr. Pen This Guaranteed -for -Life Pen, all of i in this report: graduates »5 tilth the Bonus Point That lebury will be required to pass Flatters Your Hand, Is Like 2 Pens for the Price of One ugly as at one time last year, the hall Of course shall be closed altogether. by Do you know that by having a such a thing is to be avoided if pos- The trustees adopted Parker Duofold pocket Pen, you can sible, and the College Government asks which reads as follows: now have one of these beautiful Desk everyone to feel her obligation to keep knowledge of the English Bible could Sets too, without having to buy a the hall in good order. Wishing to aid properly be demanded of graduates of second pen? You save this extra ex- pense because this Guaranteed-for- every effort we have appointed the fol- Mlddlebury." The reason given by the Life Pen is convertible. lowing committee to assist in the car- president is that it is impossible for rying out of the smoking regulations. students "fully to appreciate Shake- Parker convertibility means that one Pen takes the place of separate pens It is their duty to remind offenders speare, Milton, and KiplingO) without for your pocket and Desk Set. By a of the rules governing the places where a reasonable knowledge of the Scrip- slight change, the Pen's pocket cap is smoking is permitted and the use of ture and its background." replaced with a tapered pen end for ash receivers. Their task is unpleasant Another collegiate gesture towards Desk Set use. Presto! Off with the and difficult and we ask co-operation. taper, and back with the pocket cap, internationalism is being furthered by Their special appointment does not when you go out again. the new business school which will be free any member of the college from Desk Base-tapcrcd pen end included opened next week in Paris with Har- We Pay a Bonus for Every identical responsibilities. The commit- free to convert your pocket Duolold vard as its model. It was organized to a Do/.- Set P\ n. Complete set. as Duofold Point tee is as follows: supervision of G. F. Doriot, under the Parker points flatter your hand- Wihelmina Andrews assistant dean of the Harvard School writing. For squads of post-graduate Henrietta Brannon of Business Administration, who says point-smiths give Parker Pens their Margaret Goodwin optimistically. "International business Pressureless Touch. and settled They are paid a bonus for every Ruthe Gordon problems will be discussed point survives 1 1 merciless inspec- and it is natural that this should lead that Eileen McCann tions. Any point that fails one test, to the exposing and discussion of politi- fails all, and its maker pays a forfeit. cal relations, which nowadays are Yet 7 out of 8 are bonus points because we limit the num- Elizabeth Noyes with business." closely connected Parker a day, and he has time to make each ber a man may make Elizabeth Patterson one as good as his best. fTrrwTWTrrrwrrwrrTWTTwwwwi Parker Duofold Pens are Guaranteed for Life. They hold Daqfb/d 17.4% more ink than average, size for size. In sparkling Prisctlla Rowley LIBERAL CLUB SUPPER jewel-like colors, their streamlined Permanite barrels are non- Helen Vanden Bout breakable. Select your Parker at any pen counter. Pens MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 $5, $7, $10; Pencils to match $2.50 to $5. Desk Bases $3.75 Flavttla Morey, AGORA 6:30 P.M. and up. The Parker Pen Company, Janesville, Wisconsin. Vice President of Wellesley

College Got i rn, twill A s^octaiiu ! — WELLES LEY COLLEG E NEW! SOCIAL SERVICE TEA

(Continued from Page 1, Col. 3) THE PEREGRINATING PRESS Come and meet the Social WHEN DAY Service Chairman, Evelyn Zubrod, in the Christian Association office during IS DONE her office hours (posted on the door) or in Cazenove. ASHMAN'S TIRE & and your evening Perry did", and To^Ze^Z^ll^^l rsAllHiKl is just beginning by my boots, I wil tive, Birches responded with a very) CU. Bicycles Sold, speak for myself. snappy number, and Fiske surpassed . Rented, and Repaired with two songs. The Noanett 69 CENTRAL ST. LOOK TO YOUR greeted the serenaders from Phone Wei. 0017-W the fire escape. SUCCESSORIES! a cold. I caught it in tunes of most of the serenading i he rend in i at the Libe, which THE f: songs were easily recognizable as boasts one c largest collections of RAE'S the popular hits of the season, with the cold germs I know of, extending back transformed words admirably fitting almost to the founding of college, when the occasion. A specialty number, sung Vanity Shop it was last aired out. It is the general

by a double quartet to the tune of I opinion that something ought to be Percy Grainger's Country Dances was CENTRAL STREET done about this. given at stated intervals, and invari-| The Arcade ably had to be repeated. NEXT to colds, flies have been most prevalent lately. Their particular

large1 ' crowd followed the sopho- Tel. Wei. 1561 hunting ground s the El Table during A increasing as they pro- Fly paper and Flit gressed into the heart of the village. have been suggested, but it is hoped Several energetic seniors cheered and that the cold weather will prove more cheered at every opportunity, and most nical of the village juniors came to see and - Recommended by $lfk& UPPERCLASSMEN with benevolent hear. Altogether it was a big events P^ and if the freshmen enjoyed it as much instincts have been receiving their The English Department of % acquaintances of late with as the sophomores, it was a success.

r ANY changes have been noticed in WELLESLEY tOLU'th.T with sundry < / M the Stone and Davis group this \ noticed fleets of airplanes ' year. For instance, Dower now eats at I tAVE you have been circling over ourl Davis and Homestead at Stone. More- WEBSTER'S r~I that campus during the past week? Be not over, the brickwork has been given a waterproof finish, deceived, vain creatures. They are not! costing sixteen thou- COLLEGIATE Dick coming to do stunts for sand dollars, but adding nothing to the and ] Tom The Best Abridged Dictionary beca use it is based i on WFB-TFir- goggly- beauty of the place. Evidently the you, my dears, but only some NEW INTERNATIONAL— The "Supreme Authority". Here is court doors also its eyed Legionnaires, Boston for the | were weakening, for hours oi reading and study that will prove they have been replaced by others, done real value every time you consult it. A wealth olT-c.Klvmlorrn.iuonon word-, persons, pl/iucs, the • • • in the same intriguing baby blue. embroidered purse 106,000 words and all winds of opinion • • • will be a successful fashion DISREGARDING phrases with definitions, etymologies, pro- : | have blown blithely over the toWeau worthy of a New Yorker ' which A i 1,256 pages. .^ because campus, and voluntarily perpetuating Includes dw ;.< it is shown in >. : colors .!on..-r^-oi biography. ! g.--og .,;i£ the Wellesley habit of receptions, teas, ores of Lake Waban—a family of raphy and other features. •£? to contrast with your gown, and yet more teas, freshmen in Wash- [ picnicking, wading, and playing ball it's so small your date ington, Webb, and Little were enter- th their extra oranges. ^--^KSsr if won't mind minding it for you, 5 final proof oi U\iMiin^tun it's many-pocketed to keep A lich the Pressman peregrinates, the minuteness of his observa- all your whatnots nay he mention that during the for the evening,

PM . and it's indicative of the three electric bulbs on last Monday evening, October sixth, in top of the the new exactness of Alumnae Hall. The President of the new Ad Building Tower blew out? costume detail; college received the Members of Adieu until next week, made in France for us . . $IO. the the Faculty, after entertaining Perry the Pressman At Slattery's Trustees at dinner. If you thought the Reception on the Lawn the height of ALUMNAE^NOTES the double-chiffon ENGAGEMENTS You Can Be Choosey is definitely successful, '24 Elizabeth C. Buethe to Mr. Paul H. Dunakin, University of Michigan. it combines '27 Helen Probyn to Mr. Owen Mil- Femininity and Romanticism- liken Smith, Dartmouth '23, Harvard About Your New Velvet flutter . . faculty h Business School '25. To as you dance $5. '29 Dorothy Auten to Rev. Fred P. watering the rose bushes. Sutton, U. of Pa. and Philadelphia they must. The head of the School of Divinity. — and select from our complete collections the very Division of the Botany Department '29 Polly Wyman to Lieut. Rawson style you have been seeking. There is black of Bennett, II, U. S. N. busin - '30 Doris Martin to Gerry Keene, course — and what versatile black! — wearing saucy she planted las iirections Harvard '30. turquoise or blue bows at its throat, and brilliant- the MARRIAGES studded belts to match at its smartly-natural waist- Head Gardener '22 Lois A. Childs to Cnief, thence to the Laborers. Thus , George Raphael, October 4. line,— or wearing a beaded collar of soft yellow and it was tnat, Friday last, '29 "Wrapt in the | Adelaide Melendy to Mr. the successful evening Free- turquoise to frame your face, — or wearing a tiny style Sessions of sweet silent thought," 1 1 '26, man T. Putney, Brown Phi Delia is the twenty-four bolero and most gallant gauntlet sleeves, stumbled and fell headlong over a Theta, Phi Beta Kappa, September 3. both button length. maze of fire hose outside the Build- Ad BIRTH trimmed with white galyak. Then there is rich Successful because it is ing, hose used for watering the rose '22 To Virginia Griffin Loomis, a shadowy blue, wearing suavely hips, bushes. draped and dash- the complement of your new , daughter, Perdita Ann, April 20. ing cavalier cuffs, trimmed in real lace in a truly dancing and dining

SPANISH STUDENTS Charles II manner, and there are many, many others dresses. weeks of Wellesley Frankness, the SPEND YEAR ABROAD we could talk about! Of softest French kid, $12.50 Senior Art students were delighted to The Spanish Department announces in jewelry, discover last week that the female of — that Miss Lorna I, Lavery has returned They are all, as you will conclude when you see the species is distinguished by her the successful high fashion, from Spain after having spent the headdress. them, just about perfect — for tea-dancing in town, which displaces the month of August supervising the worki for after "semi-precious" vogue, spite of the eight students sent this year the game, or for the theater— in fact, for IN of the cold, in spite of ( by Smith is simulated real stone jewelry. 1 attractions, a good portion of and Wellesley Colleges to any place your gaily tripping extra-curricular feet sophomores, wearing spend the Junior year in study in that The most exciting example white caps may carry you! country. carrying blue lanterns, turned on During August the girls at-' this Ruby Jewelry Saturday night tended the summer session of the Dnl- to serenade the fresh- $25 to $65 with white satin — men. Led by Fame Anderson, perched versity of Liverpool 'held in Santander The necklace, 12. 50, in the rumble seat of Helen Gunner's and directed by Professor E. Allison Peer0 """^ also the earrings, 8.50. Warper, they went through the campus ' attended lectures past Dower and Homestead, down organized by the Menendez and Pelayo Wellesley Shop Wellesley Square Washington Street, stopping at each ' Society. September was spent in pri- vate study in Madrid with Senorita, Wellesley Shop, doubled on their tracks to find Crofton Enriqueta Martin, formerly of the fa- Wellesley Square and Birches, and ended with a bang culties of Vassar and Smith. The pro- j at Fiske. gram of studies for the academic year, during which time the girls will pursue SIatteryS E. T. Slattery Co. e Centro de Estudios Historicos, will ablished in Boston in 1867 Established in Boston in 1867 directed by Miss Elizabeth Foster, so. Prof, of Spanish in Smith College. — WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS

Certain evenmgs of the year thought to the cur ent questions of the WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS themselves, by day. And do we? Even the editor of Campus Crier and the News sees fit ;o call the activities Department of the Liberal Clu! "feeble" and to say WELLESLEY, MASS., THURSDAY, OCTOBER ! Perry items, as Club days. Besides the Circo- that Model Leagues only arouse a few los, Vereins, and Alliances, such or- —and the worst of it is she is perfect- BUSINESS STAFF Cosmopolitan Club meet ly right—and knows it. I agree that big step ;. The system College Governmnent took a difficult task by sending a student to Geneva last MARGARET C. STEVENS. i simplifies the M \K.ml(IK <.l 1. KSMAN. ... ,;,!(!. Ml! social sched- ule; but at the same time it limits interest on the part of the rest of the the individual's activities to a single college. Did you know that Wellesley is considered "provinicial" in respect THE LIBRARY RIOT ISABELLE DOWN, politan and linguistic, scientific and to her interest in world events? She mathematical. And those linguists who is supposed to care only a little about (More epoch-making than the C.A.- boast an interest in more than a single C.G. foreign tongue are forced to play fa- quite a struggle t AUDRA ALBRECHT. lei the Assem- Dramatis Personae—Three Frenztec vorites. The traditionally narr col- 1 legiate council to ; JEAN GLASSCOCK. II lege girl ought not, perhaps, be ' bly here this year, they were students | afraid we could not put it over suc- troubled with such problems; : Library Official overworked social schec cessfully. Imagine that! Wellesley's Vilo Phance, master detective questioned (but *ANNA DILLIARD. lii U,INi;i-K. should be presented ^ reputation is being Library, I The Lit. Room of the rather than complaint. Yet we know rather justly we feel). And their fears Scene— 10:39 on Monday. (Enter Phance smok- that the question often does arise; and will be justified if we see no more signs' ! pres- ing the enevltable Regie cigarette, and we should like to ask if separate De- of interest than are noticeable at Betty Co-Ed. He is followed partment Club meetings could be more ent. Must we be not only the "coun- ; humming Library Official.) evenly scattered through the year. try-cousin," but also the laughing stock , by of the Eastern colleges? pftance—There's something wrong

F. C. S. '32 ', here. There's more to the crime than .appears on the surface; in fact it has FREE PRESS COLUMN Secretary-General, ^ ^ m&^ { g flnger prmts> of ft Model League Council, super criminal. I think my knowledge or this column

i of Arthurian Romance is going to prove must be signed with the full name ; invaluable. of the author. Initials or numerals APOLOGIA PRO TORPORE MEA L. O—Pardon me, sir, there is no smok- Son, A Plea For A Respite will be used if the writer so desires. Swan in the Library, but Alumnae Hall The Editors do not hold them- Wellesley College News: just around the corner. selves responsible for opinions and The class of 1931 is the first class the Walrus Phance—I was just up there but three "The day has come, j We. the class, are resigned. statements in this column. that has known from the time of its tried to entice me into a bridge understand that our petitions last said—," for Wellesley's conservative girls We Contributions should be in the arrival at Wellesley that, in order to Incidentally, I am a criminal in- ! game. spring were foolish, that our opinions multitudes to rise up in their wrath receive her degree, each member would hands of the Editors by 10 A. M. on their say. For last vestigator investigating the alleged dis- were futile. We realize that spring vaca- and say unsaid the the end of the senior year to pass Sunday. have at least, in appearance of Wordsworth's Poetical tions were especially designed for writ- three years at and probably a general examination in her major Works. All the copies have vanished ing papers and reviewing forgotten un- times unpenetrated by my memory, the subject. For over three years now the BROOKS ROOM a trace remains. Culture will interesting facts, that the following columns of the News have fairly and not present senior class has heard other soon, . isn't done months, though blessed by the pres- shrieked the cause of liberalism—lib- die if something senior classes complain about the di- eralism meaning evidently an un- ence of the now extinct automobiles, Wellesley College Neu Fi rs t Student—Oh, Mr. Phance, please visional and has heard instructors offer

certain combination of being-well-in- : are not to be enjoyed like preceding neip us i nave Lit. at 10:10 and it is helpful, or otherwise, hints about the We sincerely hope that thi Mays and Junes in Wellesley, that the -international- room will be used and enjoyed by con- and doing i-bit-for-the-oh i-op- this splendid "cap and j grand climax of I u; ;.'-> siderate people this examin- year. After the pressed-min s. Which is a gown" year must be a useless chological import. If we could only episode of last spring, when an inked is adequate | well them as likes ation, and that two days have a fast game of poker I could tell tude toward the W was found on one of the beautifully I j U "1U1G out, and sparks fly the criminal in an instant, be desired. One upholstered chairs, placed there for the! prepare for several more of somewhat " have our say. For (Exeunt Phance, Students, and L. O. might almost say that as a body It girls' comfort, the library staff, not to(„^„ similar nature. f„„ r few of us there are, and I w in the Lit. grad- approves of the supposed purpose of mention the thoughtful people of the The hub-bub Room more will rally to our battle sleuthing party re- xamination. The class looks upon college, were much upset. During the ually subsides. The dill i are genuinely opposed to it. But we ask, assembles on the steps of the Library. inevitable. Why then must it be summer, the chairs of the Brooks room that is sensible, pile of books is seen subjected to hearing such sentences as have been cleaned—since others were In the distance a pal. \b-llr Food mixture you • st thia system of generals be- slowly and decrepitly.) he following inserted into lectures: found to be ink spattered by careless advancing, throats. Here with come another of those hard and fast, You ought to learn this, even though students. College government is paying Phance—What's this I see? Can it inexplicable traditions which have al- a of enriching lives which you may not have occasion to mention the bill as representative of the stu- be W* M "*"* " " & " """"' ways succeeded in hindering every for- will later of necessity be harassed by, the general examination"; "That dent body. But can't we all enjoy the nears tri s over petty troubles, some of us would prefer (Pile of books and P ward step, in blocking every progres- certainly is a date that one should Brooks room and observe henceforth its first ste Beneath the debris is spied Certainly the amount Plato to Stuart Chase, and the Brooks P- sive move? rules? There are only two of them: Room to Economics lectures. have an infinitesimal freshman.) gained is not worth the strain and We like these throughout 1. Don't use ink in this room, worry which even the best prepared the year absolutely necessary? As far - 2 . Don t remove books Gardner's afternoons, butinal is returning to the scene of the students cannot avoid. In fact, the from this on Sunday as the student is concerned, they ac-

room we do not enjoy the drone of a dis- ; crime. (To the culprit, now caught in amount gained is not worth the time complish little. To begin with, they How about toils law.) dear young and energy demanded of those who showing our appreciation cussion on the disarmament question. the of the My reduce the general examination to the , of a comfortable reading girl, just explain the dis- prepare the examinations, com- room by being And judging from the number of ! how can you must level of the college entrance examin- appearance of these books? They van- pare and discuss answers, mark girls editorials and free presses which ap- | ations. Continued suggestions like these Virginia Chapman, ished last evening and all our efforts and flunk them. For it is a question pear sponsoring the cause of such :er in only one respect President of College Govern whether there is any benefit at all to which we are obliged t( listen: the be derived from the vicious invention. ice among you, wht Freshman (practically in tears, and previous ones aimed to get us into col- Cramming in one week can not possibly SAVE ways are argued, well she might be) . I made a mistake. lege; the present ones, to make it pos- YOUR STRENGTH crystallize facts so that they will re- id, your eagerness 1 I thought they were my books. You ble for us to leave college. main a permanent possession. Stuffing for th see I had so many on the table, and Comments like these are psychologi- To the Wellesley College News: then I overslept this morning. Oh, lly unjustified. They tend to impress in as many days into a resistant brain is consoled by the fact that many of minutiae on our minds. They also in- Have you noticed the milling throng no efficient method of assimilation, no are eventually going to turn Mecca- a thoroughly unsympathetic at- around the library steps and clustering j phance—An wards. clever short cut to correlation. One students Having learned to judge the panting for the front j cornmitted oi > toward the examination, door to by week gives absolutely no time adequate- age in which we live by the standards, wish we dared make a suggestion open? The two lower doors of the li- Let us adjourn ly to review the necessary subjects and brary, of greater ages, and having acquired e with a German academic prac- one on either side of the build- Second please Heaven!— a perspective that is intelligently to compare and correlate ing, are opened at exactly the same . recently returned member of the l little tot sadly needed by most amateur faculty recommends for adoption here; time as the front portals swing wide. stunning? ticians, we will probably divert Certainly in the four preceding years that whenever the general examination Why not be efficient and use the of our husbanded energy into the > there is practically no opportunity given entioned needlessly in the class- other doors provided for you? nels which you advertise. It maj .,,».;; . ii or taken which might enable anyone by an instructor, the class be al- A little while ago a hurrying sopho- I sibly be worth more for having to shuffle its feet loud more unintentionally knocked and long. down husbanded. field. In one week there is only one that i one of the library staff; the sopho- So, we beg of you, leave us t Down the halls of Severance opportunity—that of becoming tho- .;. ;; ..-: ..or- ; that more was in zealous pursuit of a re- You And in and out of Tower roughly nervous, physically tired out about May 29; even the serve book in the Bible room. There the Spirits wander wildly at a strange and and mentally confused. 1931 does not le new administration resent the fact that it has had to be admit that the region Let's included in the experiment. We might rush. The library staff are there my merciful friends, even derive some grim pleasure in be- help you; so don't trample them Still dare to battle learning ing martyrs to education—if, and only As atumn throws derfoot. if, 1932, 1933. 1934 and succeeding gen- Autumn Tints flaming hues Not the freshmen in the Vill erations in Wellesley would be able to SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Nor the houses on the Hill profit by our experience. We will not marvel at her daring and infinite Are slighted by the wei protest against our own general, but variety. But equally strange and bold with loud and insistent voices we sing are the lipsticks used by of The senior class officers many the Who nightly make thei our swan song, "Why, why must others students, and for every shade of every suffer too? Wellesley College News: Why continue struggling leaf that hangs overhead there passes Georgiana Tufts with an experiment it when has failed a student on the walk below with lips whose color challenges the fire of an be of prime importance Margaret White

tal defect, >. - ;; August sunset. Perhaps it is fear of just i nuch so In fact that one Caroline Brownson the things they been discovered, and it can r. the coming winter that makes the girls wonders if the college is Edith 1 Kennelly Executive Com. je the ghostly tv the present at least, be remedied protect themselves from the elements, anything else. Probably not. Elizabeth Lineberger the Puppy who there has been such a failure i; that is the assumption that c Elsie Watkins Track all ... the crucial down moment to face th leges make Factotums when considering Elizabeth Zumbro In thelr nighHy and begin evolving something is, they think that we neve Mary Dunham Recording Secretary '; ' ' LEY COLLEGE NEWS

statesmen who were prom- ing his desire to clarify the antecedent (COMMUNITY The Theater The closing pictures showed the prog- Eugene Powers the Professor is ress of the railroads, the mills and as a I COPLEY—Shooting Shadows thoroughly exasperating family tyrant, the schools of the state and finally an PLAYHOUSE HOLIAS—Subway Express airplane rising gracefully from an %&&% querulous invalid, self-centered pedant. WELLESLEY HILLS LYRIC—Blackbirds Eduardo Ciannelli as Ilya, representa- airport, exemplifying the fact that Evenings at 7:30, Matinees on MAJESTIC—Bird in Hand tive of the faithful servant type and Massachusetts is keeping pace with Mon., Wed., and Sat. at 2:30 PLYMOUTH—Death Takes a counterpart of Marina, and Isabel Ir- modern progressiveness. Holiday ving as the feministic E. J. H. '31 mother of Uncle Thurs., Fri. and Sat. SHUBERT—Earl Carrol Sketch Vanya uphold the minor parts with ' Book credit. And when the family group FOCUSSEDONTH^SCREEN 'Manslaughter' with WILBUR— Uncle Vanya is gathered, called by the professor to 1 Saturday the hear his sage commands, excellent Claudette Colbert and Community Playhous women s management is evident in the skillful Fredric double feature bill. The picture March UNCLE VANYA handling of stage tableaux. M. G. mousquetaire Miller's popular Manslaughter. George O'Brien Undaunted by world-rousing revolu- Claudette Colbert and Fredric March tions, a Russian country estate of the CAMPUS CRITIC play the leading parts of the selfish gloves nineties, with its monotony, its stupid- "Rough Romance" wealthy girl is who reformed by a term Fox News A Sportlight ity, its tragic drama, returned to life in jail, and the lawyer . TERCENTENARY MOVIES who loves her, 6 button . $5.50 on the stage of the Wilbur Theatre but prosecutes her for the murder of Week of October 13 this week. Chekhov's Uncle Vanya re- 8 button 6.85 Thr. Centuries a policeman. The second picture Mon., Tues. and Wed. vives the old Russia with such con- the subject of the talking movie a will be Rough Romance, with George 12 button 7.50 viction that the effect is sometimes Cyril Maude ast Friday night. Oc- O'Brien, Helen Chandler, Antonio terrible verisimilitude rather one of Moreno, and Noel Francis taking tober 3. Albert Bushnell Hart, Profes- I the than artistic realism. Technically a Emeritus of History at Harvard] leading parts. Th( all "Grumpy" comedy, Uncle Vanya leaves with its University, explained and supplemen- tne name suggests, of the "From Coast to Coast" audience an Ibsenesque sense of un- ted the pictures by his lecture over thei nolth woods, where Pathe News Audio Review mitigated horror which is qualified on- Photophone Reproducing Euns are Put ly by a delight in fine stage pictures. Equipment. The presentation On Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes- Each role, rising from a comedy of day, the main picture will be Grumpy, given under the auspices of the \ manner tone to the dramatic heights lesley with Cyril Maude in the title role. The Tercentenary \ of realistic tragedy, presents a small around the old Professor Hart told of the landing of situation complete within itself. Even Grumpy, who can still be lively enough, the first colonists in 1621, the gradual to play rise of villages near the seacoast of quately at first and later more con- granddaughter from the attentions of Massachusetts and the | vincingly, Kate Mayhew, seei robber, and the boy who by ward of the hardy pioneers grow in her very sameness. Ne\ her from machinations of the mficance is given to the vegetative Cyril Maude, with thirteen' Smith. Endicott ner of her life, to her darkly hundred performances of this part oni standing sympathy, expressed the speaking stage behind him, gives' bling of "raspberries and tea." an admirable representation. One is al- , of each When ^ ^^ j opportunities tempted to say that the ; The title role affords become fairly settled in their for of acting which Walter Con- performance can be enjoyed to a range mode of ij Vi ng| some of tnem greater degree since it makes it possible admirable skill. The I nolly employs with their thoughts to education, especially audience Irish comedian is out of for the to see the actor in face of an for future preachers. Among them closeups. place in a play that is the most Rus- j was John Harvard, who donated - Mr. Con- of the Russians; but 400 poUnds and his theological library- the founding

the first ;

most resourceiul means of an unforgetable livelihood is fishing. This industry by the tyr- fostered tl building of different types lany of which proved of yet terribly, tragically sane in his con- great use to the United States in her sciousness of wasted life. The droop- j foreign wars, especially the War of ing. middle-aged figure outlined in j 1812. Boats were also built for the black against an Autumn doorway, trade which Massachusetts speaking futility in every line, is a pic- I carrying on with Europe, Africa ture not to be forgotten, an image that ne West Indies, and which in the awful, unutterable, silently relates Examples meaning of Chekhov's play. Her shallow depths just the tragedy of which she is t the exquisite Helena moves stage The early settlers, Professor Hart subtly, delicately revealed in 1 pointed i words. Lillian Gish offers the es ence cles ^ j to overcome. One of Helena by the mere presence of ing blots of fragile loveliness; her expressionless, childish voice, and dainty gestures , thought complete the portrait of the sweet and wnQ fir shallow beauty whose only v piness comfortably attained. i worked Helena's stepdaughter,

: superstition rncle Vanya, plays a role parallel to Though is in tragic import. Zita Johann ;

poignantly pathetic ' | peace . it w hgure of the play. Appearing at first Puri t ns formed ^ a no more than an appealing XVemember, the brain does rial body fuel i conventional unrequited love 'The lectable and easily digestible steadily scene by scene to 1 f the form. If breaking you want your men- cry of "He's gone!" and the class takes advantage tal wheels to final sobbing outburst on which the whir| ;„ doub , e curtain falls. quick time keep your physi- The country doctor, Michael Astroff. cal machinery in perfect con- whose part is assumed, not brilliantly, dition. A bowl of Shredded but skillfully, by Osgood Shredded Wheat adds to Wheat served with whole more convincing as lover ar lilk every morning will do than as friend of nature a intellect. onders toward increasing opening the play your intellectual caliber. manner, destroy for is perhaps the fault of the playwright.

Wellesley - Harvard Formal SHREDD

Music under the Direction of Roy Lamson

Saturday Evening, October 1 From 9 until 12 WH Wellesley Inn mission $3 Tickets at the Inn 55 Centra] St. Wellesley WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS

finishing touches to a book for the there : POLLY'S BEAUTY SPOT called, l-'i.r vvuh Century Company, to be Miss Pauline Keefe lack of seriousness, A Tourist in Spite apologies to Kipling, Plain Tales collection of si A Tourist in Spite 01 Himself. A. id- o) Himself is not to be regarded the Cells. It is a expert hairdresser Brown and Com- frothy. Rather let us of crime and punishment told by the ward Newton, Little light and Tel. 1964 53 Central St. whom are living pany. 1930. it the playful but worthwhile sally offenders, many of an experienced writer in the field of and some of whom are now serving life one To those who know Mr. Newton sentences. Mr. French says that '32 of he encountered in through his fascinating tales about the S. E. the difficulties that a book-collecting game, A Tourist in Spite gathering his material was PRO—CLASSIC ISM prisoner is permitted to write only one o/ Himself comes as a distinct surprise. There are some, I suppose, who, written a small has to wrote for information pre- gusted at seeing their friend ai whom he l'h< English Classicism, Imol.. i ferred to bestow his one letter upon a the course of classical pal or a sweetheart, and then Mr. .vill lay ( thought for more than four hundred also title page. But. there French had to wait. Mr. French is hope, who will have compiling the third volume in the Louis Kronenberger in his review aviation series for boys, which he is ; to go a little Luther Mr. of Mi'. Vine's book, in the New York editing for MacLaughlin Brothers of Times, calls the author a dogmatic Springfield. rather than a sympathetic classicist. He

is passionately absorbed by his study lively wit at its best in a new field. so that he neglects the admirable fea- WELLESLEY JOINS A Tourist in Spite of Himself is not! tures oi Romanticism, and sees no WORLD MOVEMENT a„ ordinary travel book. It is not the| ' ralue ir> tne Elizabethan lyricists and recountal of museum and | jour romantic poets. He sweepingly cathredal visits in the leading cities of (Continued from Page 1) dismisses the latter poetiy as th Europe. It is not the daring exposal of extraordinary deeds performed a la ai-umxrd It is rather r;i, i ,l. i-ti Hallibur be glad of an opportunity to hear his fascinating account of a seasoned NEW BOOKS stimulating interpretation of one of traveler's experiences while living in the world's greatest poets. various European cities. Mr. Newton Is I The New York Times gives the fol- not a tourist; at least, he has no desire lowing short accounts of new and an- In anticipation of this delightful

1 ticipated books: contribution to our scholastic interests, "new things however old they may the departments of Latin, Italian, and When D. H. Lawrence died he left are fatiguing. But with all his f | English Literature urge their students behind him manuscripts of several un- cosmopolitan ideas he is not able to gain acquaintance with some of the ' published works. Among them was a escape the despised label. First work of the world's scholars in this novel which Mr. Lawrence had pre- then on the Continent field. Some of the most important pared for the press before he died author finds that to hide one's books dealing with different phases of and which Alfred A. Knopf will publish nality under the cloak of nonchal- this subject will be placed on reserve next Spring under the title of The Vir- is practically impossible. In the lobby or in the Reading Room gin and the Gipsy. The other books iiolm he goes shopping for a of the College Library at least two which were found in manuscript form silk stocking to protect his eyes weeks before the lectures begin. An- among Mr. Lawrence's papers will also the glare of the northern early) nouncement has already been made of be published by Mr. Knopf. ing sun. He thinks that because the exhibition of early editions of Vir- Can you imagine a laugh on every g Louise B. Van Everen, Inc. g purchase gil in the cases outside the Classics page of a novel by Knut Hanson, the it shopping is Room of the Library. author of Growth of the Soil? And 30 Church St. ping whether it be for Swiss w yet that is precisely what O. E. Rol-i or the latest model

of Giants in the Earth, I after Tailored Sports Clothes and Hats Hamsun's latest novel, Vaga- Paris he eats cassata sicili bonds, to be published on Oct. 29 SPECIALTY ° sort of glorified ice cream a A Rolvaag, although novelist, is NOTHING OVER $14.50 2 birtn a countryman of Hamsun's house-hunting by and mav be Presumed to be familiar finishes by deciding to places wittl

he is annoyed present title, Weakening a 'dimpled

Dorsetshire" ; follows the Egypt where he forgets himself as to the camel. And so he goes from Bristol to falling always graceful but amusing uncosmopolitan American.

of these rather monplace made particularly amusing by many anecdotes ton has literally filled his The College World has "gone Sheaffer"*

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WELLESLEY COLLEGE N E W

Smith. Murjorie H., Aetna Life Ins, Co., supplies that were 1 Hartford, Conn. were many and var Oininr Out Fron ns and WELLESLEY PRESS, lr Smith, Sarah A. G., Case work in through the Book Store one first saw a training, Main Line Fed. of Church- counter of Japanese goods such as affiliated with the Townsnw es, Phila., Pa. might be expected in any Japanese "Wellesley's only Home Pape Speirs, Mary, Research assistant. Chem. shop. Next was a miscellaneous array Superior Printing Tel. Wei. o< Dept., Columbia Univ., New York of pottery, soap animals, coasters, and

Welle I go Spurr, Rosemonde L., Latin, French. hammer sets, followed by shorts and SCHOLARSHIP WON History, Sr. H. S., Block Island, F. H. PORTER Miss Elsie M. Franck, 1930, has been R. I. all kinds of candy ; POWDER PUFF SALON awarded a scholarship in mathematics Starks. Winnifred. Chem.. Physics. Gen. this, togeth HARDWARE STORE in the Graduate School of Syracuse Sci., Kentucky Female Orphan which sodas aes. and sandwiches Scenery Paint Midway. Ky. School. , took up the back part of University . P.. Eng., NEXT TO THE BANK Stephens. Ruth Asst. drama- the 3 In the tiny kitchen at the The following list is a continuation tics, Wheaton College, Norton, of the one published in last week's stove, we filled all orders for coffee, News giving the activities of members Stern, Margaret R.. Studying Int. De- cocoa, bacon and eggs, anything McLELLAN STORES CO. of 1930 who have reported to the Per- tea, corating, N. Y. School of Int. Dec. make. sonnel Bureau since June. we could possibly duties were many. The store was 5c to $1.00 MERCHANDISE Boose, Helen A., Studying for Ph. D„ My NICHOLAS STUDIO Margaret, Library Science able Prices. Yale University Stirling, open all day long except for two hours 55 Washington Street course, Simmons College, Boston, Brooke, Mary Elizabeth, Interior deco- in the afternoon. In the evening, it Mass. after supper, rating, With Miss Helen Davis, was open directly and Margaret G., Editorial and Sec- DR. DWIGHT R. CLEMENT Boston, Mass. Trotter, then again from about half past nine DR. PAUL E. EVERETT retarial, Berea College selling part of it was fun Currier, Ruth, Statistical work, Amer- to ten. The Dentists OSTEOPATHY Voast, Helen T., Studying, Union ican Tel. & Tel. Co., New York City Van in itself. It surprised me to find how PHYSIOTHERAPY Theological Sem., New York City DR. Pisk, Sophia, Studying landscape arch.. much I learned about the psychology COPELAND MERRILL Elizabeth A., Civics and Com- University of Cincinnati Varney, of selling. We were continually shift- Wellesley Sq. Phone 1901-19( munity Hyg., Long Lane Farm, Greenhill Gracia, First Grade, Montes- ing goods about, displaying things on Middletown, Conn. sori School, Waco, Texas tables, and decorating the place with Vivian, Eleanor, Asst. Bible Dept.. Wel- Dr. F. Wilbur Mottley. M. A. DR. STANLEY E. HALL Studying for M. A., Baylor Uni- evergreens or Japanese lanterns. Then there was a whole system of triplicate DENTIST Statistical work, New Gunn, Katharine, Studying, Union The- Wade, Thelma L„ orders to be learned, the organization DENTIST York Tel. Co.. Albany. N. Y. ological Sem., New York City of charge accounts, and the relation be- L., Selling. Wanamaker's Colonial Bldg. Wei. 1212-M Jones, Pauline, Secretary-stenographer, Weldon, Ruth tween the office and the store. Part York City Dr. Wm. R. Hurley, Boston. Mass. New of my job was that of keeping supplies psychology, Columbia Studying, Bryant and Stratton Studying University Laun, Margaret, Studying, Miss Conk- Wells, Katharine L„ Secretarial work, lin's Sec. School, New York could enter into all the regular camp N. Y. Life Ins. Co., Portland. Ore. May We Introduce- Lee, Catharine, Studying stenography, activities. It was a camp for adults Pa. Stone, Marjorie L.. French, German, Peirce Bus. College, Phila., only and a new group of people came Not just one of those places Italian, Univ. of Lyon, France but something smart and new Merrill, Elizabeth, Teaching English, Potsdam. New York Considering everything, I can hon- Pattison, Mary D, (Mrs.), Editorial A SUMMER IN estly say that I never enjoyed a summer The work, Charm Magazine, L. Bamber- A CAMP STORE more, nor did I ever Red Rooster Inn learn as much in ger Pub. Co., Newark, N. J. so short a time. The salary was not AT LAKE NIPMUC, Nancy C. Gribbon, '31, spent the MENDON Pease, Dorothy, Family case work, much, fifty dollars for the season, but Charity Org. Soc, Hartford, Conn. the experience was valuable. Just store; she gleaned some information - - Peck, Eleanor K., Studying medicine,) took i uring the whole pe- DINE FLOOR SHOW DANCE about the life of a storekeeper, and Coll. of Physicians and Surgeons.,; ;. but it must havi has written about it in the following He's like to know— N. Y. C. ; $4,000. Now I havi N Minimum or cover charge Phillips, Eleanor C, Asst. to Miss Gam- \ What to do with a summer? It was Every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Night ble, Dept. of Psychology, Wellesley good living, being 1 a question in my mind so I went to the Directions—Wellesley to Framingham Personnel Bureau and explained what Phillips, Mary Elizabeth, Selling, Lordj Nancy C. Gribbon. I and felt about and and Taylor, New York City thought a summer position Pierce, Edith L„ English and Math., no work. The result was a as High School, North Andover, Mass. a store assistant in Camp Maqua, a Y. in Pitts, Elizabeth, Secretarial course' W. C. A. camp Maine. The was a large one and the Jamestown Bus. Coll., Jamestown J camp New York store proportionally so. The' store

Rose, Grace Louise, Latin and Greek, 1 Howard Sem., West Bridgewater, might call them. The Mass. Sargent, Doris A., Technician—Phys. j Blow Chem., Harvard Med. School, Bos- ton, Mass. REMOVAL Sater, Mary K., Studying art, Art Stu- dents' League, New York City NOTICE! the Whistle ibner, Helen M., Studying French, on and after

Ecole Normale Superieure, Sevres, ! OCTOBER lo, 1930 Shankland, Katherine A., Course for The college women, Katharine Gibbs i School, New York City Wellesley Press, Inc. Sidman, Evelyn A., Studying World and Peace, Miss May's Internat'l Cen- The Townsman Pub. Co. tre, Florence Offices) Singer, Katharine M„ Secretarial course (Plant and Packard School, New York City will be located in Smith, Edith W., Laboratory technician, COLONIAL BUILDING Boston Dispensary, Boston, Mass. Cor. Central St. and Crest Road Smith, Margaret I., General Science, Wellesley Tel. 0969 - O970 Jr. H. S., North Braddock. Pa.

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-^-LISTEN IN- In other words, go into a huddle with a glass or bottle of refreshing, delicious Coca-Cola. It will make you captain of your soul again, ready to live — or die S<£FLOWER/ for the dear old alma mater.

9 Million A Day-it had to be good to get where it is WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEW:

iffection on my desert island the Six Stranded Scholars Colonial Tailors & Furriers CALENDAR nan race which I have left behind. I believe, Tolstoi's CLEANSER & DYER Select Summer Readings will take too, I ind Peace, that I may live to realize big ciety. 'Continued from Page '. in life's great

2 of eternity. "For the third? I should like my ERNEST FORSBERG FOUNDATION Chaucer and he would relish Fielding' Watchmaker and Jeweler dojys of moulded bines ,cnt of Economics company; but there must be only on> loved companions. I spend my hap- few well placed book with laughter. Piers Plowman piest hours with books and get froir The Faerie Queene? Still Prometheu them my keenest pleasure, but my 'fa- WELLESLEY, MASS. Our Ivy Foundation garment Unbound? Shall I be true to Victo gives a pleasant vorite' is the one which at the momenl feeling of rianism —select perhaps Arnold's "Num. security with soft natural lines. is giving me something new which ] bers,' my Glare Silk am eager to know. ALEXANDER'S or Taffeta combined exile to wish for my lost America a de- with Lace Uplift Brassiere. "And then there is always the latest SHOE REBUILDING votion to "whatsoever things are ele- SPECIAL $5.95 Oppenheim or Edgar vated"? The trouble is that the books my night cap." Ivy Corset Shop which I, too morally, remember first. Miss Tuell speaks thus; 8 Church Street Wellesley seem more adapted to life within so- moters of the questionnaire Congregal Leyden ciety than without. After all I could indispensable books for a desert-island still use the Book of Common Prayer, sojourn know that we are bound to and there is luckily no space remain- reply dutifully. 'For the first two the SUE PAGE STUDIO Bible and Shakespeare,' and to call /^ Crusoe the Next Hotel Waban presently for Robinson as NEWS TRYOUTS I j^E] XMAS PHOTOGRAPHS standard guide to the land of noble- 25-26 AD BUILDING Wellesley 0430 V?^/ as early as convenient savagery. THURSDAY, OCT. 16 "I did once select another list of three. I had finished my first course in the history of English literature and observed with some surprise that I had three classics worthy of my attention: Religio Medici, The Rape of Lock, and Prometheus Unbound. Well. I cherish them still, but I should NOTES: -WF1 Il-SI F> TH to recapture that first fine care- 12 mniscience, to discover the exact synthesis to be made of these. I must try again. SUCCESSIVE SEASON "Anyhow I will 1 THE BRUNSWICK Harvard Will Not Subject Songs To Vallee Croonings GRAMKOW'S Harvard University refuses EGYPTIAN ROOM Rudy Vallee, popular radio croc Ice Cream her famous songs. The Harvar Sandwiches son says that Vallee tried Salted Nuts—Etc. fully to get permission t Harvard songs. He had hoped to make The "Fair Harvard," "Gridiron King." and Again your friends eating he "Up the Street" as popular as he has runswick repeats its annual invi- made the "Stein Song" of the Univer- "vill" sity of Maine. University authorities In the tation. refused to make exception to the copy- Phone your orders rights and did not consider Vallee's Wei. 0167 Gather your friends. Come to the

Egyptian Room. It's almost a tradition

now that here you'll find Boston's most Really smart thoroughly enjoyable dinner-dance and Rooms wear supper-dance assemblies. Delicious food — delightful music — good Glazed Chintz! company always! When you hit for town, MEMORANDA here's c the brightest spot on the whole LENOX lor 85 to GRILLE— men a target. Before the show . . . after the game $125

. . . or at . . . LENOX SPA— instant midnight the Brunswick

Egyptian Room scores high with interesting LENOX PALM ROOM- people.

SPECIAL-SERVICE ROOMS of

Teas — Banquets- Dances -Wedding AND THIS YEAR, there is NO MINI- Breakfast!—25 to 300 Persons. MUM CHARGE AT ANY TIME for a Id carte service. Table d'hote dinner And their really wise BRUNSWICK SHOPPE— Bosto smartest owners select it at Jor- little stop-a-while. Booths a $1.50-$2.5O. . . with no cover charge counter-service from breakfast to m dan's, because the mod- until after 9:30. Dancing 6:30-2A. M. ern Viennese patterns night. Sweets, ices and fountain S| Or Ombre stripes are Jordan's stylist trill help bold! Gorgeous! Differ- you ensemble Curtains, ent! Because the colors slip-covers, and bed-spreads are more unusual than in the modern manner. in any other fabric . . . Have them made in our price meals until B P. M. robin's egg blue, for in- workrooms at a nominal stance, apricot, char- charge for so much con- BRUNSWICK CAFETERIA-Sell- treuse, lemon yellow! LEO REISMAN'S food prepared by Brunswick chefs.

EIGHTH FLOOR ANNEX ON EITHER SIDE OF ORIGINAL COPLEY SQUARE JORDAN'S L. C Prior, Pres. ,„d Managing ORCHESTRA