Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Bryn Mawr College News Collections, Digitized Books
1946 The olC lege News, 1946-10-30, Vol. 33, No. 05 Students of Bryn Mawr College
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Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1946-10-30, Vol. 33, No. 05 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1946).
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" VOL . XLIII, NO.5 ARDMORE BRYN MAWR, PA. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, Copyrl&hl Tru.slUI . J..R1CE 10 CENTS and 1946 DrYn Mawr Collt.e. ot1145 r
� _ .. ' , • '" '. t . HarrisonSpeaks Conimittee'Deals B. M. to Support Freshman Plays Uncover Talent Combloux Chalet �. ." With Complaints, On Nazi Trials . By Relief Drive Rockefeller Wms Placque • . ' CurrIcular Needs 1946 The Committee for Relief for Friday's Plays Exhibit Conleciy I'erfor"munccs, Un g aduat w;th problema Europe is directing its efforts this Pohclesinvolved d" c .. A�lillg, Oirecling Sentimental Drama concerning the curriculum are ure� year to the suppollt of the Worlrl 24. reo Student Service Fund and. more Goodhart. October The ed to take them to any member Talent Given SatllrPennsylvania, in a talk on "The among at working (or an International Stu and quantity of actorS, actresses produced Thornton Wil Implication, the NUremberg once every two weeks, and its cen �oel dent 'Grou,p. whom were. Theresa LObo in Cap der'a Pullman Car Bin'atha, Triala" at the first Alliance assem· tral executive comntittee meetl . Kings: am Combloux was opened for fifty tains and Shirley Winter Coward's Ways and �'leanll. and bly of t.he year. "I wholeheart with the Faculty Executive Com students whose health and endur and Ethel Stolzenberg in IJe.c:k)· Booth Tarkington's The Tryslinl': edly for the trials, the prindples mittee whenever necessary. 40 ance had been strained by deten Sharp: Mimi Lukens, Raskind Plat.. The victorioua Roekefeller established � regard to .them, and The following are the members to 01 tion in co]:centrutwn campe, de. and Jean Pieri in Ridefll the freshmen, however, concluded the the results of the trials," he con the Student Curriculum Com- N portation, and the resistance move Sea: and Ann ewbold in The evening on a sentimental note with tinued. mittee: A Continued 011 I"'nM;e 6 ment. The French Student Relief Happy JournlY:"; J. M. Barrie's Well Remembered In discussing the question of Committ.ee reports that lrom Feb- Special c]·cdit goes to Elizabeth Voice. . whether or not .the trial, should Continued Page l! A on Dowling, director of the Pem West Well Remember� Voice, di held at all, Mr. Harrison have been Conf. Discusses play, for biting off more than she rected by Carol McGovern, '48, was begnn by eatablishing precedent a could chew in J. !\t. Synge's tragic carried by the acting of two indi for thc principles involved. Belore Delegates Show Irish aaga-and masticating it viduals, and the work of coordina the 18th and 19th centul'ies, he Humanities' Place thoroughly. The three principal tion seemed to have been a nern stated, a diatlnction was always Role of Women actresses showed feeUng and re gible factor in the production. unjust made between just and In Next Century straint as the mother and two Katherine Harper ns the father, wars. but during the centuries that as daughters who-lost t.heir men to and Emily Townsend Dick. em Miss Taylor, Dean of the Grad In Modern Life followed. the idea developed that the sea. moving gracefully and phasized the sentimental elements liL"W"'tL.by sOl'CreienJtateLJn: uate Sch� and Mias Gilman, of of-therr- 1'01 Delegates from the Internation subtly aeross a well-dHiined stage. fredively, but to be accepted as legal. "The invader the French Department, were two al Assembly of Women, meeting The men, however. made no effort the virtual exclusion of all other intent on pillage was given the of the three women who attended with a group of students and fae either to speak or act in keeping elements. same ,tatus as people delending the Con-ference on "The Rumani! ulty for an informal discuuion at with the mood of the play. and the The supporting cast, consistinJ their homes." The trials at Nur- tic Tradition in the Century M.. the Deanery, spoke of the contri entire performance was not heard of the mother, portrayed by O. Ahead" held at Princeton Univer emberg marks a return to the at the. rear o( the auditorium. One Harris, Laura, the fiancee, Pamela· 6 6 bution which women can make older idea of ju,t and unjust wars. sity last week from October 1 to K. J. through education, the family and of the chief difftculties of Riders Wahl, and Cllsssrd and Nice 18. Other delegates to the Con When Justice Jack,on was faced through direct to the Sea is the keening, which ly as the Major and .Mr. Rogers, ference were presidents and pro community lile, and with the question at the end of . political action, to national was handled effectively. and cli gave adequate but rather colorless fessol's, in the fields of Literature, and J. the war of what to do with cap international development. maxed by A. Rock', keen. The performances. set.ting up the bark Philosophy, History, and the .Arts, tured Nazi l�aders. three courses combination of the play's essen· ground f�r the centml scene be, (rom several outstanding collegQs Mias Anna Lea Lelli, delegate were qpen to him. lie could free tial violence and Pem's' subdued tween the. father and lion.A smooth and universities, creative artistll Irom Italy, opened the disculSion them without hearings, which trellt.ment.. • of thill violenee produc. production fron\ the technical such as W. H, Auden and Artur by stressing the need lor a Socrat Continued on Pll,e 5 would certainly have been unfair standpoint, the piny did not seem Schna'hel, and prominent foreign ic education, "to make a better to the soldiers and civilians who to, shf\w a ·group contribution. It ers: Lord Lindsay. Salvador de man in the spiritual values, in the rell during the war begun by these tha was apparently a poor choice for Madri�ea, Jacqu,es Maritain. and mental values, and in moral men; he could have executed them Alumnae to Meet production by a group and tailed in Edmundo O'Gorman. value!." She pointed out that good without he!rings, which would its lew opPOrtUnities to make the The three days were divided in education had been included among have violated the American con- It play an integrated whole. to four hour and half seasions at. the five basic rights ·defined by the Weekend Nov. 2-4 eept of right and wrong; or he 1 In contrast, an example of a " hich speakers discussed special International Assembly 0 Women. was c.uld pas, judgment on them aftel· ' well-eoordinated production ISpec:ts of the central theme. fol Dr. Stene. of Norway, and Mrs. "Education at the Crouroads" a hearing, which was the alterna Rhoads' Pullman Car llia� alha. 01 discussions towed by comments from the floor. Rydh, of Sweden, emphasized the wiJl. be the theme tive he choae. The trials at Nu· directed by Jessica Levy, ·.a8, and .umbug The purpose impo tance of betw.een alumnae, studen18. and the Continuedof onthe PAl'e Conference r action in building ,�. were result of this 5 Alumnae Nancy Schwartz, The act up community responsibili a faculty at the Seventh decision. ty nd resses recognized the. importnnce to be held at Bryn MIlWr • in expressing the woman' p n �eekend 4. It s oi t 2, of coordinatioh, so that feeling Once it had been decided to bold 3, and The,e •. of view in the political fi on November eld. Dr. for the whole waa obtained. An .the trials certain other matters Players to Glove discussions are highlighted by the Continlled Po,. I !)l Stene noted that daring the war . on , policy had to be aereed on. The for Faculty §Ill ch ildrt\n, hither;to liberated from Alumnae Drive British lIuggeated that the Nazis and Academic T. Wilder D rama any responsibility, had been re- aries, Scholarships be tried only lor specific violations Projectl, and plans for the Drive at incorpot;ated into lociety through Brice Will Offer of treaties and agreements. The The Varsity Players Bryn be discusse during the week- resistance to the Nazis, both men- '!iill d .Russians and French favored trials Mawr and Cap and Bells of Haver- tally and actively. end. of more of a politiCllI nature, in Varied Program �o::r :'�11 �� ��:ne,,� � se�; �� l n r an i · e �� alu �: : �� T�e ed for combining demo- :��� �: � �I.��: which the letter of the law need nt W d S n p ng d 8:30 crat]c ,Ivmg with the improvement nae J not be adhered to. It was' the Our Teeth" at Goodhart at vcloped by various mpmben of The first . in the series of three oC I']ving conditiQJ1s was tited by for the of United States that finally effect n Frid.Y and aIUrdaY nl ts, l the Fac4lty, a Conference is concerts Ix!netit the ° s !� wo representatives of the Far N 5 l Alumnae Drive will be presented ed a .compromi,e-that the trials ovemb er anI d 6 , for th e "ene- . !lcheduled for Saturday morning. . East. Mrs. Feng yu-hluang, of fit of the Alumnae Dr]ve lor Fac- n, a K Mr. DonaW W. MacKinnon, of the by Carol Brice, contralto, Thurs- Chma,' an d MIn d k P hka a- 31, 1 S . day. October in Goodhart. u ty alanes. • The comedy, deal- I ' Psychology Department, Mrs. , . I rcan dee I ga e. Ing With man s near escape from Helen Taft Manning, History, Dr. Miss Bricc's program follows: BAaroness nn-M'arle r eEh ..n- I gedy • Phyl!ics, Miss tra through the ages begin- 01 1 Walter Michels, C Q(, •• , WI IS. krona Swe ed n, asked or a n�ng ' h Ihe I ce A ge, be·In Mary S. Gardiner. of the Bio1 ogy untata Schlage d h gewenSC"40e Activities Drive I B new fashion in decency" to count- d]rect�d by Mr. Thon An Seide- Department. and Miss M. Bettina Stunde - Bach. . � eract the negative spirit pervading 1 the Language Furibondo Spiro iI Vento-Handel. man ]s tltage manager. aided by e t1 Lmn representing . . ,pe u a on a bo u a t t Ih'Ir d war, J[ Collects $3,227.23 Jack]e Cawan and Betty Br]ght W 'I _..I". Le 'I, 0 II Department. will diacuu their . h l e ll aI y, d d eman - ft Page as heads of the construction i B projects. Au OllUng - Schubert. 1946 '47, ed "('th n men n d n i th e per- The quota for the Activi- crew. EIiUlbeth Dowling. ia I . 0 .. A Symposium on "Educatitm at Liebe schwarmt aut allen Wegen- fec ta :;] t ( men. Y for Schubert. $3,000.ties Drive had been eatablished at handling publitity (or the produc- the Cl'08sroads" is planned The main projects IUp- tion. Saturday evening, aWing the Erster Vf-tlQ,lt - Schubert. The cast is headed by the CALENDAR porled by this League drive are lollowing students: alumnae an opportunity to discuss Ocr Musensohn-Schubert. _ I The Ht4Ison Shore Labor School, Mr. Antrobus Brooks Cooper, admissions and scholarships. re- III '47; _ Thursday. October 31 8:00, The Bryn Mawr Summer Camp, Mrs. Antrobus Ellen Har- li,ion and personal guidance, And L'tnfideUte-ReynahJo Hahn, '48; _ Carol Brice Coneert, an Th e V - with reference to the Les Cigales-Chabrier. d arsity Players. The riman, Henry Antrobus E. Goodhart. ClWriculum total collection _ and present and to futUre L'l ntruse-Fc\'ricr. by halls is as B. Coaie, '48; Gladys Antrobus F y, November 1 past '49; _ rida follows: . Sheila TatnalJ, Sabina Ann plans. A discussion on thelle same Sequidilln-l\fanet dc Falla. (88%) $84.00 '49; Alunmae Weekend. with mem- Intermlstllon Low Buildings Eberstadt, Fortune Teller - Saturday, November 2 lIubjects will be held $32.00 '49: p.fO:BO. IV Geraldine Announ- Hockey game with ben of lhe Senior claN at a buf- Radnor (7870) $49.50 Warburg. '48; Spanish House cer - Henry LevinllOn, Dino- Swarthmore (away). fet breakfast Sunday morning. The Wounded Birch - �t.chman. (63%) $181.70 _ '49; &AUI' Sund.,.. Novelllbv- 3 Teas and other meetinn fill the inotf. Denbigh Helen Hale,'49. Mammoth, 7:30, (65%) $138.60 H. Lewill Cutler. Chapel, - - Peake, rest o( the weekend schedule, con By the Windo.w-Tschaikowaky. Non Reaident (94%) $44.50 Miraed Room . stu- Music cludlng with the Bryn Mawr 0>1- Had I Only Kno,,'ll, nad I Only Wyndham The following Bryn Mawr • ..,..� . (9590) $887. ,h Monday.__ • L>- Noveraber .....-J:> J) . ."'�dltional- membjl" _ .. ..,I..O"noenIEv eftl ;lIii .... 1 ege Fun d 1 nn� • ·vemng G�Tschalko�.. ky...... �. blorlh (95%) $367.00 "Jt!':'lJ '4 l!.!. . ommon ....t!-f....:. at the philade hia Art Museum. Pal'asha's Dance-Mou.�--· Rhoads South t e east: EtiubeJth LUlt, Room_ - '41, � E. ---:'l1JCj:l':iTh e Honora.ble. J_ William .rut- JoWo Y Merion rnr.o.tel, T.dlhr, N� (98%)f:A 2'" $492.00 '49, '49. Good- 1\.I . Cl&nl Fahneatoek, Alliance Mus Heeting, urirht, Senator ftom Arkansas, Jlay Up In Heaven-arr. b}' Hall RoekefeUer $11'7.00 MeuJler; '47. 8:80. (loo�) hart, will be the apeaker. The alumnae Johnaon. Eut House Eva Krafft, Christel Kappea, H. (100%) $891.96 '48, '47. N .... 6 to by and Naney Strlekler, Mn. Weclne.da7,4:00, o wlU also have an opportunity Dry Bones-an. T. Burlei,h. Pembroke Eatlt (94%) $656.47 '48. Welt s Boeke, ...me wltb Bea- visit c1anel, and wlll eat Sunday Lil' Bo),-arr. by Roland Hayel. Pembroke S. W. Hare, i actlnw.a (here). 0 11 ver CoUece supper I none f the ah s. Follow Me-an. by Nat"anlel Dett. Tot&) ...... : ...... $3.m.29 prompter. � - , r � , -
• THE COL LEG.E NEWS • " . • ,
THE COLLEGE NEWS The Spectator • (Foun4rd U. Contributed 1-J14) Sped.II, •
Publisbed .edl, dunn, the CoUeae y�u (napt durina n..nk.,iia .. •• When we have left this place, Students Desir" Action Urban Clarifies Issne a.rinmu Mil Elltu holidlY., and duriq �.. min1tion wft1J) in the inttrett what. tokens, whether words or ' Mr., at the PrUllin, CompJon" Arcimon,f ..,.Uld For Beller Ventilation Thanksgiving of BryD Colltp; Arlmoct sights or smells or sounds, will be or ..,.n M •• r CoIIf,.. Lhe talismans of our remem- In Library Vacation
brance think shall remember • TIwt it fu ly prot«t41d by eop),ri,ht. N.thin, thac Ipptlll 1 ":I [ Colic,. N.w. l . To 'h.• Editor: ... T 0 the 'E d',I or •.-- ill it ml, hJI: nprintrd aliMt wbolly or m pan .ilho\lt ptrlllAuion of th_ all things lll'�ing and ineon- Eclitor·in."'.f . ., ,ruolls, all things quiet. and Since an average of 6/8 of the 1 would like to try to clarify ------: .alrange, all moments when the conscientious Bryn EditOl'ia1 Board Mawr student's aorne misunderstandings whlen clocks stop. nd the work lal1s time is apent in the library, we resulted from the han meetings EVAAYS. y '47, E4itor-;"...Chk! from yOUl' nands, and you catch would like t9 suggest EMIL! that aome- held, by the Curriculum Committee NANCY MOIlBHOUSlI, '47. COPytlAUlET WARD, '�8J MWllP sight, tor one delicious momentl' thing be done about the breathing last week. HELEN ANDEll.TON, '49 BAk.8AItA BETTMAN, '49, ot Eternity's tail just as it slips tacilities. The ventilation, as you The Curriculum Committee, rep LOUISE Makeup �J '47 llround the corner. no doubt know, is almost non- resenting the student body HELEN MAIlTIN, '19, Sporls Now, on Sunday at five o'clock, e:a:istent, to the point where the brought to the attention of the there is such a moment. Editorial Stair The week library atmosphere becomes not Faculty Scheduling Committee has gone olf down its tunnel with merely conducive to sleep, bUl that a majority of students wish Dokcrnn JeHU, '47 HELEN HAu, '4.9 GOLJ'lllu.., KAnlNA THOMAS, a long, receding, self-important literally untenable. · ed to have the Thanksgiving week HauiH ... , '4' DA roar, leaving these gray towers to We therefore suggest, even end as a vacation. The faculty JUDITH Sn.VA, '", G � WHITS '4' A'DI'YOI.T1f L stand up in their ponderou; seren- though reallzinc the difficulties pointed out that the schedule was Auca W '-4, ' , JEAJiELHS, " jty, unmoved by all the dust and this might pl'esent, that imme- drawn up and printed lasl Febru B.u.LU.A ZIEcLE1 '-4. Louu£ EIlVIN '4' .. uproar. , Pbolographw Unmoved, indeed, by the diate action be taken, for the bene- ar), as usual, upon full considers J'tOiAMONn insistent rains, by the wind, the fit of the whole student body. tion of the pnvious petition, and ItANE, '4. lun, the night, or the minor How about tanl t Cut out some the students should have pretenl • time or at a ","lao.. Board acurryinga ot humanity. heating t Have jammed windows ed their viewa at that CoNSURO KUHN '-4', Btuiruu M""" gtr Now the. cobalt dusk setties fixed? CrOll-ventilation 1 regular faculty meeting titer the CAa.OL upon it all. There is no wind; the Sincerely youn, schedule appeared. BAUIl '-4., AJvtr/lJin, M.".,tr Impertinent birds and dogs and Sandol Stoddard, Sarah Smucker, Last minuu petitioning ia indie NANCY BuSCH '-4, JeAK ROBBINS '-4, Jqulrrela lIave all gone. The Sarah Darling, Helen Burch, E.ative of insulicient planning on MAay B2BTl..E.S1'ONE, '-4, people walk in twos, slowly, 150 McClure, Sylvia Stallings, Leila our part. Tlle responsibility lies elowly that the eclio ot their voices Jackson, Betty Coleman, Judith with the whole undergraduate A the rustle· of their feet is lost in Brodsky, Nancy Schwartz, Mary body .which ,must request any ac NNA-S •.JCSOI1, '-4. M.".,e, KUNHAJ.DT"'- TIN EJI the air, aa if they moved in some Barton, Elizabeth Hamilton, Phil. tion which the curriculum commit NANCY '-4. SALl.Y BEAMAN. '-4, other piaoe, In a dream Or a mil'. lis Ripley, Jackie Miller, Kay tee may take. EOYTHB LA GIlANOS' '-4, SUE KELLEY, '49 age. Even the buildings have no Greg-ory, Lucille Lewis, Ruth T,he holidlY granted last year WeE LoWE HACK-NEY, '4' EOIE HAM, ·SO fixed walls, was a victory celebration and was BAUAJ.A YOUNG. '-47 BETTY LYOINC, gr.cI. 'the treea drift up out Metz;er, W. Barrows, J.Carrman, ot illusion, rooted only in mists H. Cheyette, A. Barbour, T. Man- not to be considered as setting a . The waves ot smells tower and gravite, Darst Hyatt, G. Warburg, -precedent. Subscription, $2.7S Ma.ilin� Price, $3.00 break: ground _ smell, leat -smell Anne Kenny, Sylvia Taylor, Jean The arguments presen'te.d by the Subocriptioou-may besin at U\l' time and the amell of £he advancing Ford, Janine Landau, Barbara Curriculum 'Committee to the hall night. LeMay, Carol McGovern, Jill Un- meetings were not their own. They ncluded those which the faculty Ellt.red .. MCO nd ct- aunu u thI. AlcI.moH. PL, r.t 06u And all this will now be folded derhill, Claude Valabreque, Joan Ulldu An ofC"..oeJr- .....' 24, 1'12 up and put away on some' shelf Hitchcock, Nancy Kunhardt, Grace had given in a combined meeting, be until you will clumsily knock it off Dillingham, Betty Mutch, Helen for it was lelt that they should body And then, spreading out the dusty Abell, Sylvia Hayes, Thea Holland, stated to the undergraduate n order to insure understanding thing, (perhaps unwillingly, lIince FranceR Binger, Lucia Rogers, of aides of the question. Apath� Action memory has a persimmon taste Carol Vejvoda, Margaret McLean, both vs. Sincerely you�, . . yet with a sense of miracle) you Betty Smith, Amoret Bissell, Lucy IS Margaret Urban, "7 The undergraduate body at. Bryn Mawr In a way a will remember all this. Roffman, Page Hart, Peggy community, with organizations run for and by the studenta Continued on Page 6 English. -- The privileges and accompanying responsibilities of such"n community should not be ignored. The undergraduates and W.S.S.F. Drive Opellillg Historical Sketches their representatives on the organizations do not seem wholly Seeks MOlley, Clolhes , '4& . By Katriaa Thom. . aware of these facts. There seems us be a tendency on Current Events to to Continucd from I PIIC Bryn Mawr waa not affected by the p&rt at Bryn M&wr students to �xhibit either timidity or "To what extent i Ct: ch I three apathy in assuming the full responsibiliti of their own or ruary '45 through �aKh '46, man-power shortages before 1929. es · 8 vakia under Russian inft en ' hundred and twenty-three stud· ganizations. We cannot elect representatives and then forget : :; In fact, men never attended. dances wu the question disculled on ente attended Combloux for a per- before that year. ,In the "-Good that they are ours, nor can these representatives their months, October 28, by Na"i1 Morehouse iOO of from one to three accept ld the underrraduate ... Ruth O Days," positions and then forget that they stand for us. � '47, for reat and recuperation. who spent the aummer in n ot the body got all ricged up in their 'ltiis unwillingness pl'iviieges and accompany· Heinsheimer, Chair� to urope u the Bryn Mawr delegate accept � Committ.ee for Relief for Europe, nsweat finery, sent each other cot ing responsibilitiE!J '" a pparent to us to varying in to degrees the International Student haa painted out that this period of sag� and went off to dante with almost every underrraduate organizatiQn. We have,.baw Serviee. recuperation '" of the utmost im· one another. ever, choeen a specific illustration which be they are seetbs to us to MillS Morehou.. emphaaised the parlance to students if A typical event was Ithat of J922. ofeepeci.al .importance .. l connected our exis- to continue their studies and work "Sophomores Give Most BriUta1l.t it is cloee y to fact that expediency fore.. C&ee.h I atudeftte at in Europe. Dance on Record", read the .. ead- teacee .. Bryn oalovakia to be on friendly terma Mawr. linea in the •• Thi, "bril1l.nt," Bryn MaWI' a libend arte college. A student pretum· U this com'bination rest home, il with her powerful neia-hbor, New and lnurnatlonal affair to receive the Frflhmen was Bryn Mawr it best cultural center and ably beeaU8e seems that, whUe that nation wO\1ld and MOOHB to come to also Student Center is to continue its a c.ombination of food, .klts 8uited .to give her the education which she desires. the of pal. On Hke to maintain amicable relations vital work It must recein further dancing in the settinc toa other hand. eacb student Bilould stop think about what it colleges ace of ice" In • • , , THE" ,.,, PO .. , COLLEGE NEWS Danees with May Day Ill·lld'l'ised Ma! Day Tradition Petitioning Voted Men Dr. Cutler to Be Um::: .� � �ents Introduced in 1929 For Sp ring of 1948, On Thanksgiving .. Chapel Speaker Continued Irom P..,c 2 Contlnued from Page I r elves or make. every undergradu- of good will, Holiday in Future eacorts, and urged to cut in. The components Firfally, it has been asserted that ate take the opportunity to partici- There ia no account of the dance mutual trust and the welfare of May Day is an anachronism dati"g pate in thi. important phase of men will be covered by Dr. Lewis As a result of a vote in hall itself, but despite the probable non-academic: life. CuUer, Director of the Philadel rrom less serious times, when the meetings on Wednesday, October Hood of extra women, it was hail The publicity value of May Day phia Regional Office of the 'Na energies of students could with 23, the Curriculum Committee will ed in an editorial in the Ne"'s as i. al,o one that cannot be over tional Conference of Christians good conscience be devoted to such submit a petition asking the Fac an "inauguration of a new era of looked. Bryn Mawr i, one of the and Jews in chapel, Sunday eve ulty to consider scheduling the normalcy." "The- fact that Bryn a production. At this time, and, few colleges that abstains com ning, November 8.at 7:30. Friday alter Thanksgiving as a Maowr has sanctioned and carried as it now scems, lor a number of pletely from ordinary publidty. through a t&IC dance, on ita very Dr. Cutler was educated at Ger holiday next year and in future years to come, the demands upon Even with Big May nay publicity • campuI, is but another milestone mantown Academy and the Uni is only an incidental by-product. years. It was voted, 218 to 128, the sludents nre, and will continuo not to petition the Faculty to hold in the good regime of the self veNity of Pennsylvania, graduat But it is an Important by-prod government of common sense . . . ing from Princeton Theologieal to be, or such an immediate and a special meeting to conaider the uct. Through the Inftuence of past pressing nature, directly related to question for this year. Yearly t.he life at college approach Seminary. He waa the rector or May Days Bryn Mawr has been ea the norm of Ule that one would the Calvary Presbyterian Church world problema, and cannot be The vote in the halls was the brou,ht dramatically to the minds postponed ,.ld neglected. 0:1 lead at home." at Wyncote, Pa., until 1943 of many people unacquainted with result a meeting between the It academically. Many of our great Central Student Curriculum Com drives for funds and endowment. mittee and the Faculty Committee have gained their greatest impetus on Schedules in which petitioning from May Day, which could con lor thia year and the idea of Thanksgiving vacation in general tribute materially to the present • Alumnae Drive. were discussed. At the han meet KING Many of the objections raised by inls. members of the Curriculum those opposed to having Big .May Oommntee reported thia discus Day this year can be answered. sion stating the Scheduling Com-. Objection: We've no right to ex mittee's point of view. pend so much time on such an ac The vote by halls for petition URE tivity in these times. ing for this year or for futUre Without denying the importance years was: of reconstruction work at this time, Now it Ihowd be pointed out that the Rhoads ...... , ...... 31 time devoted to May Day is tra Pembroke East ...... 25 ditionally up to the individual stu Pembroke West, East dent. Those who take on major House ...... 7 parts In the piaYI naturally spend Denbigh ...... 25 more time. The dancing on the Rockefeller ...... 36 Creen reheanals are fitted in by Merion ...... 8 lubstitutin, them for all winter I '.yndha,m ...... 1 and apring term sports. The amount- of time- expended de.pends Harrison Explain. entirely on the type of May Day the undergraduates should decide Nuremberg Trials to ,Ive. Continutd from (lase I Objection : We have no right to deal with general principles, not expend 10 much money on so friv- specific vi olations, buL that they olous an enterprise at this time. be based on established legal pro- .. Never baa there bee,p a deficit on I ced,,,,, It wAs also agreed, in a May Day. Ttcketa, sold at $8. 50 cb!lrter drawn up by the four apiece, pay the coat of produe'tion. powers in London, that the cap And the Board of Dlrectora will tured war leaders would be tried never permit the holding 01 May on the three counts of crimes Day if and when they consider it against peace, war crimes, and a flnanclal rilk. crimes against humanity. As the two chief long run achievements of the trlall, Mr. B. M. Third Team I '.' '''''"on cited the following: firat, lhat "whatever doubt there was T ie d by U·rsmus has been removed ...that the waging of aggressive war Is an The third teama of Urainus and international crime." And sccond, Bryn MaW1' fought to a 2-2 ti' that "individuals are to be ,held re- ,. , Wednt'aday on the Bryn _ .... spons.ibJe for International crimes," h«1r.ey fteld. regardless of whether or not they Bryn Mawr made the first acore are the heads of states or are act early in the game, aft-er closing in ing under ordere from superiors. on the UninUfi ,oal several times. There are several subsidiary WihUe Bryn Mawr was ablt' to achievements as weB. Mr. Barri brinr the ban up the .field with son considers it a very good thing ereater ea.e than bheir opponents, that a pernnanent record haa been more co- the Urslnus team showed made, as it was in the 'tri�la, of ordination in its attacks within the the aims, doctrines, and methods striking circle. of the- Nazi Party. And he also Uninua matched the first. Bryn believes that the Nrembel'g trials MaWT lOal, but the Owls tallied establishes once and for all the another lcore. In the laat ve • V� � fi fact that much International law OIiE OF THE IUUTlts IN minu�i play, Ursinul made of 4 i.a based Upon the sense of justice, "AIINIE GET YODI GUN" coal to effeot a tie which neither or "growing conscience," of the team w.. able to break. With two peoples of the world. a.ltemat.e. forward line. at her ;::======i - dilpotal, lUe. Grant aubstituted I freel,-, to determine the mOlt ef fedlve lineup for future match Treat? play, .• The lone cro.a-fteld drives of , Polly Porter, hal1'back, and the de· fiat • fenaive .hota of Pat Edwards, full '.. back, showed particular power in Meat! • \.he backfield, w.bile the atiekwork of Betay iDay. captain for the HAMBURG HEARTH match, waa notable in line. The ,oals for .Bryn !I In the �f.�&�� �.' Vil. .. were made by Ro.amund theKane��:.; and: II THEY Calhy A."" t, AYRTE� S Tweeds for your tai)ored skirts Matching yarns for cardigan or pullo�er " lovely colors .. iJl , .� . Blue ."-� ... . � a..t.k:.. ..!-'�cIo �;�=��C vra.l Nata,.lGreen !T_ ..... DINA H FRO ST" S , , THE COL LEGEN E W·S . , • • - Successful Carnival Features Alliance 1l,t1llflllistic Tradition , Analyzed by Scholars Token Gift Voted Peck Victory, Food and Prizes During tbe current campaign between Bill Batt, Jr. and Samuel Con!in�d from P'Ie I by Gloria White, ' skies and text books. Mr. Berry For Two Drive 48 �tcConnell who are the Democratic WDS to det(!rmine what. leatures of Plato, hakesPeare, and Napol. was quite an expert at penny The Alumnae Drive. to . which ---&. and Republic1\n candidates, respec. the lwmsnitics. us we know them eon ,1tepp to the background pitching and little Jim Berry, the students will be expected to ea--... tively, for the Congressional rep· today, would be llseJul to the gen Friday afternoon as Gregory Peck astride his faithful tricycle, carried re'imlative ffom the sixteenth dis. eratiolls a century from now. It contribute. will be the big drive was voted King of the Campus home two prizes. Mr. Sprague �rlct in Pennsylvania. a group of WDII, noV.;ever, purely discussion on oompus this year. 011 Wedne.· with Kilroy running a close second. tried his hand at pitching baseballs students under the Alliance have Dry nnd no practical results were day evenings the undergraduates This revealing poll took place at and I,poketl liKe good material for been actively campaigning fOl" anticipated. On the question "What dec.ided, by a vote of 259 to 88 ill the Athletic Association Carnival the faculty baseball team. Batt. They feel thal he is the bet· are the Humanitiea 1" no agl'ee on Me�n Gl'een lor the benefit of hall meetings, that the customary A group or Girl Scoub, invited ter candidate because he is in fn· ment W(lS renehed, since opinion • individual lIolicitation lorl the Red the Faculty Salary Drive. by Corky Pickens, '47, enjoyeti vor ot the Wagner-Ellender. Taft l'slIged from the limited view which The event was a big success, nnd themselves immensely and walked Cross and the CommuTlit), Fund Bill (to stimulate home building aaw them 81 the continuation of • will be replaced by a token gift. amid the atmosphere of ring. oft'. with several prizes, quite ob· for middle nnd low·income fami· the Greek trlldition of "Humani The sum to be put 011 each stu· -tossing, penny.pitchlng and apple. livious of the lact that they were lies, price control. the Employment taa," the highest thinKS in' life. to bobbing everyone forgot the c10udy dent's pay day will be divided be· nearly drenched from bobbing for Production Bill, and Civilian·Con· those who believed they should 4:' tween these two organiutionl. apples.-Ah, Youth I trol over atomic energy. McCon· elude everything that touches Man, The only other organized drives Rockefeller "ictor For those who did not win prizes, nell, on the other hand, who has even certain aspecta of science. there was plent» food and drink been in Congre5s since has the League Activities drh'e In Satrtrd PlaYIJ ol 1944, Among the mosl Interesting \ ay so everyone was happy, and most either failed to vote on or has vol- the AUi"ance V.S.S.F. drive. Continued from p�.t I speakers. they fell, were Hajo important was raised ed against Veterans Housing, the even balance was maintained be· about $50 Holborn of Yale on the historic tween Nancy Corkran, lta&,e man· for the Alumnae Drive. continuance of stTOng price con· approach, Wolfgang Kohler of ious crises out or which the best trois, and the expansion of recip· ager, who competently provided Swarthmore on Science and the is always perpetuated. rocal t"�iff powen. the strand linking the various epi· Humanities, Lord Lindsay, and Bolh Mill Taylor and Miss GiI -._" .. to.ether, and the other char· The students campaigning for • G reat V·arrety S eerl Lyman Bryson. Lord Lindsay em· mall felt that the I\\ost valuable act.era. The latter, however, seem· Batt have been canvassing voters phasit-ed the t.remendous import work of the Conference was the in this area to remind them to ed better when portraying types In '50's Friday Ploys ance of adult. education in Eng. meeting of 80 many ditrerent than in interpreting more complex vote and to inform them of what ConliDloIcd from p�.t I land. which t.he United States is points of view, and the opportun- . roles. Mary Lou Thomas as the •B a t t stan d s f or an d 0 f 'l11 oConne II' 'I apt to underestimate. »Qinling out ities for infOl'mal discussion out· eerie effect whlch record in Congress They that earnest young doctor, and Beth ed the proper feel that it demands the highest aca: of the scheduled activities. not lost on the silent audience. the work they have done has not DO-year.old lady, were was ______Hebb as f demic standards 'and the mo.t ___ play, A only .been valuable pleasantly typical. Nellie INelidow The non·residents' to the caUse of highly trained teachen. Mr. Bry· Happy from Trenton to better government, but as Harriet, although she showed Journey has provid· son discuued the position of the that a simple cd an interesting stage presence, did not seem fully Camden, proved and enlightening radio in regard t.o the Humanities, is better choice lor ama· experience fo\' them We're Ollen aware of the implications 01 her play a as individa· which can be an important med· "our boys" were a ala. more complicated role. Among the teurs. Two 01 ium. but not until a !lchool 'Of ser· presentation, In conjunction with 'Til AI! Hours minor tharactera, Margie Low, as great aid in such a this work ious criticism is developed for it who had his part several students went town the Tramp and as 12 o'dock. was Eugene Galanter, to a is like that for the stage and cin· outstanding with her IIkili in the well in ,hand throughout the eve· meeting on Friday night, spon· ema. The conference was ably COME IN Lawless, whCl sored by the League use of varied actions and expl'es· ning, and James of Women summarized by Marj,rie �icol80n stepped back into civilian charac· Votera, at which each of the can· siona. l of Columbia, who strrssed the note or twice. Ann Newbold didates spoke When 'The East House production of ter once . the meeting ot- pessimism under.i».ing the!:"fnett· For a Lale Snack wa obviously the was thrown open Noel Coward's- Ways and �runs u-�he'�1Tl"other s to iscullSlon ing, which she !'aid. is unfounded, focal point o the play, around from the floor someone asked directed by Naney Bell Wesson, f since the world has survived prevo each or the '49, allhough a less polished pro. whom were successfully integrated candidates to express BLU COMET auction, exhibited a similar spirit the other memben of the cast who. his views on the FEPC, whereupon of equal contribution. June Moyer as her children, husband and gas· a large proportion of the audience as Stella set the pattern of [he atation attendant, made poseible got up and walked out. When the 'latch the whole with her well·handled satire. chairman asked them to remain play her vivacity and " someone Autumn rapid patter, although Toby.. play. Channing ""PolI • You don't need a IOilP box. .,. h�.YII it to • poJi.heJ .I.nce· f1ou .. and Everyone Wants a Warm, Tho....Se,a.an·, .RIGHI Red- to win them ov/:r! Rt:d i. � Wool and Rayon Plaid Shirt Jwl n'g At if,· Ihe anI" lip.tick .h.de Ro.er f:! , ....�lJet oif.r, On the li p., it. b..uty c...::1 'n � �.Our. ! �. ". � L.,t.-anJ lu:o.. J I lCUPSnCK, tI�80'O 1\9- . �...... ""-' :::. , ROGER & GA llET .. 11_. _ ....._1.0 " .... '. 1. • . LUlfaITBR AVBlfw ..TN _.Dry __ 1I, . . " "01 loa, I , , .- . ' THE COLLEGE NEWS - The Spectator Two Delegates Represent B. M. Continued from P"Iot ! At Hudson Sh ore Labor School W. s. S. F. DRlVE tin board, including the room, time, and organiz&tion involved. Miracle we must call it, that There will be a mass meeting to Joan Eisenberg, '48, and Pearl from English unions, selected by a Class meetings take precedence aome little smell, lome twisting. of open the World Stwdent Service Edmonds, who reprCo'ented the committee of Bryn Mawr alumnae. over all other metein,gs. Fines the tight, will conjure up again, In Drive for Combloux on Tuesday cannot be exacted for non-attend- employees of the college, were the Two weeks of discussions, ot class- time to come, this evening; that Bryn Mawr delegate. to the Hud night, November at P. M., ance at meetings· which are not es, Ilnd of learning to live with 5, ij.;30 t.he sca-shell holds last the ocean son Shore Labor School this sum in Goodhart Hall. The main speak- posted at least. 24 '��ul ,g .' uuu lr'I®lYff/SfO) \ OI)'MPIC OMH6ACE; CXlQl(.Y" GlLtSSEN,oEMONS1'1ImS . lItE • 2111 FOIl�IIAIiC! SOI1l£A6j\u�.- "\. , sr/CK TO CAM ELS. TASTE ORTHROAT, THEY SUIT MY 'T-ZONE'roA IT' YOUR "T·ZONE" ••• WILL TELL YOU T fer' ...... T f. TIIrNt -...... Z!!! ,.., ... poeMIII -- - • t;r.... � .-,;.:� 2 ..,..z-'.... "'To" \