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1934 The olC lege News, 1934-02-21, Vol. 20, No. 14 Students of Bryn Mawr College

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t XX, No. BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDA'Y, FEBRUARY ::Oilyrhr;ht BRYN JolAWR ;.J PRICE CENTS Th 21, 1934 COLL .. ;oE NEWS 193-1 10 VOL. 14 e-·College • International Club Holds Shane Leslie Speaks CALENDAR Oxford Press Serves Miss King Discusses Thurs., Feb 22. Vi�nna Round Table Discussion i. Gertrude Stein's on• Authentic Swift Choir Boys will give 8 concert. Scholarly Interests Art The International Relations Club's • Goodhart Hall,. 8.20 P. M. Tick­ . ets on sale at the Publi­ round table diKcuslion of Latin 'Amer­ Disguised Handwriting Proven 8'tJ.! ·Foundation of Fine Printing Impressionists, <::ezanne, and cations Office. ica, held February in J-he Com· False by Recently Found Laid by Gifts of Jurn),s 1S Cubist, Sho", Parallel. Fri., Feb. 23. Class swim­ mon Room, was a high.1y successful � ·and Bishop Fell. to Her Writing Manu.scripts ming meet. Gym at 4.00 P. M. experiment. Sal, Feb. 24. Varsity bas­ Carmen Duany, '34, who was SWIFTIANA RE· EDITED ketball vs. Dre�el Institute­ BIBLES ARE FAMOUS re-­ TECHNIQUE IS ORIENTAL sponei61e lor planning the round ta­ first and second teams. -eymn. UThe Oxford Press has alway. Ie, opened the discussion with a In '�he Common Room, Thursday Shane Leslie, lpeaking In Goodhart at. 10.00' A. M. ) been something more than a commer· rier account of the International afternoon, Miss King gave an ilium· Wednesday evening', February 14, Sat., Feb. 24. PrelJt(ml\n b cial venture," said Dr. Herben, ill· Relations Clubs' Reg;onal Conference inating talk on Gertrude Stein and on the subjeet of recent studies in Show, Goodhart Hall t 8.30 ( traducing the exhibit of Oxford print­ on Pan.Americanism, which she- At­ French Painting, which was on Swiftiana, gave his attention more - P. M. Tickets on sale at the baaed ing in' the Deanery on Monday after·' tended in Washington last December, her rsonal recollections ot MilS particularly to a textual criticism of Publications Office. � noon, February 19. jilt .is and hall The following student! also gave Stein and on her wide reading in the the pieces in the Swift anthology Sun., Feb. 26. Mr. Edward been a great. institution for the serv· short reports on different aspccta of authoress' works, . • "written in Swift's .well·known dis­ M. M. Warburgt of the Museum ice of scholarship by the disaemina­ the Latin American question: Lucy guised hand." af Modern Art, will 8peak on M iSI King met Mias Stein fint in tion of hooks," Oxford's claim Fairbank, Margaret Simpson, Eliza· B�ause of this fiction concerning Th.& Artist in tlt.� orld Todal/. good New York through Mabel Weeks, and W to be the home of the first Eflglish beth Billgham, Elizabeth Bock, and Swift's handwriting the famous Dean Deanery at 6.00 P. M. Estelle Rumbotdt, the lICulptor. Miss printer ill unfortl)l1ately as faldc all Grace Meehan. is one of the worst-edited authors Sun., Feb. 26. Chapel. The Stein U!led to visit Miss King in .her the tradition maintained by Uniyer. in English literature. He signed his Rev. John W. Suter will speak. These repor,s emphasized the diffi· "penthouse" apartment on 67th sity College that it was founded by - letters, but never his poems. To Music Room at 7.30 P. M. cult topography of South AmeriC:l Street, cram herself out of the win· Allred the Great; but-the xford Itart from, then, the editor has only Mon., Feb. 26. Margaret O and the large Indian�l�ent in ,the dow to admire the vista of the river Pr.e!!s, if not the second after Caxton's . halt ot Gulliver', T,.aveu and half Ayer Barnes will mCt!t all those populaUon as reasons .lor th prob- and" the buildings, and finally settle nt Westminster, was among the carti­ o'f the Journal to Stella, deli.nitely in students interested in writing lems which the Latin republics are down to talking at length about "ny· cst in England. The colophon date on his hand, and available in the Brit­ in the Deanery at 4.30 P. M. racing today. Those countries with thing from art to lllychology. It was the manuscript of t ish Museum. The other halt ot the Tues., Feb. 27. Miss Rossa RujimUJ, On. he the leust Spanish blood are the least about this time that Gertrude Stein Creed has been shown by scholars to pl'Ogrellive. Transportation is still nnd her brother, passed much latter, a composite of gosaip, polities Cooley, Principal of the Penn Leo, R an error resulting from a typeset· and "gossamer love making," ie po,.· Normal Industrial and Agricul. hi! very primitive, although the new air· time abroad, where they oIten hap· ter's omission of one Roman numeral, sibly in some small cottage bureau. tural School, Frogmore, South lines are bringing out.lying districts pEned to meet Misl King. An inter· ten: it is, therefore. 1478 instead of The main task for the editor of Carolina, will speak in the into closer contact with the capitale, esting story is told of Miss Stein's l468, and not prior to Cuton. Swilt is the comprehension of his Deanery at 5.00 P. Tea at . so that trips which once required falling asleep on the ltepa of S1. John 1\1. months when mad(! canoe or mule Lateran in Siena, the day handwriting, and then the correct at­ 4.30 P. M. Please notify Polly The Oxford PreSl ,t first had no � beeause tribution of the poems in the Swift Barnitz if attending tea. more than a casual association with train now take �- a few hours. waa hot. and she was tired. From anthology, frequently In the hand­ Tues., Feb. 27. Mrs. the UniYenity, al in· early days a In the post-war decade, Latiri there the scene shif� after a lapse writing of Swllt'a contemporaries. Thurlow will speak on Oppor- "sc.riptorium" was apt to be found America enjoyed a J:)rie! era of un· of aeveral yeau to Paris, where the The Swiftian manuscripts have had, lor Women in lndu.· near any intellectual centre. The precedented prosperity. American two had taken a studio. Mr, Stein r.hlJtiti�1I a remarkably romantic history. Laboratof'1·t!'. Common first Press went out of existence in banks practiclllly compelled the vari· was selling his fine collection of Jap­ trial. governmentl to accept loans. The anese prints In order to buy paint· When Swift died in 1745, all of his Room at 4.45 P. M. Ten at 1486, after nine years of publishing. ous depressi�n has, however, blocn pal" ings by the modern French-Reno,ir, books were lIPid: the six.vol�me 4.l6 P. M. Eltablished anew in 1507, it printed Faulkner edition of 1735 was aold to L for only fourteen months, at the end ticularly IK'vere in Latin Amerlcu. Cezanne, MatiSIC, and Picasso, Miss ______--" , Lord Synge, it was lost, and reap­ I of which it was suppressed by Wol­ Since it wal impossible to keep up King did not see Mi88 Stein again peared only to be sold and lost again Miss Park Outlines Plans lIey. The present Oxford Presa wa� payments on the public debt and tn(> until just before the War, when ahe unlil Mr. Leslie recently discovered For Addition to Library rounded in ] 685, from which time to New York bank!! insisted on receiving enjoyed looking at new French paint.-­ it. The Chesterfleld fetters were also the present moment its tradition is their Interest, the only way to ,'(1. ing and learned to understand it a eventually sold, and passed down At Chapel on Thursday mornirog, unbroken. ... move the burdCIi of these obligation" littlc, with the aid of an intrOduction through the tamilYi these, Miss Park discuased plana for a new For the three hundred and rorty­ .....all revolution. to Picasso's dealer. During the War, The Pan-American movement. ini· Miss Stllin drove an ambulance in too, were for some time 10!lt to the Library wing and for a Pl'OI>oscd eight years of its existence the PrettI'S . world. In all the catalogues of print­ has the finest records of any publish­ tialed by the United States Govern· the SQuth of France, and "worked like change in the present Library stair· ment, has attempted to. foster loli- u dog," as she, herself, expressed it. ed booke in the Shirley library· there ing house in the world: we know case. The 160,000 books in the library, was no mention of the manuscript. ('vcry title published in those years darity and good·will between Amer· And the war·time experiences revcr­ Dr. Rosenbach, however, finally founn which grow in number yearly by ap· and for all of them, with few excep' icft and the other rcpublics of thll berate in her work. The next meet· Latin II. r�erence to it, and lent Mr. Leslie proximately 10,000, make more Ii· lions, copy il available. The first wt.'Stern hemisphere, but the ing was in Madrid, where Miss King to find manuscript. It was an countr1cd tese�t American pn:i(!omr- waa working at the Bibliotheque Na­ the bralY space Imperative. The iilea or title or the 1585 Pres. was, appropri­ nance, and the interventions undcr· tionale, and Miss Stein was working nrduous task, beeause the more re-­ ately enough, a Latin one, Moral brnlding th� along the unftn· • cent generations of the Shirley Cam· Abollt An',totlt', •. taken with a corollary o{ the Monroe late at night, and lleeping well into ished back wall of the Clohdera wal> Qlle,tion. Ethie i1y had neglected the library, allow· From 1585 to the turn of the century, Doc:trine as an excuse have arou!Cd the morning. She gave Miss King ing the books to get stuck together discarded, for it would make the reo seventy or eighty books were put out hostility. British and German trad· her manuscripts of the volumes of like bricke, for the livelier pleasutt.'8 moval of the windows in the pleasant by the Press. crs have been getting an increasing l>ortraits. Earlier was the one of proportion of Latin American trade. Mabel Dodge, which circulated and or kennels and horse-racing. Mr. seminary rooms at the ends 01 the The vicissitude! of the Pres." have Leslie had no success whatever in Ids Proposals are now being considered was imitated so widely at eollege; present wings necessary. Two long been many, pleasant and unpleasent. for continentalizing the Monroe Doe· but it was then that MilS King torm· search here; and it was a stroke first It has always been exceptionally for­ wings extending towards Rocketeller trine and treating the other republics cd that habit of continuous reading of luck and then or genius that finally tunate in its benefactors, who hnve Han seemed a better plan. Th(:�e as partners equally interested in Its which she considers nce'casary to get procured the long-eought manuscript. endowed it with funds, and more wel­ was suddenly informed of the wings have been etaked out. They do enforcement. a ful! understanding of Miss Stein's "He come even than funds, type. At the As a rollow.up' ot this dif!.cussion, writing. Today when l\Ii�1I King is (Continuea on Pair. Flv., not come unpleasantly close to Rocke· beginning of the sixteenth ccntury, ty­ Mrs. Manning will give a talk in Paris, Ihe always goes (Wl'r to Rue feller and will, when completed, en· IlOgraphy did not keep pace with the 011 Mexico next Tuesday, (Continued 011 I'a •• ToUr! Industrial Workers Tell close a very plea!lant quadrangle. ndvunced output of books. That pub­ Views on Trade Unions The basement ani), of the wing will lishers then were carelcsa about the be used for books, and will be ap­ artistic presentation of their books the Wisdom of Playing Follow·the-Leader Is Twenty Bryn Mawr v:ndergradu· proached by the present bascment horrid condition of Shakespearean • ntCl and fifteen industrial workers passages. The building above will be dramatic quartos is sufficient witness. Driven Home to Bryn Mawr Stag Line discussed the effect of the NRA on used by and specifica1ly adapted to No care was paid even to the design with our brilliant discoveries, only trade union organization at the meet­ the needs of the Departments of His­ of the titie--page; the plays were pro. The cryptic procesl by which a to find that every other girl in the ing of the Student-Industrial Group tory of Art and of Archaeology. It duced OIl pax pa.,.- with blunt type stag line unanimously decides to reo supper.nleeting last Wednesday, Feb­ will contain offices for the memben like Browning's "scrofulous French IItag line hod discovered them too and nounce the pleasure of rushing nine­ ruary 14, under the leadership of Dr. of the faculty in these departments, novels." was dC8Cribing them in lyric terms tenths of the beauteous damseJs gath· to the late arrivals. Somewhat daunt­ Fairchild. or,re group concluded that seminaries, eias$·rooms, a large room Friends of the Oxford PreM, real· ered at any dance for their express ed, we bared our elbows at a dan­ alt�ugh government, under the New where can be shown, and, along izing that more care must be given to films 8 been a source '.)f Deal, may J:aelp the workers some­ the back a permanent exhibition t. 8 delectation h 8 long gerous angle and plunged anew into Iin(>, the artistry of publica lon, began 8 wonder and admiration to o\ir un· the fra)" cutting in at random what, workers must still rely on their room for all valuable pictures and early as 1629 to present it with hn. 01'1 initiated eye. Football coaches turn every side. After leveral rebuffs and own efforts to see that codes are en· objects. The main part of the library ported Continental particularly types, green with envy and throw themscl\'fll, a terrific kjck on the shin, we found IorC(!d and working conditions im· is not completely non�nflammable those of Holland and Flanders. From into untimely graves at t� sight of ourselves cursing in the arms 01 • proved. I and, consequently, some hesitation has 1660 to 1672, Dr. FelJ, the Bishop of the team Ipirit and concerted action future minister, who reproved us at' The experience of workers repre. been �hown in donating valuable ob­ Oxford, endowed the Press with a going to waste along the edges of length for our language, refused a sentlng the silk'spinning, hosiery, and jects of art for permanent exhibition set of Dutch which laid the type, every dance floor. We, too, have cigarette on principle, and described paper--hox industries showed that the there. foundation of fine printing at the untimely (p'avel'l to us the iniquitous state of has reduced hours and raised When the Library was planned, it nearly been driven to the col· NRA Press and exerted an enormous in. by our attempb to punle out jost legiale aoul throughout five dances the minimum wage. On the other was intended that the main reading Ruence in ralsing the standards of its how it happens that halI an hour and four intermissions hand, however, the weekly wage has rOOlILshould be a redangle, unbroken publishing competitors. Fell, usual. I afler a dance begins, the ltag line When we finally re esca� t.o-thc in manr easee been diminillhed, Rnd by-"the ugly and unnecesury projec­ Iy remembered by an opprobrious - a man has selected which girls are IItag line, we foulld it, few remaining the pace of the work increased. tions formed by the stair-caae and quatrain, should be more properly rep to be avoidt'd at any cost. But �ow members laughing gleefully at our Two 'ilk Ipinnen told the story of the reserve rooms. This plan may garded an'd cherished '81 benefactor to a that we have been part ot a ltag bne, obvioua disc:omliture and looki.nc their succeuful strike still be realized if the present stain to printing. His punehel and mat. ead· to achieve. we are no lodger in a. state of Iy .t the other members, who had union reeognitJon. Further requesta are removed and new stain rice., are preserved to the present be· fHrhts of wilderment: ita devious plan of ac· formed into two banda and we.re for a fairer distribution of the work built at both ends of the library, or fContlnu� on Pa«. FlY.) _ us amazingly clear QI d ahameleuly pursoing around the Roor _ ____ tion seems to ' even a single flirht, in the style of ______led a Ioc.k.out on the _ _ l to seven W1!Cb' . evea'more admIrable than our two orir,inal discoveries. pretense that the company had no English college., built facing towards r befOn!. The rest Yoc4lio"aJ Tea Our recent gymnaatic encounter of the evening augured 'f'ery il and orden to be but when tbey reo Pembroke Hall. The main porch l, 1\1Ied, HU'Old Thurlow with Princeton's more voeiferoUi in tact .....ent from bad turned to work, they found aitu· would and be utilized perbaps Mrs. G. to wane. Oor the remain Dikeman, 1928) will utembf!n I'ot off to a moat auspicious best. friend 'trudged woefull, and ation Improved. hosiery yorker, hold a seated figure of Mias Tho­ (Esther past A te apeak on OpportunitiCi' for beginning, .. far as we were eon· practically threw a man Into our who was n union organis.er, mas. The books from the reserve re­ a adln. Women in Industrial Labora•• The fint two men we cut in loctant arms; he told 0. that was repor1:«i a s "bich she rooms would be placed in book-c:ucs «med. he that bike in Common Room In on danced wt!U arid wen amusinl'll' delighted there co o 'bfv· was in'f'olved failed, perhaps rising to the height of the windo.. tories in the waa no al h lic heeaUH Hall on Toesday, Feb­ caostlc about Glee Club, PrinH'­ erace found a p ac it attempted too much. around the reading room. Mill Park Goodhart the to be i the o h be-­ ruary at quarter five. ton, Bryn Mawr, and men and wom­ eaOIe, after conductinl a lonl The next meetinc eet ,would like to have this alteration 27, of ,. I.a tentatively Tea will be eerved at ha1f�paat en In ceneral: the e.ve:ainl he dec.lded for the Cqmmoa made when the new winp belag aeemed 88fth, had that people February 28 fa are aurur well, and we retorned who drank were no happle.r aabJect will be faDe­ built, .. it would leu fOUT. to to t.haa 'Room. The the be eipenJ;ive fee1lnl very pleued n dona of amolll. line (Conti ued on Pap Three) and alma trade theD. '------1 the atac , (·age 'J'wo THE COLLEGE NEWS

'" g IN PHILADELPHIA orll«JlU nuty tenorl Litten, lady, have a lleart. I have, I aaid, I can Tbeaira THE COLLEGE NEWS feel It, it.'s ftutterinr. Well he look­ Erlanger: Anthony Armstrong , • .,.. is 10 1914) ed-up at me then -with lueh a queer Irr--t lle mystery drama, (Feundaci l�ed Ten-Mtftute expression 4tnd his collar and A���·- "'ol.nd ,Drew, R. J. LOVELORN said, I'm beginning to f�l rather BlunkaU and Stapleton Kent who, (Wit'. End llOt 'J'e'J)01Wibt. for U taint. I felt all motherly and thrill­ needless say, did not comprise the '" ant( problem. ezpre"ed ill kI tliil ed and I said, Baby, my poor little original New York cut. All about c:olum?L) baby, just sit down while [ get you a lad who commit., a murder to &ave Dear Hatter- a glau of waLer. But when I came his beet beloved frol'D a fate wane • met a man from Princeton the was cone and I couldn't fint.l I back he than death, and then moves the-clock other night. Ah mel I ruesa it him anywhere. What am I to do! ahead ten minutes and fools Scot­ The Con.... New. Ia rU\17 proteeted by Nothln" ..ra ID • must. be half a week ",gone. I lo'(ed do not even know his name. I fo:r­ may bl reprinted either wholl)' or In partco wllhpyr1l'ht.lul written parmlthat.. apploD of the r land Yard-maybe. H him inata:pt I saw him. And got it. What"'_ the proper approach� Edltor-In-Chld. • the . Broad: Rollo Peters and Mabtll he took great interest in me:. fIe • a I am, Taliaferro in Autumn CroclIs, a f/,Utot asked me twice where came. from­ H�arted. fdlu",1n'Chic/ lAp, I Broken extrava,ann about noth­ SALLlI! JOHU, '34 NANCY HAI.T, '34 " twice dllring one dance I was 10 I Broken Hearted: I undenland ing in part��ar. Has a certain ap­ o flattered. He � waa cute, too NciUI Editor Sp ru Edttor io t 1 JM!rfeetly, dea". Every young girl peal for th04e who like to pick spring J. ELlU.aITH HANNAN, '34 SALLY eould HOWl, '), just see over the top of hill haa these momenta. Now, if I were ftowers. head. I would go anywhere for him you, I .bould write a complete. de­ Convention Han: The history of Euv.al!TH MACItlNl.ll!, "34 Editors Gn.ALDINI RHOA'bI, '3f -even to New Jersey. Only he Is ac.rlptlon of him on your little envel­ the Jewbh people done In the form of I'L\NCU PoI.CHU, '36- CoNSTANCI ROBINSON, ' 10 srnall. Shall I throw conven'tion DIANA, TATI,S ..",H. ).4 ope and send it CAre of tht! Princeton a drama-pare-nt, entitled Romattee hANcea VAN KI!UUN...... 'If 'u to the wind�tlMt. though he i. so f People. Glee Club. Th.t will surely reach o Q. The 'Production has & &,i'IWI M''''41" smallT OoaOTHT&lfnmpticm �LlAC". MAnA," '34 B"UAlA Lr.WII. him, for I everyone be cast of over according to the '1' YearNing. know will 4,000, sympathetic. He win be. delighted to Philadelphia Record, which meana N�o do not throw convention the receive any fragile flentiments you DoU8" <:AMAD,n. '36 tb probably .tOO.- Anyway, It's a very winds. NQt ·that. Be quite dis­ may care to enclose. Don't be too • amuh'lg spectacle and will be of in­ PRICE. •• ,.. cret!t. First of aU ask him if. he violent at fint, dear. 'Lo� is a fra­ terest to those Interested in the m� SU8SCRIPTlON, .2,'0 MAILING ANY TIMB uses tobacco or strong drink. And gile flower, helped alon8' by tender chanica of theatre . • SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ·the if he does, tell him-you know, in a zephyrs rather than 'by strong hot February Coming, 26 • nice motherly way-that that il what blasta of puslon." I am looking for­ Broad: Conrad Narel in Goodbye is preventing his rrowth. Then, ward to seeing this little romance Aguill, the comedy hit of last year, Button, Button' . when he grows up, your love may bud and will be glad to hear fronl . in which Osgood Perkins and June ripen into some�hing really besutlful. Every time we ' re fortunate as to disc"OVCl' a typewl·j er within you when it blossoml, too. a 80 t Walker atarred. A very amusing our reach, wt) are overcome with an uncoDtrollaM desire to sit down story about the past who appeared .- Dear Mad Kattcr­ .. Dear'Mad Hatter, and write an editorial about taking books from he Reserve Room in Cleveland to harass a lecturer. What's the matter My child went. to Princeton Univer­ 't Recommended. without signing for them. We strongly suspect that the college be­ With the underllignedT sity. It was in the fall that he went Academy of Mwic lieves we write them for lack of anything else to write about, and 1 have thought to the aforementioned center of Philadelphia Orchestra: Friday although we are greatly' tempted to write' a stock editorial on the That true love ought learning, but the difficulties in get­ afternoon. Feb. at P. M., and subject and reprint it regularly every other week, it is not true that Always to be blind. ting his trunk closed at that time 23, 2.30 Is my youth purveying trulh neceasltated a complete reat cure for Saturday evening, Feb. 24, at 8.30 we continually on this subject in order to up space. "Ie write fiU- When he says that he me. In my absence and without my P. M., and Monday evening, Feb. 2G, write about it, wishing alt tile while tbat we did not have to', because Cannot "dear" me consent he went to your establish­ at. 8.30 P. M. !ssay Dobrowen will it invariably hallpens that on he rare. oc.casiom; when we do battle our conduct. Program: I When he's near me- ment with a group of songsters, and way through the snow and ice to the Ijbrary, we find that the books Ncar enough to seeT now, he wants only to return to Bryn BerliOlO, Overture, "A RomllD Carnival" we w8nt have been missing for the past six wceks, and we aJ:e always -Says my face Mawr. I diflCOvered his reason when Makes this the case: a former Bryn Mawr student told me Crie8' ...... Symphonic Dances accused, probably as a shot in the dark, of having taken them! Ralea a feature mole-y, that at her College there is a group Tschaikowsky, we have attempted, somewhat futilely, in the past to create se IBeeause And abu s of aesthetes who Indulge in dancing, Symphony No.6, "Pathctique" commotion and launch reform in the matter of pilfering books� Movies R· a And refuses in costume. My financial embarrass­ the library envisions another walru!f in its midst and has now brazenly Bonds the least bit holy. mcnts arc many, excuse my being per_ Fox: A dandy little opus entitled of having "with sob� and tcars, sorted out those of thc "Take,oh ake cConllnue(I on raj(. Flv., oming Out Partll, with Gene Ray­ Rccused Ull l C mond Frances Dee, and Alison Skip­ largest size holding 8 pocket handkerchief bcfore our streaming eyes"! Tl10se lips that make , ' Me shudder, (ar away"- News of the New York Theatres worth. Is exactly what it sounds ur eserve om privi' 'I eges WI un d ou bte dl y b e WIt' drawn ' llc O II Ro 'II I I III I The viUain quoth We batted exactly per cent. on like and even the leavening influence the ion 60 near future, and we look with distaste on possibility of expu]g And waxeth wroth. thc predictions which we made in of La Skipworth doesn't help much. as Ihe lowest variety of sneak-thief, which seems to loom ullcomfortably Now why! this august column last week concern­ Earle: The Paramount film tor ill the offing. We bitterly regret that we ever mentioned the subject ing the reception that two new play" which a national beauty contest. was Didi DOIJ. were likely to receive at the hands of staged. Called in the inimitable Hol­ to you, but since we havc done 80 and cannot now dcny it, we plead in Dear Didi Day: You are esscn- the New York critics. We were lywood manner, Beoutv For Sale, and the voice of one crying bitterly ill 8 hushed wilderness that this unfair, tially .. romantic. If I were in your borne out In our optimism by the en­ has Ida Lupino (Who won), and Rob­ dastan1ly, nefarious, abominable, craven, cowardly, execrable, odious, place I would show your boy friend... thusialLic reviews which The Shilting ert Armstrong and Buster Crabbe. bnd abhorrent practice should cease at once and that the missing books Karlton: Roland Young the how mistaken he may be: meet him Hour called forth, but we were hard­ in should be returned before have to replace them. 1t is amazing maSKed some mysterious, prepared for the ecstacies which -screen vertion of Buned A lltle. En­ 1I0W We fimf:-be be I)' and!-whisk him away the boys in the aisle seata indulged titled Doubl,., Life, it Is the story that our slightest. word on the subject of examinations and marks languorous, Hi. of a man everyone thought was dead should meet with reprisals from the faculty, whilE! our most "igorol1!o\ to church before midnight. Then rPo- in concerning our own little Dennis veal younell. You will find him Kin8' in Richard of BordeaU2:. After and all the fun he had on the sly Rnd vehement insults hurled itt the undergraduates meet with absolutely moved as he never has been before. reading all the papeR available in the before the secret got out. With Lil­ 110 results at all. --- frantic hope that some brave soul lian Gish. Dear Mad Hatler- wnuld say that Mr. King is not the Stanton: We have a new idea for . My husband doesn't love me. He answer to the prayen of those who a story, no leIS. About a telephone want live again the happy hours girl and her little �switehboard.They Speak Up, lAdies! seems stranger and stranger of late. to We have seldom regretted a proof error in the to the extent of reign of lAid Richard, we fin­ call it I'v. Got YOllr Nu.fnber and in , New, I'm sure somethinl' dreadful is go· the that we regretted that which appeared in the editorial concerning ing to happen: he says such strange ally had to giv't up and take refuge it. are Pat O'Srlen, Joan Blondell, and Glenda Farrell. marks. The board of the was in complete agreement with the things that sometimes I'm afraid he in the thought that we probably News will murder somebody-yet he is the wouldn't have liked it had we been Boyd: Frederic March and Mir­ statements made in that editorial and {be qualification which appeared AU of !tie, gentlest profeasor in State U. Like there - but we were here, so that iam H�klns in the usual in italics at the end of the article was intended apply to the appeal to the other morning-he put his papers thought had little bearing on the situ· story of the lovers who faU to get for an examination in Bible. 'Ve feel that such 8 mistake waH morc in his brief case and said, "Will you ation. Anyway, we shall start by anywhere until the final fade-out in The Shin- spite of aU the efforts of them both. t han unfortunate as those to whom o�r eft'orls are addressed are already please be quiet when you pais ouLT" saying what a good play • I terribly me i'l" is, and hope that we fill Fair. too often uelin take what we say " h 8 grain of salt and the am scared. Advise HflUr i ed 10 jt the column before arriving at the Stanley: One of the best films mental Te!rervation that the element in this couotry is the how to hold his love. Red 011 Worried Wife. other animal. that haa come out for many a moon increase. -Eskimo, with a native cast. The Try t·he cut-comebaclt. (I enclose In that play Raymond Massey, However, we meaut what we said about the inadequacy of the lurid advertiaementa about "untam­ our little handbook in State U. col- Adrienne Allen, and Gladys Cooper present system of and we are on the verge of going further ed," "unashamed," "wife trading," and marking, ors, entitled "College Life in the flnd themselves in a Yorkshire farm- what not do not keep it from being a in our campaign to advocate that numerical marks be abandoned in Raw.") house, alone with sex in a moat subtle

_ very important movie and one not favor of a more general system or elassifie.ation, or Ihat the numerical disguise designed by the author, Mr. Dear Mias Mad-Batter, Keith Winter. Mr. Massey and MiM done for box-offlce only. See it.. markli be privately dispensed instead of posted for the morbid benefit. I wouldn't bave started to write Allen are happily married and living Europa: The disturbin, movle of all and sundry who have nothing better do tba.n stand by the to what's going to be heart-rending for a life of patrician ease in commun­ that. consists of the secret films of door to the office of the Secretary to the Registrar and wateb the you and me both, il I just weren't ion with the great outdoors; their the nations which were involved in parade. The group which gathers around the ting boards never at. the end of my tether. I can't tell chief divertissements being Bach, the World War. Entitled fo�orgottell Pos it is very upsetting. ceases to remind us of the crowds which collect in front of a hO\lsc my roommate or even my best friend. and steeplechases, in which the man Men, < Local Movies where a particularly unpleasant crime has been committed. We have It's not physiological, either. Oh, of the houlre ridet heroically while MilS Mad Hatter,� it's wone. It'a the lady hOPei for the best. Into Ardmore: Wed. and Thurs., arguing against system which makes a gpe:nt hours ill this column II Katherine Hepburn in LitUe awful. It's 10Vf�. ] hope you can see this pleasant atmosphere alinks Mias JV07P&e1'l, student's marks publie property. We feel that it a violation of the t.he tearz which j\ave faUen from my Cooper, as the wife o[ an odd broth­ With Douglas Montgomery. Fri. and unple888llt­ Lad" Kille.. privacy of tbe iodividuill aud leads to embarrassment and eyes. I've draw1 rings around them cr. The first inkling we had that Sal, James Caeney in , lhe student who a subject, or who does not you can't mias them. I am Bitting there was trouble brewing was when with Mae Clarke. Mon. and Tues., uw. II also plactij fails 80 Charles Laughton in TILe Pr-tvt1fe accomplish a creditable mark, in the position of a public curiosity. here quivering like an aspic leaf. we were startled to find the same Life of You see, 1 went to the dance'last Mig Cooper in the arms of Mr. Maa­ Wed. and Thurs., Tbe chiet joy of many of our comrades is making Bure that tlley have HtnI", VI1/. Saturday night because I'd leen the sey in front of the fireplace. A hasty Paul Lukas and Eliua Landi in OJ! 1>USeCi all theil' exams and tben launching into extensive research to moat beautilul � In the Princeton glance at the program informed UK CoruUdilht. - what and how many times.. \Ve feel that it is Girl find out who ftu.nked Glee Club. He "'aa in the front row that trouble mOlt certainly was in the - Seville: Wed. and Thurs., Witbl4 A Room, none of their business, to put the matter brietiy, and wc will never and I thought when I .potted him, air, and with the entrance of Mis. with Charles Far­ an,d Marguerite Churchill. Fri. to do baltle for some bystem whereby the news will be broken to Ob, my God, girl, you're done for, Allen we were lure of it.. The re­ rell cttie SA41t14 Beh.ave? ,I;itl' you're rone now. at. the dance maining acta ot the"'Opus were con­ and Sat., the undergraduate privately and a bit. more gently than at present. So t Lodiaf cut In On him six times in npid suc- cerned with the strunlea of the two Lionel Barrymor. and Alice Brady. However, we ba\'e DO desire to occupy the unattractive position Mon., Tuea., and Wed., Joan Craw­ ceuion. This is the awful part- women to dominate Mr. Massey. who of one c.bampioning a cause and we ate going to cease our out· f1oo.ti ford, Clark Gable, Frane-hoi Tone l08t. when I was V with him for the did nothing to reaolve the situation, D bursti on the trubjeet of lUarks unless in the uear future we have some si.xth time, all IOrt of atinedup inside as he was equally willing to be done and Fred Astalre in Ancing on Pu. Three, Wayne: Wed. ud Thurs., indjcation from the stuelent body as to their feelings on the matter. the ....y you get.. he said to me in his CCu... Unu� y-tldle ______tr,Kent ______witb Dorothea Wieck an If we could arm ourselvel evidence \hat we were backed SfYItII, with'conerete !..... Taylor. and Sat., for tbe past two weeks, Fri. ?G"ci7l1 by majority oC the. aa regards our c.riticisms and sug- subjects which we have in this column the students wseu.ssed lAdr, "Itb J.. n Clarke we will I.uOQ could aecompliah IOmething, but ul1til we are 10 lhey bad t r with that effect. Otherwise, we a.rmed be te communieate US to Gable and Fnnehot Tone. on. and and offer up thanks that we are closer to a cn�2B v., li 'tir up lethargic comment in the faculty turo to lighter subjects .. with we .0 do ttle betide lOme - Tv. , Sloultl LotM. Tberefore if the uodergradu&tel feel OD the diploma in point of time than mOflt. .. aDd Brady. .tJraocboIc'. strongly Llo 1 �n Allee THE COLLEGE NEWS Page nu..

of the New Yo k Varsity° Wins Varsity Basketball Wins News r Theat critics into a state o( Bcmi-incoher- Easily Over Philao Cricket Club ence, which ill something of a tri­ (o.»t\llued from 1'a,. Two) umph in itself. ' The book and play Over Remnant Team °letters - both administer a most unkind razz- On Satul"darmornmg 4:he Va·lsil.;, ronl by them both. the IRg to a those IRiliVittuals In any Squad of Alumnae and Agnes bu�kcLbt\1l team defeated the .phila­ of ladies committed lIuicide and t=�;;;�� way connected Wilhntollyw and 61Jitlilnlll UIJrn.etl;;: ill tlti. Ood 7; delphia Cricket. Club Learn, ac.--19. 7,;:;=;;;�eolumn.)�iT. Irwin Students is Defeated everything was again under control. the silver screen. In the play we ;=j;f-�-: Contrary to our expectations, the ll To the Editor or the New,: . by 46-14 Score It would be difficult to describe. ade­ 8ee all the iupposedly charming, or 1>loy exhibited was far below the c.x­ It seems unrortunate that the in· quately the general excellence at least brilliant, denizens of the aUIl- cellence shown in Va.nity'. previous 01 the tclligent aUack on the marking Bya. 8S lit mountains, carrying on the �nost CENTERS PLAY HARD two gamel. The forwards. althcugh play a whole and the Linden fam­ tern which appeared in lut week', unattractive affaira imaginable. They shooting well, had lost. practically ily can safely be reliee upon to pro­ edilorial should have been weakened are all fat. slimy, crooked, drunk, On Wednelday evening, the Var- all trace the unique teamwork for , DI vide b such a misleadin, sentence a. that an exciting evening of theatre. lecherous, stupid, bawdy, loo�c, and sity basketball teams defeated 'lhe which they arc famous. Not until the which state. that "the majority of We now come, as we knew we would prorane, anJ as luch their elltertail\- the Remnant!, two teams composed of tinal quarter did they begin to show RiclwJ'{l Bor­ fri!shman class was relegated to Kooner or later, to of mellt value is questi()nable. Hal alumnae of the Agnes Irwin School, any signa of the excellent work ot dcaFlz, this the lower registers of pauing snd Mr. King. 1n his­ Skelly plays the lead and he does 46-14 and 48-16. �hieh they are certainly capable. marks" in the required courses. torical drama by Cordon Daviot thc quite well conllidering that he is for- Faeth and Boyd. although had The centers' passes wQre either too Since English Cempotlition is the they Jlnswer to the prayers of numcrOUM 10 ced to get drunk and stty that way reqUired an unusually eye the basket, high or cJolI.e to the sid, "The)' can'l fourth quarter. however, they co-op- the shoUl which they attempt Bryn CL4JlA Mt" .lR8 URG KIRK. fist. thereby establillhi!!J: himS!!.LBK take it." .. he to garnll-On ' stand have eratecl-.mueh-41lOl'e easil�,u,d qtlickly, Mawr:. would ha.v.'e ended the 1I0thlRir s ort of a victim of melan; \ emselv" .hown up for what th short of score. As it WIlS, �)' E NelUl : did &orne niee passing and scored the end the Queer To the ditor of the Coll�,e dlOlia ; (c.) Subject to violent fits arel" and "Why did Peopifl u tinal spurt in the last quarter alill Al me to congratulate some prett'y shot�. Following up, es- ur at the low you upon u temper just moment when take the wont Ilanning any show has pecially on the long shots, would, �tuln t.o normal enablCd U your editorial concerning ' Bryn he lih ould be calm, thereby causing received thil{ Et!IlS0n - bccause It coach and SlltlCtators to breatke a however, keep the ball in the forward to insult ministers Ilutkes e theatre Mawr's lack-an embarrassing one him his at pre­ fun of th in Il bril- court and hence give many nlOre 0(1- ...igh of relief. the -of a course in the Bible or in Com­ ci.;ely wl'ong moment ; (d.) Cen· Iiunt and tro!ll('hallt manner." Perhaps the fact that two ruc- 0':00,, JHfTo tiv-e R�li,ion•. portunitiea to score. b 1$0, hi that -, tillually in a jam. thereby laying him­ but our bet it ii! also a licCtl and a game preceded Satu daY'IJ It is seldom that I feel .trongly The centers were faced with an seJrOI)Cn �o the exposition of the mod­ IUIII play. accounts tor the slowne's an disap­ enough to write you about the ques- unusually etrong opposition, as Long- po ern. p�ywright. The play shows him inting type of play. It t at is tha tion. brought up in your editorials. acre and Remington, who held these in his futile efforts to per�ade the o Three certain qUl1stiOI1- -'I , ,u 'i�'''' explanation, perhaps Uy week's state versions of � � however, is one on positions on last year's Varsity and ministers of and the English :-� game will once. again pro,e the truth oblc scenes ill pidul'cl\ Rre now be- I which I have relt strongly during my were one of the best combinations ever t people that war is a 'stuPid game, alld in ing produced Hollywood. ur our prophecy as lo� the outcome pathetic One is college yearJII and since graduation. to play tor Rryn Mawr, were' both in the end we have the spec­ rr.leue, and record for the sca n. {or the general American am one whose Bible education wall playing on the Remnant team. Jo t m'$ T tacle of the young king deserted by he line-up was follows : one for the more moderate Statea left to "chance and the Sunday and Larned played excellently and� Pltila. C. C. UrN"" Ma wr all and dethroned by a blustering z such as Ohio and Pennsylvania, and Schools," and I regret it. t have con- except for the second quarter, when . . Lancast.e� whu .. . !!Cion of the house of the Elliott .. .. . 1'...... Faeth .oI till another ror England. wished that had their .. k r. collere passing was not up to �, e mar . ... • . is a whiz wilh a battle axe, and con­ : . . . f .. Boyd tilt! -(N. Ro F. A.) Oil Pa #' maintained a good offen&C and nn lin. Robe!" ...... y Kl'Quently more to the liking or f�ntlnue(l .. ,"VI) Oarlmg "'j.'.c...... Jones usually strong defense. . 'English, usual, anxious to . s. who are, as Landell . .. c...... L ul'ned Perhaps The guards played their usual 'I' ••r. . •... clean up on the French. we Lalor .... . g. Bridgman steady game and by tightening up have not mltde the play sound too in­ D ahy. 10g K ' • when Yeager was put in during th viting-if not we apologize and ha�­ l.! ��bs��tu ·t;.� �P. ·C: ·C:;·R��t· ��r BES T S ARDMORE thAt second half, they managed to hold ten to assure )·ou we know you Landell. Bryn Mawr: Kent. for it, 1\Ir. her to seven points and made it prac - will like ellpt'Ciully since Larned, arrett for Kent, Larned for get repol·ted tically imposllible for her to close King's diction is to be ex­ Kent. cellent cnough to the basket to �ore �II C.: Rob. and crystal clear. Scores- P. C. Elliott, 10; chil) shots. {I. Mawr: Ia; The. other plays of relative inter­ , rts! Bryn Faeth. that made t H o d , est their IIppC8rance 011 This was the firs game In which l 23. .0 Rrosdway were grcett'(l with the official team pl"yed 8S It whole, ______indif­ PASTEL, ACCENTS und ah n u B rt r lit !Cslvos of one Ihinp: nrc .. ew a .. d smart on dark crepe nd it should, we think, be crooit r n Mawr Stag Line Plays to y othel'. Ernest AS unn ItS Miss Crullt'� c()llching nnd judg- Truex is t y e .. Game of Follow-tlte-Leader N'er in m nt a play that is more feeble than IJ'IIiMtk It u�ulll-SiILU I1ml The. line-up wa!' u!\ fol!owl\: Contlnu-.:J !rom Pall'e One iiS all about Rcmna'Ht_ (our people Ilnll their they lJrUII Mllw" people who did r.ot drink, that Illllritill rclationll and !'upposed to be Crawford .....r. f...... eth and Fn were in fact much more unh3PPY (unny, but it isn't-vcry. M�. Truex 'Mclnness .....1. f ...... Boyd End. invariably cume to A Bad 1'hi� i� lignin the scared little mun con­ Longacre ...... c ...... Jones of "l' turned out later on to be the same (ronted by the hideous monster 22.95 .. Remington 8. C. LI\ rne i who rot' oPPoliite ...... •'/ ' t Bad End to which came >co Jle nUrliction n biological .. r. l l l\fcCleod .. g.. " ,, l'idgmUn to ulle th(' se . smoked and drp,nk.... cotTee. He>.J how- (we hel!itatt' word x ...... • . ...Kent Cregg ... , ....1. g that the . ! ever, had solved the problem of daily fen ring it might frighten Remnunts : nJ Substitutions - Yea- living, and wished to pas., on to u .. gcnUemnn into the feu that he is victim complex), ger ror Mc1nnus. Bry.!M awr: Jar- hi!' solution: every morning he sprang or an unhealthy anI! I stralght rett lor Bridgman. from his bed into a cold he denl� with the problem in hL'I usual Scores-Remnants: Crawford, mMnner. I 6; �h(lwer, and consumed six Jllntc� of liA'ht n this case he and a l\tcJnncss, 2; while Mi�1I beiO.R' Yeagery7. Bryn Mawr: 1I1l1meal I!howering; he then ral, certnin Mathews hal}­ 28; are 011 Jo' aeth, Boyd, 18'. "" live mileR through !Snow nud icc, lind pill' Inurried to two people who Re(eree-l\1i8s p61·kins. retu rned, feeling very fit, to atlenll nn expedition of questionable desti­ lind his classes with healthy zest. We nation in Harlem, theml"elvCl" In t.he &Ccond teum gamc also, co­ round ourselves wishing that. he had nlonc And r.re � rascinated by the those si1C circunI!ttaneCl'; operation bet n the rorward� wa3 traver� miles procticilw that they both gt't beautifully. sadly lacking. Buker seemed unltble dllncing,.. illstead or running! " fluite drunk and do ;t tvcr-shot e h t . about l thC'r(' to l008en up, th btlskct eon­ At that point., the polic)' of �11'lJ; T a "cern!! to be fi l if! Aistently, perfectly the and had hard work get­ lines seemed to us obviou'4 In Illar. nnd there you arc. II: who ling the b,.11 to her team-. and most delightful. Like our broth­ Tho�C' or us ,'end the book, the second hair, h()we\'e r, she had dis- tiS, aweitHI /\.. CI'!, beCore at thc fir!t opportun­ Out"r Pel'll/fl'. with int('re!l;t tinclly (ound the range of the net, ity re8ults in lltlSsed . we abandoned all shame and join­ the of it>!. bcinll Ilroduc('fi ,.much more successfully and ed the happy bands pursuing our two New York, nnd much to our nmnz(>­ 8tood 9nly one point behind Pierce in annoyed till' . caustic good danceZ'$. Again, likt' n1ent it seem� to hn'!(' total /points. The final score was 43-1�. our brothers before us, we were per­ r('CUy content with the few pleasur· height The centers, outstripped in ablt,; words and steps which we '!pent JEANNETT'S by/ a good six inches, did remarkably the rest of the evening fighting to BRYN MAWR FLOWER we ll, considering the odds ngpinst gain, and looked with conscious su­ SHOP. Inc. "hem, but a little speedier offen§c periority upon our unhapp)' "ister�, M� N. S. T. Granlnlet' ould have made their passillg a lit­ ' who had not caught on to the lime­ HZ} tle easier nnd much more accurate. Lan('aslef A"enlte 1" honored and approved sYllte>m of that ,,1\VN MAWR. 1' .... The guards were slow but steady C':ccellent American institution. th" and stuck like burrs to their long­ Stag Line. I shooting ol>ponentll. Here again a * SUMMER SCHOOL little more llpeed in getting away The American sYlItem IS education IN RUSSIA o machine. would have been a great advantage. by the adding according, to The line-up was as follows : Dr. Robert Maynard Hutchins, pres Registration new optn for Remno.1tt. Brtlll is Mawr ident or the University ot Chicago. Summer ��ool Cours� the Thomas .....•.r. f...... Pierce at -First Moscow University, Yeager ... , ...1. f ...... Baker 1934 . .. •.•...•.... sasion, July 5 August BnttlCl .. ...c Meirs 1 ch to Longacre .....s. c. . •....Rothermel NEW - DISTINCTIVE A wide range of 26th. counes Haines ...... '. r. g...... •..Bishop on social, eco o c, education­ .. n mi Flannery . . ..1. g...... Washburn al and language subjects will Substitutions - ReDUlanla: Mc­ .. Shirtwaist Dresses given English by promi­ Cleod for Yeager. Bryn Mawr: Mc­ be i� • Cormick for Rothermel. Acetate-$5.50 nent Soviet professors: Ten 6; thirty hours. week.' Score&-Remnanb!: Thomu, COutKs, Six Yeager, Bryn Mawr: Pieree, 10. (R.yon Silk-....shable) work, four of rQident study 21. 22; Baker, and two of travel field work. • University credit possibl£. Don't use' the floor a. an ashtray.

.,,; ,o.r , ., I THI ANGLO-mRlCANINSTITUTI or Bryn Mawr CoDfecti.,....,. KITfY MclEAN ...... THI PIlST IIOSOOW DNJVWITY (N t to S iU" T"-'n .u&.) Tlte SportsWDfftlnl'S SIIop n. Retd,n_ of theeou..GiN Montaome,y and Anc&.tIOn Awen...." Ardmore. Pa. .... BRYN MAWR, PA. lltJ5t&°G:o. T.., s-dftcha. J)elidDli. 5 ' --,, 5odo_ 0, Ard�

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." Page Four '. THE COLLEGE NEWS

• example, the thine belore the last, a sort ot libretto, requlrmg an 01'- in Lhe worw. oC'the Cubiiltil, Miss King Discussea who wert: liUOJlS beat Dut the pattern 01. the ehestration � Gertrude- Stein's Art or the next to the Jast question du':! in the mind of tftc readc:.r. always her eloscst friends, especially lIlusic, as in Ravel's Bolno. One to be allked. The e.xponente oC thili Thcre is one question which Mias Picasso and Braque, and Matisse _ must recognize the partieular teeling new form point out tbat thing� King ia often asked : lOla Misa Stein's ultl'lough he not properly one of of words-the kinaesthetie difference Contillued h'om Pac. One 80 ia hapyen in lile,-not nCCi.ll3arily ill !Mi­ work a joker" Tbe answer "No; them. The interpenetration ot maSS£8 belween "up" and "down :" that sug­ ""leurus, / aJT(! star9�at i.s . sit· pintinp, quenec. Gertude- lein thinks tbat it is absolutely in good 'fafth ; as with tn Ctibism harbecome-interpenetra­ gestiveness of word. whkh cauaca and talk" with Gertrude Stein. Lhese repetitions and caltings-back Swift, one must recognize the irony." tion of time in Gertrude Stein's prose ; reverberations and bouset associa­ turning to Gertrude Stein's 111 re­ are the 'manner ill which one thinklf, Another question, whether or not it Lhe object ia used only as a point of tions. I.tion to Freneh painting, Miss King but. in whieh one does not talk, be­ is easier to read and understand The "Essay on Braque" The use of repetitions and particip­ said, "My own atudents, preaent and dcparture. cause people simply do not. For this when one is used to it. must also be in alld is a story ial constructions of becoming, is part­ past, know aU I am going to .y. They Gcoor-alJIIII Plalll realOQ thoughts cannot written unswered in the negative. One must with the events leri out, but the rela· ly to get the long wave rhythm, which undel'stand painting and it docs not be: . , . down until they have been worked always work ever any fine bit of lit- of the eharacters and their dia­ 111 not the rhythm or the suspended worry them. They are used to taking tiona over into a logical order. erature in order to get the most out logue left in. It like the work of sentenee and the involved and invert­ a picture for what it is,-.and· eo Is A mare'A nut wal atined uy in the of Jt. One should start to under- Braque in his later period. Miss ed c1au8Cs. Yet alter reading why not take a page for what it i,r last over the ques­ stand Gertrude Stein by parallcb,. Stein's use of eenerete details ap­ enough, one doe. know what it is all They are ulled to the all-over pat­ At/anti,} MontltlJ/ ' tion of automatic writing, to which Living in Paris, in the midst ot pliquCd to the main strueture about. "It Is that technique of dry tcrns, without reliet, without centrali­ l'Cscm· type of writing none oC Miss Stein's painting, she could not help being bles the work' of the Dada-ists or of realiam the irony and the poig­ zation, in whieh there il no beeinning with work belongs, rl'or to that of free 88- affected by th""suecenive influences that croup of Cubtate who actually naney; it right American in the or end, and in which the top and bot.­ 18 8OCiation. 'tAu'Lomalie writing glv� which aft'ected lIaihUng. The ftrat pasted bits of eorle or newspaper clip' t.radition from Mark Twain through tom, the left and the right, are inter­ what the person 'is not aware of tool­ parallel lie! in her affinity to impres ping! on their c�nyasel). . By the Sur­ Sherwood Anderson end Ring 1:.ard­ ehangeable. They do not resent this, ing, whereu this is what the writer aionism, wit� it:., all�ver, ftat pat- Realists, she was inHueneed nero It is a sort of pioneer style, and nor think that the artist was a 'thim- towar(1 and rcader &l'e equally aW8l'e or." terna, its laek ot relief and centra'li- Mpontan�ity. frelhne!S apd whimsieal­ with pioneer thriCt, Mis. Stein wastes • ble-rig&'Cr.' Consequently, they can Writing or this sort, created under &ation, and its pa8sioD lor the mo- ily, and toward the use of brchestra­ nothing. She employs all the impU� employ this same attitude when ex­ the inftuence of hypnoais, is compar­ mentary image. The work of tion. "Just !IS at operas and play!!', cations, the hall-recognized, the long_ amining a pattern of words on a Cc- able to lOme of t.he )¥ork ddhe by zanne affords II. second parallel. His the text gives you only the libretto, (orgotten; the rhythm and creak of... printed puc." • To illustrate her the painters Sur-realiats In their canvallC8 reveal "a compolition and whieh b completed by what proceeds the nUl'1ery roeking-chair, the Inter­ point .. King read a paragraph 141 struggle for pure spontaneity. adjustment of tensions' which are on the Itage, 80 her" the orchestra­ mittently-remembered experience of from Henry Jamal' Mias Wi"". 0/ tlte Stein's work is not like this, for it is, three-dimensional," ano. there are nft tion liel in the suggestions, over­ thought and feeling, the divagatiops chosen at random. A fur· Dove, deliberate in strueture and dire<:tion. interstiees. "Trying to make exeerpts· tones, and eonnotatlon�." ot the questing reason, the infinitesi­ ther illustration ,may found by be In faet, it is jUlt as conscious as trom Gertrude Stein, is like trying to Gertrude Stein should be rcat! a­ mal realities 'that are thc stuff or uamininc the development of dia­ Pater's style, though at the opposite piek those plants whieh run a long loud, for the greatest' undentanding experience. She hu no inlaYII of logue in English noveli8ts, from extreme from fhis:'''Frankly, it. seems root underground with sterna eoming and pleaflure ean only be procured handsome words. like 'crystalline' or Trollope and George Eliot to Jamca up here and there. If you give a if one lets oneself go and follom he 'inimitably to me- much 'lI'Iore like 'The Dnrk ;' she keeps a level surfaee, and then He.minrway. In the dia­ t Night. of the Soul,' exeept that is tue, the� I comea up, roots and rhythm. -"One eannot take-tla� wor(l a 'Muster ohne 'Ende.' just alike at logu ot �e tormer, the. sentences � poetry, and this il pure prOle ; that aIL" Miss King read throo short nM 11 unil, nor the phraae, nor the both ends and In the middle; it is of have beginnlngs, middles, and ends, is emotion, and thil is a mirror-hr.nge pleeell, "Dinner,"' "Celery" 'a nd sentenee. 'there are no unit!. It is ft the oriental pattern, not· of Gothic, "et1cUr Buttont, and the eharactera involved answer of something mental going on." Min "Pheuants," from to whole long rhythm." . Words are more with its governing prineiple of 8U­ eaeh other In logical sequenee. In the King read a selection from Luey !thow how mutilated sueh tragment! replete than their definitiona, from premacy and 8ubordinaUon." become when removed trom their con- which eannot be grasped the entire Mis! King read at one dialogue of the modernll, however, Churelt Amillbl'll in iIlust.ration of her time or an­ the sentences often begin with the point, and showed how what was tent. \ meaning, with its implieations and other, from nearly all of Gertrude middle, and the characterl answer, for aetually there to' read, was merely The third parallel is to be found associations. The interlaee and repe- Stein's books. bf> I � � �= ���=-� ����-- ������======� .�£�--�==�

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r • • , THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five

.. , ... f 110 ! Prineeton .s alr.;d Ihat we would LITTERS lo its manufacture is .urefully ing through a continuous existen« ot Princeton Singers Do . _ luarded that it fs not known to any .lmOlt four hundred yeara. • not bk e more serious muaiC!, or tttr- of from employee of the A, sJ)eCimen Conventlonal Program hap8 they were incapable giving it (ConlJnueC Page Three) 1 fress. UII. 01 the paper may be seen in that on End to They .howed, at. least, that tecttv. Wil" o ered a� � e co rse in Compar- they can sfng- InteiUlently and wit.h � � which the Hne eleventh edition of the I " . . I C a�lVe Re.h,lons. Is It not true that E , 14 t'lta"il.ICQ. 18 f; (COntinued from .- oncert W iU- Punctuated. by expresaion, a.ud that theil. technigue "CVCwpat- � . make their fortunes at the same time orthwhlle than their actual offer- dressed to "Miss Leslie, my own � The matter was remedied by the Ox­ lngs. _ home,.. my own lamily," which rcrer- ford Press in 1673, when Its mana­ The and Sullivan red to the poem "to my own home" In Gln>ert was th..:! gers induced Guy and Parker of tho best part.. of the pro,ram from a the Kensington Museum. Should rival company to combine with them. mueiC!al point of view, though the Now that the char8C!ter of Swilt', selves. Guy had already gained enor­ "Chorus of the Peers" had none of well-known, and scarC!ely disguised, he FRESHMEN mous wealth, 80me part of whicl.l the spark which belongs to it and handwriting has been established, the of applied to the founding a Hos­ the proper effect of the middle section editor ponesse. a canon of criticism pital in London. of the song was 10lt because the of Swift'l work; and light can be Seventeenth-century printlnc pro­ basses could not be heard. "Invlctus" thrown upon many Swiftlan contro­ marry REDHEADS? duced books of ra� beauty. One of il another IKIng in which we have venies in the edition upon which Bar­ the most frequently printed and pop­ been drilled lrom childhood, and it old Williams is at present working. ular books at that. time, next to the seeml rather la�areera to One of these controversies centres Bible or even ranking along with it, give UI such fan\lIiar doctline: how- Hi.tOf"Jl 0/ tM around Swilt's supposed ne,lect of was Clarendon's Rebd­ . ever, the executi�n of it was good SteJla. Why did he not marry her? litm This work sold in suC!h numben and th� proper C!hmaxes were nicely Mr. Leslie says that he simply put that the proceeds enabled the Tlte Cb:tord emphasI&e

rion, maidens, official., and also ani· many shortcomings of ordina ry pUP'" cnce, it not: with scorn. They Faave The Weaving Maid Shadow Puppets Act placed agalnat a . linlt"ti,m1 fon k., the Chinese theatres and are mall. These are plua the additional , 1 •. First :iister Sister whit\ screen, usually of Chinese pa· one view (only two dimensions arc now crowding the movie houses. The Second. r Out Chinese Legends a per, occa ionally or fine white silk, represented. usually aide view). But shadow puppets ca,\ now only be seen The Western Mother with a projectil11 Jight BOrne five feel in Ipite of these handicaps there are in Pe.iping and lOme pute of-Shanal The Heavtnly MCU€!na:e�· ...r".--_" ", C.",� Donkey St:eru. Figures away from the screen. Oil la mps cle'ver puppeteers who can preSCJlt (a province in North China). There SkinVoe Conven onaJized had alway. been used (beCore the in- the characters with ext\'eme dexterity are very tew Jeft in the pro- I. Prologue experta Stage troduction of electricity) which gave realism. The fight between the duetion of puppet shows. II. Beside & Stream res P. a delicate. 10ft Illumination, showing dragon and the elephant ill an ex- A!tcrnoon Program, 3.00 M. III. In Heaven up the colon beautifully through tht> ample, or the crumpling down of a The Feast of Lanterns IV. The Cowherd's Cottage ART NOW DISAPPEARING 1. Kcmi-tr&nsparent figures. The pup- burning house. However, there are 2. The Sword Dance · from the v. The Bridge of Magpies pets are noL manipulated by strings elements which have to be taken lor Snake" (Thit retliew 0/ tlte fHJT/ormo.fUJe "'Ii"te from above, but by stiff wlrea from granled, or otherWise they acern in- S. H�e Elephant Got His Trunk 0/ tM Red Gate SluJdow Puppet. in At. the close of the afternoon per· below. The actine is accompanied by congruoua and ridiculous. There: nre -A Chinese Fable thl! Dt4'1tef"J1, Febrt«J yA"7, the formance tea or Ice cream waa served r mwer music, noiMl, conversation, ·and ocea- movements and gestures, the signifi- The Drum Dance «",pice. 0/ the OKGte.. Scltola".,liip Ilional explanations. cance of which can hardly be under- IntermiB.ion at twenty·tl.ve eents per penoD. Ce»mn.iU,., t.gecilJil.r eantributed The subject maller is usually a stood by the uninitiated. But wh('n The Cowhe"" and the Weaving it 6. story or a legend, which is familiar a type of play has lasted for two Maid-The Legend of the Stars .. VUI'Ig-Yuin Tilt,. It will b. prixt­ b Clu&racten in'tAe Prologue ttu:t 0/ tlte to every Ohinese mind. The daily thousand year:& in a country, it is nat;.. tile iuue STUDENT- HILL FARMS ed in. life of people with their sorrow and that conventionaj movements arl3 Chien Hsin, Student ....Lu Ping INTDtNATION,.u.18T.) . A .nd Ave. happine8a portrayed. The element d,!Vellop"d which are traditional and C,\a, acte,., in the PlaJi City Line Lancuu An amusement which bears a great I' I Overbrook-Philadelphi. of the supernatural enters in quite taken granted by the natives, and The Cowherd resemblance to motion pictures and which preceded them by some two frequently j as when the spirits of whicb are utterly incomprehensible to The Cow A rmlinder that we wodld to haa Hk. two loven, for example, are trans- lake of thousand yeus is the Clli?le'6 SlwldoKl care your parenta .nd wNn.vcr to PfA,PP4!u. t relatf!d that at that 10rmed into a pair of birds or butler· Unfortunately, with t.he influx of 1:"""'''''''''''''''''''''''==''''''''''''''''';'\ friends, tIM)' come I I. CECELIA'S YARN visit Hies; or a. when the members of the western c.ivilization and its amuse­ you. time the Emperor lost his mOllt beau­ SHOP tiful and graceful dancer in the H.c&venly coun are incarnated into menta, the. younger generation ill Seville Arcade court aod could not be consoled ; he h�man beings a. a puniahment or China is looking upon its own amuse­ � I BRYN MAWR - PA. demanded his magician, to bring her ml&demeanour. There are also storlCS menta as antiquated or wittl indiffer­ 1Vh" the Dog Cha.es back alive-With the penalty of death for c.bildlUl like Cat, PHILIP. HARRISON STORE if it was not carried out. Thill wae UtA ..nd the adaptation of How 'h� Ell!Pho'ftt Got in BRYN MAWR, PA. the oricin of the puppets. The arth.u Hit Tntnk. All BRYN MAWRCOLL BGII INN al1, they afford a great deal of amuse­ GothamGold and players were so c1ever that the Silk Hosiery, TEA ROOM Emperor was pleased and the shadow ment, especially for the: women and •.�i'! children, are confined within the Luncheon " - '7�c .' ,pinnel 85c puppets were Installed as one of the who BtJti. q - -'Oc: - $1.�, walls of the courtyards. chief amusementa of the court and of ...... carte a d"hote J Of course, these puppets have the � • the official households. Didly .... • ' ...... , 8.30 ID 7.30 P. 11:1 The puppets and scenery are ex· ...... ---....- --- .. quisitely carved out of donkey skin, THE CHATTER • BOX ROOM BIUDGIl, DINNER MAY BB ARRANGED painted with bright colon and lac­ TEA Disl;ncl;ye SRorlsJllear SERVED WEATHER PBRMITS quered. They result in almost trans­ L,mchtonJ, A/rnnoon Tea MEALS ON • Hats Women . parent colorful flgures which con­ _"d Din"trJ Stetson for THE WtW> form to the of characters seen Oe.llcious Home Cooking Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386 Davis, Managt:r types ARDMORE ... Sw.h on the Chinese ata(l:e;-scholars, war- _ .... ._ .. .._- ......

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