the college news, 1938-04-13, vol. 24, no. 21

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Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College News Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Collections, Digitized Books 1938 e College News, 1938-04-13, Vol. 24, No. 21 Students of Bryn Mawr College Let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: hp://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews is paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. hp://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/598 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, e College News, 1938-04-13, Vol. 24, No. 21 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1938).

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Bryn Mawr CollegeScholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn MawrCollege

Bryn Mawr College News Bryn Mawr College Publications, SpecialCollections, Digitized Books

1938

The College News, 1938-04-13, Vol. 24, No. 21Students of Bryn Mawr College

Let us know how access to this document benefits you.

Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews

This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_collegenews/598

For more information, please contact [email protected].

Custom CitationStudents of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1938-04-13, Vol. 24, No. 21 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1938).

. .

• •

• • •

�THE� ·COLL.EGE ,',N-EWS \ VOL. XXIV, No. 21 BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE .. PA.; WEDNESDAY, APRIL IJ, 19J8 Copyright TRUSTEES OF

BRYN MAWR COL.LEGE. lIS' PRI(]l 10 CENTS

. - Bryn Mawr Wins

Acclaim as Russia PUt::.' .l.J Leagu� -Morley Awarded First Prize

For ULitvinoff" Speech On League Inaction

SAYlOR OF HAVERFORD CHAIRMAN'S ASSEMBLY

,

. . .. Zunmerman Attacks . "

. Imwialistic Economy ,

Labor Must Fight M ili Gove.rnment;

---,-.-Commbn Room, April B.-Mr. I. Zim�man, formerly organizer .... . -, Ute C. I. O. In Delaware, spoke to �e Industrial Group on Lo:bor aHd

D«laring that imperialistic The Bryn Mawr International Re- omy is one of the chief causes of

COLLEGE CALENDAR Thursdall. April H.-Prof.

Harold LasKi will speak on The n,.,..i.tilfh. LabM PaTt1/ and De­

-.,Mcrael/ .• Goodhart, 8.�. .

SundaI/. April n.-Memorial RC(:ital. Mr. Hot)'ce Alwyne Ilnd the. Curtis String Quartet' will play. Goodhart, 5 p. m.

Monday. April J8.-T h I r d Flexner Lecture b y Dr. Edwin

Gay. Goodhart, 8.20. Cornelia Otis Skinner in Ed1UJ. H� lVi/ ••

Miss Skinner to Give Dr. 'Gay. Discusses Theatre Guild Ben,mt,," Change to English

Will Appear in Dramatization ... ' ...... EJnQ His W;�-

Starting on Monday, April 18, Car­nella Otis Skinner will be at t.he For­rest Theatre in Philadelptya in

Monetary .S stem . ..... � ('( .f,..

InAux of Silver Gave Impetus To New Economy and Helped

Promote Capitalism . . dramatization of Margaret Ayer OlE:RGY

"arnes' novel, Ed1l4 H'u lVi/ll. MiN AND MONARCHY

DE611EST SUFFERERS

For the benefit of the. Theatre Monday night (or the benefit of Good/lOrl, AWil 9.-ln hi' IeCOnd Workshop. Forre!t Theatre. lations Club took a prominent part in Mr. Zimmerman stated that Tbeatre Workshop, but there will be Dr. Edwin Gay discussed 8.30. , ""n" t.he MQ<lel Assembly of the League of force to <\0 away with war i, T1featiBlI, April IR.-Current 110 increase in the price ot tickets. I I as the third cause of the price

Nations held at Rutgera· University beeause il alone can fight Event .. Mr. Fenwi.!:k. Common Students from Bryn Mawr and Bald- revolution during the sixteenth cen-A '1 . hth d 'th La t againlt the-present Iy,tem. He urged Room, 7.30. International Club win will give out leaRets at the thea- The growth of population and on P�I elg an nm . s year free action of t1' e I!bor party in Bryn Mawr repreaented Denmark poUtical field to "'''ard against � meeting, Common Room, 8 p. m. tre with information about the Work- t.he advance in technology were .. - Saturday, April tl.-German 80 suffered f.rom an inferiority com· IJressive legislation and to I'Ihop, treated last week. Club Play. Goodhart, 8.30, .. plcx; but this year self-confidence was about more adequate social conditions. SllmJall, AV';I�.--:-N' d i a Edna Hi, lViI' is Miss S�inner's Throughout the sixteenth century,

reatored when we were allotted Rus- By OPI)()sing rearmament and the 80 I . 0 liMit full·len ..... \. play. It starts in the uccording to Dr, Gay, there was a sia and the trip' turned out to be a f ' 1 ' 1 ' b d Is u anpr teeJta . eanery, li IS ... •

crease 0 ml I ary u gil p. m. Leslie Glenn will speak carly 1900's, 'with t.he firat scene laid st.eady transit.ion from the old "na-great sucb!ss. Louise ' Morley, would form, a mOlt effective weapon ' Ch I M t \" t th " .. won Hrst prlw (�her speech in aga.inst war. In Monkll:

,l."P�.7�5�ooFm� :':�h in ». boor garden where a party is I c<':o

' ·n· <omycc.on;�\� n�ean� ��:t b�:��S Friday Plenary S sipn, Dr. Fenwick' Imperlali,llc .. onon'y ca'''' being given for a brakeman on the Flexner Lecture by: Dr, Edwin transacted In cash rat.her than In 'fL1 quoted by Chum, and many dip- Mr. ZimmerrQan said, because such Gay. Goodhart, 8,20,

Blue Island Railroad; Edna, her ' )(OO{Ia. Since very little t:ommercial lomallc manoeuv.r, w.r. won by 'Y'" I pa d u,' h v. I nd ,w • h • m. 0 ex n , m a Tuc.dE-l4. April !B.-Current er, a ' 0 young m n ave come paper was used except in international ttrree Bryn Mawr delegates at to supply raw materials and a Mr. Fenwiek. Com- on their Monarch Safety bicycles, tl·"de, the msult waa a demand for informal dance, f ' f t cd ......M d or manu ac u.r & ........ s an mon 7.30. Miss Skinner plaJs the part of Edna nev.:. supplies of metal for t:oinage. On Friday morning Tillman Say- capital. The division anti 1I'"I .. ,od"y. April t7.-Peace th h This need was first met. by the de-lor, of Haverford, opened the of colon" .. ,'n 191n are Ih. rna,'n in alternate Bcene" b�t ' .Bf"e c aracter So be ., Day; Vera M. Dean will speak. velopment of silver-minea in ut rn plenary seaaion and Ilich routine of lOOay's conflict between the G h IIf Palll Jones. her powerful and ruth- Germany and Bohemia. Later, alter b· , II th ood art, 1 1 a. m. U8lnCSS 0 owed sa e appointment and the "have-nots." With such .: 1'-_____________ --" l iL'8S husband, dominates the entire the discovery of America, great of the Credentiala Commit and the cause we cannot simply say that 'II�)". even though he naturally never amounts of precious metals, eapecially election of the president the as- it is the nature of man to fight, of Ne�:

a�(11 :;f.���:�<

Mias Skinner has an extra- silver, were also Imported from the sembly. After this ca e debates, expect to stop war by expreasions Rh ds Hall . . faculty for creating invisible Spanish poasesaions in Mexico and ' in which Louise Morle , '40, proved indignation, 03 . IS who have as much reality Peru, The supply 'Of silver was par-

t.he best diplomat. Imper8Qnating the Every nation is now preparing ___ all her own portl'8,yal.. ticularly large, and became more and Soviet. Union, she pointed out that war, not only by rearmament but Cola, Book List, (,ip,.tiicl'-' I The sets were designed by Donald more-important with time. From the League has tailed to keep down more in8idious means; through OClIslager and the costumcs by Ma- 1493 to 1560 it formed 55% of the aggression largely through ita at- tion, the R. O. T. C. and Are Enclosed as Typical Helene Pons, who does most of Eurollcan total; from 1561 to 1620, it tempt to be universal. Thi8 ideal uni- propaganda groups: The Of College Life tile costuming for the Theatre Guild. fal'med 757r; alld from 1621 to 1660, versality has caused artiftcial and in· quoted Fechner, head of the C, - Mrs. Otia Skinner always wanted to 80,/(,. • cffective meaaures, for the Leagu.<' 1 as saying, "All of these boys are RlllxwiR Hall, April 9.-The ,0,,".,,·1 hcr daughter framcd, as it were, According to thc estimate of Socl-own covenant permits the withdrawal per cent army trained . . , All of stone tor the new dOI'mitory was ill 11 compal·a.tWely small eetting, and hcer, betw�ll 1493 and 1660 the total of members for aggressive guiding spirits (of t.he C. C, C,) with aimple ceremo'nY. Mr. Mr, Oenalaircr has cal'tied out this EUI'OpC8n IIUllply of both gold and Therefore the Lea�e members, military men." Rhoads, prcsident of the ,o""""alion I idea. In the past the whole stage silver was aPllrox i nlR�Ait),400,OOO er than holding to this ideal The 14M Day" (Mobilization Day) son of the hall's �a:;:e:::

�:JI::'"I:: ':i�

""': n left bare ex�ept for a few (ulling lhe valuc of e ar before veraaHtr, should be united by a Illans which were brought to light in properties, making it difficult Of this, $310,000,000 came smoothed out the last lum", of mon universal idea auch a.s that the course of a munitions ',,<.,,"ga.1 ror Miss Skinner to fill, in a dramatic from EUl'ope and Arriea, and $238,-u tar with a silver trowel. Upon l>eace, of respecting the independence tion are the basis, Mr, Zimmerman the large hollow block of g"lnit •• 1 senlC, a space which Is usually occu- 000,000 from America. From 166t and integrity of all peoples, of out- said, of the earlier :;Shepherd-Hill cnrved MCMXXXVIII, which will be pied by at least two people. Mr, Oen- to 1620, the total was $J,099,Ooo,OOO. lawing forCes as an Instrument in Bill and of the May Bill. The pro- tll the slager was also confronted by the Owing to the lack of accurate ae-national policy." viaione of the May Bill come under problem of providing P"'''' ''III� .. -r.,, · l count.s, sucll ftgUf'C8 can only be ap-arch, was towered into place. Mr, The ailence with which we have ac- four :;aads: price fixing, drafting 0' h imaginary characters; in the proximately correct. A new and Roads led. the small gathering in cepted the recent aggrel8ive actions of man . er for military service and in. gardcn IfCtne, for instance, he j.,'f'CatJy reduccd estimate of the Amer-three cheers (or the ball, Miss Park, three nations is dangerous, t.he "So- control of indust.ry, and prep. cided to have only one chair (or ican imports has been advanced by the architect and the cqntractors, and h h ' h h bl viet Union" believes, for the aggreu· aration of a treasury report on in. lit a table, even t oug elg t or Earl J. Hamilton, w 0 wu a e the ceremony was complete. --..I • d . . -ors may interpret our silence to;::ean duslry and income. He l>Ginted out people are SUPPOHU to lilt own roughly to deduce. from Its regl8tera, A suitable inscription for the h M' • ted A agreement with their principl As the provisions which seem most sig- her. In anot er scene ISS the complete amount Impor . e-trowel will be planned by Miss Park h 'Ed • h . d a solution, the speaker. urged that the nifieant and dangerous to labor. The Illaying t e part 0' na 8 i to hi. ftgures, t e Import rna e and it will be preserved in thc I d . h I k 0 000 Thl I Leaa-ne make ita policy that of strong bill gives the presi.lent absolute au. nnd a en Wit rea pac aps, total of $854,50" a accoun , .. - '4 hall. The copper box which will .. 'bl d '" .. k f m . I non-Intervention and show by one ex- thority in t.ime of emergency to con. lUi Invisl e an qUI convmcmg however, was ta en rom 0 Cia sealed in8ide the graniWl: contains d I k II , .mple that "aggressivenes8 docs not script everyon, in the United States, gram, I' ccor s, aOi mD cs_ no a owance or eolleetlon of items for the benefit F h h 'II Sk' . r I h'ch .pay." Then the three previously men- to fix prieel, wages, rents and serv- rom er mot er I' S8 mller Ihe great quantIty 0 meta w I was

\ioncd States would re�urn and help ices. No exemptions will be made in future archeologists and the follo,.·lherited a passion for meticulous cor- In, unregistered, and which · attain the ideal of a universal League drefting. and those not taken at once ing letter: I'cctnesa, When 1\1\'8. Skinner directed (ornled anywhere trom 10'1. as an instrument of peace. will be given "deterred clas8iftcat.ion," "To

i�gah'7ver opens this box: C"ce'>I May Day, she made it so to 50% o( the total supply, If such

The afternoon and the tollowing Only women and ehildren are exempt, that English directors came specially 60% increase i8 added to hi' oriclnil morning were filied by commi.sion and since in '¥trtirne all 7estrictlons "We have enclosed in this eorn,,,·1 to see it. Miss Skinner has studied ftgures, it brings them mut:h closer seasions dealing with mandates. Far- on labOr for women and children stone a number of things which thC"carly 90'. with such care for to those or Soetbeer, which still, how* Eastern aftairs, and internal conflid. would be removed, th'ey would replace think will give you lOme indication Hi. IYile that even her slang remain too high, The correct Ann Blake, '39, Mary Wood, '39, the. drafted men in industry. Under �i:: ::r e��r�ry

annd �:e:rd��� .. '

.',.

ur'lcorre<:t.. L.. 'k Is

probably lie. somewhere be-Rosenheim, '40, Alice 'S8, the bill the president may The priCes IVr tic e are: the two,

1 I I f b . � . .• th . e of 1938. tm, $2.28; Menanine, $1.71 �tbeer'a esdmate, ___ ...... lIise Morley and al in contrb 0 uSlness, I.

,

ODntlllu-.d on

Patience Satirizes Pre.Raphaelite School; Contributed to Downfall of Aestheticis�

newppaper 1,1,,;ln; the second. and million dur-generally reas! by the atudents, illg third. Compared with the

at eight o't:loek. Lile, a weekly . CAREER IN million-this seems rat.her slight. But d.livcred tlt our dOl>fi .<trY J��:�I A. A. PRESIDENT PJANSOC totar Jearlf'PlOOottlbn' In '193�5'

/ iine which inundates our it i8 really relst.ively large when it Is )t is usqaIly a moot point, whether then to indicate his abstraction F 'd I h eeda' Ih . 1 rooms every nay. is a 80 Anne Janet Clark, miwly-elected t.o t e n 0 e SOC:le y oper •• and operettas should be ex- a gross world. When 'PatiuclI opened, th t d Is Th Ih I' among e s u en . e president of the Athletie Asaociation, e Ime. plained beforehand. On the one hand, he was to be seen in the front st.alls, Self Government rulea contai

(n

�"lIeg.

1 ha, spent her life officiating in Bryn This "fl.ow o! metal." had tWo chief \ holding his lily and laughing indul- ch h • . , d' · I A' an opera libretto gi9es the plot to gently. P,,,u:h, also laughing, wrote lawB whi operate within t. e Mawr athletic ,slOCialions. At European polOU 0 luUS on, n werp

brief for those who presumably will a poem on h,'m, and which are made and obeyed Bryn Mawr School in her---l'\'1i\ive Spain, f�m which the Ame.rican the students, timore she was president of the •• h.1 ,"pply was distributed. not know e wordei on the other, "Aesthete o! aesthetes� what's in II The Orchestra program, Book IIh I ted Ilepred atlon af\d juggling with the Gilbert and Sullivan operettas are ao name? leUc association. � e was e ec

...... ,'" ... had ;I y little to do with the _'1 I.ar tho' Ih.y need no ex (which lndieatea the popular fiction coil ... on. upon .rr,·val and W ... cry...... e - His actions are Wilde, but hi. verse is E I d h planation. But moat of them do not tam.... the moment) the Motion Picture systematically run the CNT,N, revolution, In ng an , t e b k mD.ion Card and the Inn menu, i (rom 1544 to 1553 '''''"-a have as definite a historical ac - Th. c�arac"r 0' Swinburne is not .

P · h' h' 1881 cate, In part, what we do for led in the price movement. but wa. ground u at-U1u:e, w IC 10 80 ... ,·Iy �,· .. bl. ,'n G-venor. A. J.'. interesta are var . 00 I' " _., B" -¥¥-.... ..... tionA The underlined item· on :�:��� Ir:-=-��n;n;"��on�';-;�':-"':l burst upon a whole society of Lon- who i8 a healthy version of the "fleshy OonUnlHd on Pap Aur won the special Bryn "Mawr

don autbetes, and beeame the moet poet," a handaome youth who diverts r---'::''::'''':::'::'':'::'':'':::':'':'''':::---: I.hip for t� top ranking TO SPEAK spectacular piece of satire of the all t.he !eminine attention from Bun- TH EATRE WORKSHOP 8Choo� and h ... eontinued to Tomorrow night Harold J. period. _ thorne. In reality, Swinburne had a abilit¥.J .... '--" - ��... - (.ask-i, of the Unh'emtY' of ton--Th--e-&Ve.race \In Sulltvan- mass of red hair and a pale .mterest.-

The Players' Club-i. giving 8Cien�. She is prepanng"Nf a .. ,�� II don. will speak" in Goodhart on Jte i. well a.arel that Bunthorne is ing face but he' was much 'too lmall ita two $lne-act playa on Friday, in biological atati,tics by majorinc rh� Britula lAbor' PrvtJl 4JIG-mcaot to be Oscar Wilde, who_d-wtlt -Cor-th .. �.ue.t of love-Ilt:k May 6. for the benefit of the German. At. eoJlep she h •• been DflmoernC)'. Mr. Luki ia dis-lovingly in hi. poetry and in hi' daily B',. only cl .. ·m to f ... -... .. a Theatre ..workshop. Thee play. founder and active lapporle.r ot ,

liCe on "atrance IOrrowS and stra.nge Oly p'an hero w .. -·

th-

at be did m pcn.O'It. PO"W71 And Petri- Club, holding executive tingulahed as an economist and I .. W'1de 1t1� In Lond • m I jicatiort, an -uproarious farce by .Ition, bl it .. In other or nisations. al an author. He h .. made a • n� .' ". _ on. 10 strike stllfned'-Jua attitudet, and ... 'fl spec"" '-Oft Ib ..... me to Bryn

1878 d mod tel •• __ • the d I " Bernard Shaw, and 4 " U, ' Her lummers are divided tween . II ..., ,an 1m la y �IJIII:I 1 0 ... preaented· a rob .. '" "hool than M th h Ih '.. ,'on of a awarm of imitators. Kia favorite WUd F that t,.- aubtle traaedy of rural Iile by sailinc' .Ioop in Maine or on a't\'t". roug e 111 I'ffU attire w .. black. velvet knee breeches �,go';I�: �:I'more :�pied :.. belSuaan Grodl���. �

thh play. are Chesapeake Bay and mount&� ;1�i�I��f<lS��p�%"� :;I� ::: h::, and a ftowinlr tie; tn his �<\haad �Id-'t.ban be pretended to be DC P u..-. WI out aeenery Ing or bit:yt:1ing in Europe. w ere

be would hold a pure white ca11a lily, and aceoniJng to Beerbohm'l carie.: to lower Upuules. t:Ontncted her fondneu for all Ibi·, .. ll�h�im:. _______ ....., ___ ·J anUBnC- it thouabtfullJ every DOW.aDd ... 00irttD ... oa ..... Tbne German. • •

I

,

THE COLLEGE NEWS (Founded In 1.914, - _

'" co::: Publillhet1 weeki, durin, the Colle«. Year (exc epHn. durlnf Than�IVlnl( , Ct!rlltmu and Euter Holiday&, and durin, examination wealu In the Interu

of Bryn »a",r Oolle •• at the It .... ulre Bulldln., Wayne, r&:, and Br)'n Mawr Coli .....

The Colleo New. II lull), protected by copyrlcht. Nothln. that appear. In It rna, be reprint ed either ",,'holl,. or In part without writ tan perml .. lon of the Editor-tn-Chief.

Editor-in-Chie/ MARY R. MEles, '39

Cow Editor Ne1lJ. �'tor ANNE LoUISE . 0 '

I, A.«'t Newl I !R of .AI ""n,JlET �CO. OTIS, '30 ... _. A •• 't Cop" Editor

EMiLY CHENEY, '40. I8O'(A A • .TUCKER, '40

Edito,.. OUORAH H. CALKINS, ''''0 OLIVIA Kill,." '41 MAllY H. RAOD,

• ... 1 ELLEN MATTISON', • ... 0 CATHDINE HEMPHILL. '89. ELIZABETH POPE.. 'aO SU81E INGA.U.8, '41 _ LUCJ.J..l.E'SAUDER. 'S9 --

Sport. COI'TI!',poMent.. � BAJlBAllA. AUCHINCLOS8, '40 PEGGY Lou J�Fh:R, '41 Grnduate CQrreaponde1tt

VESTA SONNS

'Bun,Iu« MaMY.,. -CAROLYN- SHINE,. '89 Advef'ti«itlg ltiaMger DOROTHY AUERBACH, '40

LILLIAN SEIDLER, '40 Al8i.tant_ - -

.... . BARBARA STEELE. '4(/ BETI'Y WlLSON, , ... 0

Sub.cript",,,, Ma'ltOger RoZANN£ PIil1TJlS, '40

.....

THE COLLEGE NEWS

- -. DON JUAN

(Being the XVlIth Canto, which wa. recently found in a aeeret cham­ber ot the Villa Diodati.) I left Don Juan with a grace,ful ghoat,

Her Crolic Grace Fitz.-Fulke, in 'a­ble trock ..

Fiu-Fulke had fiesh and blood allure-menta, Most

Of juan's finds were of the sell-same 8fk. .

Add on an amorous venture to the host Of thOIl8 of which I've ere now taken

itoek. But 1 must get Don Juan from the

Of arm. duchesae,

charms, with o'er-<leveloped

Co�er Contest Don't lorget the contest for

the cover of the Pa.tienu pro­gram. All designs must be in by the Monday after Euter. The prize is five dollars.

Cohen Play Presented By Blind Orama Club

Actors Rise Above Handicaps in Se,-en Key, to BI2/Jpl2tt •

(E',MCiully C07ttributed by Emily Tuckerma", '",0.)

Overbrook, April 6. - fhe Philo­drama Society and the Modern Drama Club ot the Penn.ylvania Inatitution for the I natruction of the Blind pre­sented Seven Kell' to Baldpate by George W, Cohen In the school audl-

,

Theatre Review

The Guild ptese.nta�ion ot Cbek hoy's SW Gult With' the Lunta. ill re­atrained 'and subtly cheerlul. The tragedy concerns Nina (tQe sea gull) and Conatantine. who are in love with each other and want to beeome (.mauL Seduced and disillusioned by Trigorin, a well-known author, Nina. becomes a�lrd-rate actres8. The boy Constantine is thwarted by his actress mother, Trigorin'lI mls+ tress. and shoots himself after Nina'. revelations. , ,

"Their _oula may Borrow, but their minds smile at their lOuis" applies strikingly to Chekhov's charaden. They refuse to become morose or dra.­matic, at least, al1 but two. Lynn Fontanne 88 Constantine's mother, Irina, stride. and 8hrills, as no doubt Irina should do. She is still loud torium.

Not long ago I found it hard to tell, \, and rcd-peaded, very Hke Alkemena. Whether my hero wal to have an

The key to the .!tuation' Is that and the blond menace of Idiot'. De-end there is only one key to Baldpate In light.

V th h . . H II edstance and not the seven of the The JleCond exception is Richard \ i an un appy ma.rrlage or In e novels. The scene of the play i. Or with a red cap as the people'. laid on the snow-covered mountarn- Whorf's Constantine, who is thorough-friend, Iy morose and impassioned, AB the top, Baldpate, in s Bummer hotel. A Fighting for liberty and dying, Well, thwarted genius, he is amazingly

SUBSCRl-PTIONt..!2.60 MAILING PRICE, $8,00 I wa s surprised and hurt, I can't youn� and enthusiastic writer of transformed from the Mercury of SUBSCRlt"TIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME pretend

melodramas has to complete a novel Ampltitf'JIon 88. This reviewer was Entued a •• econd·cla .. maller at the Wayne, Fa .. POIt omce , I waan't, when he made the .tartling !�:r� ��r!� t;�e'��: j!�;:��!��:�; bothered all evening b y his voice.

. '--v query, fro� real lite to the novel and not build, and abrupt movements, that re-• . Theatre Work$h.op If he might sojourn in a seminary. until the end does the audIence realize minded us of someone by no means so

'Without the knowledge of the majority of the college; blueprints that the wild night of surprisea is tragically inclined. We were (relieved

, Roll on, thou deep al1i1 dark blue nothing mo- than the mel�'ram at,'e to read in Mr. Benchley's co umn in bave been. made, architectural sketches have been pondered over, and ,.... 00. th N Y k th h h d f I ocean, roll. He imagination of Uae young author. OJ e ew or 'er at e, too, a e t building costs have been estimated, for the big stQne barn thai lies on In8isted on a transatlantic trip, COllse, the book i. written, the $5000 Mr. Whorf'8 resemblance to Eddie the Baldwin school grounds opposite the Diezes' house. "Then the word Which landed him not far from bet woo, and a happy ending is at Cantor. is given, it. will be transformed into the .Mrs. Otis Skinner Theatre famed Paoli last reached. Although h.-s not much in evidence <V ' __ L I I I' dEl' b I l k' (A place to give the toughest man 'rhe play wa. well ea.t and exeel- until the aecond act, it is Alfred Lunt l OrruJouop, p easant y W lite al1 IZS et Ian 00 lUg on the outside, the pip.) lently directed. To all outward ap- a. Trigorin who dominates the play and equipped on the inside to suit the most catholic of twentieth But Juan thought that college lift! IlCaranccs the aetora laced only the by � sheer quietness and intensity century tastes, According to the 1)'1008, the lower ft'oor will be di.vided was holy, problems 01 the usual amateur of his acting. He manages skillfully into two equnl sections,.onc for Bryn Mawr and one for Baldwin, with And far from feeling coarsc or even theatric!,' performance. However, it a long monologue to his adoring �I 8 stage at either end, 8 partition in the middle, aud a galaxy of sloping flip, became apparent that 2'l.though the Nina about the trials of an author,

1 be ed - 1 B -.

B He _donn'd (Or women's clothes a fea- acton addre.sed each other, appeared ascending and descending climaxca scats t lat can mov lUto tie . 81dwlD end If . ryn Ma\\"'l' so desires, -r tha dusta, to read letters, Iwitched lights on and adroitly. He has little to say, but and moved back again for the purpose!l of entertainment. On the . tl th h be ,'f I And, incognito, called himself Au- off and lit oil lampa with more than moves qUlc y roug a au I u second floor will be a green room, a big studio for the Art Club, and 8 gust.. usdal IIkill, they did all thlll mechani- part. Hmaller studio with a north light tor artisbJ who want. to create in cally by training and not by sight. All these Guild actors create deci-scc.lusion, ... Hi. first acquaintance was the great Only the l!Xpt"e8aion of their-� _live entities, not puppets for the Lunts

TI f I· -d 1 1 I ' Lcm Munch, � gave them away. In all other re- to IShove around. Uta Hagen makes Ie opponents 0 t l iS I en arrangement say t lot t tcre IS no more A conoisseur in Byron, so they aay. spects their enthusiasm in their work her 1)roadway debut as the tragic

time for extra-curriculnr activities, that Goodhart is perfectly well From the beginning, Juan' had a hunch was easily noticeable. They de8erve Nina. Although the playbill indicatell equipped, and that if people wa.nt to study dramatics or art they should That Lemuel knew he wasn't Mrs, great credit fO!" the flawlesa handling that she was born in Gottingen, Ger-go to Bennington. But the Theatre \Vorkshop is just what ill needed Leigh.' or properties and cues which per- many, and has spent most of her life to start an ex�n of extra-curricular activity, to prevent it from He asked him to the Deanery tor mitted a smooth performance. abroad, the young actress speaks beau­taking more time because jt will be correspondingly more efficient, to lunch, Several characters were particu- tieul English. She makes an intelii-

And when they'd gotten fairly un- larly pleasing because ot their eager- gent, sympathetic transition from the stimulate talent that might have been discouraged by the vastness of der way, ness. Mr. Quigly, the old caretaker happy young girl in a child's frilly Goodhart, and by the difficulty of carrying on 8 consecutive piece of "Unma8k," said Munch, "You can'l ot Baldpate Inn, with his simple coun� white dress and pigtails cf the first work. Goodhart, wllieh is meant to be an auditorium litld-not 8 medium 1001 Dr. Chew on, try bumor and hi, mousey little wife ad to the disillusioned, melancholy for small studcnt productions, kills real experimentation, and swaIJow8 8YI'01l, I see. you for the wretch DOli formed a very pleasant contrast to the woman, deadened in black clothes, the up ill audiences. The Thcatrc Workshop will have a manageable stage, Juan." sordid wordy crooka of the ensuing Nina of �e fourth act.

... (to be continued) acts. -.. �argaret Webiter plays Masha, the because it ill 8 workshop, it will be aisanningly informal, and sets which 'Pronounced- Lay. Equally enthusiastic and no less weary young daughter of a sad, weary are in the process of building will be untroubled until they are finally -. eager to succeed was Peters, the her- mother. This is the part that Eva dismantled. As lor the third o1)jection, we think that when talented version of the Great Fire, with Aliee mit of Baldpate, who had Uae deligbt- Le Gallienne played, when ,he pro­people cboose coHeges where they can get more practical experienee, Brady, Tyrone Power, Don Ameehe ful part of a living ghOit. One of the duced the Sea. Gull at the Civic Rep-the )081 il all Bryn Ma ..... 'r'l, and that the more eneouragement they get and Alice Faye. most charming ol the male characten ertory Theatre in 19¥9. \A daughter .. W88 Jiggs Kennedy, the Chid of P� of England', Dame May Whitty, Mias to come to Bryn ·.Mawt', the better. The main argument that people Stanton: Tip 011 Girl_, a gangster lice of Asquewan Falis, who forgot Webster has drawn avalanches of ap­make agaillst the 'Vorkshop is that it is designed for II group w hich is drama, with Lloyd Nolan and Mary his lines and went back aeveral sen- )llause from the audience lor her small enough to be negligible. They do not realize the extent and the Carlisle. Beginning Satu.rdall: Pri- tences to pick them up. His guilty drunk acene . • on NUl"6, with Henry Wilcoxon and 'l d hi f - f ambition of the Players' Club and the Art Club, the fact that the Play- sml e soon earne m orglVenesa or The cast also boasts of an excellent writing Class will be transferredl that the English Department can

M����e:M;:��Og DrumtltOttd's Peril, :���:!y ��: :�P��d

ev:;in!. y!::; �:;:�O:' ;!:��:!); an�e

co:,�I�:���; Ahow movieS and bold lectures, and that the eoHege at large can give another movie about the great detec- woman reporter who was trying to Maaha's husband, a childish .chool­dances. Everything which ha felt it.self hampered. can automatically tive, thi8 time with John BaN'Yn'lore. cover the story for the local press. master (A. Z. Whitehead); and a e-rnand.

BegiJmi"g Frid4W: /elcnd In. tILe Skll, The whole performance was a credit stubborn idiot of a stt!'\Yaro, who lim--r a melodrama, with Michael Whalen th h i T . h d _ At. church it is the eU8tom to give 8 sermon and then to pass the and Gloria Stuart to 6..-ac 00. 0 anyone Wit a e- ply·refu8Cs to allow anyone to use the Cluate vision it was miraculous that horses (Harold Moffet). plate. In the same way, we a� picturing tile delights of the Theatre Europa: Le BMtheuT, a French film, the acton pointed at the correct per- The .. ttin-.. are riehly done in

Worl .. hop--wi th.)ui- fQ,rg"tti'Dgr -t'''h''� .. - f'.·'·- ''i·- J3 n'r)'" '[ ' ed with Charles D�y"r "_·· 7'h "'; --- , j.) 8Wl'_-:lI-concern I -....MJl ""�"--- eon-end eilently pereeived each en- b-rowns ..JJl'e4!J\:P- j'reys and-a it is a mere cutle in the air unless it is finauced before this summer. Light, an Alpine drama, starring Lehi trance, Also, their ,kill in avoitlift' ... white. 'excellent ba�t.""":unda fOJ! Mrs. Rlefen8tahl. �'� , �u If there is not enough enthu.a1aa..m to provide the comparatively small Arcadia: Merrily We Live., or what

furniture, in walkin&' and fighting on t' red hair and fiery coafUmes. 8um of 6,000 dollan which is needed to sl8l1t building, it will be turned happen8 when a famil .. takes in a

the stage, was uncanny. ( e were very sorry t o hear that: over to the Baldwin St:hool, and Bryn Mawr will be left twiddling its trampttiw ith Brian Aheru,e and Con- I f ,r these' settingt. 'fn'l(ll' �e' atorem�en-I _ stance Bennett. and Ne�dl.u, a labor revue by the I. tioned Mr. Benc.hley a bit bilious.) thumbs. The erection of a Theatre Workshop does 1Iot meaD that our L G W U Stark Younr (of So Red tlu Rotel

I high academic standards are being diluted or that we are beeoming a Karlion: RebecC4. 0/ Suxrtllbrook 'E;lange' r; Private En.te-·.e, a haa done this new translation, which '--. . . . ". Fa""" with everythmg new but the .,.. -

potpourri of the academiC and unacademIC. Just 80 that we can oife IL8 title, and 8tarring Shirley Temple. new play by Amory Hart, about a everyone thinka is ex.celient. We 4,ttraetive a currieulum &8 other colleges. Thert; is no questio of Keith'l: Snow White axd t"- Seven. group of characters at the Salzburg can't vouch for tn.., because we've neglecting what il tbe cQre of our prC6tige j t e Theatre W'orksho was Dwarf., by Walt Disney. MusiC; Fettival, with Mariana Flory never read the play. P. L. H.

and Richard Barrows. _-, ____________ _ not even conceived until pl&D8 for the Science Building and the L rary Thetller ,., Orchestra I 'Ving had become certain. 'Vith this in mind lnd with the Wor ·ghop's Forrest: Bel1iftJU'It# Monda,,: Edna Thuraday, 8cwdertoW'lt, with Paul

, -� H' W'I ri f I uk Wagner Program, Eugene Ormandy Munl and Bette Davis; Friday and poeitive �dvantages,

.we mak

.e a

. s�i81 plea to those wh,o will h� � f::m �:' :o:�, e:n� :;:���':: a� conducting: Excerpt. from "Pa.rti/oJ": Saturday, IflUr"7I4tiollal SettiemeRt, opportunity to ute tt, the JUlllOrs and underclassmen who ex�� by Cornelia Otis Skinner. PreluM, Tf,'tUlI/of"'l'lSOtiOft Scene (Aot witb George Sanden and Dolore. del

eome back nut fall The seniors are ezempt partly because they are Locult: Begt"'liwu -A{0tUIGW': You I), Kli7ll1'0r'. Magic Gardft a.nd t.w Rio. • • rraduating, and partly because of the demaods made on them by the CC1ft't Tak. It Wtt� YotI:, the Pulltur Flower MO-idefU, Good Frid4., S�U,' Ardmore: Wednesday and Thurt:-

Pri ed ted b Sa Ab- excerpt'S from "Die MevtertriJtg6Y"', day, Gold I, W,\w. Yov Find It, with Million Dollar Drive. Th'ere ill no moral oblig' ation foreing the others :&e com y, presen y m , bot. PrelMd. to Act 1, "SO-int Johft', NigAt" Olivia de HaviltudPand George Brent; to contribute. DOthinl! �ut}heir interest and a realiution of what they Chutnut: Beginni1tl1 Monda'll: PiM and CudgeUi7tg Soette, 11lt-roduction. to Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Mon-may loee. � ... .-..� .�-,,,. .... ..,.... , .... (. . .. lit • • Act I .. Da.1&CCI 0/ t.w-Apprentt"a and. day, Bringing Up BubY.-»'ith Kath_ ---------------�,�----------- . I Elttra",," 01 th, MNte-r�"era. � arione Hepburn and Cary Grant.

Notice we -, Mo-,·.,·· � -Mon.,

1IoJd: 11_ A_ lIu1e, a comed1 ..... ... _ do.",*- " a movie .ear, ....... 0-•• ' Dartaa ad Hubert MentZ"

AWIM: no A_ ., "_ "., • I ... d •• I"arllal ....... that _ .. joII. - CluJ' �,

Stanley: Jud.l, the romance of.. _ .. . _ Southern ARt. bdl"", l1uuy, played Dr. Fenwick will speak on Sevill e: Wednesd.y .nd .Thursd� r- Ekctiorls . current events in the Deanery Ckorli4 ella" at Mo"t. Carlo, with by Bette Davi .. B.gi" .. i.,1 FridaW: on Friday evenin .. April 22, Warner Oland; Friday and Saturday, Foot. lor Scawdal, aoother lunatic 19S8, at the sprin&, meeting or' E"f11Ibod� Si .. g, ... i\h Judy r.Garland. c:omedy, with Femand Gravet and the Eastern P e n n, y I v a n i a, Suburban: Wednesd.y anti Thur .. Carole Lombard. Southern New .Jersey and Det.- day. Loae em A Btulget, with 1M

1'0.1:: BIt&e6M,..,. •• "I&U&. Wile. a ware Branch of the AlllllUlae .Jones, family; Friday and Saturday, miDor OII •• dr, 1taITl ... Gary Cooper Auoclat:lon of Bryn .M • ...,. Col- l...uneocioul Sd�, with Georp &ad a.a h&te CoIbert.' s.,... lep. • Sanden and Dolon. del Rio.

The Undergraduate ASlOCla­tlon takCl great pleasure in an­nouncing the election of -Sarah Meigs., '39, vice president; Ca­mnJia K. Rin-, '-40. MCretary; and Charlotte Hutchina, ''''1. treaaurer . ..

FritIa,: 1. OW C ...... , Hol1JWood" Wayne: Wecm.daJ, P ... Untia'V',IL--__________ --' • •

J

, .

.. TIlE COI:.LEGE NEWS

Patknce' Satirites Pre-Raphaelite School

�iss Henderson Scorns "Bastard British" •

As Well as the Tainted Debutante Drawl Conllnu� h'om 'ran One

How .many unsuapectlng mothefl turea would not have been at all en· h II ed th ' . h . I • . ave a ow elr aaug tera, atll dearing to the malden of today. But . .:"'1 . ' . th ' d h pod , . ·wlth a mert"'y hsp upon t.l)eir hps to e mal ens t en we� stee In pre-

. come to BrYD Mawr and faU a victim l!aphaehtism, and the unhealthiness to "bal!ltard British" (Mill Hender. of Wilde's phyaiogomy accorded too son likes the alliteration), a language \Il,.ell with that of the art which they spontaneously generated and under­admired. Like the women who appear stood only by the charmed circle who in Rosetti'. painting, they dressed use it? The Speech Department haa themselves In ripplin.g Greek chitons, been trying to keep the outside world bound about the waist wi�h a casual t'rom knowing anything ahout this in­rope; on their leet they wore sandals, sidious tongue capable of robbing a and their hair was allowed to· hang girl of her prominent "r'I" forever in all Ita abundance over their extraor· and aupplanting them with a treach· dinarily long wh..ite necka. Whiatler, erous "a" and a rounded "w." too, carried on ' this tradition, and "Bastard Briti,h," a8 one mirht eX'· Lady Jane of Patie,iu is one of his peet from its name, is not legitimate taU ladie. ravaged by time, and en· in America or England. It I, marked dowed with a '''rugged bosom" and an by the "intrusive New England 'r,' " ample {arm fa,. the pUrPosea of com· e. g., "I aawr .. rat." Although ahe edy. .. _ pretends to have creat contempt for

There are countleaa other' alJusio H it, we feel Miss Henderson is very i n Patietl(:e is an exact representa fond of this foster child beeause It The dragoon. al1! ttte "mmU!ry," the has 10 much indivldpality. There Is sturdiest part of t.he English popu: a theory that i� wa's introduced Into lation at that time, puzzled by what the college by a atudent who thought even the aesthetes could not attempt the curriculum needed a little cockney, to explain. Some of t� mystery ot' �ut �asn't fully sucees�ful in lupply. aeathetie poetry was the �It of u mg It. The accent whtCh the Speech constant search for the' t'{�t word, Departm�nt haa moat fun with, how­the mu;ical word, like Bunthorne's ver,. is one which. could have origi· "calomel 'I which is quite . unpoetic in n tea only in an ' obscure eorner of its cont:"t. "Greenery-v�llery Gros. Scotland: I t is deflniLely not in what ve!!9l' gallery," refen to a reai GrM. t�e .e�perts cal� Ute "fAnglo.�axon" venor gallery where a · single picture tradition and. MISS H�nderson . '1 at a would ()(!cupy a room, standing out 'in loss to explam how It made Its way a halo of light tram the da.rk drapery into t�s far"(\istant spot, with all that which surrounded it. water In between.

What seems most improbable to us MillS Henderson believes one's repu· in Patinee. is an exact reprcsenla. tat.ion may be lars:ely .d�e to one's tion of things 8S they were, and the !'Ipeech. Sh� tells With rehsh the tale aesthetes were therefore r a t h e r of the Enghsh professor who, wapder­pleased than otherwise. Its cxactnes!, ing pnder Pem arch at 6.30 (obviously however, made them ridiculous i n nor. p. m. ) was stunned by the wild clarno! mal people', eyes, and, doomed by its

In the dining room. He later com· pared the sounds he heard to the I5quawking in a large chicken yard when a few ear's of corn have been toased among ita occupants.

Dr. Greet, Mias Hendenon, and tt,eir infallible phonograph do not want to deepen the students' voices, but to smooth ofT the shrill edgea. They al80 hope to eliminate the debu­tante drawl, speech w'th a "taint of elegance." This drawl, - in" Miss H.'. opinion, marks the generation in which a girl haa grown up. Eleanor Roosevelt, an outstanding addict of the debutante drawl, is imitated ever and anon by her fun-loving eGusin, Alice Longworth.

Fashions in speech are dangerous. The growing girl may pick up ,all $Orta of broad letters if ahe i, not careful. Formerly Washington Square: N. Y. C., boasted an elite accent. unique for the . way in which it con· lorted the vowel sounds. This atree· tation has since died out. When cook and lady's maid began to use it, the proud 'old families were horified to find Junior and cook 'speaking alike.

While many Americans are trying to develop English accents, young Britishers are attempting to master American slang. Great Brit.aln, pre­dicts Min Henderson, will become an American province, linguistically. She also belieVe!! that the MJddle West. will be the ·cradle of American speech. Most Americans use the Chicago ac· cent now, the outstanding exceptions �ing New England and the south. An English accent is still requir.-d tor certain professionl, and is obligs· tory t'or teachers. No aspiring actol' who hu a New Y,9rk accent ca be successful.

Miss Henderson fi y believe hat the only way to corr t rson's speech is by the phonogra man being really . knows what he

SPRING TENNIS SCHEDULE The Tennis Team will play its ·first

match on Saturday, April 23, against. Uninue. Tryoull tor the Squad and the Advanced Clalll were started lsal week and It la expected that -the final lilt. will be posted before next Mon· day.

The IChedu)e for the rest at' the sea· son is aa follow. : Saturday, April SO-Merion Cricket

Olub. Tuesday. May 3-Germa.ntown Crick·

et Club.

Page, 'th_

Camp... Maestri Give M ... ic:ale in Demery

," .. -Chin"rse S,,'ord Dance Included

_ t- Van.{ Prognomme Tlte Dtolter¥. April 8.-Much cam.

pus talent was dilplayed at. the annuat musicale for the benefit of th� Mawr League. The program', ar. ranged by Jane Gamble, '�O, owed ita charm chieRy to the varie'Ey of th'e performances. While the singi1'lg and

Saturday, May 7-Faculty live) .

(tenta. instrumental muaic waa well done, the two dancerl were mOlt applauded.

Sunday, May 8-Vaasar. Monday, May 9-$warthmore

Members of the German Club ung (tents- a new �p at folk songs, and a, en-

core, lVuur "JUt cUr lV,in, a liltin .. live) . Saturday,

Mary. May 14-William and continental walta. Dorothy Auerbach,

'40, accompanied on the piano by Har­riet Hutchison, '40, played the violin in a meiodioul ChalUcm DaM"', Thia year three singles and two

doubles matches Will be played at each meet, instead of four singles and one ltaubles as formerly. The th8J)ge has been made at the request ot' the other colleges.

rriend won't. tell �lI.-yo,*r speech is bad beeauae people �'ritremely se� sitive about their ices. It is em·

Lydja Lyman, '39, lang three son,.. in three languages.

May Chow', Chinese ,word dance was contrastingly oriental. She danced without music, dressed In red. coat and trousers. With perfectly sustained tempo Ihe brandished her i/.word t� give every gesture mystie signifieance. The cwlental tradition ?arra8lling to sho a

. st�denl def�ta was carried on in lighter vein with In her speech by rnltallon. No Im- "Brightl� Dawns Our Wedding Day;' ltator can be nearly accurate as the revived Irom last year's Mikado by phonograph and therefore not nearly ' a quartet of Helen Lee Ruth Mary aa fair. Penfield Terry Perrer ' all '40 and Sound is becoming more important Ruth Stoddard, '39. Patricia RObin­every day. Good voices are qualiflca- son, '39, played an arabesque by De­lions tor many jobs, particularly bussy and a minuet. b)t Ravel on the radio work. Ears are taking an equal piano, with one of Bach', lamiUar atand with eyea, and perhaps most ot aarabandes as encore. our reading will soon"" fie done by Arsenia Arroyo sang three Spani,h lilltening to broadcal!lts. We're wait· talk songe, one written by a Loyalilt ing patiently for that short wave who has since been killed. Her atrenu. broadcast trom Scotland commencing OUI peasarJt dance was freer and leu "Once there was a rat named self<onscious than the typical "Span. Arthur. " O. K. ish dance." The thort full skirt of .

Vote of Thanks The Bryn Mawr League

thnnks all those who took part in the musicale and Jane Gam·

her costume gave scope lor lively footwork and syncopat.ed atepa rather like tap dancing in their r�ythm.. Castanets were used to show the

. chanBing moods of the dance.

own exagk'eration, .. gradual dislOlu· Raphaelite garments. But I)robably tion of aestheticism began, not to be none will ever dare come to America completed until after the war. It. is again, as Oscar Wilde did jn his said, though, that isotated cases still habitual get-ull; and calla lilies long exist that in certain �arts of Londo1!L !lgo reassumed their old Easter sig. hIe. '40, for her line work in or· sounds like, and bad speech, she points The advertisers in this pa .... r are ",anizing the program. ..� women can ,still be seen in loose Ilre.- nificance. M. R .. M. out, is "vocal .halitosis." Y9ur best your friends and neighbora.

�����"T�OB�AC�CO��

-, "Anyall·dgauttes-are-aiike talk doesn't jibe with myupericDce.Tbere's a big difference. I've smoked Camels steadily for 5 years. and found thlt Camel is che cigarene that agruswith me, in I JOt of�IYJ., Good taSte. Mildoeu. Easy on the throat. ADd Cameb don't give me jumpy Derve •. Like,a lo[ of people ] kDOW, 'J'd walk a mile for a Camell'"

JO[ meadt a aet. His famil, are 6.shu folk. DiMagio il6 Ceet taU -wap.arou.ad 185 poWlds.His DaTes aN b�.I.,.b·,1

..fJtI - oIr ,,-., .-D·D·.·. C-A· .. ·T·O·. � ........ �--peI'. 10....,. bioqk IO� CoOooI dpnn ... ... .,. If IIC 7:)0 _ .... 1.1. 1:, 6:)0 .... C. T .• t::tO p. Ml�.J'I� 1: :tO" P. S.T .. ovu v;III_Dia N.cwodt.

O . ... �_ J' ..... ,., KJlIIfY GOODMAII .,.. ..... - .----

H ... _ __ Good __ Swi .. a..d·'aorotow ....... ...,T.......,. • dab _ ____ ':lO ... a.S.'t:, ':)0 .... C.S.T� 1:)0 ,..- W.s.T .. ... 6:lO ... P.;).T .. "_ eoa-.. blaN_OIk.

CLOSE·UP of Joe', srip. Wben lomeODe mea­tioaed • ND.IOve throat, Joe remarked: "J .tick co Camds. Camcb don't it-

,

GROWERS FAVOR CAMELS FOR

THEIR SMOKING!" - is the majority

opinion in a survey of successful, well-known

tobacco planters

"When Camel says 'costlier tobaccos' I know it's right," says Mr. Edward E s t. e s , capable young planter, who kno_ws tobacco from the ground up beeause he grote' it.

':'Take my last crop, .for in.unce. the bMi-pan.­

paid me the moat. I've ever eott.en. The merf who ITOw tobaceo bow what to Imoke-CorMlIl"

f ,1Lut yeff � -bid the dandiest crop e.e r," a.y. M r. Roy Jones, another uperience<iplant.er who pre!en Cam. els. "I amoke Cam­

ela bec:auae 1 kM", they bid higher pay more at tha auctlonl for

choice Iota of leal tObacco. They paid the higbut pri� 1 ever rot from anybody.. Con.lderln.. that Camel UIeII 6ner, eoatller tobaCCOI, it', not lurprilinr th.t Camel II the le&dinC cicarette with u. planters."

M r . H a r o l d Craie, too, buM hi' preference for Camela aD what be kliMa' about the kina. ot to ....... that

F • • 'tfI/I' .$ .i Co lDto the .. riOUI dprett.. UY .. t the check - 10 1 how u.t Camda: ,... .on erpenai,.. tobMcoL Camel aot u. bel' of my Jut crop. That beida true with mo.t planters 1 !DOW. too. You bet'l amob C.mel. "

,

. - . -

CoIIega � cOop..ntt PARALLEL TO i"'.7IeJr ....... · ..1114&.' ·SHORT ST,OJlY .CC¥'/TIliT, Educa�onal Endo_ .. / 1 !_J' . The Pa.rtiann. R8vW, a :��:E:I::,N�i: ... ::YCWk CitM-U. S. blgb. er MU· III Otc:ar Wilde'. Satire CONQUEST SEEN � AIDA J ",-_Un.: �·C'mo ... "l " '-' .., monllilY. atu\o� a cOnte8t ha. rec:elveo gift. and bequesta

"lmpocunce of Baoc""Eam ..... Pari, (KNS) - Ghl8eppl Verdi', OoaUnued from Pq. 01:1. whiCh . prize of '100 will be more than '680,000,000 from famous opera A.ida. Is heard no more determine in what order induatrial t.be av.thor of the but abort phila"nthropic foundation • • inee their H .. ..- Spring Play ltaly. The .tory of thl. opera II contr.cta an .tuHUled. He.....may before June I, 1988.' toundin8'. well known. Aid�1 an Ethiopian ran� tn.nJfer and create an; particularly interested Tlii. facthai bee.D reVealed at � The Cap and Bell, Club of a .... ··l\ rirl in ErYpt, II the dauchter of apncl.. Tbe provisions the May seeing the work of promi.in, lumbl. Univeraity. Of the total ford College win pr.ent TIu: kin, of Ethiopl&. She WIJJ Bill 'would be in force until Congreu graduates. The address of the amount .. iven, 64 per cent came from ptf't.4KCe 01 Sm., BUf"SINd by by the ElYPtiua declare. a ee ..... tion of hOitilitiea. zine Is 22 Eut 17 Street. New the John D. Roehfeller, Sr., and Car-Wilde on Friday, April 22, at wan in Ethiopia. In the which in the lut war did Col}ditfOits : nerie trulta.-A. C. P:

Four Bl'1ft IIawi" shKIenta are in . c&mpargns her �ather, take place until 1921. Until �. Portuon Review reserves the

cut. .. , 18' allO made prllOoer. the power gTanted to publi8h, at our usual ratel, any The Collel1e New. take. great � hit of the 90., the pia, Is in love with Rhadam� could be used to destroy all of the stories submitted for this pJeasure in announcing the elce-sustained by such brittle the El'Yptlan ruard, organizations. contest. tion of Olivia Kahn, '41: Mary u : jjThere are Oftly two thinp to and her father try to • The stand of labor in regard 2. Only unpubll.hed stories will be H. Hager, '41: and Susie In,aUs, 'Witb a woman. Make 10Te to her to become a tra.ltor the May Bill is obvious. Even conaldered. '41, to the editorial board. abe i. pretty, to 80 ... o.e ,I. if and to help the Ethioplana are not actuaUy S. Cooteatanta may submit as manY1':========:':;':'===::; not.," DeeeptioM lead the their freedom. are made uaeleas beeauae atorie. .. they like. I . ba.aorou. iatricadH to a 80bstitute Faaci8t Italy for suptraedea all other . All manuscript. rouit be typewrit- JEANNETIIi'S inc in whidl moR of tbe the opera it and takes away the union's ten and accoropaJtied by stamped, are !lamed ErDHt. The It opeaa with the wordl: of fixing wages. aelf.add.re:uea envelopes. • .,.. Matn PI .... Shep. I.e. prodoction will be stased ill Everywbere iI heard the voice The labor legislation ot the 6. The CODte8t emi. at midnight.. June Flown, lor AU Dcc.", coatumel, col*tad from old trunu �- Eth· . 1 1938 •

n • • ---_ A-'-IoU&' loplana Deal W&l denounced by Mr. • . � � -_ attic.. Breathinc deftaDct: . ' &I "sugar-coated .uppreaaion 6. The winning .tory will be an- Brya Mawr '''0 '. THE CAST '�IO I��;::�I (r..d Haile Set ... le) and a resbict.ion of the ' .�n;o�u�n�'ed��ln�th�.�J�U;IY�(�19�88�)�i

.. :u:

e:

.�::::::��::::===::=�: Lady BradmeU . . Susan O. Miller, bis dauahter: labor to strike." He ftamed .... G"D�

' her daught.!' -' " t.ha h Ru'h Eli .. R.ihl, Thou ..." mbe"", , , • W,gn,r Act as an exam I, beeau"1 " 77JM,f' A_tu"-'MII!I. ".At less E&'Yptlan while it haa iO.me advantaree, it ""�lllYtT """ A1semon )fonteriefr, her nepbew Profaned our house •• temples (rom labor ita moat important asset, William Reevel, aJurI; independence Jack Wo�v.a, hi. lona 10lt b�er Mothers, old men and children • :Wil.tred Simmona, '41 81ew. --------------

Cecil)' Cardew, Jack'. -..ud He score& the Egyptians with "-,va,,, I at night for the purpose of studyin ... Carolyn R. Shine, '89 The wooden .tlek with the ribbona on rage: Min Prl.m, formerly nursemaid to Up, thenl it I. symbolic of a custom whieb may

the Monterie". Rise, Egyptian legionsl lOOn be abandoned. (d. Rosemary Sprague, '41 With fire, destroy our citiea- New.). Hoops are roUed every year

Canon Chuuble . . . . Alan Bacon, '41 Spread terror, carnal'll and death. by the departing Senior Clau on the Merriman . . . . . . . . Robert Aucott, '38 ro your fury there is no lo�er ftrrt of May. They are then given Lane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Amos Leib, '88 check! as tokenll of friendship to member. ORGANIST TO APPEAR IN

WYNNEWOOD RECIT

Though they have lost their king, the of the lower: elaaaes. Thi • .tick I. one Ethiopians determine to fight 00 for of the .tIcks used to roll the hoopa. freedom and deliverance. Says the It I, inICribed with the n .. mea of captive Amonaaro: those to whom and by whom it baa

Before piling for England to pia, Then delay noL . In arms now i. been given. ·· To you, whoever you by speci .. 1 invlta.tion at the Royal roused may be. In the hope that you will find College in Dartmouth, Dr. Edward Our people-everything is ready. the CQ.ntentl of this box to yoor .. t� Rechlin haa consented to give an 01'· And "Rhadames confinns the fact that isfaclion, we of the Bryn Mawr Un­gan recital under the auspices of the "once more to fierce battle Ethiopia'a dergraduate A8IIOCiation, have now In­Bryn Mawr Graduate Club on TI�:.:l ��::� have united their soldiers' scribed the stick. day evening, April 26, at All Saints' Rhoads Hall, Bryn Mawr College, Epi.copa! Church-. in Wynnewood. The paraUelism I. 80 striking that Bryn Mawr, Pa. April 9, 1988."

An interpreter ot Bach and his con- Aid" wu taken out of Italian reper- Several itemll wen added to the te�.mporariea. Dr. Reehlln has been ac- toires. aroup listed in the letter. A package claimed by mualcianl and critics both of cigarettes (Camels) joined the rec· in this country and abroad as an able I (:OI'n,,,,'lono of New reatlon division. The buiJdipg plans organist and a real mUlllcian. He was and specifications, aceompanied by gUeflt organist at the three hundredth Rhoads Hall ;s picture of Mr. Rhoads, were included anniversary of the AUI1.bur" - to enable the future archeologist to .iOll and played at the dedication Continued from Pu. On. reconstruct the dormitory. An the great Ifeldenorgel erected at menu is the moat frequent choice for )jsh pape.r written by Sylvia Wright stein, Austria, in honor of the World afternoon tea. The lipstick and foun- with the comment by Miss Wood. War dead. tain pen are our daily aids to beauty worth "this is contemporary" will

The program, to �in at 8.00 p" and learning, while the hair curler show, it ia hoped, the cast ot the stu-1�1������� (a clip for holding dent mind in -1.988. F C P E ini:lical.e our lneth-FfLllLtUle ot1(i "I1U' . . . . . . . • .lToaated. Hambul'g Roll."

SonlltiJt' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RitteJ' I ods of hairdresaing. The sockll are •• "Nancy Bucher to Dicky Reese We All Beli'tle In One True God intluded hecauae they are typical of to Julia Grant to Discoverer." of the underaraduate costu"" as Wokt, Awah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rejoiet, Mil SOIlL . . . . . . . . . . . Toeeato. . . . . . . • • . . . . • . . . . . . . . J mprOlJillf1.tioli Si.Jt/onia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sicilli,1t", . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fugllt (St. An,,'.) . . . . . . . . . . . .

A collection will be taken (or benefit o( the traduate Club Mu"ic l Fund.

The church, located on M''"',row''''' 1 Avenue, can be easily reached

, the Wynnewood Station or by 1"alkh,g I along Mont.gomery Ave.nue from Mawr. ALICE A. FERGUSON.

It f c· ..... . due. we ...-Jd,U9 to tab an 01 your ,..-. and lNaada. whmeYtr m., � 10 viii, J'OUo

P." �A: C. GEORGE CRONECUR

Yale University School of Nuraing

'A Pro/ft.w.. lar 1M c".,. w_ n. _ _ ' _ ..... .,.... _ ' ', . .... ItMic a-pM' = _ ... ....... ba .... .. _" .. .... . . .... .. ..... .. ... ' . A " + 's .... • Ik -· .... ...... 'M ' ... . eoIep 01 _ !, := \ ' .. " , .... .. , ;:t� �

,., dd...-: _ 1a/fIf rtf,. eI._

1'111 1:8AM YAm :.a:HOOL .. . -•• .. c P'.

from the more formal silk attire of the young women

who do not attend any college. The bottle contains a popular beverage known as "Coca-Cola." It acts aa a stimulant and many studenta find it use(ul in aiding them tp stay awake

E. Foster Hammond IfKOqJOuted

R.C.A. Radios Victor Rtto 829 UDCIIller Ave.

- . Bryn Mawr

,

---------

Flattering-Mesh and Calf A light, cool pump th.t holds its sh.pe

" ,

Blue mesh. with blue calf. Block mesh with �t�nt leother. Beige mesh with brcwn coli. All white. BI� end white.

$14.50

Clafl i n

COLONY HOUSE INC.

B. H. WRAGGB-•

DRESSES SUITS BLOUSES

DISTINCTIVE PlAY a..oTHES

S.,-..

77[ .,. ... .

-

THE FRENCH

-• .-'fwd • • • why Ilot take . car along, or rent one abroadP (MIlllmum round-trip rate for cars, 'lGlJ.) Exchange 18 very low this year. You can have a marvelous vacation abroad (or about a. little as It would cost at home. Go Pl'ftlch Line, of course., 10 you call enjoy Its many extra plta.ures . . . at DO extra COlt. Your Travel Agent will gladly help you plan your trip. . I I N C H L I N I

f. C. (hr"'., •••. lI,r. 1700 WALNUT ST .. ,lNNnACIU 1020

fIr A.,.,.,.. I. f.,..,.. y,. A't'-fnJ.ce

ONly \ · ... ROU"D Tr�IP THIR,') ClAS�

Li..IuI • tnek ICU. 'tVIUenDaG', mapa into writioa fICo> lion the ,plit • .coad you touch it to �pu.

W .. nnaa', Saptr Poiac.ol l4-K Gold, tipped with iridium, u.oder.oet 80 Jepuate maauJaccwi.n. opera­don, to in'are thit quick .ad eyer-dependable ..... WII'. M .. ch a ",.tem.u's •• a.inac any Other pen. See bow much fiuJw it *rlI. See how much more ink Watenn&ll's 10k-Vue Peas hold. size for aiu aad prke ..for price, becauc 01 their Doublo-Aaipa �u

, m. Joeb witboat lotiq ia.k-iUio. pea to 100% c:ap.ciq.

.A a.an, ..odan pea, W'a&enDUI:'. 11 idaal for the �uart.lAI: rout 1oc:a1 cIoa..s. damourrcae t,he pan. oETOMORROW-.u,. 1.1l�¥U. PU . ..... -..... ,. .. .... ao

OMwr.m.-',MwlJssa,.s.

\

" CURRENT EVENTS Bryn Mawr's Russia , Accl4imed at I.e,ag"ell

(Gleon«i f�om Mr�F.f.�����,�:::��::����� on. -c. � Comnu", Room, repreeented Bryn Mawr at these '\.. present controverty in minions but, unfortUnately. Peggy tratlon is the result of the division Foy, their advisor. was unable to go. between the "pump-primers" and On Saturaay the first eommittee sub­"anti-pump-primers" in the govern- mltted a report which provided for the ment. Congreu has not yet voted on extension of international control over President Roosevelt's latest bill' which mandates and looked for future inde-would call for the expenditure of pendenee of some of the mandated

. 1088al amounts 01 money. It Is areas. The report 01 the commission likely, however. that the bilt will on Far-Eastern affairs was an analy-defe�ted n ita victory in sia of the economic and political con-, ' would mean at least a temporary end fllct between Japan and China, and a of the depression, Uniesl slightly idealistic program whereby conditions Improve before the both countries, under the auspl�es ot

THE COLLEGE NEWS

Blankets 'Needed The Bryn Mawr Camp is sad·

ly In need- of bedspreads and blankets (in any condition ) . It ..... ould appreciate any Contribu­tions that members of the fac­ulty and departing seniors can give. All donations can be left in Pemb'roke East for Anne Fer­guson. We hope. that spring cleaning will produce � re-8ults ror the Summer Camp . , The Bryn Mawr Camp

Committee. (A. Ferguson, Chair- j

man ) . � (S. hillier, AS!listanl

Chairman ) . elec:.tions the Republicans will the Leagtl9;",miiWt. come to some set-almost sure to move into the tlemenl .... , _____________ ...J I House. The moat controversial 01 the three ing "in character." Although the

It Is risky to attempt to was the committee of which Louise nesc speaker was also very good, the budget during a depression. Morley was chairman and which dealt is to be chiefly remembered tor should first end the depression with internal conflict. This provided use of a typical Fenwick se,"",ce l then paY" our debts. We are in (or. the or.ianl&8�on 01 a and his later remark. "Oh. ·ye., dangc'r of bankruptcy unless we by the League Council for appropri- stole that one from ,.Your prol." row from other countries; as long ate action in the instances of loreign The reports of the our debt.....j. to ourselves, the aggression. In caBeI of internal were then given and the award. will be relatively simple. strife, existing legal nounted. Again Philadelphia came

Harry Hopkins, an aide to will be permitted to receive aslist- the front. for Haverford as Fh,I .. ,d 1 President. il opposed to the anoo (or their defense. The ,mnmi'- I gained first pdze. After this tion of relief as a meanl of recegnized foreign intervention Model teagile wss disbanded and business. As an alternative he in Spain and agreed to "take such International Relations Club ·re,ourne<I.! cates a sufficiently large public action as will restore the rights of proud of its own showin� at the program 80 that every man can get Spain under international law." sel\1bly (and at the dance ) but job. However the wages for James G . McDonald. as critic to eially pleased with the success of emergency work must be less the session, epoke at the banquet pre- head. Louise Morley. those paid in private business, ceding the dance. and, while The New York Time •• of April 9, erably about a twenty percent overly optimistic about the gave the following complimentary cnce. It il doubtful, however, expressed his belief that the world write-up of Louise Morley's speech : the President or Congress will could discover means of keeping order " . . . The greatest applause was re-this in consideration of the and ideal justice. served for the address of Mia Louise opposition (rom labor. . The Final Plenary Session held Morley of Bryn Mawr, representing

The defeat of the Satu.rday afternoon was won by Soviet Rusaia. Miss Morley adva,,,.,d I bill was merely a geature Matsuoka, 0'( Swarthmore. She a plea (or a firmer League

-- -

STATENDAM JUNE 3 NIEUW AMn"ERDAM JUNE 11 VEENDAM JUNE'I -STATENDAM JUNE 24 NIEUW AMSTERDAM JULY 2

TOURIST CLASS Round Trip 1257 up

THIRD CLASS Round Trip

1176

,

Page Fivo

pioneers In pro�ldin' youth witll tra�eI \0 \ts \\\lin'

nc., �_,I1';;:::'i::::;.,· 101" Thlnft 00" .:::: .. ..;;;!v�­For detail .. InqulN S. T.CA. Deportment

HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE President Roosevelt by the House in behalf ot Fascist Italy. against aggressors and :,��:;�:.;::I Representative.. The bill itself .p," _ 01 be,'ng met w,'th �-- and tlon of anti-Communist "' ...,.,. 1701 Walnut Street, Phlledelphta formerly been advocated by hisses her speech was praised as "James G. McDonald.

...

dents Taft, Wilson, and Hoover. League of Nations High ::�'�i�:;�;�I ... �u:u':u:u:'O:':u:u,:u:":uO:U':U:'H:":":O:":":":"':":'0:':":":"':":":0:":"':":":"':0:':"':":"':":'0:':":":"':":";O:"�"_ summer the House voted for the Refugees Coming From but because o( limited time the strikes. The present condition who conduc.ted orthe critique o( the ate postponed any action until France is encouraging to Hitler os.serted that he 'ahno.q

h continue his- policy of expansion. Ik ' h Spring. It was necessary to ave thought Litvinoff was ta ing, w en revote and this time the bill was The United States has yielded he listened to M.iss Morleyls the demands of the Mexican go· ' 'crn, 1 feated. showing how much prestige President has lost as the result ment much more leniently than"

01�;;;: 1 r--::::-:-:::::-:::::-:::::::::::::--, the Supreme Court controversy. Great Britain. England. whose p "M�RCH OF TIME" This at present is the main has always been to defend her

' II 1 h Id leatuM, Jrtquenccs I.m 01 F'an,e. In the last ten jects In a parts 0 t e wor • d d' -, p.",tio,n., 1 1 directed by Georg� Black France has had twenty-five go',ern,1 a strong note eman mg .,

IOn of ments ., each has lasted less There has been feeling that months. The government il ave n exp ol ... ng e h bee . I '" th ��e�;

�:�;� 1 1 ROCKEFELLER HALL'S

and demoralized, and open to however. our investments in MRS. CLARA BLACK at any time from Ge.rmany. were made at the invitation of will be shown Blum was torct!d out of power Mexican government. Today , en. ,', at'-pt,' ng to ... elo" 1 1 WED" THURS" APR, 13, 14 the Senate rei used to ratify a govemm . .....'" .. , giving him the right to revalue socialism and ita first step has et the

franc on the basis of the gold to take OOntrol of the oil wells S E V I L L E and to impose a capital levy farms. }t has been ,.,mo" ,.,dl l The latter calls lor five per cent each taxpayer's capital and was con- li:"---------------iiiiiii

. sidered a drastie measure. Labor groups have been

and wao. industries are at a still. The government, afraid civil war, cannot send troops to end

e

, RICHARD STOCKTON

EASTER CARDS

Appl\.pna .. Gifts for Easter

e

To That Senior Who, bavinl excelled In hi.tory. math, a lCienu or German . . • and who, bavinl a modest income aullicient to .upport herself for one year awa,. from home, hu nOl yet Idded upoa wbat abe will do nut ,ear.

A Provocation To contribute one year of

her life to participation in the for­,matiOD of a new acbOol to be built ar�a1 idea.

Send aliatof your counes In lhtle .ubjecu. with &fade&. Send • • napahot of yGW'­telf and .. ate a weekend when ,.ou would like to meet on yoW' own cunpu. or in Nmy York City.

FUl'lca ilion !OrR no-. 25 wUT 43 "' .. Jmf Y()I;K CITY. II to

. .

MEET YOUR FRIENDS at •

The Bryn Mawr College Tea Room for a

SOCIAL CHAT AND RELAXATION Hours 01 S.",;c�: 7.30 A. M.-7.30 P. M.

8reald�t Lunch Tea Dinner For-Special Pam.., Call Bryn Man.l86

Convenient Railway Express Service

Speed It home and back ,*",kly by �otlon.wid. Railway Expr .... Thou.and. of .tudenh in college. throughout the country rely on ,hi • • "",Ift, lof., de-, pendable .ervln. Prompt pick-up and delivery, without extra charge, In all cltie. and principal town •• Be thrifty and wt.e- •• nd it called-and It can come back prepaid, If you wi.h. Low, eco­nomical rot •• on laundry, boggage or porcel •. For ru.h .. rvlce te'-phone the neore.i Rollwoy Ex�re.. office Of arrange for r.gukJr c�1I dot ...

UYN MA lVR AVENUE 'PRONE BR.yrq- MAWR 44O-BRYN MAWR, PA.

BRANo-I OFFICE: HAVERFORD, PA. (R. R. AVE.) 'PHONE ARDMORE 561

I

P R0 B b ErM : -�

S O LV E R When you have a date with IOmeone

out of town and you find that you can't

kHp it- make new plans - by tel ...

phone-and kHp everybody happy.

Get in the hobit of ,using Lang Dis­

tance. The cost is small especially

after 7 P. M. each night and all day

Sunday when' ra t .. a re reduced.

• TH& au. TILIPH()Nf; COMPANY Of P£NN5YLVAl''IA

-- , .Pii\e Six ! "

--]'tfB COLLEGE NBlVS , .,.

- �� -� � D;$CUUf!J Price comes were fixed. The monarchy lutr- JR. YBAR MOVIES SHOWN turel, the Delaware Group _ did- not - Re'YolUlion ;,. England c:ed UJ*ially, tor It could not meet· Haverford Uiaio'll, April 10.-Dr. spend all their t'me in Atud·y. One the demandA "of the new militari.m John. Kelley. of the Haverford Ger� Haverford aenior explained that you

-. .. - . . . . . -

d lh·" I II . d man Department, entertained membera - , of the Bryn Mawr and Haverford '" Yin PI' II y, OHUn'Ied mm '''.� �r an e new nat ona am eqUIPpe could not -elp ,tud . g o·tabl The �mmunitY Kitchen-

864 Lancaster Ave, not fundamental tu--, n,,· "volu· .ml" w·,·t·h • medieval ,·n-m.. U-n,· even ,· n pU" u,·" that we would "w' ,. I . w .a:K: I German Clubl at an informal Lie-- con· tion." 1 VI� made up the deficiency by robbing de�6nd. Movin, picture. of th� aider a waate 01 time, lince you al-

Phone 860 8. M.

The eo�ueneea of the liver m- ·the barons. hia IOn by robbin .. the 1937 Delaware Group for the Junior waya had to do it in German. ftow were cnormou.. Fint. it. gave church, and Elizabeth chiefly by de- Year Abroad w'he shown as in inter- The Iinging waa aeeompanied on Impetus to the new "money" economy :lIKliling· the nobility and by · actual miuion in the ainging, and refreah- the piano by Dr. Kelley, and by sev-

Afternoon Te. - 3Sc 8( 2Sc

and helped to build the capitalist jlaraUnony. But the Stuartl inherited menta were served. �ral violina. The repertoire of the world. It was extraordinarily favor- .a financiaUy bankrupt {Jlonarchy. and '::crman Club waa increased by t1\e able to the development of the trod· thcir ell'orh to reh�bilitate it by tax- Jack Velte, '38. and a (riend at new longa learned lor the League

Iud t�a lor wo,.,,. JI(�ath�r BuDd 5NPtnU by Appointnrtrfl

�-c.laa8Ca. who bought and sold on a ution brought on \,tie , Itrugg1e for Brown Univeraity had taken the pic- Musicale. JOllg, rising market, with a fair chance constitutl6hal Iibert1\in t.he aeven- tures. Ip them three Bryn Mawr • _______________ _

-. . - .. - =� �. -... of gain. The rise in pricea and the leenlh century. seniors. Elizabeth Simeon. Alice Chase influx of precious metals changed. In the case o( the clergy, the reault and Mary ).fowe DeWolf appeared

·h ' d h I h · I I k dressed in dirndll. on excursiona in t �r political po'ltion an made t em 0 t e price revo ut on wae to rna e one of the moat powerful group ... ill them desperately poor. and therefore Central Europe. They had sklied on the atale. • to deprive them of .their independence. the Zugapilze. near Garmischparten-

Secondly, a great inequality .of in- Allhough there were many exception •• kirchen in the Alpine country which comes resulted (rom the violent bl'Utk tbe clergy in general became pliant was photographed in color. and had up of eustomary price relati�nahipa. und aubsetvient to the wealthy. They seen the aighta of Vienna, Budapest In France. England. and Soulhet;D wcre not relieved until the time of and Munich. To judge from the pic­Cermany. there wat alto a very seri· Queen Anne'l *BQunty. a hundred OUI drop in the earnin� p6wer Qf the years Jater. lower claIse&. Thi, waa caused by an The effect ot the price 'revolution on inere&.lle in population in eountrieA the landlo!da and the measures they

took against it will be discuued in next week'a lecture on t.he Agrarian Revolbtion.

. , • BLAIRS - Hair S /,,/is/ 64 EAST LANCASTER AVENUE

ARDMORE. PENN ....

Is plf!as�d to Announu thai MR. MARTIN

Form�rl; 01 Bryn Mowr ;s now tlSsocia/�d with .,s SHAMPOO and FINGER WAVE �l.'O

Tf!ltphon� Ardmorc J181 jor APPointmcnt Our CIn" Will Cdit Jor YON �

with fixed ptoduc:!lon Iystem". many .""====�========";'===============�!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!!!!E!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;!!E!!E"'!!E""!!!;!!!!;"'!!E!!E!!E!3.1!!!!!!E5, 1 wage-earncra, no'" Gutlet fot migrll­ilon, and inadequate improvement. i n technology. In England. from 1600 to -+600. 'there was a 60'7" drop i n earning power. In Spain. where there was no inerease in population, there wal only a 30% depreciation. and'by the middle of the seventeenth cen­tury. wagea were almoat as high as they had been at the end of t e lix-teenth century. ..-

The working clauea were alao af­fected by 'another change of attitude cauaed by the pri« revolution. Dur­ing the Middle Agel, "the upper clauea had regarded the lower at lel­low-ereatutes. a necelBary part of the human mac.hine." But from the end of the sixteenth century on. they be- . came more and more mere impersonal unita, "the laboriag poor." . Aside (rom the..working-claueI, the people who suffered moet in the price revolution. were the c.lergy. the land­lords, and the monarchy, whose in·

!!��!1 �-Solo Tours

lA_LIlli" WlttC.lY - .... y ,., ... , . ... ",uST S199 up Urd octan)

Wnlt Tor dCliult'd lacu on thfle tnlwl opporlunllln. planned (Of economy .nd indi¥ldua l freedom D <·COUNTRY TOUR&.- Engl.nd,

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