The Wellesley News ( )

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Wellesley News ( )"

Transcription

1 Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: Recommended Ctaton Wellesley College, "The Wellesley News ( )" (1931). The Wellesley News. Book Ths s brought to you for free and open access by the Archves at Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve. t has been accepted for ncluson n The Wellesley News by an authorzed admnstrator of Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve. For more nformaton, please contact r@wellesley.edu.

2 Perodcal Lbraran Wellesley College Lbrary HOLD MEETNG OF C. A. WLL GVE LOCAL EDUCATORS OLD NATVTY PLAY Dscusson Subects Announced by Secretary of Assocaton for Annual Meetng COLLEGE OFFCERS ATTEND The Present Athletc Stuaton, Modern Developments n Educaton, ntellgence n Vared Forms are among the subects to be dscussed at the 46th annual meetng of the New England Assocaton of Colleges and Secondary Schools at the Hotel Statler, December 4th and 5th, t was announced last Frday by Professor George S. Mller of Tufts College, Secretary of the Assocaton. Fve hun- cast run as follows: dred educators wll meet at several sessons for the consderaton and Over-emphass on athletcs, especalment by school and college heads that the entre Frday mornng sesson wll Present Athletc Stuaton. Such speakers wll contrbute ther opnons as Dr. Frank P. Day, Presdent of Unon College, well known for hs deas for modfyng athletcs; Mr. Ralph L. Kendall, former presdent of the Suburban League and now Drector of Athletcs n Medford Hgh School; M\ Carl L. Schrader. State Supervsor of Physcal Educaton; and W. Barry Wood, Jr., Captan of ths year's Harvard football team. Mr. Howard Conant, Presdent of the Assocaton and Prncpal of the Hgh (Contnued on Page 5, Col. 2) Presdent Park Speaks At Annual Honors Day Servce On Sunday, December 6, at 7:30 P. M. n the Chapel, the Chrstan Assocaton wll present The Natvty Play of the Company of Shereman and Talors. Ths s a ffteenth century guld play, wthout defnte scenes or acts, smply a seres of epsodes gvng the brth of Chrst and the flght nto Egypt. n presentng the play Chrstan Assocaton has attempted to reman as close to the Mddle Englsh orgnal as possble. Even the costumes wll hark back to the sprt ol the tme s. beng Englsh rather than orental. Ths s the frst tme that a producton of ths sort has been attempted. The play wll be coached by Mss Hobgood Dora Cummngs s Student Charman of the producton. The ton Memoral Chapel on Tuesday saah ( arologue) Catherne V. Johntz '33 Gabrel Katherne L. B. Waldo '35 Joseph Constance Bennett '34 Mary Dors Carpenter '35 Hera'ld Evelyn R. Segal '33 Herod Ruth A. Benedct '32 nued on Page 2, Col. 2) afternoon, November 17, n celebraton of Honors Day. Dean Knapp read the must be submtted to the headquarters Sophomore Honorable Menton Lst and of the Foundaton n Phladelpha not Presdent J. Edgar Park of Wheaton later than September 15, 1932, wll be College spoke on What s tle Scholar? udged by a number of promnent pro- Dean Cooldge led the servce and explaned that the purpose of the gatherng was to honor hgh scholarshp among Wellesley College students. Mss Louse McDowell, Presdent of the Eta Chapter of Massachusetts of Ph Beta Kappa, read the names of the ntly cety for hghest scholarshp. Ths lst was prnted n the November 5th ssue of (Contnued on Page 3, Col. 4) Exhbtons Wll Be Held At Farnsworth Art Museum Prom November 25th to December Announce Essay Contest 12th, the Farnsworth Museum wll publshed n have on vew an exhbton of etchngs and dry-ponts, whle from December 1st to January 17th, the work H! p n:! of Gertrude Mage, Amercan Panter, wll be : dsplayed. and offcal documents The etchngs are by such well-known Monumenta Ger manac (Contnued on Page 6, Col. 1) (Contnued on Page n WKLLKSLKY. MASS.. N< VKMHER 27, 1931 To Honor Goethe's Annversary The frst prze for an Englsh essay s $200 and the same reward s offered for the best essay wrtten n German. Not more than fve thousand words should be wrtten upon Goethe's conthe youthful Goethe (to 1776), or Goethe Wellesley Lbrary Guards Rare Manuscrpt Of Otto The Wellesley Lbrary possesses a manuscrpt datng from the tenth the News. Dean Knapp then read the lst of sophomore honor students supposed to have been rretrevably and Presdent Park concluded the servce wth hs address. the tme of the establshment of the lost durng the confuson n Rome at The scholar, accordng to Presdent Park, s not content wth a superfcal n the year 996. the young emperor knowledge of facts, but delves deep Otto was crowned at Rome, and a few days later, on the last day of Ths s partcularly necessary n the vlay, he gave a charter to the Roman study of words and such a pursut s monasterv of Sts. Bonface and Alexs, desrable for the comprehenson of confrmng t n all ts possessons, both lterature and scence. n order ncludng lands, houses, churches, and to have a really broad pont of vew, ncome from varous sources. After the scholar needs to know all the crcumstances leadng to the stuaton gram, and sealed wth the beng sgned wth the mperal mono- mperal seal, the parchment was gven nto :he keepng of the abbot of the monastery, and, after seven and a half monastery archves, where t was ;ranscrbed by the abbot then rulng, who prnted t as an Appendx to the hstory of the monastery whch he Room 130 tf., Frday, November 27th. n Bllngs Hall, November 27. At 7:30 P. M November 29. Thanksgvng Vespers wll be held n the Memoral Chapel. D<>an Knapp wll Mscattell Wll Speak For Department Of talan On Monday, November 30, at 4:20 P. M Marqus Pero Mscattell wll speak at Shakespeare House. Hs topc wll be L'dealsmo Femmnle nel Trecento talano. Ths speech s presented by the Department of talan. Author of many books whch have from one of the oldest, noble famles of Sena. Hs home n Rome, the Pazza Veneza, s the old Bonaparte palace where Napoleon's mother ded. t s consdered a shrne of learnng by talan scholars and s always open to at the Unversty of Sena. Marqus Mscattell s a member of the European Commttee of the Dvson of ntercourse and Educaton of the Carnege Endowment for nternatonal Peace of whch Presdent Butler s the presdent. The Marqus s also member of the Assocaton of the Caternat, co-edtor of Maranna. a magazne of art and letters publshed n Rome, edtor and founder of La Dana, an mportant revew on artstc and hstorcal subects, publshed n Sena, a member of the Academy at San Luca, ex-vce-presdent of the Assocaton of Lovers and Patrons of Fne Arts n Rome, a former member of the Consulta Araldca for Latum, Umbra and the Marches, and former Honorary nspector of the Monuments of Rome. Marqus Mscattell has been Carnege professor n Poland and Czechoslovaka, where he has lectured on (Contnued on Page 6, Col. 4) M. Desclos Lectures Here On French Panters Dec. 9 Monseur Auguste V. Desclos wll lecture Wednesday, December 9, on Tros Pentres Francos Contemporans: Lesasque, Laprade, et Ladureau. The lecture wll be n French. As assstant Drector of the Offce Natonal des Unverstes et Ecoles Francases. Monseur Desclos for many years was n charge of the educatonal exchanges between England and France, and n 1926 became drector of the exchanges between France and the Unted States. Pror to hs work n the Offce Natonal, he was Professor agrege au Lycee Condorcet n Pars. n 1927 he vsted the Unted (Contnued on Page 2. Col. 2) BARN TCKETS ON SALE N ROOM 30 GREEN HALL NOV. 30, DEC. 1 ALL DAY DEC. 3 UNTL NOON Sgnor Grand Confers Wth Presdent Hoover Durng the past week and a nternatonal nterest has frequently focussed upon the vst of Fascst taly's Mnster of Foregn Affars, Dno Grand, to Presdent Hoover Washngton. The purpose of the vst has b solely that of furtherng the cause world cooperaton n the present tme of uncertanty and economc stre endeavorng to brng the partcular ponts of vew of each naton nto closer accord. n ths respect, Sgno Grand refers to hs vst as an example of what he terms "the new dplomacy," whch has come to mean the personal contacts between outstandng representatves of the powers Examples of ths are found n the vsts of Prme Mnster MacDonald, Premer Laval and Foregn Mnster Grand to Washngton. n contrast to the recent cor proposal extendng the year's- ho n the payment of the nter-go ment debts, the Hoover-Grand ference ended wthout any del (.Contnued on Page 3, Col. < Wellesley Has nvtaton To Dsarmament Assembles Professor of nternatonal Relatons at Clark Unversty, Norman Thomas, leader of the Socalst Party, Henry Stmson, Secretary of State, or th< under-secretary, Mr. Castle, and Gen^ eral Smedley D. Butler. Professor S. Ralph Harlow of Smth College, who conducted a sem summer n Geneva, wll open dent Dsarmament Conference Twenteth Club, 3 Joy Street, at 7:30 P. M. Thursday wth the key-note speech on The Jm portance of ths Conference. Profes sor Sdney Fay of Harvard Unversty (Contnued on Page 2, Col. 3) Organze Chrstmas Sales nto One nclusve Bazaar A new and mportant eh;rme been made ths year n the arra ments for the varous Chrstmas whch are usually dstrbuted among the socety houses and held at dfferent tmes. Ths year all the sales are oned nto a bazaar to be held at December 2nd and 3rd P. M. Tea wll be served by Mrs. Bradley of Crofton House. The profts wll go to the Students' Ad Socety. Many of the organzatons helped by C. A. through Servce Fund are contrbutng artcles to be sold. From the Grenfell Msson n Labrador come woven and hooked rugs, and kntted artcles. The Near East Foundaton s sendng a large dsplay of hand-made lnens. These were to be on sale at A. K. X. but are now n the ont sale at Alumnae. A descrpton of the lnens may be found n the ssue of News for November 12. The Armenan Relef sale of work done by BARN TO PRESENT A THREE-ACT PLAY 'The Swan" s Romantc Comedy by Molnar, Wtty Modern Playwrght CAST S ANNOUNCED On Frday and Saturday nghts, December 4th and 5th, Barn wll present ts formal play of the year, The Swan, by Ferenc Molnar. Ths threemodern playwrghts, s a comedy n the best modern The settng, a mythcal kngdom Europe, gves an excellent chance nversary of the death of Goethe, the vstng muscans, artsts and men of follows: Carl Schurz Memoral Foundaton of the Wesleyan and at the Phladelpha announces a natonal Student Dsflrmamen essay contest, whch s open to all Sena, St. Francs of Asss, the panters of Sena, and Dante, the Marqus and 5th. Boston the week-end of December 4th undergraduates at colleges and unverstes n the Unted States. Cash Prncess Beatrce s the frst to hold the St. Catherne The Parley at Wesleyan wll pre przes, amountng to $1000. wll be char of lterature founded n 1927, sent as speakers George Blakeslee, emzed by subtle humor, wtty dalogue, and a sophstcated endng. Fast movng and clever, the play remnds one of Barn's Ara da Capo of last year, and should be equally successful. t has newly been released for the amateur stage, havng been acted n 1923 and 1924 by Eva Le Gallenne's troupe wth nstant success. There wll be dancng, as usual, after the performance on Saturday nght. Tckets wll be on sale at the El Table durng the week of November 30th. The charman of producton s Betty Congleton. 33, and the cast s as Dr. Ncholas Ag Elzabeth Roosa, '32 George Martha Young, '33 Arsene Hope Norman, '33 Senate Vctora Esenberg, '32 Page 5, Col. 3) Makes New Rulngs On Urgent Socal Problems Senate, meetng for the frst tme ths year, on Monday evenng, November twenty-thrd, legslated largely on socal matters. A Senor Prom petton, askng one o'clock permsson, was granted. Ths means that 1932, at ts Prom, takng place ths year on February twenteth, may dance untl twelve, after whch supper wll be served. All promenaders must then A proect to enlven Saturday evenngs on whch no other event s scheduled to occur was then agreed to. t was suggested that moves be gven at Alumnae Hall from eght to nne, wth dancng to follow from nne to eleven-thrty. The date for the frst nformal Saturday Nght wll be anlater by the Commttee. Smokng ton to be necessary the matter. Senate realzes that the smokng stuaton, as t s at present, s unsatsfactory to many, and especally to the freshmen, but t feels that any changes must be made permanently and therefore carefully. More tme and thought was therefore consdered ; Orchestra Offers Program n December 8 n Wellesley College Orchestra wll present ts frst program of the year 40 n Bllngs Hall on December 3 admsson wll be charged. The, Debussy eludes fne lnen handkerchefs, lunchcrepe program follows: homespun, and Armenan needle Pett Sute Symphone Mltare Haydn Jalouse Gade Corolan Overture Beethoven

3 true order of thngs ths s our per- petual lluson s now apparent." But he s mstaken. Only to the reader s the true order of thngs apparent... though perhaps ths too s an l. ;!'., : \ tones, ncludng her colonal posses, ( J! ' Overlookng $2.50. The Waves s another of Vrgna Woolf's nterestng experments n fcton. The novel contans not a lne of drect dscourse, not a trace of the omnpresent pont of vew used by there half dozen people from old age. The as they appear others. There s Susan, who understands only sayngs that are "cres of love, hate, rage, and pan"; Lous; Rhoda, who dreams; Nevlle, who s "capable of such contempt that horsebreeders hate hm"; Jnny, and Bernard, who "was born knowng that one word follows another." who tells stoextraordnary understandng except Before each chapter s set a curous and lovely lttle preface. Taken together these form an allegory of ther own, to be enoyed, though scarcely understood. The chapters themselves are explanatons of the prefaces, whch n turn llumnate the mnd on the whole development, even as he concentrates on the partcular The Waves s to modem fcton what the "cross secton" type of drama s to the modern theatre, wth ths addton. The novel s three-dmensonal; t has depth; t s a block of lfe. Bernard labels the block; gves the theme old presses the dea whch has been n the mnds of all from chldhood. "The! luson. The book s not one for a lazy moment, nor one for a hurred readng. PROF. BXLER SPEAKS AT VESPER SERVCE Professor Julus S. Bxler, Head of the Department of Relgon and Bblcal Lterature at Smth College, was Chrstan Assocaton's speaker at the Vesper Servce held Sunday nght at Tau Zeta Epslon. He traced the development n man's thought from the mnd-body and subect-obect conceptons of phlosophy to the present vew that the most mportant factor n relgon s the effect upon man and man'. "Prayer," sad Mr. Bxler. "s the a ttude of receptveness to values." N onger s there the expectaton of supernatural flood of sprtual exper; ence, but a general openng of one mnd to whatever may penetrate Professor Bxler llustrated hs phl- osophcal and psychologcal dscusson ence. descrbng man's effect on the world and the world's effect upon C. A. WLL GVE OLD NATVTY PLAY {Contnued from Page. O. C. '32,. R. C. DSCUSSES VERSALLES TREATY nel Trecento talano. The nternatonal opened ts meetng Frday at 7:30 n! Founders Hall wth the ntroducton of Mss Black, member of the Boston branch of the League of Natons Asso- caton. who dscussed the work of the W ELLESLEY COLLEGE NEW Jeanette Say: Martha Doty '34 Jasmne Eddy '34 Ruth Stephenson '34 Frances Knapp '34 Frances G. Becker '34 Jean Wolfe '35 Emly Vvan '34 Maran A. Johr-nn '34 CAMPUS CRER {Contnued From Page 1, Col. t s too fnely dressed and garnshed. To read t haphazardly would be both Marqus Pero Mscattell, Professor nsultng and stupd. The novel needs at the Unversty of Sena. an apprecatve palate. t has a fne the European Commttee of the Dvson of ntercourse and Educaton of the Carnege Endowment for nternatonal Peace, wll speak at 4:40 P. M., November 30, at Shakespeare House. Hs subect s L'ldealsme Followng Mss Black's talk, Ruth Royes dscussed the fnancal and eco- Vocatonal nfon nomc phases of the results of the Ver On December 1, at 4:40 P. M., n Tau Zeta Epslon House, Mrs. Hugh Butler wll speak on Publc Speakng as a Vocaton, and Mr. Sheffeld wll speak on Leadershp and a Vocaton. Tea wll be served at 4:15 P. M. Ths wll be under the Commttee on WELLESLEY NVTED TO TWO ASSEMBLES {Contnued From Page the Dsarmament Conference of 1932,\ and an open forum wll follow. At nne o'clock Frday mornng at the round table dscusson Professor Harlow wll explan the dsarmament conference at Geneva n 1932, and Rev. J. Paul Wllams, of Massachusetts! Agrcultu.al College, and Rev. Gar- dner Day, of Wllams College, wll tell of mltarsm n educaton. Thomas' Que Harrson, of the Natonal Councl for the Preventon of War, wll lecture on Student Actvty for Peace n but before transcrbed for prntng... Professor E. S. Brghtman, of Boston t could be publshed, the orgnal Unversty, who spent last year n Germany, completely dsappeared, wll speak on Repudaton of reported n Rome that an Eng- the Theory of Germany's Sole War Jesse Wlson Say re. daughter of Wccdrow Wlson, has as her subect at 2:30 Frday afternoon, Commttng Ourselves to Peace, whle at three J. B. Matthews. Executve Sec- >f Fellowshp of Reconclaton, e place of Russa n Round tables at four sder the nfluence of and Luca Ames Mead wll lead the group n a study of economc nfluences for ds- PERRY GUEST HOUSE 8 Dover Road me u. a. Doara. ne one egstatlon <""> te fee admts a stu- *>» '"«" all the meetngs and should Lake Waban and ( he Chrstan Assocaton Wellesley Campus Eleanor Crofts, at 402 Tel. We e tckets for separate be -fve 1 BE A NEWSPAPER WELLESLEY GUARDS CORRESPONDENT RARE MANUSCRPT 4, v : lellbmt moy m0 ^Contnued From Page 1, Col. 2) f, after s stence of more than a thousand suppressed by the government. rpt; A few years later, manuscrpt seems to have been bought through a London dealer by an Amercan collector, Mr. Medlcott. who of- For Motor Coach Servce Call Framngham Pass. Coaches and Seven Pass. Cadllac Lmousnes (or all occa- Twenty-Four Hour Servce The Framngham Tax Servce and Baggage Transfer HENRY C. BOYLE Framngham 2500 salles treaty n the Saar valley, Alsace and Lorrane, and Lower Slesa. She gave bref sketches of the men who represented the Bg Four; Clemenceau, Lloyd George. Orlando, and Wlson. n speakng of the 14 Ponts of Woodrow Wlson, Mss Royes remarked that the clauses of the Treaty were supposed to nsure ther mantenance although! n realty none of them have been car red out. That Germany s n such a Relef, Grenfell desperate stuaton s due, Mss Royes Relef, Codperat beleves, to the fact that the ndemn- son of the Blnd. Boston Tuberculoss tes whch she s forced to pay are Assocaton, "The Caravan," and Student Agences. Tea wll be served stupendous and that Germany has lost her valuable wealth-gvng terr- from 3:00 to 5:30 P. M. Helen Gunner gave a report on the racal and geographcal manpulatons effected by the League, whch endeavored to splt up Germany and Austra nto racal unts, an attempt whch has proved far from satsfactory. Mss Gunner ponted out that the Corrdor of Poland has separated Germany from East Prussa, much as she was n the tme of the Great Elec- Mss Gunner also showed that the loss of the dstrcts of the rch Saar valley, Alsace-Lorrane and Lower Slesa had left Germany n a most unfavorable poston n European poltcs. At 8:00 P. M Dec. 1. n Alum Hall, the Department of Speech present Edward Abner Thompson Dsrael. Ths s the The Chrstmas Bazas from 2:00 to 9:00 P. M.. December 2 and 3, at Alumnae Hall. Among the he Near East DESCLOS WLL GVE LECTURE N FRENCH (Contnued From Page 1, Col. 3) States as a member of a commsson of four apponted by the Mnstry of Publc nstructon for France, for the purpose of learnng about Unon ton, uses, and control, the problems the Unon He stare. Durng ths vst he lectured at nearly thrty colleges and spoke at Wellesley, October 5, 1927, on the French Educatonal System. Ths talk was followed n the evenng by a lee- ture n French on Claude Monet. A waterproof corduroy coat for ran or shne Sehaparell's famous coat wth the metal clps turns nto as smart a bad weather coat as we've seen n all our ran coat experence. Wne, blue, brown, black. Szes 14 to 20. $10 Soft-as-fur Angora dresses Perfect cold weather dresses as sheer as tssue, so that they don't bulge and bulk under your heavy coat. Yet all of Angora wool, and there sn't anythng much warmer. Szes 14 to 20. Hgh blue, clear red, green, tan. $5.95.

4 DEAN early and should be abolshed. The commttee apponted for the purpose seems to have accomplshed ts work well, for the next mornng the mad dfference that appear ths tme every year. t seemed rather sad to Perry that the marks had to be publshed the day before the bg game; he has always thought of that week-end as an unusually care-free one. Thus he was rather releved to notce that all of the unfortunate survvors seemed to be enoyng ther last bg flng. And he actually found one grl who had safeguarded her gcod tme by forgettng untl Sunday mornng that her roommate had told her that she had had a note n the mornng mal! )ERRY enoyed the week- ] mch as these freshmen, but hs sprts e a lttle dampened when someplayed on hs sympathes Saturnaht wth the sad story of the who had a date but ddn't see «.-],s (hot rhe was wth 'cnlleruu' from Yale who had all possessons locked up n sut-case n the back of hs car. hen t seen s that they went to a precous belongngs, nthe A. A. brought no favorable results. So the dsapponted young lady was forced to rde around Cambrdge wth a gentleman n full dress whle her frends watched El n acton. ng the past week wth the addton o: several hundred dolls to the college body. These new students range from attractve sx-year-olds n cunnng thrl; place a group grls huddled around trola that was tryng D wf WELLESL' COLLEGE NEW hgh-mnded portable vcdo ustce to understand French? Well, pe yes. for then you can burstng buds and puddles n the grass, Perry turned hs waverng footsteps to the court-yard of Green Hall where he calmed hs warrng mental facultes wth an atmosphere soothngly and romantcally Gothc. But l was no use. Over the heghts of soarng medevalsm floated a drgble symbol of progress and the achevements of shall we say gross modernsm? t was beautful but stll dsconcertng. Perry at present looks hunted and avods open spaces, obsessed by a vague nameless Fear a dreadful feelng of nsecurty Perry the Pressman FASHON SHOW HELD FOR STUDENTS' AD On Thursday evenng, November 19, a Fashon Show was held n Alumnae Hall for the beneft of the Ad Socety. The gowns were from Stuart's, and the corsages from Fraser's. Shoes were provded to match each costume by. Mller's, ewelry by Barbara Gordon, and the coffures were done by Rae. Mss Gal Aronton, a stylst from New York, exwas provded by Cory's Dorm Orchestra, and James Dewng tap danced before the fashons were shown. The models were all Wellesley grls. One of the most unusual features n the exhbt was the arrangement of a specal corsage for each costume :an r >!g from a v. PRESENTED LECTURE KNAPP READS ON UNDER-SEA LFE S HONOR ROLL 17, the Junor Servce League of Wellesley and the Department of Zoology presented Mr. J. E. Wllamson, explorer, who gave an llustrated lecture on Beauty and Tragedy Under the Sea. n the Mr. Wllamson gave a leclor chldren unh n the evrnng. posed manly of faculty people from outsde the college. Mr. Wllamson frst gave hstory of the dvng sut, and sldes llustratng many years before Chrst modern ones, n whch ar s generated by chemcal acton. He then showed Rce, Pansy Segel. Barbara Smth, apprecate the fact that Mademoselle workroom, whch s a la: Ann D. Upson. was unable to make the bell rng. Bruel, of the department of French connected to a shp by Gr' Unfortunately the story doesn't end (naturally), lectured to the Boston collapsble tube large enough for hm Elzabeth luth L. there. When the house-mother heard chapter of the Amercan Assocaton to crawl through. n one sde of the son, Mary L. Atanasoff, Martha J. of the prank, she went upstars mmedately and woke up all the proctors, meetng. Mademoselle Bruel spoke on of Teachers of French at the Fall ball s a plate glass wndow through Baer, Annette M. Baker, Barbara A. Ball, Phebe L. Ballou. Constance W. tellng them to knock on everyone's Le Conflt entre Vamour et le devor sde of t s an arrangement of electrc Bennett. Thelma M. Blackmore, Bettye door and announce a house-meetng. dans les oeuvres de Chreten de Troes. lghts. P. Boeshaar, Olve Bown, Carolyn B. The grls are stll watng for ther The frst reel of pctures showed the Casper, Jane Chasnoff, Dorothy M. extra ffteen mnutes' sleep! salvagng of the wrecked submarne, perry s Chlds, Elsa D. Cohen, Dorothy Dannenberg, Eleanor Mary Davs. Harret ne of mnd BUT Perry s afrad that ths exubevanm wll not last much longer happened. He showed men wth huge mght have been when the accdent nduced by the grotesqueres of lanng weather n November. Freshman, now that pro slps are out. The dreaded notes came out Saturday, and were conflctng suggestons of turkeys on the floor of the ocean and drftng dvng Lnd to the helmets on ther heads walkng Anne E. Grant. R. sobel Gray, n Frances H. Hood. Mary J. Humes, receved wth the same mld form of the offng and an atmosphere most about wth the most delghtful ease: Mare F. Kass, Helen Keyser, Bernce hystera or the same attempt at n- Wordsworth km n ts promse and n contrast, the horrble pcture of of a man caught n qucksand and the.val Perry has spent around wth the representatve dstrbutng them to ther respectve mothers. n ths way he has served as udge n many arguments over the comparatve beauty of grls wth blue shoes and blue socks, and grls wth black shoes and pnk socks. One of the cases he decded was even more serous than ths. The THE smokng queston seems to be endless. The sugeston has now been made to Perry by one of the more PEAKNG of orchdposton. to Mss emphasze call sk lttle of the dress. Thus, one wshes to emphasze the back f the dress, one should wear the corage n the back. Among the most nusual arrangements was a corsage u the form of a muff whch could lpped up the arm when dancng, rrangement of flowers to form a \ Conference, accomplsh somethng defnte regardng armament reducton and lmtaton. However, the entre talan press has recpent had asked for a "baby doll,".round the wast, and one n whch the representatve had no more "baby dolls" left. The recpent refused the they the remanng grl dolls; she nssted upon the baby. Fnally Perry suggested that a baby bv odered; ths suggeston was upheld by the harassed representatve. The recpent was reconcled; aftercolor combnatons the ncdent closed wth a maternal, " hope my baby wll come soon!" rhte, and green and vere very promnent, >rt coats. Unusual arrangements to gve es, were also notced, e of the exhbt was lul!'"- r. L :.] thrllng rescue. The second set of pctures was taken n the Bahamas. Beautful tropcal fsh swam about utterly dsregardng the strange ball that had descended among them. Mr. Wlla growths and showed many pctures of natve dvers gatherng them, e of the gh. The race aganst s to get the spec thrllng pcture. secured aganst th lall fsh who consc The "landscape" o beautful weeds movng gently cean cu rents, made a pcture < does not easly forget. The last set of pctures was taken last summer, and showed more about fshes, especally sharks. GRAND DSCUSSES PRESSNG PROBLEMS (Contnued from Pag. 1, Col. 4) Nev worthy tha the Mussoln Government and the Hoover Admnstra- expressed great satsfacton wth the results of Foregn Mnster Grand's conversatons at Washngton, showng no dsappontment that no postve agreement was reached, snce no such result was foreseen. They suggest for lad : that CURRENT EVENT NOTES A 50 per cent tarff, n many spects a protectve tarff, has b placed upon twenty-three groups manufactured artcles by the Englsh Board of Trade. Enforcement begns on November twenty-ffth. Negotatons are now under wth the Brtsh Admralty regardng the salvagng of the lner Lustana whch s lyng off the head of Old Knsale, reland, n about 200 feet of.rgely by the : to 1 Of! tube, long whch he s studyng at the mor Presdent Park sad that par scholarshp s the love for and th A complete lst of the sophomore honor students follows: CLASS OF 1934 Dorothy D. Clement, Jane Cooley, Martha M. Doty, Mary Alce Eaton, Lucle E. Flaccus, Gang, Freda Gross, Mary Jane Hayes, G.ace E. Hoyer, rene Jarde, M A. Johnson, Hermone G. Kopp, Rena Lpetz, Elzabeth K. Nell, M. Vrgna D. Krshen, Kathrne Laure, Sarah C. Lawton, Edth Levy, Mary H. Maer, Florence H. Masel, Maron Melus, Marore E. Mller, Drucela Moorhouse, Jean P. Morton, Constance Murdock, Carolyn Palmer, F. Jacquelne Peck, A. Wnfred Phllps, Else Schoenberg, Bettye J. Sheaffer, Elzabeth S. Smth, Helen D. Stx, Jane A. Taylor, Helen M. Toby, Los Torrance, Geraldne Verge, Mary E. Whte. Ruth C. Wggns, Charlotte T. Wllams, Alma L. Wlson, Harret E. Wlson, Anne F. Wolfe, Ellen C. Wurtz. ALUMNAE NOTES ENGAGEMENTS '28 Paulne Guye to Mr. Donald MacDonald, Yale and Yale Law Anne Oppenhem to Mr. rv York Unversty MARRAGES 28 Elzabeth East to Dr. Raou: Laurent Drapeau, November Maran Chld to Mr. Rchard H Sanger. Address: 1715 N Street Washngton, D. C. DEATHS '98 Nelle Luther Fowler, Novem- COLLEGE NOTES ENGAGED Geraldne J. Harrs to 1 Goldsten, Unversty Buffalo, '26, pre-law, Unversty Pennsylvana Law School. COMMUNTY playhouse WELLESLEY HLLS. Wllam Hanes "The New Adventures of Get-Rch - Quck - Wallngford" 1st Fr. and Sat. Edmund Lowe and Los Moran Paramount VEEh OF NOV. 30 Mon.. Tues., and Wed. Elssa Land Barbara Stanwyck "The Mracle Floyd Gbbons News Woman" Thurs., Fr. and Sat. na Clare n "Rebound" "The Beloved Bachelor" PERMANENT WAVNG con, the only genune Harper Method Hardressng Ol Method 34 Waban Buldng Wellesley, Mass. Anna M. Ryan We M Prce does not determne the permanent value of a good book. There s somethng for every purse at HATHAWAY HOUSE aaaaaa*aflntfta<aa" Lt "*'< JORDAN MARSH COMPANY... Opens ts Chrstmas Gft Shop on the Seventh Floor of the Annex... YOU'LL fnd ust the thng to take home to Mother and Dad n fact to all the famly, ncludng the ssters and the cousns and the aunts! And you'll surely enoy pokng around among the many new thngs we've assembled n our gft shop.

5 KANHLL. WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEW! WELLESLEY^COLLEGE NEWS feel that wth ths damnaton the Ul 111 M V. MASS.. FRDAY. edtor also damns the abnormal explotaton of outsde games nvolvng competton. Amerca has done to athletcs n to FREE PRESS COLUMN All contrbutons for ths column must be sgned wth the full name of the author. ntals or numerals wll be used f the wrter so desres. h.k. A^ 1A>. VK ]::'.. The Edtors do not hold tjemresponsble for opnons and ths column. Cuntnhatons should be n the hands o the Edtors by U A. M. on Monday. SH'U. -: an (l!!'.. = - \ssrock. l'jl:' VRGNA C.' 'SHU'.MAKKK. EDTORAL NOTCE The News wshes to announce the names of the followng new members of the Edtoral Board: Crawford. Charlotte '33 Sheehy, Alce '34 Anowsmth, Jean '35 Landauer, Sarah Jane '35 O'Leary, Mary '35 Smth, Joslyn Credt Where t s Due! '35 Few of us senors who plod our way toward lterature, zoology or economcs generals, and, occasonally lookng back, sgh at the dffculty of our path, ever realze that we have comrades dffcult tme than have we. For the student who elects musc n Wellesley s puttng n many hours of work whch go uncredted n her schedule. f a student wshes to elect practcal musc n college, she has added to her regular schedule sx forty-mnute practce perods, and one lesson perod per week, for whch she gets absolutely no credt towards her dploma wth the excepton of one onehour course. Ths s gven once a week, and has no preparaton other than the work whch the student does practsng. One credt pont s gven for ths course. Thus f a student takes musc lessons throughout her college course, the maxmum credt whch she can obtan for her four a system whch gves due credt for work actually done. For nne hours of work a week (sx wth an nstructor, and three ndependently) the art student receves three hours' credt. Hstory drected readng demands nne hours a week of ndvdual work, wth only a short conference wth the nstructor, and three hours of credt are gven. Whle on the other hand, the musc student can obtan, for eght hours of work (sx by herself, and two under nstructon) merely one hour of credt, and that for only Ths se hl.^-cl. seems to be defeatng ts own end. The musc department offers excellent rstructon, and many freshmen enterng here are eager to enroll. What happens? The freshman elects prac- negroes, even those who were s ton wth other women's colleges. artsans, were barred from the u tcal musc plus her requred sxteen Freshmen n partcular, fresh from the And, too, they could hardly go to work on plantatons, for there they bravely, determned to get n those dsapponted, mystfed, and sometmes tan groups would have t, but sadly came nto conflct wth mmgrant enraged at the curtalment of these enough these groups are usually the labor. Accordng to much of her. Then, as work ples up, games n such sports as hockey, same ones whch take no part n the the and requred courses exact ther toll of class's actvty. Whether or not t tme and energy, t becomes ncreasngly dffcult to ft n these extra ganzaton of each class s not the temptng to gan ths soluton by unors, and senors are for the most would be wser to abandon the or- The Boston Urban League s sx hours of work, whch are abso- queston. The present system by whch vncng the employers that color each class s run by a few ndvduals not regulate effcency. The Leag lutely unrecognzed n the sum total for a dploma. She struggles on, and at the end of freshman or sophomore year, wth her nterests also broadenng n extra-currcular lnes, fnds t mpossble to keep up her musc. One The college ams, we sncerely hope, to further nterest and learnng along certan lnes, not to stfle t. Yet that s what happens n ths case. t s sgnfcant, t seems to us, that Vassar, Smth and Holyoke recognze the place whch ndvdual practcal work has, somethng to be done expertly or not n the currculum, and all grant at all. credt accordngly. Ths chefly we thnk the Amercan The Department of Musc has con- colleges have to learn: that athletcs sdered the matter and come to ts decson on the followng bass. t consders that the grl who truly cares about musc wll keep at t, whether or not she gets any credt, and also ths same grl wll prefer not to have her practcal musc work too carefully supervsed and organzed by the department. Now to us ths seems a most mstaken vew. A grl, though she may truly care about musc, certanly cannot keep at t when she regular courses, and extra-currcular nterests. But ths same grl, were she permtted to substtute practcal musc for one of her three- or twohour courses would do so gladly. Furthermore, she would certanly not obect to havng her hours of work and her requrements for examnatons of all subected to the same careful organzaton as her other courses. Ths organzaton would necessarly be entaled, were practcal musc to have credt. Therefore t seems to us that a most excellent result would be obtaned, were the college to gve dploma credt We are no advocates of any system for practcal musc. To refuse to be whch merely totals up credt hours scentfc and systematc about ths toward a dploma, but we do demand subect, merely because t s very ndvdualzed, s nonsense; to refuse to malce t possble for every college grl who wshes to do so, to carry on her practcal musc work through college, s actual stflng of a need. And that s what the present restrctons do. Therefore, we advocate f only as a Love Of The Game Much msunderstandng exsts at pesent among undergraduates n regard to Wellesley's athletc polcy of no outsde games of no team compet- part equally mystfed, but after ther year ther ndgnaton and.sde because of the maelstrom of other actvtes n whch they are caught. Hence for the maorty the mystery remans unsolved. t s wth great pleasure, then, that we notced the Columba Spectator from ts edtoral heghts, damnng calzed spectacle where one hundred thousand people congregate n a condve at each other and a small pgskn ball. t s a spectacle because few come for the love of the game or the college, whle many come because t s socally "au fat," an exctng excuse for drnkng and cheerng. t s n ths respect that Wellesley and all other women's colleges belongng to the Athletc Con federaton of Amercan College Women are at present vastly superor to men's colleges. nstead of competton n sports, wth ts emphass on the sklled few, these women's colleges have stressed cooperaton n sports, wth ts beneft to the great maorty of the farly able but not necessarly sklled. Wth ths emphass on cooperaton Wellesley hopes gradually to nculcate n each undergraduate the rght atttude toward sports that of playng for the fun of the game tself nstead of for the pleasure of lckng the other fellow. The Englsh have ths sprt. They regard sports as exercse, as fun, and as an opportunty for every one. The Amercan regards t as a busness, should play a normal, pleasurable part n the lfe of every student; that a few should not be overworked and overadvertsed to the pont of hystera; and attenton to ths much-mentoned few. n ths drecton women's colleges have assuredly progressed much further than men's. prestge of New York as the theatrcal center of these Unted States, s certanly not devod of cultural advantages, we are appalled that Wellesley students do not aval themselves of the opportuntes thus afforded. Whether t s nerta or an nsdous form of procrastnaton that wll lead sx blssful young optmstcs to wat untl Tuesday mornng before callng for tckets for the Wednesday matnee of Merchant of Vence or makes us seemngly gnorant of unparalleled chances slppng by apparently unnotced, we do not know. The fact that a mere dozen Wellesley grls could be seen scattered among a large audence that heard Rachmannoff s rather ndcatve of some sort of ntellectual lethargy. And we often wonder why only those harassed note-takng art students spend ther Saturday afternoon n the museum. t would seem at tmes that the moves hold more attractons than the Pultzer Why do we bother to have Why each class organzed nto a Bother? body wth numerous offcers, f we have not enough nterest to support t n any way? t seems to be a matter of prde never to have gone to a class meetng, to have voted for any offcers, or to have had a say on any ssue. Complants are the responsblty upon themselves not effcent. A class as such shou ether be a body whch s alve a whch functons or t should nothng. that Street, partcularly ust before ten o'clock. One man has sad that eght grls asked hm for rdes one evenng about quarter of ten as he drove up Central Street from the Square. To ask an unknown man for a rde n an automoble s to me not only an evdence of bad taste, but also a dangerous thng to do. As serous results do not occur frequently, t s dffcult for the student body to apprecate the grave rsk whch s n- When dsaster overtakes one grl t s as overwhelmng for her as f t had befallen everyone who had been 'f!.:]v ndscreet. LECTURERS VS. Mary C. Ewng, Dean of Resdence. LATE-COMERS To the Wellesley College News: Of course the boards n Bllngs are slowly rottng away and each star has ts respectve tune, but must people racng from a late gym class or comp conference flng wd cent doors and tread on tr pectng people sttng by the for lack of avalable seats? Many a knowledge for tme has ths eager tween the ams of the modern dr; and Eugene O'Nell's latest effort cause of volent rattlng of glas; Consderng Wellesley's locaregular ntervals from 4:40 on. Greater ton on the outskrts of a that we gathered from da Tart Boston cty whch, f t hasn't the lecture was that the road to the erary pnnacle s steep and that Pars s full of nterestng people. Any fur ther nformaton concernng the ga two breathless damsels. Perhaps a medal should be gven t the person who keeps her head turned toward the speaker when pantng late-comer arrves. Should the doors be locked aganst the tardy ones or would scathng glances remedy the stuaton? Devotees of the Poets' Readngs CONSDER NEGRO'S ECONOMC PROBLEMS Prze Play. t s rather ronc that n s chefly a matter of bread and butter, ng credt where work s done, the acceptance of practcal musc as a sub- perhaps more money than we shall negro gets pay enough to mantan a college where we have more tme and and that t wll be settled when the ect worthy of dploma credt from have for many years to come we fal reasonable standard of lvng. Wellesley College. to use those means ntellgently. The negro s always at a dsadvantage, beng the margnal worker and the one frst to be dscharged. There are. ndeed, fve employed n Boston Not untl the World War dd negroes turn to ndustral work. Then came the problem of trade-unonsm, ft creatng obs to keep up the morale of the older generaton of negroes, whle the younger generaton prepares tself more adequately for work. The Leagu s hampared now, however, by the eco he country. "Let us gve thanks,' Begns the dog, And then he gves Now, concludng, The dog wll say, "Ths week we get One holday." But there are quzzes, Long papers, too. When he comes to them What shall he do? He mustn't le... But stll he can- Not pass them by. The dear depresson." VTROL N THE SOUP One fact heartly deplore, To rght and left my neghbors' snore. And those who lve below, above, Play all day long "'m Through Wth Less than the dust beneath my feet count the taste of thngs eat^- But tell me not dgeston craves The knd of oeuf that msbehaves; Oh, tell me not my stomach begs For eggy stuff wthout the eggs! At the second of the nter-race meetngs, Frday. Novembt George W. Goodman, a representatve Growng older has ts pangs of the Boston Urban League, spoke on The Economc Status of the Negro. He explaned that the Negro problem s prmarly one of economcs, that t The grl you roomed wth sophomore Has got a couple of twns, my dear; Th2 tablemates of yesterday Have gone the old romantc way- Growng older has ts pangs, You do not go around n gangs. CONFUCUS AGAN Vhen the Old Mand den Nash at V\ sweetly: One s Futlty, Pardon my Brutlty. never knew when was young The way that smooth rolls off the tongue; also parleyed pretty well, Before the wo: d dscovere-d swell Should be banged Should see them s the freshmen

6 ; Sprngfeld, lc Secondary Schools Wllam C. Hll, Prncpal, Central Hgh School, Countess Erdely Anne Lord, '34 charman; Thornton Jen- Laldes-n-watng Betty Keth, '32 Prncpal, Maden Hgh School; Mary Dutcher, '34 Clement C. Hyde, Prncpal, Hartford, Alfred Adra Armtage, Connectcut, Publc Hgh School; rvng O. Palmer, Prncpal, Newton Hgh Jula Drake '34 Lackeys H. M. France 33 Fred C. Mtchell, Prncpal Hussars C onstance Bennett 34 Lynn Classcal Hgh School. Maran Johnson '34 kns, School; 1 Alexandra Father amply p The Theater COPLEY The Frst Year MAJESTC Once n a Lfetme PLYMOUTH The School for Scan SHUBERT The Student Prnce CAMPUS CRTC HARRY RVNE On Monday, November 16th, at 8:00 n Alumnae Hall. Mr. Harry rvne gave the frst of three rectals under the auspces of the Department of Speech. Hs subect was An Evenng wth Wll SJakespeare. Mr. rvne prefaced each of hs selectons wth a few remarks on Shakespeare or on the partcular passages chosen for delvery. n the course of hs remarks he brought out the pont that Shakespeare s not the superhuman beng that he s often thought to be, but rather a very human person, M-. rvne offered a wde range of selectons; he read fro m As You Lke t, "All the world's a stage," from Hamlet the solloquy from Othello, Julus Caesar. Romeo md Julet, The Tempest, M Nght's Dream, Much Ado About Nothng, and several tl they are at the heght of ther career before performng Shakespeare, Romeo and Julet requre to be done by youthful actors, or at least n a youthful manner. Mr. rvne showed very well what he meant by gvng the Mr. rvne held hs audence very well throughout; hs delvery was clear ny attempt to sho. t through hm the audence was able as nearly as possble to spend ther evenng wth Wll Shakespeare. KRKMKK'K RECTAL P., '32. Mr. Maurce C. Krkpatrck, of the Department of Musc, gave an organ rectal on Monday evenng, November 23, n the Memoral Chapel. Ths con- Cesar Franck's Choral n B Mnor was the frst number; the rch chromatc texture of the composton and the echo effects aganst a low bass were well brought out. Schumann's Four Sketches (composed for Pedal Pano precson. Allegretto, no. 2, called for a quck change of stops, and was adequately handled. Karg-Elert's The Nymph on the Lake (seven Pastels) conssted of a narratve, beautfully and clearly told n sound. Quck lttle breezes on the surface of the lake, the approachng storm, the tempest, and then suddenly, unearthly calm, passed n successon. n the nterpretaton of ths type of descrptve musc, Mr. Krkpatrck excels. He acheved a hgh emotonal mood n Nes Esgusses Byzantnes), by Mulet, n whch a clmactc end followed upon the slow movng lne of melody and skllfully bult up development. Chant du Berceau, by Sokalsky. showed a splendd use of the swell. Whle the composton was kept n the mood of a soft mnor lullaby. Mr. Krkpatrck made of the thematc repetton an opportunty for vared nterpretaton and expresson. Wdor's Allegro from the Sxth Symphony con- HOLD MEETNG OF LOCAL EDUCATORS b u WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS Page 1, Col. School n Holyoke, wll presde at all the Frday sessons. The Frday noon luncheon for offcal delegates wll be dvded nto three Out From Dreams and Theores SENOR REGSTRATON Senor regstraton s well under way. Many of the class of 1932 have already Regstraton Those who have not al are urged to obtan the \. the Bureau as soon a VOCATONAL NOTES /nn.k'u'.1 sectons. Those attendng from nsttutons of hgher educaton wll meet Mrs. Mary D. Martn of Clarksdale, Dr. Kenneth C. M. Slls, Presdent of Mss., has the dstncton of beng the Bowdon College, whle those from only woman ustce of the peace n s wll be under the State. She s called upon to perof Mr. Wllam L. W. form many marrage Feld, Headmaster of Mlton Academy, and those from publc secondary! More than 1300 young schools wll be presded over by Mr. taly takng advantage of free nby Government plots n the \ Wllam C. Hll, headmaster of the Central Hgh School n Sprngfeld. of flyng arplanes. Those attendng the afternoon sesson wll hear Mss Margaret F. Morrs, Dean of Pembroke College n Brown Unversty, Dr. Lews Perry. Prncpal of Phllps Exeter Academy, and Mr. Frank W. Ballou, Superntendent of Schools, Washngton, D. C, present papers on Modern Development n Educaton and wll have opportunty to on n dscusson. An nformal recepton n charge of a commttee consstng of Dean Frances L. Knapp, Wellesley College, charman. Mss Clmena L. Judd of the Mary A. Burnham School, Northampton, Dr. Guy M. Wnslow, Lasell Sem- others. n ses Mr. rvne had a new e nd orgnal nterpretaton to pesent. n the case of Hamlet's nary, Auburndale, Mr. Ernest B. solloquy, he felt that hs was not ntended to be delvered as a phlosoph- Hapgood, Grls' Latn School, Boston, and Mr. Wllam E. Wng. Vce-Presdent of the Assocaton, wll precede a cal treatse, but rather as the thoughts of Hamlet as he t es to reason dnner at whch the guests of honor out hs problem. n gvng from and speakers wll nclude: Dr. James Romeo and Julet the cene where the R. Angell, Presdent of Yale Unversty, Presdent Frank P. Day of lovers frst meet, Mr. rvne ponted Unon College, Dr. Raymond G. Bressler, Presdent of Rhode sland State College, Dr. Rchard M. Gummere of the Assocaton of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the Mddle Atlantc States and Maryland, and Mr. E. H. K. Mc- Comb of the North Central Assocaton of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Saturday mornng wll be gven over to a busness meetng at whch reports offcers for the ensung year, and the report of delegates to the College Enhance Examnaton Board wll occur. Followng the busness meetng, Mr. Thornton Jenkns of Maden Hgh School wll speak on Teachng Latn n Secondary Schools, and at tenthrty Mr. Ernest W. Butterfeld, Commssoner of Educaton n the State of Connectcut, wll address the delegates on ntellgence n Vared Forms. followed by general dent Howard Conant, Prncpal, Holyoke Hgh School; Vce- Presdents- John A. Cousens, Presdent Tufts College; Wllam E. Wng, Prncpal, Deerng Hgh School, Portland, Mane; Secretary-treasurer Professor George 3. Mller, Tufts College; Executve! commttee Dean Ots E. Randall,] Brown Unversty, Provdence; Clmena followed. Moderato e Maestoso, no. 1, L. Judd, Prncpal. Mary A. Burnham was crsply played, the composton School, Northampton; Dean PrancesL. havng a marked rhythm, and a runnng accompanment whch demanded THE APTTUDE TESTS pmdr December 1, and Decemsts are not closed untl at 12 o'clock, so f others wsh to take any one or all of these tests, they should sgn for them as soon as possble. The tests wll be gven n Room 222, Founders Hall, at 4:40. Sgn before 12 on November 28, at The Prvate School News has called attenton to the artcle under ths ttle by Bernce Kenyon, '20, publshed n the Scrbner's of May, Based upon an nformal study of the Wellesley class of 1920, Mss Kenyon concludes that college graduates are "a normal lot, marryng successfully, f late, havng chldren, and when they don't marry, leadng actve and useful Approxmately 70 per cent of 1920 of chldren calculated per gradm the class s , Or per m graduate s ; 23.7 percent c marred graduates are chldless. Supportng the second pont, the unmarred Whle she has not actually proved the contrbutory value of a college educaton to a successful lfe, Mss Kenyon feels that from the study of ndvdual reports, she may assume concluson to be true, to c the Prvate School News, of a colleg'e educaton offsets,ts much te k' of spnsterhood." SS. KS -eu;jbarn TO PRESENT FLAY Ernest W. Butterfeld. State Commls- soner of Educaton, Connectcut, A 1 HKkJ-AL, 1 Hartford, Connectcut. Standng Com- (Contnued, From Page 1, Col. 5) ous groups of schools are as follows: Lucy Thompkns, '32 nsttutons of hgher learnng Dr. Hyacnth Kenneth C. H. Slls, Presdent. Bow- Catherne Johntz, '33 don College, charman; Dean Prank Symphorosa Maron Dakn, Unc. G. Wren, Tufts College; Ellen P. Pendleton, Presdent, Wellesley College; Colonel Wunderlch Molly Ames, '34 Prnce Albert Prances Townsend, '33 Dr. Arthur S. Pease, Presdent, Amherst College; Ernest Everett Cort- Ruth Count Lutzen Fath Mellen. '33 Benedct, rght. Presdent, Connectcut Junor College, Brdgeport. Connectcut; Pub- Mad Marore Foster-, 32 Prncess Mara D Sylva Glass, '32 pe'det ana transent guests Near Staton and College Telephone 0449-R,S HANLON 1 Waban S DR. JOSEPH P. MESLS Podatrst-Chropodst Room 7. Morton Bdg., Wellesley Sq. Offce Hours: Evenngs by appontment Phone Wellesley 2246 DR. STANLEY E. HALL Dr. F. Wlbur Mottley, M. A. Colonal Bdg. DR. DWGHT R. CLEMENT DR. Dentsts COPELAND MERRLL Wellesley Sq. Phone flv-l Wffytsr THE Floor of Chrstmas Presents s ready! These gfts have been gathered n nterestng and out-of-theway places abroad and cannot be duplcated later. They're marked at prces that ft these tmes. HATS! HATS! HATS! " TOP OFF " EVERY COSTUME $8.50 f-xnebs nc 53 CENTRAL ST. NEW! A SANDWCH SHOP where you can have plan or [naslcd Mndw ches and ALL THE COFFEE YOU WANT FOR 10? VGOROUS HEALTH all who eat plenty of fresh fruts and vt^chms. 'rmku''d n Nature for the physcal wellh'np of young and old, they t Wellesley Frut Co., nc. 567 Washngton Street Wellesley, Mass. couldn't have happened n a prvate home. But n that gay crowded restaurant almost anythng could occur. Somethng dd, but not the romantc thng she had hoped. An obsequous 'water was servknocked hs arm... a>nd the horrd, buttery thngs sld straght down the front of her lovely Persan green gown! When the week-end was over, she brought us the frock. New Mode Cleanng made t as lovely as ever. When such accdents happen New Mode s an nexpensve remedy. Wellesley 0727

7 - CALENDAR WK..k-.CY HAPGOOD LECTURES ON GOOD TEACHNG publc addtonal evenng, except Saturday rom 7:15 9:15. Mrs. Mage Amercan who has studed for years n Pars and who has ganed a real place there, exhbtng n numerous salons. Her work s vared n character and she not only makes beautful and delcate etchngs but also colorful water colors and pastels. Her subects are also vared, as well he Her colors are oyous loves beauty and n her etchngs delcacy of lne charmng. Mrs. Mage wll WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEW; arranged so that HUNTNGTON URGES NUMERCAL METHODS Professor E. V. Huntngton of the department of Mathematcs at Har- Unversty lectured on Poltcal Questons Mathematcally Consdered afternoon, November 18, n Room 24 Founders Hall. Huntngton dscussed the apportonment of representatves n Congress and the method of determnng ths apporton: by fractonal problems. Vnton dscarded as u by Webster Alumnae Magazne for October. 1930, made from the complete fuson many lesser arts actng, danc musc, scenery, propertes, costumes and lghtng all carefully orchestra ted before they are placed before tn audence." t s the dea of unt; An ndvdual may be an excellent actor, or produce a strkng scenery, but t must ft nto the scheme of the play before t can be an tstc whole. t s not ndvdual v but group work. The course follows two man 1 the study of the background, and tual work of producton. The hstory of drama and ts growth s traced from the Greek and Roman perods up through the Medeval and Shakespearean to the modern. The work n the course s vared and nterestng The group frst studes a play for the general atmosphere, and each perhaps only sary peces of scenery and for provetc. Then MSCATTE T WT T " gmlart LECTURE N TALAN talan lterature, hstory, and He was a member of th Congress of Hstory, Hedelberg. Germany, My after gvng a sere tra, Egypt and ol Marqus Mscattell has edted a seres of books on foregn authors and ther wrtngs, ncludng studes of Shakespeare and Goethe; he has also edted the letters of St. Catherne of Sena, n sx volumes; the letters of Govann Columbn of Sena; anthologes on The MedtatoTs of St. Catherne of Sea; The Most Beautful Pages of Bernardno Da Sena, and The Mountan of Prayer, a collecton l. FLY HOME! To New York To Phladelph; To the West Curtss-Wrght..u. For Servce nformaton Flyng KYvnolds Travel Bureau At 4:40, Monday, November 23, Mr. Ernest Hapgood, Prncpal of the Grls' Latn School, Boston, lectured n Founders Hall on The Successful Teacher. The lecture was sponsored by the Department of Educaton, was open to Wellesley students nterested n teachng as a career, and was second of a seres of vocatonal lectures arranged by the Personnel Bureau. Mr. Hapgood gave an nformal o lne of the type of person who should choose teachng as a professon, of the chances for advancement, and of the qualtes on whch teacher ratngs Who shot d choose to teach? Not those who re too ncompetent to do anythng dse; teachng demands ablty. Not those who are lookng for short hours and long vacatons; teachng s serous. Not those who are self-conscou s, retrng, unassertve; teachng takes ts toll of nervous energy. Teachers must be wllng to gve ther b st efforts, enthusasm, and energy to neet the challenge, must have the conscousness of reserve Gettng nto the teachng professon s hard. The feld of applcants for postons s so large that only those of hghest ablty can be accepted. Once n, however, t s the part of the canddate whether she s to advance or not. f a young teacher shows that she has deals, that she s nterested n her work, that she can ton pupls, she wll be advanced Regulaton of promoton s based on the wdespreadng movement of "ratng" teachers to check up on ther merts and defects. A typcal ratng sheet grades teachers on (1) personal qualfcatons, such as punctualty, personal neatness, enthusasm, loyalty, and tact, and (2) professonal qualfcatons, such as conspcuous qualtes of general scholarshp, evdence of thorough schoolng n a specalty, use of Englsh, and enunca- EXHBTONS HELD OF MAGE PANTNG (Contnued From Page 1, Col. artsts as Durer, Rembrandt, Corot, Seymour Haden, Manet, Whstler, and Murhead Bone. The gallery at the tme when the exhbton was offered was occuped by the work of another artst, but the Museum felt that the opportunty was so mportant that the etchngs have been hung n ture room. Unfortunately, the lecture room s not avalable at all tmes be-

Twenty-Third Publications

Twenty-Third Publications Introducton Advent s a tme to wat for Jesus and to prepare for hs comng at Chrstmas. People all over the world wat and watch n dfferent ways for Jesus comng. You wll learn about some of them n ths book.

More information

The Great Chain of Being

The Great Chain of Being The Great Chan of Beng AUTHOR: Susan Barry Frankln Hgh School, Frankln, WI Introducton In ths lesson, students wll use prmary and secondary sources to develop a better understandng of the contnuty and

More information

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God created the frst man and woman, Adam and Eve. The chldren wll dentfy dfferent parts of the human body. The chldren wll thank God for ther

More information

And God is able to make all grace abound to you...

And God is able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you, so that havng all suffcency n all thngs at all tmes, you may abound n every good work. Thnk of t. God hmself

More information

Brothers and Sisters

Brothers and Sisters Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God makes famles. The chldren wll demonstrate ways to be helpers at home. The chldren wll thank God for ther famles. Bble Story Text Geness

More information

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P.

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P. AND PLACE OF Dstectve Charles F. llvas, Dsde County Publc Safety, kpartment, Homcde Sectoq obert Hlavac, nv. James P. Farrell, ~udsoh County Prosecutor% Offce 59 5 Kewark Avenue, J. C. t. J. Lor1 12, 1973,

More information

.tl",- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, ":~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4

.tl,- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, :~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4 ~ ' I c l! 'I I tl"- ' --;'~~ " :" ~- --t"' ~ : r tcj"'" :: " ~~' "! j ":;;c' :;;t ~ ; r TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH " ' : ; \!';[~J" 1 "1t~:::::~ f" ; j I ; : '~;: t A Response to Recent Allegaton~'::

More information

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll name the Ethopan as the man who Phlp taught about Jesus. The chldren wll practce sharng the Bble wth each other. The chldren wll state that God wants

More information

Josiah Loves God s Word

Josiah Loves God s Word Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll dentfy the Bble as God s word. The chldren wll dentfy Josah and specfc events surroundng the Bble s dscovery n the temple. The chldren wll vew the Bble

More information

This Child Has Been Sent by God

This Child Has Been Sent by God Consensus Volume 20 ssue 2 n Prase of Valant Women Artcle 10 11-1-1994 Ths Chld Has Been Sent by God Bonne J. Scharf Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/consensus Recommended Ctaton

More information

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state a characterstc of a dscple. The chldren wll sng and pray together. The chldren wll state how they can be lke dscples, e.g., share, pray, read the

More information

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll understand that prayng s how we talk to God. The chldren wll learn that Hannah prayed for a baby and God answered her prayers. The chldren wll pray.

More information

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report Ths publcaton was dgtsed by Rochester Cathedral Research Guld Homepage: www.rochestercathedralresearchguld.org Adran s Wall Frends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report 20-202 G. Keevll Abstract: Test pts

More information

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant UNTED STATES DSTRCT COURT for the Central Dstrct of Calforna Chuck Foster Plantff v. Theresa Keepng Defendant Cvl Acton No. SACV14-0004-AG-DFMx; consoldated wth SACV14-0012-AG-DFMx PRODUCTON OF DOCUMENTS

More information

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER 2015 Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye by Hgh Prest Brad Gault Prepare ye, prepare ye, O nhabtants of the earth, for the judgment of our God s come: behold, and lo, the Brdegroom

More information

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them.

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them. The Call of the Wld Jack London The story step by step 1 Lsten to Chapter 1 (from Judge Mller s place... to...he never forgot t. ). Lst the parts of the body that you hear. The frst one s an example. Check

More information

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017 Introducton to the 2017 edton Processonal a wrter s cottage Alexandra, Vrgna, 2017 A plaque hangs above my desk: Tell Your Story. Those words serve as a daly nvtaton to a sprtual practce. Tellng a story

More information

air will make their nests in it.

air will make their nests in it. 355 "THE FOURTH DIMENSION AND ITS USES BY MAN" By Charles Fllmore Unty Tranng School July 31, 1933 Lesgon l "How Sprtually to Qucken Man' 8 Supermnd Facultes and Use,"Them In Character Buldng" ' The am

More information

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives 1 of 5 2009 09 19 01:16 Welcome to RootsWeb.com Sgn n DISCOVER MORE > Home Searches Famly Trees Malng Lsts Message Boards Web Stes Passwords Help Archver > SALEM WITCH > 1999 08 > 0933867296 SALEM-WITCH-L

More information

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas Evaluaton of geometrcal characterstcs of Korean pagodas *Fahmeh Yavartanoo 1) and Thomas Kang 2) 1), 2) Department of Archtecture and Archtectural Engneerng, Seoul Natonal Unversty, Seoul 08826, Korea

More information

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries.

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries. The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca 30th Annversary Rededcaton March 6, 2011 Unversty of Florda George A. Smathers Lbrares Thrty Years of The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca Unversty of Florda

More information

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 Can anyone tell me what the theme of our summer seres on Acts s? That s rght UNSTOPPABLE. In the power of the Holy Sprt, the Good News of Jesus

More information

989 James Robert Todd

989 James Robert Todd xv. 989 James Robert Todd Bographcal Sumnnary (1324) Todd was born on December 10, 1919, n Groesbeck, Tex. (2165) He held a varety of occupatons. He worked approxmately 2 years at Sue's Used Car Lot n

More information

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform 5th Internatonal Conference on Measurement, Instrumentaton and Automaton (ICMIA 06) Methods for Measurng and Compensatng Ball Screw Error on Mult-mode Industral CT Scannng Platform Yuje Zhang, a, Shangfeng

More information

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY an mprnt of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY Publshed 2012 by Pyr, an mprnt of Prometheus Books A Gule of Dragons. Copyrght 2012 James Enge. All rghts reserved. No part of ths publcaton may be reproduced,

More information

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE » M < 1 I I ~W ' TT UNITED STTES OF MERIC TCOM HERING MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BORD CHICGO REGIONL OFFICE IN THE MTTER OF: LEROY J. PLETTEN vs. UNITED STTES OF THE RMY DEPRTMENT Transcrpt of the" Deposton

More information

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14 STUDES N JOSHUA- JUDGES-RUTH A DGEST OF CHAPTER 14 Vv. 1-5 The plan for dvdng the land. God told Joshua to dvde the land by lot (v. 2). Ths plan had already been selected durng the days of Moses (Numbers

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-21-1929 The Wellesley News (11-21-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your Drect Examnaton - Manley 465 1 BY MR. HARPER: Your Honor, we would ask that 2 Deputy Frank be fnally released from our subpoena. 3 BY THE COURT: He '11 be released from hs 4 subpoena. 5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT:

More information

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11.

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11. If)?S ~ 2 67 f=---=--~----~ f! CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS j ~ ofthe ~ f Natural Hstor~ Socet~ ~ ~ of the ~ ~ Uf\verst':J of lllf\os, lf I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I ~t~ f I I f~ Pubshed by the

More information

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosah 1-3) by Ted L. Gbbons QUOTE OF THE WEEK: The Book of Mormon contans the fullness of the everlastng Gospel--the record of the ancent Nephtes, translated

More information

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch APRIL 2016 CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER SEVERAL YEARS AGO WHEN I WAS WORKING FOR THE MARRIOTT CORPORATION, I WAS SENT FOR NINE MONTHS TO BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER IN DALLAS,

More information

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH Catholc Schools Youth Mnstry Australa Vson and Focus Areas JUNIOR AND YOUTH MINISTRY YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK STUDENT POST SCHOOL YOUTH MINISTERS TEACHER AND CHURCH

More information

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 When C@mprr@mose Os Good By T. B. Maston A retred professor of Chrsuan Ethcs There may come a tme, for

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 10-13-1932 The Wellesley News (10-13-1932) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-29-1945 The Wellesley News (11-29-1945) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was!" Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was! Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass .1",_r s r Gratutes 'Vol. V, No. 12 Publshed Weekly by the Students of N. 0. State College of Agrculture Engneerng J) ṗ STATE COLLEGE STATON, RALEGH, N. C., DECEMBER 5,1924 Sngle Copes 10 Cents - ~. r...

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves -7-932 The Wellesley News (-7-932) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at http//repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 1-17-1929 The Wellesley News (01-17-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve Wellesley News Archves 3-14-1929 Wellesley News (03-14-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church I t 1 s Desgn Revew Board F February 6, 2018 Those present were: s I $ James H. McMullan, Vce Charman Carolyn D. Presche, Member C. Sherrll Dayton, Member Robert D. Caruso, Member Bruce A.T. Sska, Member

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-23-1939 The Wellesley News (11-23-1939) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-14-1929 The Wellesley News (11-14-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13.

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13. Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRL 9, 1891. NO. 13. Publshed on alternate Thursdays, durng the college year, by the students of the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. BOARD OF EDTORS. FREDERCK HOPPN HOWLAND,

More information

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp ...., [.., :,... MNUTES Of The Seventy Seventh Annual Sesson Of The Arkansas State Assocaton t,,,,,,. j,. of Free Wll Baptsts At The Free Wll Baptst Youth Camp - On Beaver Lake-Conway, Arkansas August

More information

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion Courses nactved Snce Pror to 1992 and Courses Pendng Deleton Dv Course Number and Ttle nactvaton Date 311 CAAS 400 / MHM 457. The Muscs of Afrcan Amercans. 311 CAAS 420 / Anthro. 347. Race and Ethncty.

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 5-31-1928 The Wellesley News (05-31-1928) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of '- The Sabbath Recorder 510 Watchung Ave., Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 "WHERE THERE S NO VSON THE PEOPLE PERSH" N. THE fnterest OF SEVENTH DAT BAPTST

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves -28-932 The Wellesley News (0-28-932) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

God s Masterwork, Volume Five God with Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelation

God s Masterwork, Volume Five God with Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelation Volume Fve God wth Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelaton The Heart of the Matter We now begn the second phase of our safar through Scrpture. Havng concluded our study

More information

By High Priest Brad Gault

By High Priest Brad Gault The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch NOVEMBER 2015 By Hgh Prest Brad Gault Lsten to the voce of Jesus Chrst, your Redeemer, the great I AM, whose arm of mercy hath atoned for your sns, who wll gather hs people even

More information

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 CONFERENCE PUBLCTY Frst of Seres GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld N.J. 07061 (lssn 0036-214X) Second class postage pad at Planfeld N.J. 07061 THE SABBATH SEVENTH DAY BAPTST

More information

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m.

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m. OUR MISSION STATEMENT TO SPREAD THE GOOD NEWS OF JESUS CHRIST TO ALL GOD S PEOPLE BY WORD AND ACTION. 02 WEEKLY SPANISH MASS AT ST. MARKS STARTING OCT 5TH 03 SEVEN SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STEWARDS 05 HIGH

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-15-1928 The Wellesley News (11-15-1928) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london.

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london. o Retanng \ Through Walkng n the Lght." The text s 1 John 1: 5-10. The. Assocaton Camp Commttee has been requested to meet mmedately after dsmssal of "the.afternoon servce. Mrs. Delmer E. Van Horn, Correspondng

More information

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - April 26, 1928

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - April 26, 1928 Longwood Unversty Dgtal Commons @ Longwood Unversty Rotunda Lbrary, Specal Collectons, and Archves Sprng 4-26-1928 Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - Aprl 26, 1928 Longwood Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works

More information

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh SAMPLE PAPER TERM I SESSION- 2017-18 ENGLISH CLASS- VII Tme allowed: 3 hrs Maxmum Marks: 80 Ths paper s dvded nto three sectons: Secton A (Readng) - 20 marks Secton B (Wrtng - 20 marks Grammar) - 10 marks

More information

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 2 - Oct 12, 1927

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 2 - Oct 12, 1927 Longwood Unversty Dgtal Commons @ Longwood Unversty Rotunda Lbrary, Specal Collectons, and Archves Fall 10-12-1927 Rotunda - Vol 8, No 2 - Oct 12, 1927 Longwood Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at:

More information

LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS High Priest Dean Falconer

LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS High Priest Dean Falconer The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch OCTOBER 2015 LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS Hgh Prest Dean Falconer We have all heard of mracles. But do you want to see a real mracle take place now? If so, take a seed the sze

More information

OF FREE "/ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES

OF FREE /ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES -------- FRST ARZONA DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE "/LL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL MNUTES 2006-2007 - - - FRST ARZONA - - DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE WLL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL TES 2006-2007 \ - - : : -! - -

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 5-26-1927 The Wellesley News (05-26-1927) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY

PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY --_._-,---_._----_. ~ ""t-"~',:, "." ~ '!" ',- r f',,~ ~ w' r:! u ' ~',!::,1. B ~~ ~,: PRACTCAL CHRSTANTY OTHER BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR EL AND SYBL JONES: Ther Lfe and Work. ZDO., 300 pages ( r889) A

More information

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It "The Stick of Ephraim" j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It The Stick of Ephraim j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF +~-llll_.lltl-t--1!11-h-1111-fl-ltl!-lll-h-k~--1111-hu-uh--tt-~-~~-m--1111-l!-llll-l+ ~ : THE ~ f! t BOOK OF MORMON J s t "The Stck of Ephram" j Referred to n the Thrty-seventh Chapter of EzekeL, Verses

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 10-17-1929 The Wellesley News (10-17-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at http//repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve Wellesley News Archves 3-5-93 Wellesley News (03-05-93) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at http//repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

Corpus Christi University Parish

Corpus Christi University Parish Corpus Chrst Unversty Parsh Rev. Msgr. Mchael R. Bllan, VF, Pastor mbllan@ccup.org Lauren Farrell, Campus Mnstry Assocate lfarrell@ccup.org Deacon Robert Fedynch, Bookkeeper rfedynch@ccup.org Susette Malak-McNutt,

More information

History of the Pequot War

History of the Pequot War I!n 1636 there was unrest and suspcon between the Englsh Colonsts n New England and the Natve Amercan People who had lved there snce tme beyond memory. Each group was worred about the ntentons of the other.!

More information

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections Notce of Copyrght Publshed and unpublshed materals may be protected by Copyrght Law (Ttle 17, U.S. Code). Any copes of publshed and unpublshed materals provded by the Western Hstory Collectons are for

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 1-21-1926 The Wellesley News (01-21-1926) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043,

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, \ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, 373 FOR\* 374 Indat- T \';"..c >fjl. - TTlRD INTERVIEW 5043. Feld porker's Ths report wad'? on (ta^" February 1, I.)3 7. *V' ~" * "" "" "" 1.. Name JL!^-?!!! 1^^

More information

LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE

LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE Part 1: WHAT IS CONFIRMATION? LITTLE FLOWER PARISH CONFIRMATION REFERENCE GUIDE Confrmaton s the sacrament of ntaton that completes Baptsm and gves us the Holy Sprt n the fullness of hs gfts, thereby empowerng

More information

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN Edtor s message A new speces of Raglus Stål (Heteroptera: Rhyparochromdae) from Israel A. Nr 1 The Dctyophardae (Homoptera: Ccadna: Fulgorodea) of Israel A.F. Emeljanov, T. Stern, and A. Fredberg 7 The

More information

.., - FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL SESSION OF FREE WILL BAPTIST NE' HARMONY CHURCH. Houston County, Ala., Oct. 8, 1936 OFFICERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

.., - FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL SESSION OF FREE WILL BAPTIST NE' HARMONY CHURCH. Houston County, Ala., Oct. 8, 1936 OFFICERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ,,-_,----- --- --- -- - -- ---- ---- -,-------~ - ------~--~, - : ) MNUTES Of The FFTY-FRST ANNUAL SESSON Of The- State Lne Assocaton, l 1 OF FREE WLL BAPTST Held Wth, NE HARMONY CHURCH Houston County,

More information

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty DgtalCommons@USU Utah State Magazne Utah State Unversty Specal Collectons and Archves 11-1929 The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty Follow ths and

More information

The Bee Gee News Commencement Number June 9, 1920

The Bee Gee News Commencement Number June 9, 1920 Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU BGSU Student ewspaper Unversty Publcatons 6-9-920 The Bee Gee ews Commencement umber June 9, 920 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve Wellesley News Archves 6-9-1927 Wellesley News (06-09-1927) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at http//repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

THEOLOGICAL QUAKfERLY.

THEOLOGICAL QUAKfERLY. THEOLOGCAL QUAKfERLY. VOL.. APRL 1897. No. 2. BBLOLOGY. 'fhs chapter of theology was by our earler dogmatcans commonly dealt wth. n ther Prolegomena, where they treated of the nature and the prncples and

More information

Eastern Progress - 29 Nov 1933

Eastern Progress - 29 Nov 1933 Eastern Kentucky Unversty Encompass Eastern Progress 1933-1934 Eastern Progress 11-29-1933 Eastern Progress - 29 Nov 1933 Eastern Kentucky Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://encompass.eku.edu/progress_1933-34

More information

I I. N yasaland Missionaries

I I. N yasaland Missionaries ! overseas. He s techncal medcal advsor to the Amercan Leprosy Msson and was for many years prncpal of the Chrstan Medcal College n VeHore, nda. The mcroscope s deally suted {or use n jungle heat or freezng

More information

The Sabbath ABRAHAM LINCOLN HELPED A BOY. S~ z,~ '8apua RIVERSIDE, 'CALIFORNIA, AUGUST 16-21, february 21, 1949

The Sabbath ABRAHAM LINCOLN HELPED A BOY. S~ z,~ '8apua RIVERSIDE, 'CALIFORNIA, AUGUST 16-21, february 21, 1949 ABRAHAM LINCOLN HELPED A BOY The followng ncdent,occurred n the summer of 1847, at the South Forks Schoolhouse n Sangamon County, Ill. Mr. Lncoln had been nvted to address a temperance meetng by Preston

More information

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on "The Blood of the Nation." TWO O'CLOCK TODAY.

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on The Blood of the Nation. TWO O'CLOCK TODAY. - ;. ': : r1 TE0Ct-H VO,. XXX. NO. 43 BOSTON, MASS., FRDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1910 PRCE TWO CENTS MADERO SAYS HE S PRESDENT OF MEXCO COURSES N FRESHMAN MLTARY SCENCE ARE N FULL SWNG Toneon Reported Captured

More information

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018 DMITRI IGLITZIN Igltzn@workerlaw.com Orgnal va emal to: pdc@pdc.wa.gov and peter.lavallee@pdc.wa.gov Peter Lavallee Executve Drector Washngton State Publc Dsclosure Commsson PO Box 40908 Olympa, WA 98504-0908

More information

~"""P"""""--U ---L r- - ar --- *- I-cu -- I-- ' a u-,

~P--U ---L r- - ar --- *- I-cu -- I-- ' a u-, ~"""P"""""--U ---L r- - ar --- *- -cu -- -- ' a --- - -u-, 11 ~~ LC L ~~-qll~~-~ ~~ DU~~ ~~ a~~- ~ - Entered at the Post-Offce, Boston, Mass., as Second.Class Matter. - -. - 1 *1 lfrost &" AAMS, - cxfltr

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve Wellesley News Archves 3-21-1929 Wellesley News (03-21-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

VOL. II, No. 3 FEBRUARY, Vancouver's First City Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publiclty :Cuteau OFFICIAL PUBLICATION AF F I L I ATE D W I T H C. U N. A.

VOL. II, No. 3 FEBRUARY, Vancouver's First City Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publiclty :Cuteau OFFICIAL PUBLICATION AF F I L I ATE D W I T H C. U N. A. B.C.! VOL., No. 3 * FEBRUARY, 1943 Vancouver's Frst Cty Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publclty :Cuteau OFFCAL PUBLCATON OF THE 13.C. CV~UT U~()~ L~A.f3U~ AF F L ATE D W T H C. U N. A. Eye Effcency and the War

More information

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN'

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN' TH VOLUME XVII HUMBER 5 THE NINTH INFANTRY DIVISION ASSOCIATION $4.00 per year. (Ths $4 per year subscrpton also pays one year's dues.) Sngle copy, 35c. Columbus, Oho - 286 Zmpfer St., Columbus, Oho -

More information

THE CULVER CITIZEN ON LAKE MAXINKUCKEE INDIANA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LAKE

THE CULVER CITIZEN ON LAKE MAXINKUCKEE INDIANA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LAKE Marshall Co. Hstorcal Socety 5 test Garro St, Plymouth, Xrtd. Monthly "FARM and HOME" Secton Wth Ths Week's Edton THE CULVER CTZEN ON LAKE MAXNKUCKEE NDANA'S MOST BEAUTFUL LAKE 67TH YEAR, NO. 5 CULVER,

More information

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956 Dgtal Kenyon: Research, Scholarshp, and Creatve Exchange The Kenyon Collegan Archves 0-3-956 Kenyon Collegan - October 3, 956 Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtal.kenyon.edu/collegan Recommended

More information

CHURCH UNION DIALOGUE IN THE COME-OUTER TRADITION: WESLEYAN METHODISTS AND METHODIST PROTESTANTS \; WILLIAM H. BRACKNEY

CHURCH UNION DIALOGUE IN THE COME-OUTER TRADITION: WESLEYAN METHODISTS AND METHODIST PROTESTANTS \; WILLIAM H. BRACKNEY Methodst Hstory, 24:2 (January 1986) CHURCH UNON DALOGUE N THE COME-OUTER TRADTON: WESLEYAN METHODSTS AND METHODST PROTESTANTS \; 1858-1867 WLLAM H BRACKNEY ;,: ~ ~ : " ~!~ :t~ ~!fl;,,tjf ~ lj[ :J ~ }5:"

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 5-16-1929 The Wellesley News (05-16-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

Cedars, March 6, 1986

Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle Unversty DgtalCommons@Cedarvlle Cedars 3-6-1986 Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.cedarvlle.edu/cedars Part of the Journalsm Studes

More information

part three Teaching and Preaching

part three Teaching and Preaching Re part three Practces for Teachng and Preachng TONY CAMPOLO 10 Preparng the Sol Layng the Groundwork for Sprtually Dynamc Speakng In the presence of God and of Chrst Jesus I gve you ths charge: Preach

More information

AJl!l, T X. TEXT--~Ma~t~t~ ~5~:~l~--,/J2.._ TITLE. 1 lette. Sa n Angelo, TX (XXX+++ ) 2L. San Angelo, TX P. M. 9/2/84 FBC /!

AJl!l, T X. TEXT--~Ma~t~t~ ~5~:~l~--,/J2.._ TITLE. 1 lette. Sa n Angelo, TX (XXX+++ ) 2L. San Angelo, TX P. M. 9/2/84 FBC /! E.F. TEXT--~Ma~t~t~ ~5~:~l~--,/J2.._ TTLE SCRPTURE READNG'------ --------- CLASSFCATON: --EXPOSTORY - - BOGRAPHCAL --TEXTUAL --TOPCAL ---DEVOTONAL DELVERES: Date Hour Place Results and Comments: 9/5/76

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 0-9-930 The Wellesley News (0-09-930) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

The 6ME~GH. VOL. X. BOSTON, FEIBRUARY 26, NO. 10. CI-IANNING McGREGORY WELLS, '92, Ass't Business Manager.

The 6ME~GH. VOL. X. BOSTON, FEIBRUARY 26, NO. 10. CI-IANNING McGREGORY WELLS, '92, Ass't Business Manager. -, -- _- - The a VOL. X. BOSTON, FEBRUARY 26, 1891. NO. 10. wth a report weghed by some unknown and varyng standard, they were endeavorng to obtan defnte values for ther ndvdual records by comparson wth

More information

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16)

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 978 -- 980 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper Fall 2-8-978 2-08-978 (The Journal Champon Volume, ssue 6) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_78_80

More information

Eastern Progress - 21 Dec 1928

Eastern Progress - 21 Dec 1928 Eastern Kentucky Unversty Encompass Eastern Progress 928-929 Eastern Progress 2-2-928 Eastern Progress - 2 Dec 928 Eastern Kentucky Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://encompassekuedu/progress_928-29

More information

Inter Sections. Editorial. An Australian journal for Christian encounter and encouragement

Inter Sections. Editorial. An Australian journal for Christian encounter and encouragement November/December 2011 Inter Sectons An Australan journal for Chrstan encounter and encouragement Edtoral Feature 2 Chrstan Worldvew Food for Thought 3 Orgns of Lfe, Postmodernsm, Scence and the Bble.

More information

StenoTran BETWEENIENTRE: RICHARD WARMAN. andlet ELDON WARMAN BEFOREIDEVANT: L'AGENTE DU GREFFE

StenoTran BETWEENIENTRE: RICHARD WARMAN. andlet ELDON WARMAN BEFOREIDEVANT: L'AGENTE DU GREFFE CANADAN TRBUNAL CANADEN HUMANRGHTS DES DROTS TRBUNAL DE LA PERSONNE CANADA BETWEENENTRE: Complanant RCHARD WARMAN Plagnant, andlet CANADAN HUMAN RGHTS COMMSSON Comnnsson Commsson! Respondent andlet ELDON

More information