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WEmRN I,t',~~',~~mct1ttm lIt~,"Y COl SENIOR SPEECH RECITAL BASKETBALL VS. LOYOLA SMITH HALL ARMORY :FRIDAY 7:30 P. M. TUESDAY, 8:00 P. M. Vol. 7, Nu.15 February 19, 1930 SENIORS TO STAGE THIRD SENIOR SHAW'S "APPLE CART" WILL COLLEGE CALENDAR PAUL CAPTAIN FOR ELECTED SEASON PRESIDENT WARD LEADS SPEECH STUDENTS BATES TERROR SEE 1930 REClf AL IN SMITH HALL The senior students of Speech havo THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20- PAUL L. BATES, '31, COLLEGE PRESIDENTS made arrangements to attend a perfor- Varsit~' Basket.ballj Baltimore was unanimously elected SPEECH STUDENTS GIVE MORE mance of Shaw's "Apple Cart" at Ford's Univ.j Away. captain of tIle Green CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEE OF WELL-CHOSEN READINGS Theatre, Baltimore, tomorrow evening. Terrors for the 1930 sea- HEADS OF SEVENTEEN COLLEGES FRIDA Y, FEBRUARY 21- The party lias been arranged in con" son at a meeting of the On Friday evening, F'cbruary 21, the nection with the course of drama being Senior Speech Recital; Smith football letter men on President A. N. Ward has been St)nior Speech students will present studied under Miss Mann. Hall; 7:30P."M. February 17th. The named at the head of a committee of t.heir third recital of t.he year in Smith 'rhe class is fortunate in being able captaincy erowna the seventeen college presidents to arrange Hall at 7 :30 P.]\L These recitals made to see "Apple Cart" as it is probably SUNDAY, Jo'EBRtrARY 23- enreer of one of U,e most brilhant ends for a convention of college exeeuttvea up of illdi\'idual readings are II part of the high light of Baltimore's 1929-S!) College Sunday Sehool; Baker in the eouutrv, for Bates, although pjay- to outline an endowment campaign for the Senior Speech course. The readings theutre season. Shaw completed the Chapel; 9:00 l" M. ing on a small college team, attracted the small colleges of the nation. The are usnally selections from ordinar)' play last year. It was first produced at Baker Chapel Servtee ; 7:15 P. M. nation·wide attention last season, being eommittccuppoiutmcntwasmadcatthc- dramas, onc-nct plnya, or select.ions from the National Theatre, Warsaw, Poland, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24- placed on t.he All·Eastero team and the nnnua l meetillg of the Association of longer prose selections. The readings late last spring, and achieved a succeee third AU·American line-up. American Colleges held in Washington nre under thc dlruct.ion of Miss Mnnn, but created a teTTi1le division of opln- Inter-Platoon Basketball; Gym- No one could have wished for a bet- SOUle time ago. of the Bpeeef Department. The follow- ion, a thing which Shaw's plays usually nasium; 3.05P.]rL ter pilot for the Terrors next season. President Ward introduced t,he reso- ing program to be presented Fr-iday nchieve. Literary Societies; 6:30 P. M. and During his two years of varsity root- lntion wl,ieh directly reaulfcd in the evening promises to be all unusualfy in- For its English premiere a special 7:00 P. M. ball, the rise of the Terror star has been committee of which he is the head dur- of the realm teresting one. dramatic festival was staged at Mal- 1'UE:SDAY, PEBRUARY 25- one of eollegiate most sport. spectacular in the Western illg the business session of tl'e n.asocla- to Coming Thursday Evening vern in "Vnles . .it was given as the Maryland in 1921 from Franklin High !-ion meeting. Coutendiag the unequal Christopher Merley main item in the program. It was lVell Social Olubs ; 7:00 P. M. School, Los Augeles, California, he play- di.stribution of financial support amoug Miss Scrivener received by manyj those who have been' V:\rsity Baakctball ; Loyola cei. ed on the first Terror Preshman team Slllall libenll arts colleges an unjuatl- preaclling thc dcwnfu.l.l of Shaw at· lcge; Armory; 8:00 P. M. fiable lwrdship on students of the smal- Billings of '4.9 Edwin Balmer ana ushered in theriwof the college in tacked him violently and he-, not being ler institutions, the resotuti()11 provided Mr. Grover WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26-- intercollegiate sport circles. In 11i8 Sopll The Doll's House (Act ill) on the brink of a downfall, came back Y. w. C. A. 6:30 P. M. Olllore ~'enr, he played sterling football for paign It fol' $1,000,000,000 smaller cndowlllent cam' colleges. theBO Benrik Ibsen at them sweetly. Y. ,\L C. A. 6:'15 P. M. and was one of the high·point ~COrers in Eventually Sir Barry Jaekson movod the state. In SUPI)orting his resolution provid· Miss Johnson J~agt season, he was one of the preduction from Mahern up to his ing for this financial drive, President The Comberley Triangle A. A. Milne the factors i.n the moot suceeS$' R.epertory Theatre at Birmingham, and Wnrddeclaredtherenre192smallliber· Miss Read Queen's LAWYER ALUMNUSMAKES ful year in Wes1ern Marylllnd then IJrought it down to the )listory. The Junky end was the second >II nrts colleges in the natiou with tl Theatre, London, where it began an en- INTERESTING ADDRESS high-point scorer for the Terrors and t.he total enrollment of more than 1,000,000 THREE JUNIOR PLAYS GREETED gagement early in Oetober. It i8 still Bixth in the state. stuilonts, or with on average enroll· BY APPRECIATIVE AUDIENCE running at the present time. Mr. Clmrles E. Moylan, a graduate of Next season the Green Terrors will mcnt of 1,:?50, but that almost lwlf of '1'he Ameriean premicre of the play 1S Western Maryland College in the class need the 8en'ices of a cspable leader, f{)r the Ilntire financial support goes to being m~d,e in BHIUmore this week by about one half of the colleges with an The Junior studenhof theSpecehDe- of 1913, and at preseut a lawyer in Bal- SOHle uf the best teams of the East are the Theatre Guild. An almost incom- enrolln,ent of about 120,000. Although partment presented three one-act plays timore, preached in Baker Chapel on on the sehe/tule, ineludillg Georgetown ill Simth Hall, Friday eyelliJlg, Febru· parable cast haS been nssembled for it eveniug, February 16. and John Carroll of Cle\'elan(l. the other colleges have nn eluollmcnt of ary 14. 'l'hey made up the second series and the direction has boen in Illuuge of Mr. road the opellillg sen' 'I'he Terrors and Terror Captains hlll'e about 875,000, he added, the.y have of plays whieh hnve been presented by Mr. Philip Moeller, one of the Guild t.ence of letter from St. Paul to built up a worthy tradition in football. much less mouey on whieh to the junior students this year. The threO! board managers. Timothy as his text. Hc said that too Blltes will be the mall to cnrry on the and consequently the majority tlw plays were presentcd to a large au- Ther", are twenty·four in the pa.rty many l)~opltl wcrt! wont tu condemn work of Buch former captnins as Grea5Y stn(lcnts ha\'e grossly unequal eduea· di('1lce. which i~ nt.tending the perfo!munc(! 1_0_ and llriticize ~lrn"'Jolll1goe gcn(ll·ation. Neal a:ld Charlie ITa.·..ens; uu<.iet wh"iH t.ioualopJlortunitics. The £r~t play, "It lan't Dono", was morrow night, ine1uding Misses .Arm- This is not only a characteristic of the he has himself cle,·eloped. President Ward contended thcre is nnusual in that it combined the realia- strong, Bay, Clough, Gleichman, TIns- day, but it has always been true from lleed for the continuance of the tic with a bit of the fantastic. The tOll, Johnaon, Leonn.rd, MeVey, Merrill, the beginning of creation. Mr. Moylan PRESIDENT WARD REVISES HIS colleges ~t present nnll that there curtain opened on a dark stage with :Franees Raughley, Reed, Routaoll, thcn listed uumerOUB men such as Jef- wlll be a greater necd hi the fnture iu Scrivener, ,Vara, Wentz, Williams, Miss WELL-KNOWN PAMPHLET ol'dc,' to take care of the increase iu only a street lamp burning and repre- fer~ou, Hallliltou, Dickens, and Pitt who Sara Smith, lofTs. Clftrpenter, and ],fjss colleg~ attendallce. sent.ed tile corner of some small city. had accomplished their very best work the Mr. Grove, as a poet, was ,\cceated L.Y Mann, MCIlsrs. Dawson, Eaton, Grover, at an early ngll in life. Christ himsolf President Warn has publislled ' pamphlet to "The Small College" trying to break up their student bodies . bclieve that the policem:w was right Mary Lee Shipley aud Miss June Go01· e;umulation of bard knocks, battles, giving its history, its present position, into groups t1.wt will provide tll(l socinl after all. Mr. Smith,tholmsiuessman, handicaps, and hard tasks that one bas find it3 present-day significance. He ('llvil'onmCJlt now nfforded only in smal- Lng pre!entcd two heart bllllads in song WIiS pkLyed by Mr. Lyons. to overcome in life. then proceeds to explain and compare ler institutions.. Since much of this and netion. The old Greek my tIl aboul The second "LadyFingers", "-liS small college endowments with those of ('xtnl, burden (higher education) seems Cupid a)ld Psyclie was dr:lmntized in th(l larger institutions. The phampll' a delightful comedy with a plot pnntomime under the direction of Miss "GREASY" NEAL ENTERS HOS- to bo t.hrowu npon the smaller eolleges, wbioll speaks well for its auLiwr, Glenn Virgillil1 Merrill. 'l'110se who took part PITAL FOR FURTHER TREAT- let cloaes with the suggestion of a plan Dr. Ward's resolution is a step in the Ilugllell. It concernc(l the relations of MENT which is at. tlle presont time is definitc· right direction." four women during a brief incident im- Iy being arranged. At the preseut time President Wurd Cupid Missl'tuthDavi3 "Gr,~asy" Neal, former Green Terror "Here is my conelnsion. If these 1lve mediately following a dinner after ;s bus.\' Dlakiug :l.rrnngemcnts for tlw Psyche ]\[iss Carolyn TuB SitU and for the pa.st season assistant hundred colleges of which I have been which they had left their husbalH]s with convcnl.iOll whkh will be hcld in Chi- King Miss Franccs Ward conch to "Dick" Harlow, haa left the their smokes. A business deal was to (Continned on Page 4) cago somet-imein April. be settled and it se happened that iWl Queon Miss Mary Hnmphries Hill for fnrther medical treatment at Sisters Miss Anna Mae Gallion the Union MemoriRI Hospital, Balti- settlement had passed from the host to BALLOT FOR "ALOHA" POPULARITY CONTEST Mias Virginia Scri"ener omre. "Greasy" completed 11is eollege his wife, Mrs. Gage. 'l'his fue;t was Zoph~'l" 1.J.isB Isobel Dongla~B work at the end of the fifst semester knOWll to both Mrs. Harper and Mrs. These ballots are to be marked and placed in the slotted box neal' Landon, their hnsbauds equals in tho Venus loJ.iss Mary MeComaso l)ut. hel~ rema.ined on the Hill until his the girls' window of the Post Office 110tlater than 5:30 P. l\1. Thurs- Gage firm, and 11.9 the play progresses Zeus Miss Ella Wei~ reservatiol1 at the hospital eould ue dl1Y,February 20. Hcrme~ Mi~s :Eli:
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