Article

REHABILITATION

March 1933 J.S.M. '33
Article
REHABILITATION
March 1933 J.S.M. '33

Things have been quite brisk along the publication front during the last few weeks. Not only has The Pictorial been resurrected from an untimely grave, but the Jack-o-Lantern, long languishing through trying to conform to standards of humor which a more sophisticated Dartmouth has outgrown, has launched itself upon a new era with a thorough house cleaning and sweeping-out of old ways and formulae. To begin with, the magazine had a completely new format and tends more toward the Vanity Fair type of periodical, stressing pictorial ideas and longer articles and eschewing two-line jokes and water-closet humor.

Work on the Interfraternity Play Contest which we mentioned in passing last month has been going ahead rapidly and thirteen of the houses on the campus have already signified their intention of putting a group in the competition. Among the plays which have been chosen are: "A Night at an Inn," by Lord Dunsany; "The Rising of the Moon," by Lady Gregory; "Still Alarm," by G. S. Kaufman and "The Last Mile." These plays seem particularly appealing, and if last year's standard of excellence is maintained, the contest should prove to be infinitely worthwhile.